The Asian Age

Say Nope to Pope: Irish accept tickets, but won’t attend mass

- — Agencies

Dublin, Aug. 23: When free tickets for the mass to be celebrated by Pope Francis in Phoenix Park in Dublin were advertised, Mary Coll applied for two — one in her name and the other in the name of her birth mother, who gave her up for adoption in 1962.

But Coll will not be using the tickets. “This is my protest, not to go,” she said. Instead, she will drive from her home in Limerick to Tuam, where a vigil will be held at the site of a at a former Catholic church motherand- baby home. It contained the remains of up to 800 infants.

Coll got the idea of applying but not using tickets for the mass on Sunday from , a campaign of “silent and peaceful protest” against his visit. The group’s Facebook page has about 9,000 supporters, reported the Guardian. Michael Stewart, one of the organisers, said the idea resonated with people “because it’s an effective form of protest”.

“As Irish citizens, we were all entitled to a ticket to the papal mass if we wished. The taxpayer was funding this visit regardless of their faith, and that was the icing on the cake for many,” he said.

Half a million tickets were available to the public for the mass, with a further 45,000 for the papal visit to the Marian shrine in Knock.

“Why shouldn’t [ people] claim their ticket and use it how they see fit?” Stewart said. “It seems that actively and deliberate­ly not using their ticket was an appropriat­e option while we stand in solidarity with the excessive number of victims from this atrocious organisati­on.”

The campaign was criticised by Leo Varadkar, the taoiseach, who said denying people who wanted to attend the mass the chance of getting tickets was “petty and mean- spirited”.

“Protest is legitimate and OK, but denying other people the opportunit­y to attend a mass or an event is not legitimate protest in my view and is most unfair. It should be condemned,” he said.

His comments followed reports that some people had booked hundreds of tickets as a form of protest.

One person claimed to have secured 1,312 tickets to the events, including several under the name “Jesus Christ”, and by booking coachloads of people under false transport company names.

Another posted on the campaign’s Facebook page: “I have booked 800 tickets using three different email addresses. Some people have 50 or 60 tickets. We are just doing this simple, peaceful act of protest as resistance to the Catholic church recruiting in Ireland.”

 ?? — AP ?? A newly unveiled wax work of Pope Francis is carried at the National Wax Museum Plus where they also unveiled a newly refurbishe­d original 1979 Pope Mobile ahead of Pope Francis' visit to Ireland in Dublin on Thursday.
— AP A newly unveiled wax work of Pope Francis is carried at the National Wax Museum Plus where they also unveiled a newly refurbishe­d original 1979 Pope Mobile ahead of Pope Francis' visit to Ireland in Dublin on Thursday.

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