The Scotsman

Nuns promise memorial to 400 children in mass grave

● Vow to name all those buried in secret at Smyllum

- By RUSSELL JACKSON

Nuns who ran the orphanage where up to 400 children were secretly buried in a mass grave have finally promised a memorial to mark their lives.

The Daughters of Charity of St Vincent de Paul pledged to build a memorial naming all the lost children of Smyllum.

At least 402 babies, toddlers and older children died while being looked after by the nuns at Smyllum Park in Lanarkshir­e and were believed to be buried at a nearby cemetery. That was nearly three times the number of children the religious order had claimed were buried in an unmarked mass grave.

The Daughters of Charity, a Roman Catholic organisati­on worth £60 million in the UK alone, has now agreed to build a memorial to mark the short lives of the dead children.

It is understood the order, which is due to face the Scottish Child Abuse Inquiry in November to answer allegation­s that it carried out physical and sexual abuse at Smyllum Park, is investigat­ing exactly who is buried at the Lanarkshir­e cemetery.

When its internal probe is complete, the charity has vowed to build a monument to the dead children. The nuns had previously said 150 children might be buried there and erected a headstone in 2004 under pressure from campaigner­s but included no names.

The Daughters of Charity said: “Once the full list of names of those buried in the plots without headstones in St Mary’s Cemetery has been verified, we will work with the families and their representa­tives on a new memorial stone naming and honouring all the children buried there.”

Yesterday, the decision was welcomed by politician­s, campaigner­s and relatives of children who died at the home, which closed in 1981.

First Minister Nicola Stur- geon said: “A memorial recording the many young lives which ended there seems appropriat­e. I am pleased to hear that the Daughters of Charity have agreed to build a memorial.”

Jack Mcconnell, who, when First Minister, apologised to victims of care home abuse in 2004, welcomed the memorial pledge but said too many organisati­ons which ran homes had refused to be honest about what had happened there.

He said: “The culture of secrecy has to end and the truth has to be recognised.

“This memorial will mean a lot to the families who have suffered too long, so this is a welcome decision.”

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