After 26 loyal years service as a sacristan Mr Michael Keohane was dismissed by Fr Mccarthy who used the drop in church income to justify the sacking.
But the WRC – Workplace Relations Commission in the Republic found against the PP and ordered that the sacristan be given his job back.
Sacristan Michael Keohane
The WRC adjudicator, Ms Patsy Doyle said: “the justice of this case dictates an order of re-engagement”.
Fr McCarthy had dissed the quarter of a century sacristan by way of a registered letter!
The tribunal backdated the re-engagement back to July of this year.
Ms Doyle found that Mr Keohans “was unfairly selected for redundancy amidst an attempt to address the diminution of income at the church”.
The church
The WRC also found that Fr Mccarthy had cleary excluded Mr Keohane from discussions around his redundancy.
Fr McCarthy was also angry because Mr Keohane had protested at the church gates.
Fr McCarthy said he could not entertain Mr Keohane’s return.
Fr McCarthy is awaiting legal advice as to whether he can appeal the WRC’s judgement to the Labour Court.
PAT SAYS
For a long time in Ireland bishops have been dictators in their dioceses and parish priests dictators in their parishes.
These “men” were invincible and untouchable.
And the Garda and lawyers and judges let them away with blue murder.
But the times they are a changing.
As the size and influence of the RCC decreases and Ireland becomes moreand more a European democracy the church, its hierarchs and its clergy will become more and more subject to civil and criminal law and its courts and tribunals.
This is a very, very good development.
When Daly terminated me in 1986 I did drag him before the Industrial Tribunal and High Court.
But that was 35 years ago and things were very much not up to scratch.
Anyone who thinks they have endured an injustice a the hands of any one or any organisation should have recourse to civil proceedings.
This now includes the once exempted, Roman Catholic Church and it various “operatives”.
Born in Germany in 1891, Dora Richter became a trans pioneer in the pre-Nazi era – but her exact fate remains unknown.
This article marks Transgender Awareness Week (13-19 November) ahead of Transgender Day of Remembrance on Saturday 20 November.
Hollywood might have you believe that the first trans woman to undergo gender reassignment surgery was Lili Elbe. That was certainly the impression I got from watching Eddie Redmayne in the not uncontroversial The Danish Girl back in 2015.
A few weeks before Lili had her surgery, the lesser-known Dora Richter had undergone the same procedures.
Dora was born into a poor farming family in 1891 in the Erzgebirge region of Germany. From all reports, she always identified as female and deeply disliked wearing men’s clothes. Her family allowed her to live as a female but this was clearly not enough – when she was six, she tried to give herself a DIY version of the operation she would later have: attempting to remove her penis with a tourniquet.
When she grew older, Dora – also called Döchen (little Dora) – moved to Berlin. Using her birth name, Rudolph, she worked as a male-presenting waiter or cook, in upmarket hotels during the summer season. For the rest of the year, she’d live as a female.
Although Berlin was soon to be the LGBTQ capital of Europe, Dora was occasionally arrested for the ‘crime’ of cross-dressing – transgender people were considered to be transvestites at the time – and served time in a men’s jail.
Finally, a sympathetic judge released Dora into the care of German physician and early sexual rights activist Magnus Hirschfeld, who ran the Institute of Sexual Research. She was even given special permission to wear women’s clothing.
Hirschfeld
Dora lived and worked there as a woman, being paid as a housekeeper, for more than 10 years.
Despite Germany now being the liberal Weimar Republic (created after the Kaiser’s abdication following defeat in the 1914-18 war), it was still difficult for anyone to get a job if their gender didn’t match the one they were assigned at birth, so the institute employed a number of former ‘patients’.
Dr Ludwig Levy-Lenz, who joined the institute in 1925, is reported as saying: “It was very difficult for transvestites to find a job… we knew this and were willing to employ [them].
“We did everything we could to give such people a job. We had five maids, all of them male transvestites and I shall never forget the sight when I happened to go into the kitchen. The five girls sat close together, peacefully knitting, sewing and singing old folks songs.
“They were the most hard-working and conscientious domestic workers we ever had and never did a stranger visiting us notice anything…”
Finally, in 1922, Dora had the first of her surgeries. Under the auspices of Dr Erwin Gohrbandt at the Charité Universitatsmedizin, she underwent a surgery called an orchiectomy in which the testicles are removed. The surgeon also began studying the effect reduced testosterone had on Dora’s anatomy.
Gohrbandt
Another doctor at the institute, Felix Abraham, wrote: “Her castration had the effect – albeit it not very extensive – of making her body fuller, restricting beard growth, making visible the first signs of breast development and giving the pelvic fat pad… a more feminine shape.”
Abraham
However, Dora had to wait nine more years before having her penis removed and being offered a vaginoplasty, becoming, as far as any surviving records show, the first person to have what was then referred to as a ‘sex-change’ operation. The procedure, which in Dora’s case was carried out by two doctors, including Levy-Lenz, involves the construction of a vagina.
It was this experimental but highly successful operation – with the following publicity – that attracted Lili Elbe to the institute.
Anyone who has seen The Danish Girl knows that Lili’s story did not end happily. Dora’s was at least as tragic.
In May 1933, some four months after Hitler came to power, a mob made up of right-wing students and possibly SS stormed the institute. They seized all Magnus Hirschfeld’s records and ransacked the building. Hirschfeld had already fled the Nazi terror and was living in France.
But Dora was still there – and was never heard from again. It is presumed she was killed in the attack, although it is possible she was arrested and died in custody. It’s not known just how many people were murdered after the institute’s records fell into the hands of the Gestapo and the police.
Although a small number of ‘sex-change’ operations still took place during the rest of the 1930s and 1940s, the Nazi persecution and the Second World War set back transgender – not to mention gay – rights by a generation. However, Dora’s bravery and determination shines like a beacon in those very dark times and she remains a transgender icon.
Her character appears in a 1999 German film about Magnus Hirschfeld whose title translates as The Einstein of Sex but her story deserves a much wider audience.
PAT SAYS
I find it fascinating that men of science were openly exploring transvetitism and transsexualism at the beginning of the 20 th century – one hundred years ago.
How clever, open and truth seeking of them – when even today many people are so closed minded on the topic.
We are still at the beginning of knowing all there is to know about the complexities of gender, sexual orientation and their psychological roots.
It does NOT HELP when church people promote and insist upon medieval and biblical understandings of this vast area of human knowledge and inquiry.
The first thing we must do when it comes to gender issue is to LISTEN and listen nonjudgementally.
We must also be guided by the scientific and medical professionals in this area.
And, most of all, as Christians, we should have COMPASSION.
“Never judge a man until you have walked a mile in his mocasins”.
“But for the grace of God, there go I”.
DR LYDIA FOY
Lydia Annice Foy is an Irish trans woman notable for leading legal challenges regarding gender recognition in Ireland. In 1992 Foy had sex reassignment surgery, and began a 20-year battle to have her birth certificate reflect her gender identity. In 2007 the Irish High Court ruled that the relevant portions of the law of the Republic of Ireland were incompatible with the European Convention on Human Rights, but by February 2013 the law had not been changed and she began new legal proceedings to enforce the 2007 decision. As of 15 July 2015, Ireland has passed the Gender Recognition Bill 2014.
Dr Foy, painted the mini portrait below to thank me for my support.