Posted on 10/03/2013 6:31:49 AM PDT by Kip Russell
As the country grows less religious, parents struggle to place their kids in classrooms where Catechism memorization doesnt come standard.
DUBLINSarah Lennons son Ethan is just 7 weeks old, and shes already stressing out about his applications for primary schools. A lapsed Catholic, she hopes to land him a spot at a sought-after multi-denominational school in suburban Dublinone of few alternatives to the Church-run schools in her neighborhood.
Its quite urgent to have our name down early and have the Catholic school here as a back up, Lennon said. But the Catholic school may not admit our son, unless we have his form in early, because he wont be baptized.
Lennon is among a growing number of Irish parents who no longer identify with the Catholic Church and struggle to find schools that dont clash with their convictions. In Irelandonce considered the most Catholic country in the worldthe Catholic Church runs more than 90 percent of all public schools. Other religious groups operate another 6 percent. But Irelands religiosity has waned in recent years, amid changing demographics, rising secularism and reports of Church sexual abuse and cover-ups.
Weekly church attendance among Irish Catholics dropped from more than 90 percent to 30 percent in the past four decades. Those in Ireland who identify as religious plummeted from 69 percent in 2005 to just 47 percent last year, according to a WIN-Gallup International poll. And the number of people who chose no religion in the last census soared, making non-believers the second largest group in the nation.
(Excerpt) Read more at theatlantic.com ...
My brother’s Irish expat inlaws claim the whole place has morally and culturally gone to hell in a handbasket since joining the EU.
Move to a muslim country and enroll them in a muslim school.
I am sure you will be more than happy with the results.
Weekly church attendance among Irish Catholics dropped from more than 90 percent to 30 percent in the past four decades. Those in Ireland who identify as religious plummeted from 69 percent in 2005 to just 47 percent last year, according to a WIN-Gallup International poll. And the number of people who chose no religion in the last census soared, making non-believers the second largest group in the nation.
Ping for later
Sounds like Ireland is being destroyed just like the rest of the West.
She can move up to the six sorrowful counties where all the Prods are.
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