The Portal October 2013 | Page 12

THE P RTAL October 2013 heart of the Capital City. They live a contemplative life under the Benedictine Rule. Page 12 at the altar of the Martyrs. A sister is available for guided tours of the shrine daily at 10.30am, 3.30pm and 5.30pm. Groups should make a prior appointment. Mother Marie Adele Garnier died at Tyburn in 1924. Her tomb is beside the Crypt where those heroic martyrs are remembered with so much devotion. The Convent address is: Her prayers are sought for favours regarding babies, Tyburn Convent, families, property, financial matters, priests and 8 Hyde Park Place, London W2 2LJ spiritual needs. The Sisters ask that if you do receive, Correspondence should be addressed to as a response to your prayer, any material or spiritual “The Mother General” favour through the intercession of Mother Marie Web Site: www.tyburnconvent.org.uk Adele Garnier, (Mother Mary of St Peter), that you before the Blessed Sacrament inform them. Before I left, I took a “peep” inside the upstairs many relics Chapel. A Sister kneels before the Blessed Sacrament The subterranean Chapel is a holy place. It contains in silent prayer. Sister Josephine told me they do this in many relics of those terrible times - bloodstained half-hour slots throughout the day. Of course, mass is shirts, pieces of bone, locks of hair, devotional material celebrated, and people come and go all day long. Some and pictures of the Blessed. It seems that once dead, stay for an hour or so, others for just a few minutes. the bodies were just However, they all join the Sisters in their thrown into a pit prayer of adoration. beside the gallows. Catholic Emancipation Such contempt for Leaving the Convent I walked across Hyde life was not reserved Park to Apsley House, the home of the 1st Duke for the Christian of Wellington, Arthur Wellesley the hero of Martyrs. In those Waterloo. This turned out to be serendipity. awful days, people Looking round the house, I learned that were executed for Wellesley was Prime Minister for just two - to our minds years. However, 1829, the year of Catholic trivial crimes such Emancipation, was one of them. Wellesley as stealing a loaf of had to force this through against tremendous bread. opposition. Even the King opposed the idea so strongly When the Christian Martyrs were executed, their that Wellesley resigned in protest. Realising that this friends would often scavenge the pit for relics. So meant trouble, the King persuaded him to reconsider. pieces of bone or a piece of cloth would be rescued, Wellesley returned to the Premiership. valued and kept safe. outstandingly brave It occurred to me that those who saved these relics were outstandingly brave; after all they were venerating people who had been executed as “traitors”. Thank God they were brave, for it means that we have those precious relics. They remind us of what intolerance can mean for the population at large. This is, surely, a lesson we need to remember in our own day. English Treachery It was not that Wellesley was especially pro-Catholic; rather he thought such a move would avert war in Ireland which had joined the Union only in 1801. In the end, Wellesley got his Measure but had to grant so many concessions to his opponents that the Irish accused him of “English Treachery”. If you find yourself near Marble Arch, you might care to do three things. Firstly, call in and see the DVD of their life Sisters, their Chapel and the crypt. Secondly, walk to The Sisters have also made a DVD of their life, and the junction of Edgware Road and Bayswater Road. this may be purchased from the Convent for £15. They Cross the road to the traffic island, and there you will have books and pamphlets about their life and that find a circular concrete disc set into the pavement. It of the martyrs they venerate. The Convent Web Site marks the spot of the Tyburn Tree. Amid the bustle of states: traffic and tourists, stand awhile and join the English Pilgrims and tourists from all over the world Martyrs in a prayer for the Conversion of England. visit the Shrine of the Martyrs at Tyburn. Thirdly, visit Apsley House and see the seat of the Catholic priests may arrange to celebrate Mass Dukedom.