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Michael Cleary (priest)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Michael Cleary (23 November 1933 – 31 December 1993)[1] was an Irish Roman Catholic priest, who also became a radio and TV personality.[2] Described in some sources as a "powerful and charismatic figure" in the Catholic Church in Ireland,[2] he presented a late-night radio phone-in show in Dublin in the 1980s and hosted his own television chat show. He also published a book about maintaining faith in the modern world. After he released two albums of songs, he was nicknamed "The Singing Priest".

After his death it was revealed that he had lived with Phyllis Hamilton and fathered two children with her, while she acted as his housekeeper. They lived as a family in secret.[2]

Life

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Born in Dublin, Ireland, Michael Cleary lived there all his life. He attended Catholic schools and became a priest.

As an adult, he lived in Rathmines Road in Dublin. He participated in some of the social changes of the 1960s and 1970s, saying he had used drugs. He was strongly devoted to care for the poor and working on poverty and community development issues.

In the 1960s, Cleary discussed the Catholic clergy's attitudes to celibacy, sex and marriage in the Irish documentary film Rocky Road to Dublin (1967). He admitted to a personal preference for being married and having a family, but said that the role and necessary sacrifices of being a priest were a valid substitute. As part of his pushing limits, he once said he had tried every drug except heroin.

Cleary had one of the highest profiles of any cleric in Ireland throughout the 1970s and 1980s. During the 1979 Papal visit to Ireland, Cleary sang to the crowd of 200,000 at Ballybrit before the Pope made his appearance.[3] He was a powerful and charismatic figure within the church. He was particularly devoted to raising the issue of poverty in Ireland, especially in Dublin, where he worked for change in inner-city communities.[2]

Secret life

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Three weeks after his death in December 1993 (from throat cancer), when it was therefore no longer liable to be sued for defamation, The Phoenix, a national news magazine, published an article alleging that Cleary had fathered a child, Ross Hamilton, with Phyllis Hamilton who had worked as his longtime housekeeper. This claim was subsequently repeated and it was suggested that it should be confirmed by DNA analysis. The remaining Cleary family who volunteered to provide their own DNA refused to acknowledge the boy, nor has any DNA evidence been forthcoming or provided by any of the claimed children.[2] The Cleary family have also disputed claims that he had fathered two boys (both having the same mother, Phyllis Hamilton, who it is claimed also had a girl during this time by another trainee priest) and said they were in possession of blood tests and affidavits from two men who claimed to be the boys' fathers but apparently none of these were ever produced.[4]

Cleary allegedly had a secret 26-year relationship with Hamilton that started in the 1960s when she was 17 and he was about 34.[5] They allegedly had two sons, the first given up for adoption and the second they allegedly raised together.[6] Hamilton was later supported by psychiatrist Ivor Browne, who also publicised her story with her consent.[7]

Cleary pretended simply to be Hamilton's employer. According to journalist Paul Williams, she said in a ghost-written unverified memoir published by Williams in 1995 that Cleary had taken marriage vows with her in a private ceremony with no third party present.[8] She died in 2001 from ovarian cancer.[4] Such a marriage ceremony, if it occurred, would not be legally binding under Irish law or canon law.

Aftermath

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This followed the 1992 discovery that Bishop Eamonn Casey, also a well-known cleric in Ireland, had fathered a son (by then nearly 20) with American divorcée Annie Murphy.[6] Casey was a friend and colleague of Cleary's and, as Cleary's confessor, had allegedly known about Cleary's relationship with Hamilton. Cleary and Hamilton did not know about the bishop's own affair and were shocked at the revelation about Casey.[6]

These sex scandals shocked the Catholic Church laity in Ireland, although because they were between adults they were not regarded as seriously as those involving direct abuse of children. The church was strongly criticised and the controversies shook many people's faith in its clergy. There is however no evidence of widespread knowledge among the hierarchy about the personal lives of Casey or Cleary. Murphy and Hamilton appeared on the Later With Clare McKeon chat show in January 1999 to talk about their lives and relationships, adding to publicity about the longtime affairs of the clergy.[5]

The Church allowed Hamilton and her son to continue living in Cleary's house for eleven years after his death, but then took possession after she died. The church informed Ross Hamilton he had to leave. When he refused, the church started legal proceedings against him, and as he had not legally established he was Cleary's son he had no right to inherit. The church paid him £40,000 in settlement. The church eventually sold the brick house in Mount Harold Terrace for £700,000.[4] Hamilton brought a case in the High Court in 1996, which was eventually struck out in 2003.[9]

Documentary

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On 21 April 2008, the documentary film The Holy Show was shown on BBC One. This one-hour film was based on footage shot when the director, Alison Millar, stayed with Cleary in his household as a student in 1991. At the time, his true relationship with Hamilton and their children was secret. In the film Millar also examines the changing roles of the church, social changes, the reaction of Cleary's congregation to the news of his family, and related issues.[2] The documentary was also shown on another BBC programme, entitled The Father, the Son & the Housekeeper.[10]

The film won several awards:

  • 2008 Irish Film & Television Award for Best Single Documentary
  • 2008 Prix Italia award for Best Documentary
  • 2008 Boston Irish Film Festival award for Best Documentary
  • 2008 Celtic Film Frank Copplestone First Time Director Award
  • Nominated for 2009 BAFTA Break-Through Talent Award for director Alison Millar [10]

Another programme, In the Name of the Father, was produced on Scannal, RTÉ One about Father Michael Cleary and his complicated life.[6]

References

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  1. ^ "Cleary, Michael". Dictionary of Irish Biography. Retrieved 27 January 2024.
  2. ^ a b c d e f Murray, Fiona (21 April 2008). "Secret life of Ireland's singing priest". BBC News. Retrieved 16 February 2010.
  3. ^ "RTÉ Television – The Afternoon Show: The Papal Visit 1979". RTÉ Television. 29 September 2009. Archived from the original on 19 September 2012 – via web.archive.org.
  4. ^ a b c Lynch, Donal (19 May 2013). "The twist of fate that links Richard Boyd Barrett and Fr Michael Cleary". Irish Independent. Retrieved 19 December 2013.
  5. ^ a b McDonagh, Marese (21 January 1999). "Sisters of the unholy secrets". Irish Independent. Retrieved 16 February 2010.
  6. ^ a b c d "In the Name of the Father", Scannal, RTÉ One, 2010, accessed 16 Feb 2010
  7. ^ Spain, John (5 April 2008). "The man who railed against Ireland's shameful Bedlam". Irish Independent. Archived from the original on 6 July 2014.
  8. ^ Phyllis Hamilton and Paul Williams, Secret Love: My Life with Father Michael Cleary, Dublin: Mainstream Publishing, 1995
  9. ^ HAMILTON -V- CLEARY Year 1996 Case number 354 http://highcourtsearch.courts.ie
  10. ^ a b Alison Millar, "At Home with the Clearys" Archived 2009-08-03 at the Wayback Machine, 67-second preview, Tern TV, accessed 16 Feb 2010