The school nurse (Nitty Nora, the Big Explorer we
called her) went in search of head-lice! Where head lice (nits, as they were known) were discovered, an early
visit to the clinic was arranged. ‘Offending’
children had their hair shaved and were returned to school wearing a woolly pixie (cap) until such times as
their hair might grow back. Thank
goodness that those days of ‘name and shame’ are long gone!
The nuns may not have had much time for poor white
children but they were very hot on saving poor black babies. Each child was asked to contribute one penny
per week to this cause. When the grand
sum of half-a-crown was paid over, we were told, the donor then owned a black
baby. I’m still waiting for mine to
arrive!
My aunt was very good at stumping up the penny every
Monday but my sister Patsy had less luck with my parents. My mother had scant sympathy with the nuns’
mission work. She was too busy trying to
make ends meet with her growing family of white babies, to be that concerned
with the needs of the black ones.
She felt her position justified when she saw a number
of black soldiers among those who invaded the streets of Newry in the early
70s.
‘Get away out of it, ye scallywag! What are you doing here, annoying the people
that reared you?
Would you be the one that I paid for in Primary
School?’
If he understood what it was she meant, then he showed
no sign of it!!