ceadaoin. wrote: » According to the Irish times article, his family gave permission to exhume him because of a note he left stating that he wished to be cremated.
helimachoptor wrote: » Should never have been buried with them in the first place. What a cowardly disgusting man, may he rot in hell or wherever he ends up
snowflaker wrote: » Catholic teaching frowns on cremation It seems to be a very orchestrated "perfect family picture" being portrayed right up until the end
Candie wrote: » I don't think it's frowned on by the CC, I've been to a cremation presided over by a Priest. Didn't seem to be anything out of the ordinary.
osarusan wrote: » Yes, I've seen those comments. They also said something terrible was about to be revealed and that would have destroyed his reputation. I don't think the wider public ever found out what that was though - there was all sorts of speculation from gambling to paedophilia. If that is enough for you to be confident in the term wife-beater, then fair enough. It's not definitive enough for me.
political analyst wrote: » Surely, gardaí would have informed Alan Hawe's brothers and their parents of this note before the wake took place, wouldn't they?!
brooke 2 wrote: » You would think so! Did someone choose to ignore it?
political analyst wrote: » If Alan Hawe's brothers and their parents had insisted right from the start that his remains be cremated then, surely, the priest would have respected that.
mhge wrote: » This article sheds more light on the circumstances of the burial and exhumation:http://www.irishmirror.ie/news/irish-news/crime/clodagh-hawes-mum-sister-fought-10391346
livedadream wrote: » Their fine with the burning you just can't bury the ashes then in a catholic graveyard (consecrated land) it's weird the things you learn chatting to priests
Candie wrote: » So they'd be okay with you throwing them around a graveyard? I'll never understand this stuff.
Tropheus wrote: » CC is fine with Cremation. It's scattering ashes on non-consecrated ground that they have the issue with.
brooke 2 wrote: » Never heard that. Guess it might depend on the priest to whom you might talk to about it.
Paisleigh Weak Peace wrote: » Juicy quotes from an unspecified 'friend' are a bit of a red-top specialty in fairness, I'd take them with a pinch of salt. The statement the Hawes released, with their names on it, flatly contradicts it, and says they gave their permission when asked and the rest of the delay was red-tape related. Which seems perfectly credible. Got the final go ahead from the council at the end of March, exhumation today.
freshpopcorn wrote: » Does anybody know whats happening to him now? Is he being cremated or being buried somewhere else? Hopefully he'll be buried somewhere else now and he won't be cremated because if he was his ashes could be scattered anywhere.
Now, in a statement released to Independent.ie, his family say that they have been the subject of threats from anonymous persons since the tragedy. The Co Kilkenny family also insist that they played no part in the decision about where he was to be buried and claim they exhumed his body when requested to do so. The statement, issued by solicitor Michael Lannigan, on behalf of the Hawe family confirmed: "This morning the exhumation of Alan Hawe took place on foot of a licence granted by Cavan County Council. The Hawe family had been requested by the Coll family to make that application. The Hawes agreed to same. "The Hawe family had not previously been involved in the decision as to where Alan was buried."
Junkyard Tom wrote: » Hopefully the Church will learn lessons from this. I hope the media also reports the names of the victims first and only uses 'The Killer' for the perpetrator of such incidents.