How well I remember my first visit to the shrine, as if it was yesterday. We walked down the little laneway to the right of the main hospital, past the door for accidents and through a door almost opposite which led to a small hallway. The hallway led out to a lovely well laid out walled in garden filled with flowers, bushes and trees, a peaceful place where it felt safe and somehow, cut off from the outside world. I likened it to the secret garden I read of in my library books. I had never been in such a place before. While we had no gardens in our tenement houses I had of course visited the Phoenix Park along with the other children of the street, yet, somehow this was different. I was not overwhelmed here in this place as one was with the vastness of the latter. We turned right along a narrow path and towards what looked like a tiny chapel. On entering I was surprised to find, not a church but a small room with an alter holding a life sized statue of the saint. The three rows of candle holders were already full, their flickering flames casting shadows high up to the vaulted ceiling within this small space. There were four pews with red velvet kneelers and space for two people on each pew, which filled the back wall. We knelt and prayed in the silence, well, Auntie Bridget prayed, I was too busy thinking of the fish and chip supper we were going to enjoy later on! The door opened and an auld fella (old man) entered. He knelt and prayed for a short time and then went to a small table in the corner I had not noticed before. I watched as, taking a small sheet of paper and a pencil from a basket he wrote something on the paper before placing it in the small basket on the alter adding to the many others that were there.
“What’s he doing” I asked
“He’s writing a petition” replied my auntie.
“What’s a petition?”
“Well, er, it’s a request. A kind of plea asking the saint for something he wants badly”
“Like what?”
“It could be anything, he may have lost something that he wants to find ,, or he could be praying for someone that’s sick, Ah, sure it could be for anything”
“Well then, how do they post them to Saint Anthony?” I asked thinking of that auld postman of ours who would not even go up a flight of stairs to deliver but stood in the hall shouting out the name until the person came all the way down to collect the letter. What were the chances of getting these (what had she called em ?)to heaven?
“Well, go on then, tell me how they get to heaven?”
“When the basket is full of petitions they are burned before the alter of Saint Anthony and don’t you worry, he gets them and knows what each person is praying and asking for”
“Can a person ask for anything?”
“Yes, within reason”
“And could I ask for” was as far as I got. That’s enough cried Auntie Bridget, now let me get on with my prayers”
Could I just ask one more question? Can I write out a petition? (I had learned a new word!)
Yes, yes, why don’t you ask for daddy and Uncle John to come home safely from the war?
I felt my face go red with guilt, that wasn’t exactly what I had in mind!
This indeed was fabulous news to these young ears! My eyes lit up, the possibilities were endless. Why had nobody told me of this before?
Tiptoeing to the small table in the corner I took several sheets of paper and wetting the small stub of pencil between my lips proceeded to ask the good saint for the following.