Image: Notes left at the memorial to Savita Halapannavar. Original mural by artist Aches visible. Copyright: Dublin City Library and Archive. Licensed for reuse under a Creative Commons Attribution ShareAlike licence (CC BY-SA 4.0)
A collection of images of notes left at the mural of Savita Halappanavar during the 2018 referendum to repeal the Eighth Amendment will now be available long term as a digital archive.
DRI Member Dublin City Library and Archive (DCLA) have published the Savita Halappanavar Memorial Collection on the Digital Repository of Ireland (DRI). This collection brings together photographs commissioned by DCLA in May 2018 of the hundreds of personal notes left by the public at the mural of Savita Halappanavar. The mural was painted by the artist ‘Aches’ on South Richmond Street, beside the Bernard Shaw pub.
The photographs are also being published by DCLA and DRI as part of the Archiving Reproductive Health (ARH) project. Preserving these images in DRI means that they will be archived and accessible long into the future.
Lorraine McLoughlin, Dublin City Archivist said:
In keeping with our collections policy, Dublin City Library and Archive commissioned a photographer to take photographs of the mural and the notes on 29 May 2018. There were an estimated 1,200 cards on the mural on that date, though not all were completely legible due to their positioning.
We preserved, catalogued and added these images to our digital collections.
The memorial and notes which are captured in these photographs provide us with evidence of this unique moment in history. Capturing and preserving key moments in the history and story of Dublin, and making them available to future generations, are key functions of Dublin City Archives.
Clare Lanigan, Digital Archivist for Archiving Reproductive Health said:
Archiving Reproductive Health has been working since 2021 to collect and archive digital material relating to the story of reproductive rights in Ireland.
The referendum to repeal the Eighth Amendment was a key part of that story, and the tragic death of Savita Halappanavar woke up many people to the urgent need for repeal.
We’re glad to be able to work with DCLA on publishing this collection, and we hope that it honours the memory of Savita and the heartfelt notes left by so many ordinary people during those memorable days in 2018.
The Archiving Reproductive Health project at the Digital Repository of Ireland is funded by Wellcome and is collecting and preserving digital material relating to the history of reproductive rights in Ireland, including the referendum to repeal the Eighth Amendment in 2018.
The Savita Halappanavar Memorial Collection can be viewed and downloaded on DRI at https://doi.org/10.7486/DRI.6d57cp71h.
Image: Dublin City Library and Archive. (2023) Photograph of the Savita Memorial, Digital Repository of Ireland [Distributor], Dublin City Library and Archive [Depositing Institution], https://doi.org/10.7486/DRI.4742q3244