CONDOLENCES |
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To the family of Charlie Gavigan who died in Tacoma on January 4. Charlie was born in Donegal in 1922 and came to Tacoma in 1948.
To Seattle's Colm McGlynn on the death of his brother Seamus McGlynn on January 3 in Dublin.
To Seattle Policeman Kevin O'Neill and the other members of the O'Neill family on the death of their mother, Rosemarie O'Neill, 81, on Christmas Eve in Shoreline
To Liz McKee Fisher and the McKee family on the death of John McKee, 75, on December 21. John's parents were born in Co. Wicklow.
To the wife and teenage daughters of Neil Callahan who died suddenly in Seattle on December 12 at the age of 55.
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Ar dheis Dé go raibh a n-anamacha - May their faithful souls be at God's right hand. _________________ |
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Seattle's 2008 St. Patrick's Day
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John Bruton,
Former Irish Taoiseach (Prime Minister) and current Ambassador of the European Union to the US. |
Click HERE for more information. |
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Irish Heritage Club Activities
IHC MEETING - An Irish Week planning meeting and an IHC General Membership Meeting will be held Sunday, January 27, 6 PM, in the back room at the Wilde Rover Restaurant, 111 Central Way, Kirkland, 1 mile West of I-405 on 85th St/Central Way. Anyone interested is invited to attend, especially those willing to help during Irish Week, at the Parade, the Irish Festival, or any of the other events. For information, call Melissa at 206-229-8512 or email MelissaE@irishclub.org.

ST. BRIGID CROSSES - The January 27 IHC meeting at the Wilde Rover Restaurant, 111 Central Way, Kirkland, will be followed at approximately 7 PM by instructions and hands-on demonstrations on making St. Brigid Crosses, woven crosses made from fresh rushes or reeds. Rushes/reeds will be provided, but feel free to bring your own! These crosses are associated with St. Brigid who is venerated as one of the patron saints of Ireland. The crosses are traditionally made on February 1, Lá Fhéile Bhríde (Brigid's feast day). For more information, call 206-229-8512 or email MelissaE@irishclub.org.
IRISH WEEK 2008
The basic events of Irish Week are listed at www.irishweek.org, but please note them on your calendar and check the website for more information:
Saturday, March 8, Irish Soda Bread Contest, 2 PM, T S McHugh's
Sunday, March 9, Matt Talbot Dinner, 6 PM, F X McRory's
Friday, March 14, Proclamation Luncheon, Noon, F X McRory's
Friday, March 14, Green Stripe Laying, 7 PM
Saturday, March 15, Mass For Peace in Ireland, 10 AM, Plymouth Congregational Church
Saturday, March 15, Irish Festival, Seattle Center, Noon - 6 PM
Saturday, March 15, St Patrick's Day Parade, 12:30 PM, 4th Ave and Jefferson
Saturday, March 15, Friends Of St Patrick Banquet, 6 PM, Salty's at Alki
Saturday, March 15, Everett Cabaret, 7:30 PM, New Everett Theatre
Sunday, March 16, St Patrick's Day Dash, 9 AM, 1st & Mercer
Sunday, March 16, Irish Festival, Seattle Center, Noon - 6 PM
Monday, March 17, Irish Festival, Seattle Center, Noon - 4 PM
SEATTLE GAELS - Seattle Gaelic Footballers and Hurlers elected Terry Creighton as their new Chair at the AGM last weekend. For information on Gaelic Football or Hurling, for men or women, call 206-953-8460 or visit www.seattlegaels.org.
CELTIC CONNECTION - Pick up a free copy of the monthly Celtic Connection newspaper at your favorite Irish Pub or store. If it doesn't have copies, contact Nanci at NanciS@irishclub.org to have the paper dropped off there each month.
CHRISTMAS PHOTOS - Photos from the Children's' Christmas Party in December and from the Mother's Christmas Dinner on January 6 can be viewed on the IHC website at www.irishclub.org.
MISCELANEOUS
* The Friday February 15th Feiceáil socializing event will be at Emerald City Contra Dance at the Phinney Neighborhood Center, 6532 Phinney N, Seattle.Contact Melissa at 206-229-8512 or MelissaE@irishclub.org or visit seattledance.org/contra/emerald.city.html. * 'As Gaeilge',Seattle's Irish language conversational group, meets every second Tuesday! Call 206-423-7297 or email WendyZ@irishclub.org. |
Other Seattle Area Irish Happenings
IRISH FILM - Irish musician Joe Martin holds a fundraiser this Sunday, January 20, at 7 PM with "Into the West", a brilliant and charming Irish film, at the Central Cinema (1411 21st Avenue, off Union). All proceeds benefit Tent City, the last resort for Seattle's homeless. Hors d'oeuvres and drinks available for purchase - contact Joe at joemartin@speakeasy.net for more information.
IRISH SINGLES - Dating on Demand is a video dating service on Comcast Cable and they will be shooting video profiles on Friday, January 25, 7 PM 'til closing, at the Blarney Stone Pub (206-448-8439), 1909 3rd Ave, kitty-corner from the downtown Macy's. Heather Murphy says that singles of all ages are invited to attend, just to watch or to also participate.
BURNS NIGHT - On January 26, The Caledonian's Society and the SeattleValley of the Scottish Rite host their traditional Robbie Burns Supper & Dance at The Nile Country Club, 6601 - 244th Street SW, Mountlake Terrace. Tickets are $35 - call 206-324-3330 or visit www.caledonians.com.
GUNG HAGGIS FAT CHOY - A cross-cultural celebration of Chinese New Year and Scottish Robert Burns dinner, featuring haggis, Chinese food, bagpipes, drums, traditional Chinese music, and poetry, will be held at 5 PM, Sunday, February 24, at Ocean City Restaurant, 609 S. Weller, in Seattle's International District. For information, contact 206-364-6025 or visit www.caledonians.com.
SEATTLE TIONÓL - The Irish Pipers' Club West Coast Tionól is at St Benedicts School, 4811 Wallingford Ave N, Seattle, over the Presidents Day Weekend, Friday, Saturday & Sunday, February 15-17. There are Uilleann Pipe classes with Mickey Dunne from Limerick along with local pipers Tom Creegan and Elliot Grasso, classes in the Irish Flute, Fiddle, Irish Music Accompaniment, Irish Song, Tin Whistle, Vocal, Irish Language and Set Dancing. The Tionól start on Friday evening with a party while Saturday and Sunday are filled with classes, discussions, performances and merrymaking, including a Concert and Céili Saturday Night in the School auditorium! For details, visitwww.irishpipersclub.org.
PRESIDENT ROBINSON - Former Irish President Mary Robinson speaks at a lunch at Seattle's Rainier Club on Thursday, February 28, organized by the Initiative for Global Development. Robinson is currently Chair, Realizing Rights: The Ethical Globalization Initiative (www.realizingrights.org). For lunch reservations, contact events@igdleaders.org.
HARP CLASSES - Magical Strings offer beginning and intermediate classes in Celtic Harp in Olalla, Seattle, and Bellevue starting February 18. Their winter term runs for six weeks and all the details are at www.magicalstrings.com.
SEAN-NÓS WORKSHOP - Kieran Jordan, TCRG, visits Seattle Sunday, January 27 - 4-5:30 PM to teach a workshop in sean-nós dancing at the VelocityDanceCenter on Capitol Hill. Sean-nós is a form of old-style Irish step dancing and Kieran is a professional performer, teacher, and choreographer with over 25 years experience. She holds a TCRG certification and an MA in Contemporary Dance Performance from the University of Limerick. For more information visit www.kieranjordan.com and www.myspace.com/seannosseattle, or e-mail Alicia Guinn at maithcailin@yahoo.com.
GAEILGE CLASSES - Basic conversational Irish language classes for beginners are held Saturday mornings on Mercer Island. For details contact Aidan Maher at 425 223 1869 or usacademy@gmail.com.
IRISH POET - Seattle Arts & Lectures presents one of Ireland's greatest poets, Eavan Boland, on Monday, March 3 at 7:30 PM in Seattle's Intiman Theatre. Author of ten volumes of poetry and several books of prose, Boland is currently professor of English at StanfordUniversity. Visit www.lectures.org/poetry.html or call 206-621-2230.
OTHER IRISH / CELTIC EVENTS · Riverdance at Seattle's Paramount Theatre, January 29 - February 3. · Mastery of Scottish Arts in Seattle, February 1. · Fiddler Kevin Burke in Walla Walla, February 17. · Altan in Concert in Seattle, February 21. · Gaelic Storm in Kirkland Feb 22; in Bremerton February 24. · Céilí and sean-nós Dancing, Irish Music Sessions, etc.
For more information on all the above events and many others,
visit www.hoilands.com.
STILL MORE
Camerata Ireland, an orchestra of young Irish musicians, performs at Seattle's Benaroya Hall on March 24. See www.camerata-ireland.com or contact Ticketmaster.
The Friday Harbor Irish Music Camp is March 3-9 with classes in the fiddle, flute, concertina, button accordion, guitar, sean-nós singing, tin whistle, dance, ear training, and Irish ensemble. Visit www.fridayharborirish.com. |
News From Ireland
ECONOMIC FREEDOM - The Heritage Foundation's 2008 Index of Economic Freedom ranks Ireland third among 162 countries that were rated across 10 specific freedoms such as trade freedom, business freedom, investment freedom, and property rights. Ireland was 1st out of 41 countries in the European region, and its overall score is much higher than the regional average. To read the report, visit. www.heritage.org.
2007 IRISH AMERICAN - The Irish Echo, America's oldest Irish newspaper, has named US attorney Patrick Fitzgerald, the son of immigrants from Co. Clare, as its Irish-American of the Year for 2007. The Echo said Fitzgerald best exemplifies the strengths and traditions that the Irish have so long fostered in these United States. To read the Echo's new online Digital Edition, visit www.irishecho.com.
DIASPORA OUTREACH - The new John Hume Institute for Global Irish Studies at University College Dublin will provide a public outreach program that focuses on the Irish community abroad. With each passing generation, Irish-Americans view Ireland as more mentally distant, and the important question is whether Ireland's 70 million-strong diaspora worldwide is still an important asset for the country's future. Visit www.ucd.ie.
INTERCULTURAL SCHOOL - Jewish, Muslim and Catholic children in Kildare may soon be pupils in Ireland's first primary school to operate under the joint patronage of three faiths. The planned Intercultural, Interdenominational Primary School will operate under the patronage of the Catholic, Islamic and Progressive Jewish Communities, and children will be taught about their own faiths during school hours, while also learning about the other faiths.
NI ANNIVERSARY - This April 10 marks the 10th Anniversary of the Good Friday Agreement which paved the way for the return of devolved government to Northern Ireland. Former US president Bill Clinton and former British prime minister Tony Blair are expected to participate in commemorations to mark the event.
IMMIGRATION - Irish actress Fionnula Flanagan has refused an invitation to be honored by the US-Ireland Alliance because of remarks by the alliance's president about the undocumented Irish in the US. While outlining her reasons for refusing the invitation, Flanagan stressed her support for comprehensive immigration reform and for the Irish Lobby for Immigration Reform (ILIR). Seattle's Irish Immigration Support Group (www.irishseattle.com) is affiliated with ILIR.
POLITICAL 'SECURITIES' - Traders on the Dublin-based Intrade Prediction Market buy and sell "shares" based on predicting the future, including on which party will win US elections. Traders can "buy and sell" candidates, issues, and news futures, and researchers at the University of Iowa claim that political markets often forecast election results better than polls. Visit www.intrade.com.
1740s FAMINE - While the Great Famine occurred in the 1840s, Ireland was also hit by a very severe potato famine in 1740-1741 caused by a prolonged cold spell the previous winter during which the ground froze solid. Potatoes stored underground froze and rotted, and evictions were widespread. The homeless and destitute fed off berries in hedges, and blood taken from cows. Estimates are that between 10% and 20% of the Irish population perished during this famine, but because no overseas emigration occurred, the 1740-41 famine has largely been overlooked.
NEWGRANGE - Over 30,000 people applied to be allowed inside Newgrange to witness the winter solstice over the five days from December 19-23, but only 100 people were allowed enter the small chamber to witness the rising sun illuminating the interior of the burial mound. Light streams into the chamber every year as the sun rises after the longest night of the year. Newgrange dates from around 3,200 BC, making it 500 years older than the Great Pyramid of Giza and 1,000 years older than Stonehenge. For information, visit www.knowth.com.
ROTUNDA ANNIVERSARY - The Rotunda hospital in Dublin is 262 years old, and is in its 250th year as the world's oldest purpose-built Maternity Training Hospital. The Rotunda opened in 1745 and moved to its new, present location in December 1757. The new building cost over £20,000 (today's equivalent $3.6 million) and over 7,000 women gave birth there in 2007. For more information, visit www.rotunda.ie.
ANAM CARA - Irish poet and philosopher John O'Donohue died suddenly on January 3 at the age of 53. From Co Clare, O'Donohue was a bestselling international author of works such as Anam Cara and Eternal Echoes. Visit www.jodonohue.com.
BIG BALLOT - Ireland's Big Ballot project, organized by the Ombudsman for Children and Young People, asked children and young people up to 18 to vote on five key issues of concern to determine which issue was most important. The winning issue was Family and Care. Visit www.oco.ie for more information.
IRISH DIASPORA - Ireland's Minister for Foreign Affairs Dermot Ahern has written about the growing awareness in Ireland of the role the Irish Diaspora plays in countries around the world. The Irish Government now provides support to Irish organizations overseas, particularly those offering support to their fellow countrymen and women who have fallen on hard times. Read his comments at http://ieplists.com/?ID2257.
IRANIAN IRISH - Irish singer Chris de Burgh will perform in Tehran this summer in what will be the first concert by a Western artist in Iran since the 1979 revolution. De Burgh is one of the most popular Western singers in Iran and his website has several entries from Iranian fans.
IRISH FORESTS - There are 2.4 billion trees growing in forests in the Republic of Ireland, and Wicklow is the county with the highest percentage of forest cover at 18%, while Cork has the largest forest area, with 77,700 hectares. 10% of Ireland's total land area is under forest.
BOEING ORDER - Just before Christmas, Irish airplane leasing company AWAS ordered 31 Boeing 737-800 jets worth $2.3 billion at list prices. Among the largest aircraft leasing companies in the world, AWAS owns and manages 319 airplanes and serves approximately 129 airline customers in 50 countries around the world. For information, visit www.awas.com.
JOE DOLAN - Irish showband singer Joe Dolan, 68, died on St. Stephen's Day, December 26. With The Drifters, Dolan was one of the leaders of the showband/dancehall explosion of the 1960s and 1970s. He sold millions of records and had a string of hits around the world. Some 10,000 people turned out to say goodbye before he was buried in his native Mullingar, Co. Westmeath.
RELIGIOUS SURVEY - A survey shows that general levels of religious knowledge are lower in Northern Ireland than in the Republic. Only 42% of Northerners knew there were four gospels, compared to 55% in the Republic. Only 54% of Northerners could name the persons of the Trinity compared to 64% in the Republic. However, 60% of Northerners were able to name the first book of the Bible compared to only 52% in the Republic.
SMART CRIMINAL - A Dubliner boasted to a fellow-bus passenger that he had been on TV as the hooded man shown on a Crime show who had carried out a number of armed robberies. He was jailed for six years after the fellow-bus passenger revealed himself to be an off-duty garda (police officer).
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Tid Bits
· Irish Taoiseach (Prime Minister) Bertie Ahern has been invited to address both Houses of the US Congress. Ahern will become only the fifth statesman to address both the UK parliament and US Congress.
· 32 skeletons have been excavated near the Galwayvillage of Aughrim, the site of the 1691 Battle of Aughrim, Ireland's bloodiest battle that claimed 7,000 lives. See www.triskelle.eu/history/battleofaughrim.php.
· Just 13% of TDs in the Dáil (Ireland's Parliament) are women, placing Ireland 10% below the EU average.
· Ireland will experience a population increase of 65,000 people or 1.5% during 2008.
· In 2007, almost 24,000 greyhounds were bred in Ireland, most of which were exported to Britain.
· 2007 was one of Ireland's warmest ever years, despite the terribly wet summer. The spring and autumn were abnormally sunny, but summertime was a cloudy washout.
· Over 90% of the 15 million passengers traveling to and from Ireland annually travel by air.
· A legal requirement for lawyers to sit an exam in the Irish language before they can operate as solicitors or barristers, will be ended under recently introduced legislation.
· In a charity event before Christmas, over 13,000 Santas walked Derry's City Walls to officially break the Guinness world record for most Santas in the one place.
· Fianna Fáil, the Republic of Ireland's largest political party, has been officially registered as a political party in Northern Ireland with Cumann in Queen's University in Belfast and at the University of Ulster in Derry.
· There are calls for Dublin's Victoria Quay to be re-named Fenian Quay to mark the 160th anniversary of the founding of the Fenians in 1848.
· "Kings", an Irish-produced bilingual film spoken mostly in Irish (Gaeilge) with English subtitles, is the first Irish film to be entered in the Academy Awards best foreign-language film category. Starring Colm Meaney, it has just been released in the US.
· A new study predicts that Ireland's 10,000 long-eared owls, its dwindling red grouse population and the curlew will be wiped out by climate change. The movement of Mediterranean birds north to Ireland already indicates climate change is happening.
· Almost 3,000 people who were born in Ireland declared themselves to be "Irish-European" in the 2006 census.
· Westport, Co. Mayo, is the first Irish town that can be viewed in 3D format on Google Earth.
· The Irish Business Against Litter rates Dundalk as Ireland's cleanest town, while Sligo is rated Ireland's dirtiest town.
· Galway will be Ireland's "astronomy capital" for 2009 during the UN's International Year of Astronomy.
· Over 36 million Americans now claim Irish ancestry.
· US imports from Ireland from January to September 2007 totaled $22.9 billion. During the same period, US exports to Ireland totaled $6.6 billion.
· Irish software company Havok won an Emmy award for its physics engine which makes computer games more realistic. The technology was also used in films like Poseidon, The Matrix, and Charlie and the Chocolate Factory
· The Irish Government is providing up to $1 million to appoint Irish language native speakers as tutors at third-level colleges in the US.
· There are 300,000 overweight and obese children in the Republic of Ireland, with another 10,000 becoming obese every year.
· Irish households are among the largest in Europe, with an average of three people in each unit.
· Dublin airport is ranked 16th largest in Europe measured by passengers.
· The Irish Government is considering introducing an honors system to formally recognize outstanding achievements by Irish people at home or abroad.
· The London Times reports that, because of the number of marriages between Irish and American people, international child abductions between Ireland and the US are a bigger problem than anywhere else in the world.
· A record 7.8m overseas visitors came to Ireland in 2007.
· The annual value of stallion stud fees in Ireland is $76m.
· The Christmas Sale price of a $2,500 bed at Clerys department store in Dublin was $1.50
· The Orange Order, the Protestant and male-only organization based in Northern Ireland, has opened up some of its halls to cross-community events, ranging from fitness classes for elderly people to Irish dancing.
· Belfast's July 12th Orange Order celebrations have been renamed "OrangeFest" in a bid to attract new visitors. Tourism Ireland, an all-island body, plans to begin promoting the Twelfth to potential tourists overseas.
· Ireland's Constitution, passed by voter referendum in July 1937, came into force 70 years ago on December 29, 1937. | |
IRISH PROVERB Bíonn grásta Dé idir an diallait agus an talamh - The grace of God is found between the saddle and the ground.
Slán
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