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borderroamerhttps://fisherbelfast.wordpress.comThe Northern Standard, Monaghan. Reporter.
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KEN DUDENEY RIP

17/03/2015 by borderroamer

The funeral has taken place in Birmingham of my former BBC Radio Birmingham colleague Ken Dudeney who died in January.
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Order of Service: Ken Dudeney RIP

Order of Service: Ken Dudeney RIP


My tribute to Country Ken was based on the song ‘Four Country Roads’, the last of them being the final journey at the end of Ken’s 70th year (he was 69). May he rest in peace. As it was Saint Patrick’s Day, I ended my tribute to Ken with the short prayer known as St Patrick’s Breastplate, which is sometimes sung or heard as a hymn:
Christ be with me,
Christ be beside me,
Christ be before me,
Christ be behind me,
Christ be at my right hand,
Christ be at my left hand,
Christ be with me everywhere I go,
Christ be my friend for ever and ever. Amen.

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NEWS UNCATEGORISED BBC Radio BirminghamKen Dudeney 1 Comment

IRISH IN BIRMINGHAM

16/03/2015 by borderroamer

Greetings from Birmingham for Saint Patrick’s Day. A crowd of around 60,000 attended the parade in the city centre on Sunday. But how Irish is England’s second city now? The numbers seem to be lower than they were when I came here forty years ago in 1975 as a BBC journalist. This report is from the BBC Birmingham website.

The Irish Post: September 27th 1975 Words & Photo: Brendan Farrell

The Irish Post: September 27th 1975 Words & Photo: Brendan Farrell

Are the Irish Still Big in Birmingham? BBC News Birmingham & Black Country

They once made up 4% of Birmingham’s population and were its biggest minority group – but official figures say the number of Irish in the city has declined.

Yet 80,000 people are expected to attend the city’s annual St Patrick’s Day parade – believed to be the third biggest in the world after New York and Dublin – on Sunday. Are the Birmingham Irish really disappearing? Or has the definition simply changed?

The city’s Irish connection is plain to see; passengers arriving at Birmingham’s coach station are greeted by a sign reading “one hundred thousand welcomes” – a translation of the Gaelic greeting “cead mile failte”.

Its placement – in “Irish Quarter” Digbeth – is no accident.

The storied Dubliner pub – restored after it was gutted by a fire in 2006 – sits next door while Birmingham’s Irish Centre is a few hundred yards down the road.

‘No work here’

Regarded by some as a spiritual home of the Irish in Birmingham, Digbeth is also the terminus for the St Patrick’s Day parade.

But statistics say the number of Irish-born in the city has shrunk.

The 2001 census counted 22,828 Republic of Ireland-born and 6,086 Northern Irish Birmingham residents in 2001, whereas those numbers had dropped to 16,085 and 4,623 in 2011.

Two other cities in Britain noted for their Irish populations – Liverpool and Manchester – showed a more modest decrease in the same period, and, in fact, Merseyside’s ROI-born contingent fell by just three.

However, 50,900 Irish nationals emigrated from the Republic of Ireland in 2013, and a survey found almost 60% of respondents did so to find work.

The same report, from University College Cork, found New Zealand, Australia and Canada were drawing increasing numbers but the UK remained the most popular destination.

Paddy Foy, chairman of the Midlands Republic of Ireland Soccer Supporters Club, believes young Irish – many of them equipped with degrees – are heading for London instead of Birmingham.

He said the stereotype of the Irish “navvy” – manual workers employed in the construction industry – often no longer applies.

“When my mum and dad moved over in the 1950s the Irish did the jobs the English didn’t want to do,” he said.

“My dad helped to build [Birmingham landmarks] Spaghetti Junction and the Rotunda.

“Now the Irish are going to London to join big corporations because that’s where the jobs are seen to be.”

Maurice Long, of the Kerry Association, said Irish people were still coming to Birmingham to find work, but the flow was “slowing down”.

“The call to Birmingham is not like it used to be, work availability is not here, the cash is not here,” he said.

“A lot of people are choosing New Zealand and Australia – those places don’t seem so far any more.

“When I used to go home to Ireland the journey from New Street station took 23 hours.”

Mr Long, who emigrated to Birmingham 50 years ago, added young people who do look for work in the Midlands often stay for a short time.

“They’ve found Birmingham wasn’t as good as they thought and they’ve come from one recession into another,” he said.

‘Strong Irish culture’

But do the numbers tell the whole story? While the official statistics suggest just over 20,000 Irish-born in Birmingham, they don’t take children – or grandchildren – of immigrants into account.

Organisations such as the charity Irish in Birmingham have said counting second and third-generation descendants in the city’s Irish community would put the numbers closer to 100,000.

Anne Tighe, head of Birmingham’s St Patrick’s Day Parade board, said while the older generation may be fading, their offspring were keeping Birmingham’s Irish tradition alive. Born in the city to Irish parents herself, she said there was still evidence of a thriving community.

“I think it’s a very strong Irish culture in Birmingham,” she said.

“We have Gaelic football teams, a fantastic Irish dancing scene, there are places you can learn Irish instruments and there’s a great music scene for both traditional and more modern artists. There are still  a lot of Irish traditions and Irish family values, those are all very strong in the Irish community in Birmingham.”

Siobhan Mohan, editor of community newspaper The Harp, agreed Birmingham’s Irish-born population was ageing.

“The demographic seems to be changing, on the parade day you used to see lots of first-generation Irish in the crowd but the numbers seem to be dwindling these days,” she said.

Ms Tighe said she felt the St Patrick’s Day parade was a chance to not only celebrate Irishness, but the “unique” Irish culture in Birmingham.

“I think of myself as British but I regard my Irish roots as very strong and I’m also proud of being a Brummie,” she said.

“From my point of view organising the parade is important because I want Birmingham to be proud of and celebrate its history.

“A lot of other cities are much better at recognising that and I think we should be too.”sh traditions and Irish family values, those are all very strong in the Irish

A short history of the Irish in Birmingham

  • Many of the buildings which contributed to Birmingham’s expansion in the 1820s were worked on by Irish labourers
  • Journalist John Frederick Feeney arrived in 1835 and would go on to launch the Birmingham Daily Post. A charitable trust set up in his name to support arts projects still continues today
  • The 19th Century Irish community peaked at 11,322, accounting for 3.8% of the city’s population
  • Born in Belfast, Sir Charles Haughton Rafter became head of Birmingham’s police force in 1899, a post he held for 36 years
  • Anti-Irish sentiment in Birmingham rose after IRA bombs in the city killed 21 people in 1974. The Irish Centre was attacked
  • The St Patrick’s Day Parade – launched in the 1950s – was stopped after the bombings and did not make a comeback until 1996.

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NEWS UNCATEGORISED Anne TigheBBCBirminghamDigbeth QuarterIrish Leave a comment

INNISKEEN PARADE

15/03/2015 by borderroamer
1946 Ford Anglia: part of the Vintage Display in the Inniskeen Parade Photo:  © Michael Fisher

1946 Ford Anglia: part of the Vintage Display in the Inniskeen Parade Photo: © Michael Fisher

The highlight of the St Patrick’s weekend celebrations in Inniskeen near Carrickmacross in County Monaghan was the annual parade this afternoon. Participants and floats gathered at the chapel and made their way into the village, passing the reviewing stand set up near the community centre.

Corduff Pipe Band at the Inniskeen St Patrick's Parade Photo:  © Michael Fisher

Corduff Pipe Band at the Inniskeen St Patrick’s Parade Photo: © Michael Fisher

All-Ireland pipe band champions Corduff Pipe Band were among three bands in the parade, along with Aughnamullen Pipe Band and the Stedfast Brass Band, which will be in Carrickmacross on Tuesday morning.

Plenty of vintage displays at Inniskeen St Patrick's Parade  Photo:  © Michael Fisher

Plenty of vintage displays at Inniskeen St Patrick’s Parade Photo: © Michael Fisher

The organising committee encouraged all small firms and businesses in the area to participate with a float depicting their crafty ideas and efforts (advertisements etc). There is a prize on the day for the best float.

Monaghan SF Cllr Noel Keelan flying the national flag on his vintage tractor in Inniskeen Photo:  © Michael Fisher

Monaghan SF Cllr Noel Keelan flying the national flag on his vintage tractor in Inniskeen Photo: © Michael Fisher

In conjunction with the weekend celebrations, the committee organised an art competition for the children of Blackstaff National School and Inniskeen National School with prizes for the best three entrants.  Any children who took part in the St Patrick’s parade were being encouraged to wear home-made or fancy dress costumes to illustrate the theme of leprechauns and fairies. There is a prize for the best costume.

Sean Conlan T.D. at the Inniskeen Parade Photo:  © Michael Fisher

Sean Conlan T.D. at the Inniskeen Parade Photo: © Michael Fisher

A Leprechauns Hunt was held on Sat 14th and there was an Art competition run through the local schools, St.Daigh’s National School and Scoil Cholmcille National School, Blackstaff, Inniskeen. In the Art Competition there were three categories – Jnr/Snr – 1st/2nd/3rd – 4th/5th/6th. There was a winner and runners up from each category. There were a great many entries for the Art competition, and Sarah Leddy (who herself, won the Overall Credit Union Art Competition) had a difficult task of choosing from all the entries. All winners from the Art competition, the Leprechaun hunt (Saturday) and winners of the fancy dress theme “Leprechauns and Faeries” who we hope will take part in the parade also will be announced on Sunday.

Slurry Spreader: part of Inniskeen's St Patrick's Parade Photo: © Michael Fisher

Slurry Spreader: part of Inniskeen’s St Patrick’s Parade Photo: © Michael Fisher

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MONAGHAN NEWS TRAVEL UNCATEGORISED Corduff Pipe BandInniskeenMonaghanSt Patrick's Day Leave a comment

LÁ FHÉILE PÁDRAIG

14/03/2015 by borderroamer
HAPPY-~1Happy Ugadi Images on www.visiblecommunities.org

HAPPY-~1Happy Ugadi Images on http://www.visiblecommunities.org

Lá Fhéile Pádraig Sona dár gcairde agus teaghlach! Happy Saint Patrick’s Day to friends and family! I will be in Birmingham on the feastday, Tuesday, which has now become a national festival in Ireland. The parade in Birmingham takes place tomorrow, Sunday, having survived a funding crisis this year following council spending cuts. Meanwhile in County Monaghan and neighbouring areas, various towns and villages will be celebrating over the next few days. Here is a list of some of them:

BALLYBAY: The parade organised by the local Chamber of Commerce sets off from Gerry Traynor’s shop at 5pm. There will be live music and dancing from 3pm. A prize of €500 is offered for best float, with the runner-up receiving €300 and third place a prize of €200.

CARRICKMACROSS: Parade at 3pm. See my report last Sunday.

HAPPY-~1Happy Ugadi Images on www.visiblecommunities.org

HAPPY-~1Happy Ugadi Images on http://www.visiblecommunities.org

CLONES: A parade with a difference takes place in the town on Monday 16th March. Participants are being asked to come along at 6:30pm to Páirc Naomh Tiarnach with glow-sticks and lights, to light up the route. The parade will begin at 7:00pm along Church Hill and Fermanagh Street to The Diamond, where a fireworks display will be held at 8:30pm.

INNISKEEN: The celebrations in Patrick Kavanagh country will be tomorrow, Sunday 15th March. The parade in the village will be at 1:00pm. Today they were hunting leprechauns in the area!

MONAGHAN: The parade in the town will be the biggest in the county. The parade starts at 3:00pm and the route begins at the Lower Courthouse car park. It then goes along Broad Road, Park Street, Heaton’s Corner, left along North Road, Glaslough Street and then proceeds past the reviewing stand in The Diamond, continuing on to Dublin Street. British rally champion Daniel McKenna from County Monaghan is this year’s Grand Marshall. Participants have been asked to incorporate the theme ‘There’s no place like home’ into their parade contributions.
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Following the parade the ‘Gig Rig’ will host peformances from several local acts from 4:00pm until 10:00pm.

HAPPY-~1Happy Ugadi Images on www.visiblecommunities.org

HAPPY-~1Happy Ugadi Images on http://www.visiblecommunities.org

NEWBLISS: The parade in the village is at 2:00pm tomorrow, Sunday 15th March, led by Daniel McKenna, the British rally champion, who comes from the area. There will also be a car boot sale on the day from 12:30pm.

ORAM: Near Castleblayney and home of country music legend Big Tom has built up a reputation for the smallest parade in Ireland. There will be live country and Irish music outside Rooney’s with Paddy King on the stand at 11:30am and the parade on Tuesday will start at 12:30pm from the Oram Centre. There will be a vintage display and a number of floats. Lady Mayor Margaret Ward will deliver a welcome address along with Big Tom McBride at 1:00pm. There will be jigs and reels from All-Ireland and world champion dancers from the Karen McMahon School. The celebrations will continue late into the evening.

COOTEHILL in County Cavan has a parade at 3pm. There are also annual parades in Kingscourt and Shercock.

DUNDALK and Ardee in County Louth will also be celebrating. Have a good day, wherever you are around the world! You are welcome to post greetings below in the comments section, especially if you have a Monaghan connection.

St Patrick's Day greeting card from USA Photo: www.smithtowntodaynews.com

St Patrick’s Day greeting card from USA Photo: http://www.smithtowntodaynews.com

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MONAGHAN NEWS TRAVEL UNCATEGORISED BallybayCarrickmacrossClonesInniskeenMonaghanOramSt Patrick's Day Leave a comment

COPING WITH DEMENTIA

13/03/2015 by borderroamer
Maeve Montgomery, Dementia Adviser, Alzheimer Society, at Carrickmacross Wokhouse  Photo: © Michael Fisher

Maeve Montgomery, Dementia Adviser, Alzheimer Society, at Carrickmacross Workhouse Photo: © Michael Fisher

COPING WITH DEMENTIA: HOW THE MONAGHAN ADVISER CAN HELP Michael Fisher: Carrickmacross News Thursday 12th March 2015 The Northern Standard p.43

It can be very difficult to cope when a parent, brother, sister or other relative or maybe a friend develops dementia. Maeve Montgomery is there to help. There are 700 people with some form of memory loss in County Monaghan and 850 in neighbouring Cavan (2011 census figures). Maeve was appointed by the Alzheimer Society of Ireland last September to the post of dementia adviser, one of seven around the country. She will visit people in their homes to offer information and support when someone has been diagnosed with dementia. She can also give advice to anyone who calls to her office at the renovated Workhouse building in Carrickmacross.

The service, which is free and confidential, provides information tailored to individual needs, as well as emotional support. Maeve works with people of any age who have been diagnosed, or who are awaiting a diagnosis of dementia, as well as family members. As well as contacting her directly, people are sometimes referred to her by a health care professional such as a GP or public health nurse.

Maeve Montgomery, Dementia Adviser, Alzheimer Society, at Carrickmacross Wokhouse  Photo: © Michael Fisher

Maeve Montgomery, Dementia Adviser, Alzheimer Society, at Carrickmacross Workhouse Photo: © Michael Fisher

Speaking to the Northern Standard about her role, Maeve said it was important to reach people with dementia as early as possible. She feels there is a need for more back-up services, especially in rural areas like Monaghan. This will require more funding, which comes mainly from voluntary sources, as well as the HSE. She has high praise for the team of volunteers that raise funds locally, including an Alzheimer’s group in Carrickmacross chaired by Mae Murphy. They run a day care centre at Cloughvalley every Thursday.

Dementia and Alzheimer’s are used almost interchangeably by the lay person, possibly because Alzheimer’s is the most common form of dementia. There is also vascular dementia, arising from a stroke; Lewybody dementia (degeneration of brain tissue) and fronto-temporal dementia, affecting personality and behaviour.

Whilst they share similarities such as short-term memory loss, inability to carry out routine tasks, occasionally wandering, or repetition of questions, Maeve attempts to take every case on its own merits, as everyone is an individual. She hopes her service can help to give someone the best possible quality of life in the early stages of dementia. Her approach is to look at what people can do, rather than what they cannot do.

Dementia Card  Photo:  © Michael Fisher

Dementia Card Photo: © Michael Fisher

She can provide information about the condition and how to cope with the changes; how to live well on a day-to-day basis; how to plan for the future, including legal and financial matters; driving; services and supports available locally such as the Drumkill day centre at Threemilehouse; and how to get in touch with other people with dementia and their families.

Maeve said that where it is safe to do so, the emphasis should be on the affected person staying at home, if that is their choice, and enabling them to live independently and to live well, if the dementia is at an early stage. Smart technology can be used for devices that might help in a home, such as mats that detect movement or beams that set off alarms.

She says that grandchildren can play a useful role in helping a family member with dementia by asking them to reminisce about the way things were twenty or thirty years ago. Those long-term memories are often sharper whereas what happened yesterday can be a blur for someone with the condition. It can be a good idea to develop a life story, in which grandparents can get great joy from looking back at traditions associated with events such as Easter, Christmas or Halloween.

Maeve Montgomery, Alzheimer Society, with dementia card at Carrickmacross Wokhouse  Photo: © Michael Fisher

Maeve Montgomery, Alzheimer Society, with dementia card at Carrickmacross Workhouse Photo: © Michael Fisher

The Alzheimer Society estimate that 48,000 individuals in Ireland are living with dementia. For every person diagnosed they believe that, on average, three family members are directly affected. With an ageing population and no cure on the horizon, it’s only going to get worse. We are just not getting to them early enough,” Maeve says. “The hope is that we will get to people earlier. The sooner I can get to them the better for them, because there are very good services, but by the time they get into the services they’ve struggled maybe for years, with nobody. Maybe a person who has battled on with the knowledge that their memory is slipping, or that they are not able to carry out the same daily activities as effectively as they were; maybe their family have noticed it, which is quite common”.

Anyone concerned about their own memory loss, or that of a family member can contact Maeve, even before a diagnosis of dementia has been made. In practice however, most contact with Maeve is made post-diagnosis, often when the disease is at quite an advanced stage. This has been her experience in her previous role as ASI home care coordinator for County Louth, based in Dundalk.

“Quite often by the time someone was referred to me, they were on their knees. They had gone through quite a journey before they had got to us. If we’d only got to them a bit earlier maybe we could have made that journey a little bit easier”.

Of course a dreadful milestone in that journey is the diagnosis. “You walk out, and you are sitting in the car park, you’re reeling. It’s like getting the diagnosis of any serious condition, you are reeling. So anything that the specialist may have said to you might have come in one ear and out the other, because once you hear the word – do you go into a fog? Not everybody, but some people come out and they are so shocked that their worst fears have been realised. They maybe feeling quite bleak. They might be in a very deep dark hole as they sit there. They need someone to talk to at that point. So the idea of the adviser role is that we get in more quickly and we give them someone to support and talk to”.

Maeve Montgomery, Dementia Adviser, Alzheimer Society, at Carrickmacross Workhouse  Photo: © Michael Fisher

Maeve Montgomery, Dementia Adviser, Alzheimer Society, at Carrickmacross Workhouse Photo: © Michael Fisher

Maeve says the Association’s aim is to help people live well with dementia. In helping a loved one maximise their quality of life, communication is key. “Always, tell them what you are doing. It doesn’t matter what stage they are at, always explain what you are doing and then it might be easier, because you don’t know what someone can understand if they can’t express themselves, so always assume they can understand what you are saying.” She also encourages families to include the dementia sufferer in the lifeblood of the home, conversation.

“It would be very easy not to do that, because they are not actively contributing to the conversation. But if you turn to someone with dementia and include them, even by looking at them, your body language, all of that – they feel included and it makes them feel better.”

Regardless of their ability to speak, communication in at least some form is usually possible, as Maeve notes that merely 30% of communication is verbal. “The rest is gestures, eye contact, body language – all of that. People with dementia can lose words, they can lose speech, their ability to string sentences together, but they can still communicate and we have to adapt to learning how to read what they are saying,” she explains. Even if a person uses the wrong word for an item, as far as Maeve is concerned that should now be the new, accepted word for the item. However families can struggle with this notion. “You can understand that, there is an awful lot of emotion involved in the caring for someone. We are trying to say: ‘We’ll go with that’.” Going with that includes encouraging the person with dementia to continue to be active. As they lose the ability to carry out simple tasks, Maeve suggests that the carers focus on the tasks the person can still do, or attempt to do, rather than zero in on what they can’t.

Maeve Montgomery, Dementia Adviser, Alzheimer Society, at Carrickmacross Workhouse  Photo: © Michael Fisher

Maeve Montgomery, Dementia Adviser, Alzheimer Society, at Carrickmacross Workhouse Photo: © Michael Fisher

People with dementia can be prone to depression as they watch their abilities diminish over time. Thus it is all the more important to be supportive and accentuate the positive – even if they can no longer complete simple household tasks perfectly. “They might be able to complete it imperfectly, and that’s okay. And it’s okay if they lose interest because their attention span isn’t as good. So even if they can do it for a little while and then leave it, that’s okay too.” In other words: go with it.

Many people diagnosed with early-stage dementia start to cut themselves off from their communities because they are embarrassed about forgetting people’s names. Maeve says they advise people to maintain their social life and suggest ways around situations, such as by saying something like “my memory isn’t what it used to be. Please tell me your name.” It’s not such a big mistake to forget someone’s name.

Similarly, friends can stop calling to see someone who has been diagnosed with dementia. This can be very isolating for the person and their carer. It’s very important for friends and family members to continue to call to see someone with dementia, as it gives both the carer and the person a break in the day.

Sometimes, people perk up when someone calls to see them even if they don’t seem to recognise the visitor. People with dementia can have an emotional memory of someone and not be able to articulate this.

Sometimes, familiar people are mixed up so a daughter can be confused with a sister, or a son with a brother. This can seem very strange to the person visiting, but often the associations are pleasant, so their spirits are lifted by seeing the person.

People also sometimes think that people with dementia are automatically aggressive. This isn’t the case, but there is often a reason for the grumpiness. Sometimes, giving the person clues about why they aren’t comfortable can help. For example, ask if they would like to go somewhere quieter, or whether they have a pain or feel uncomfortable in the seat.

Listening carefully and being patient are the most important things to remember when spending time with someone with dementia. Caring for those with dementia can be very stressful, so having someone new come into the house can be a relief. However, it can also be annoying if someone says how well the person is, if the carer has been dealing with lots of difficult situations in the past few days. It’s very important to look after the carers of people with dementia. alzheimers-society-of-ireland

Maeve says she finds it very rewarding to visit people in their homes. Our mission in the Alzheimer Society of Ireland is to enable people with dementia to be as independent as possible for as long as they can. It’s impossible to put a timeframe on how long someone will remain well with dementia. There is a lot of love and kindness and gentleness involved in talking to people with dementia. When you reminisce with them, you are learning about social history and giving them so much pleasure at the same time. We also visit people with early-onset dementia. It can be difficult for families to accept a diagnosis of dementia for someone under 65.

The development of Alzheimer cafes gives people the opportunity to socialise with their loved ones in an environment where people understand their needs. More information about support services can be found at: www.alzheimer.ie and Maeve Montgomery can be contacted on (087) 7489258.

THE PHOTOGRAPHS

The three pictures that were used to illustrate this article (in the paper) were taken by Ardee-based photographer Ken Finegan, from a series entitled ‘Club Life’ . Taken in 2012, they depict club members of the Birches Alzheimers Day Care Centre in Dundalk. Some of the pictures have been presented to Dundalk Institute of Technology.

“Club Life” is a highly personal yet objective photographic study of Alzheimer’s disease and dementia. It questions, searches for knowledge, informs, is a possible insight not only of the person affected and the disease but an insight or understanding of oneself, one’s essence.

Ken explained, “The images reflect the difficulties individuals and others face during their day to day lives, like short term memory loss, confusion and frustration. But they also reflect the care and consideration of the person.”

‘Club Life’ refers to the people at The Birches and the life they lead, but also to our own lives. Ken says that in creating the images he sought to portray the sense of ‘personhood’ of those who attend the centre.

Ken is a professional photographer working in the North East of Ireland for over 28 years. He covers all areas of photography and has a Masters Degree in Fine Art (MFA) from the University of Ulster.

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MONAGHAN NEWS UNCATEGORISED 'Club Life'Alzheimer Society IrelandCarrickmacrossDementiaDundalkKen FineganMaeve Montgomery Leave a comment

A DAY WITH HEATHER HUMPHREYS

12/03/2015 by borderroamer
Heather Humphreys TD at Blayney Blades celebration in Castleblayney  Photo: © Michael Fisher

Heather Humphreys TD at Blayney Blades celebration in Castleblayney Photo: © Michael Fisher

A BUSY SCHEDULE FOR HEATHER 

Michael Fisher

It’s a busy week for local Fine Gael T.D. and Minister for the Arts, Heritage and the Gaeltacht, Heather Humphreys. When this reporter met her in Castleblayney on Monday morning, she had been on the road since 8.30am, leaving her home in Aghabog to start work at her constituency office in Monaghan by 9am. Her first public engagement was at the Íontas Centre, where she was the guest speaker at an event organised by Blayney Blades to celebrate International Women’s Day. In her speech she mentioned how important an influence her mother Emily had been and how two of her secondary school teachers had encouraged her to enter politics. She stayed for two hours, networking with a large group of women and passing on the welcome news that funding a network of 17 women’s groups throughout the country had been secured. Instead of taking lunch at the Centre, the Minister stayed in Castleblayney to meet a constituent before returning to her office in Monaghan around 1:45pm. She just had time for a small snack from a nearby café before heading off to Beech Hill College in Monaghan, where a woodwork room had been refurbished and equipment upgraded with the aid of a grant. She took the opportunity to speak to the principal and teachers as well as some of the students. After an hour at the College she returned once again to the Mall Road office at 3:30pm to carry out constituency work for three hours. By 7pm she was back home, taking the opportunity to do some packing for an official trip she is making to England this week. She is flying to London on Wednesday night and will be the main guest at a number of functions over the St Patrick’s weekend. On Friday evening the Irish ambassador Dan Mulhall hosts a reception at the Irish embassy and there will be a formal dinner to attend on Saturday night. On Sunday the Minister will join fellow Monaghan native Barry McGuigan at the head of the St Patrick’s Day parade in the British capital.

Arts Minister Heather Humphreys TD at Magheracloone Fine Gael Branch AGM  Photo:  © Michael Fisher

Arts Minister Heather Humphreys TD at Magheracloone Fine Gael Branch AGM Photo: © Michael Fisher

The Minister’s third public engagement on Monday was at Magheracloone Community centre (near Carrickmacross), where she attended the AGM of the local Fine Gael branch. It was the first time in recent memory that a government Minister had been present. Over a welcome cup of tea at the end of the meeting, Heather Humphreys explained that the following day (Tuesday) her diary would be taken up with a Cabinet meeting in the afternoon and a meeting of the 1916 Commemoration committee (which is one of her responsibilities) that evening. Wednesday would see her answering questions in the Dáil.

Arts Minister Heather Humphreys TD at Blayney Blades congratulates their Woman of the Year 2015 Sr Catherine Brennan  Photo: © Michael Fisher

Arts Minister Heather Humphreys TD at Blayney Blades congratulates their Woman of the Year 2015 Sr Catherine Brennan Photo: © Michael Fisher

So after putting in a fourteen hour shift on Monday, it was time (10:30pm) for the Minister to return home. She told me she normally tried to keep Sundays free as a family day, a time she could enjoy with her husband Eric and their two daughters. She certainly has a busy schedule.

*******************************************

Tonight (Thursday) the Minister is in London, attending an Enterprise Ireland St Patrick’s Day reception at Trinity House (the body responsible for lighthouses). It is an opportunity to network with business people, many of them Irish, and to encourage investment in Ireland. This photo was posted on her twitter account @HHumphreysFG:

Arts Minister Heather Humphreys TD at Enterprise Ireland reception in London  Photo: @HHumphreysFG

Arts Minister Heather Humphreys TD at Enterprise Ireland reception in London Photo: @HHumphreysFG

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MONAGHAN NEWS POLITICS UNCATEGORISED Blayney BladesCastleblayneyFine GaelHeather Humphreys TDMagheraclooneMonaghan Leave a comment

BLAYNEY BLADES

11/03/2015 by borderroamer

image

Northern Standard Thursday 12th March 2015 p.35

Blayney Blades Celebrate 20 Years and International Women’s Day

By Michael Fisher

The spirit of the late Sr Celine McArdle was very much present as the Blayney Blades women’s group in Castleblayney celebrated their twentieth anniversary and International Women’s Day with a special event at the Íontas Centre. No doubt she was smiling down on the assembled group of around sixty women, particularly when the Arts Minister, Heather Humphreys T.D., announced that funding to allow the continuation of the various courses and services had been secured. Olive Bolger, Co-ordinator at the centre, said she imagined Sr Celine, who had a love of nature and died in 2013 aged, appeared every now and then in the form of a robin. Or even perhaps a squirrel, as a poem written by Sr Celine and read by her friend Nan Duffy reminded the audience:-

THE SQUIRREL  By Sr Celine McArdle (1988)  

Today I saw a squirrel, a-skip from tree to tree,

Red nimble little body, tail bushy as could be.

He nibbled here; he nibbled there, and then sat upon his rump,

To examine his collection, then scamper a tree stump.

He hid behind the swelling, upon the oldest tree.

And somehow as I looked at him, he reminded me of me!

A-scurrying through the branches of each day’s busy tree.

Picking up the husks and shells of dreams that used to be,

Dreams of stored up treasure, thirty years from when

I gave my all in ’59 – what happened to it then??

Or is there wealth I cannot see, stored up by God above

The fruit of all my scurrying, transformed by His faithful love?

Today, just like the squirrel, I sit upon my rump

And gather up the nourishment I’ll be needing in the slump.

When days are dark and dreary and my soul’s as dry as dust,

When nothing seems to touch my heart, and my knees won’t bend with rust.

Then may I find the store house, in some crevice of life’s tree,

And know again the certainty of God’s love for squirrels and me.

Minister for the Arts, Heritage and the Gaeltacht, Heather Humphreys T.D., said there was no better place to mark International Women’s Day than at Blayney Blades. This day is all about empowerment and positive action and this year’s theme is ‘make it happen’, she said.

The Minister said she had taken part in a Fine Gael event last week to acknowledge women who ‘make it happen’ in their local area. She went on: “We all know inspirational women in our own walks of life. I have no doubt that you could all easily name a woman who has inspired you, who has encouraged and supported you to become who you are today. This room is full of inspirational women. Women who are making it happen for other women in Castleblayney”.

She said the Blades had been making it happen for the last two decades. Since the group was set up in 1995, it had been empowering, encouraging and enabling women and their families in the Castleblayney area, so that they could realise their full potential and play an active role in this community.

The Minister described the range of services provided by Blayney Blades as very impressive; from education and training, counselling, support initiatives for young people and targeted programmes for new communities in this area. “I take my hat off to you”, she said.

Referring to the difficulties over grant aid in previous years, which made it difficult at times to keep the group going, she said she was very pleased to announce that concerns relating to the funding for the National Collective of Community Based Women’s Networks, of which Blayney Blades is a member, had been addressed.

Funding will now be provided by the Department of Justice, safeguarding the future of Blayney Blades and the Dochas Drop-in Centre for Women in Monaghan, and fifteen other projects across the country. The Minister said she had huge respect and appreciation for the work of the NCCWN, particularly the support the network provided to disadvantaged women, so she was very glad that the funding issue had been resolved.

She told the group that the work of Blayney Blades and NCCWN could be summed up in one word: empowerment. A big word, but it could also be a series of small things. A helping hand; a word of encouragement; or a nudge in the right direction. She said that step by step, week upon week and year after year, the Blades had been empowering women and helping them to make a difference in their own lives and in other people’s lives since 1995. You have been making this a better community, she added.

The Minister said her mother Emily had been a great inspiration for her. On the family farm at Drum there was no job a woman could not do. She had taught me from an early age how to drive a tractor and to milk the cows, she said.

She also spoke about the very important influence that two women had on her during her formative years. Both were teachers at St Aidan’s comprehensive school in Cootehill. One was Geraldine O’Brien, her economics teacher, who encouraged students to stand up for what they believed in. The other was Joan Hannon, who taught English and debating. She encouraged students to get out there and make their point known. Both women had sown the seeds for her to enter politics, she said.

Referring to the overall picture, Minister Humphreys said women had made great strides in Irish public life over the last two years. She herself was proud to be one four women sitting around the Cabinet table. Women occupied the roles of Tanaiste, Garda Commissioner, Chief Justice, Arrorney General, Minister for Justice, Education Minister and…of course….Minister for Arts, Heritage and the Gaeltacht! But we still have barriers to break down, she said.

“You will be aware that next year, we will be celebrating the 100th anniversary of the proclamation of this republic. I am leading the Government’s plans for Ireland 2016 – which will commemorate the 1916 Rising – the event which led to the foundation of this State.  I want the role of women in the Rising to be fully recognised.

The Proclamation was a visionary document which specifically mentioned the men AND women of Ireland, at a time when women didn’t even have the vote. Women like Constance Markievicz were complete trail blazers. I want us to recognise these women, to remember the bravery of Cumann na mBan, but also to ask ourselves how, in the following 100 years, women were forced into the background. In some cases, they were written out of history”, she said.

She went on: “We now have a situation where we have to introduce gender quotas to increase the number of women in politics. I hope you will join me as we remember the men AND women who brought about the foundation of this State. After all, a true Republic is a country that values all of its citizens equally”. The Minister concluded by wishing everyone involved in the group all the very best for the next twenty years.

Afterwards in a question and answer session, the Minister spoke about the need for the gender quota and said it was very important that women should be at the decision-making table in government. She believed women needed to get involved in politics and she urged some of them to come forward so they could highlight what needed to be changed.

Last year the Blayney Blades along with other women’s community development groups began a campaign to have funding for their projects ring-fenced. Following the announcement by the Minister, they said they were delighted that the campaign had been successful. It would now give the NCCWN long-term core funding, thus offering continuity to projects. The Blades thanked all those who had supported their campaign and the local representatives who had supported them. They said it was very heartening and affirming to have the work of the NCCWN and Blayney Blades acknowledged and valued.

In her speech, Chairperson Noeline O’Neill said the occasion was tinged with sadness as Sr Celine McArdle was not present to celebrate with them. The Sister of Mercy had the foresight and vision to bring us to where we are today, she said. In the early days of the Blayney Blades, she remembered someone asking them if their group made razor blades! They had grown and developed over the years and she outlined the various stages achieved since the first meeting at the Parish Centre in Castleblayney on January 16th 2005. She outlined some of the courses hey had successfully run and now in 2015 they were about to embark on a new journey. She thanked the staff including the four support workers for their dedication despite the uncertainty over funding last year.

Co-ordinator Olive Bolger, a long-serving member of the group, said Sr Celine’s vision and dream for the group had at first seemed impossible to realise. They had made a trip to see some other centres in Cavan and Tipperary and then received a small bit of funding to initiate the project. She referred to the establishment of a community crèche, the first in the county, which had been set up in a house at Henry Street in Castleblayney. Then they realised other services were needed such as a homework club for older children. She explained how the concept of the Íontas Centre had emerged from its original plan as a small resource centre and how it had been established while Sr Celine was still in good health.

Olive then called on Rose Laverty from Dundalk to light candles in memory of Sr Celione and two former members of the Board of Management who had died, Carmel Redmond and Olivia Rice McCarron.

Development Worker Lorraine Cunningham said the past few months had been very trying because of the uncertainty over finance. She thanked the 43 TDs and Ministers who had attended their lobby at Leinster House a few months ago and had helped to save their funding. She praised Olive Bolger for dedicating her life to making the support group function effectively. The Blades had a very supportive Board of Management and unlike statutory agencies, the work they carried out did not stop at 5pm. She presented Olive with a piece of jewellery in recognition of her long service.

The guest speaker was a St Louis nun based in Dublin, Sr Catherine Brennan. She is a former teacher, who has run courses mainly for women’s groups in Inniskeen, Dundalk, Castleblayney and Dublin. She spoke about the inner journey people must make to understand themselves and the explore their potential. In changing ourselves, change happens all around us, she told the audience.

Following her talk, the Blayney Blades presented Sr Catherine with their award for Woman of the Year 2015. The citation said that Catherine was no stranger to Blayney Blades and had been one of the first tutors to work with the group. She trained in Ireland and England in Adult Education. She delivered the NUI Maynooth Certificate Course in Counselling, which some of our members received. Catherine delivered Personal Development courses, Ennegram, Myers Briggs and Parenting Programmes. Catherine was much more than a tutor. She became a great friend and supporter to all Blades and participants from all over the county and beyond. Catherine has a great love for the environment and encourages us all to become aware of the necessity to protect it. We have all benefitted from her expertise.

 

 

 

 

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MONAGHAN MUSIC POLITICS UNCATEGORISED Blayney BladesCastleblayneyHeather Humphreys TDInternational Women's DaySr Celine McArdle 1 Comment

FÉILE PATRICK BYRNE CARRICKMACROSS

10/03/2015 by borderroamer

DSC_1276~2This year’s Féile Patrick Byrne festival in Carrickmacross was launched by the Minister for the Arts, Heritage and the Gaeltacht, Heather Humphreys, T.D. It will take place from Wednesday 25th March to Sunday 29th March at various venues around the town.  The opening event on Wednesday 25th March is a free concert at St Finbarr’s Church with Zoë Conway and John McIntyre.

Goitse

                                  Goitse

Traditional music group Goitse will be in concert on Saturday 28th March at the Convent Hall in Carrickmacross as the headline act in this year’s Féile Patrick Byrne. Tickets are €10 and are available in advance from any committee member or from Birdy’s Newsagent in Carrickmacross. Alternatively, tickets will be available on the door.

The workshops this year will be led by Deirdre Granville on Harp, Áine McGeeney on Fiddle & Seán McElwain from Ballinode. Seán will be teaching music from the Whiteside and Bogue music manuscripts. Also this year Seán McCague from Scotstown will hold Irish language workshops aimed at Leaving Certificate students who want to brush up on their oral Irish before their exam in April.

Special guests this year will include Goitse, Zoë Conway & John McIntyre, Seán McElwain & Donál McCague. There will be a Sets Ceilí with Rise the Dust on Sunday in The Convent Hall. The Festival will kick off at 7.30pm on Wednesday 25th with a free recital by Zoë Conway & John McIntyre in St. Finbarr’s Church of Ireland church, Main Street, Carrickmacross. The recital will be followed by the first of the Féile session trails in nearby Markey’s; all musicians welcome.

Thursday night sees the return of the Féile Patrick Byrne Lecture. This year’s topic on ‘Local Folklore’ will be given by Seámus MacGabhain. The talk will be held in the Shirley Arms Hotel at 8pm and admission is free. Also on Thursday night, for the first time at the festival, there will be a singing session. This will be held in McNally’s Lounge, Main Street, at 8pm and will feature Patricia Flynn, Pádraigin Ni Uallacháin and Len Graham from County Armagh. So if you like to sing some traditional songs come along and join in; admission is free.

Friday night is Our Dear Dark Mountain Concert with Seán McElwain & Donál McCague and Carrickmacross CCÉ musicians. Seán and Donál will be performing re-discovered Monaghan music from the unpublished late 19th/early 20th century Whiteside and Bogue manuscripts. They will be supported by local musicians and The Élan Trio. The concert will take place in the Corduff/Raferagh Community Centre at 8.00pm and admission is €5.

We are delighted to have an Art Demonstration by Chris McMorrow on Saturday in the Market House followed by a master class in still life with Deirdre Shanny. For further information and to book, contact Kate Beagan on kate.beagan@gmail.com. There will also be an art and photographic exhibition in the Market House which will include art by Kate & photographs by local photographer Pat Byrne.

Also on Saturday the Music and Irish Language workshops will be held in the Carrickmacross Workhouse, registration at10am.
On Sunday there will be a Sean Nós Dance Workshop in the Convent Hall with tutor, Sharlene McCaffery. Music sessions will be held every night, venues include The Mountain Dew – Corduff, Markey’s, The Shirley Arms Hotel, John Joe Cunningham’s, McNally’s & The Valley Lodge. During the festival there will be a session trail throughout the town:
Wednesday 25th March
9:30pm – 11pm Traditional Session at Markey’s, Main Street.
Thursday 26th March
8pm – 11pm Singing Session at McNally’s, Main Street.
Friday 27th March –
10pm – 11:30pm Traditional Session at Cunningham’s Loft, Main Street, and The Mountain Dew, Corduff/Raferagh Community Centre, Corduff.
Saturday 28th March
10pm – 11:30pm Traditional Session at The Valley Lodge, O’Neill Street, Carrickmacross & Markey’s, Main Street.
Sunday 29th March
6:30pm – 8:30pm Family Session at The Shirley Arms Hotel, Main Street.
8pm – 10:30pm Traditional Session at McNally’s, Main Street.
For further information, to book tickets or a workshop please email patrickbyrnefestival@gmail.com or ring 087 2396665. You can also check http://www.carrickmacross.ie/feilepatrickbyrne for the programme of events.

DSC_1274~2

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FAREWELL LORD JIM

09/03/2015 by borderroamer
UUP leader James Molyneaux being filmed at a rally by RTÉ News cameraman John Coughlan. Looks like mid-1980s. Photo: Press Association/BBC website

UUP leader James Molyneaux being filmed at a rally by my former colleague RTÉ News cameraman John Coughlan. Judging by the camera, it looks like mid-1980s.  Photo: Press Association/BBC website

I was sorry to hear of the passing of the former Ulster Unionist Party leader (1979-85), Lord Molyneaux. He was always a very courteous man, willing to give interviews to RTÉ News to put across his party’s position. He never came across well on television, however, but that did not bother him much, I reckon. A few years before I retired (so that must be at least six years ago) a former reporter passed on a hint that Jim (as he was usually referred to) was on his last legs and that it might be time to prepare an obituary. Thankfully he remained with us for many more years and died at the age of 94.

Among the things that I remember about Lord Molyneaux are that he served during the Second World War in the Royal Air Force and was among a group of Allies that liberated  Belsen concentration camp in 1945. There is a very powerful description of this event in a documentary made by the BBC a few years ago. He was an Orangeman, who served for a time as Sovereign Grand Master of the Royal Black Preceptory (1971-95).   He was from Killead, beside Aldergrove in County Antrim. While his health allowed him, he used to join in the choir on Sundays at the local parish church beside the former RAF base. The BBC’s Mark Devenport has filed a very good obituary on their website.

James Molyneaux, M.P. at an Orange rally  Photo: Press Association/BBC website

James Molyneaux, M.P. at an Orange rally Photo: Press Association/BBC website

His political career spanned more than three decades. He joined the party in 1946 and went on to become one of its longest-serving leaders from 1979 to 1995. At the end of World War Two, he was among the first British troops to enter the newly liberated Belsen concentration camp in Germany. He was knighted in 1996 and was granted a life peerage in the 1997 Birthday Honours list, becoming Lord Molyneaux of Killead.

Ulster Unionist Party leader Mike Nesbitt said: “He brought a stability to the unionist party at a time when it was much needed. “Times were fraught, not just in terms of the exceptional level of barbaric terrorism that was being imposed upon the people of Northern Ireland, but this very difficult political situation where the then-prime minister Margaret Thatcher was persuaded to sign the Anglo-Irish Agreement with the government of the Republic of Ireland, which was incredibly destabilising for Northern Ireland.”

James Molyneaux held his party together in the face of a continued challenge from DUP leader Ian Paisley. He was MP for South Antrim from 1970 to 1983 and for Lagan Valley from 1983 to 1997. In 1979, he succeeded Harry West as UUP leader.

Lord Trimble, who succeeded Lord Molyneaux as Ulster Unionist leader in 1995, said: “He was one who did things quietly and consensually – there was plenty of discussion about the way in which things were evolving – there was a collective leadership and it was effective.”

Current DUP leader Peter Robinson said Lord Molyneaux was “first and foremost a committed unionist”.
“Through his service in the RAF in World War Two and 27 years as a member of parliament, he was marked by a quiet determination and diplomacy,” he said.
“Jim’s leadership encompassed many difficult years for unionism and his skills were key to ensuring that the Ulster Unionist Party held together when there were competing viewpoints about how to move forward.”

Former Prime Minister John Major described Lord Molyneaux as one of the “unsung heroes of the peace process”. Secretary of State for Northern Ireland, Theresa Villiers, paid tribute to his “fortitude, courage and unswerving commitment to democracy”. “It is right that we remember his distinguished years of public service, as a parliamentarian and leader of the Ulster Unionist Party,” she added. “In that role he helped to steer Northern Ireland through its darkest days from the 1970s to the 1990s and for that we should all be grateful.”

President Michael D Higgins said Lord Molyneaux became an “icon in the Unionist tradition” and would be missed by many “who were appreciative of a life devoted to public service and the world of politics”.  Sinn Féin president Gerry Adams said: “Famously, he described the 1994 IRA cessation as one of the most destabilising events for unionism and the Orange state since partition, and he campaigned against the Good Friday Agreement. “We had obvious and strong political differences, but this is a sad time for Mr Molyneaux’s family and friends and I wish to extend on my own behalf and that of Sinn Féin our condolences and sympathy to them.”

Ulster Unionist assembly member Danny Kennedy said: “He fought for our nation in war, and gave strong and determined leadership in the most difficult period of our country’s history. “He was highly regarded and respected as leader of our party, and his legacy remains in the values he represented and passed on.”
Former Ulster Unionist MP Lord Kilclooney said: “He was a quiet man of politics, but a very genuine gentleman who gave great leadership to the Ulster Unionist Party at a time when it was riven by division.”
Pat Ramsey of the SDLP paid tribute to Lord Molyneaux’s “distinguished career”. “For many years he was a household name and a key player in Northern Irish politics,” he told the Assembly.

Alliance Party leader David Ford said Lord Molyneaux’s experience at the liberation of Belsen “must have touched him enormously and gave him a commitment and drive for public service”. He told the Assembly: “He was the leader of his party for 16 years, something that few of us in this chamber can appreciate exactly how he managed to do this, and he certainly had an impact over some of the most turbulent years in this region as he carried through that role of leadership.”
TUV leader Jim Allister said: “He was a giant in our political scene who moved through it in that quiet, unassuming way that characterised him, and he was above all, a unionist through and through.”
Ulster Unionist Party chairman Lord Empey said: “Affectionately known to his senior colleagues as ‘the wee man’, Jim Molyneaux was never one to be carried away by the high offices he held over the years.
“Whether as a long serving member of parliament, as party leader or as a member of the House of Lords, Jim was always a no-frills politician.”

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CARRICKMACROSS ST PATRICK’S DAY

08/03/2015 by borderroamer
Main Street Carrickmaross Painting Photo: © Kate Beagan

Main Street Carrickmaross Painting Photo: © Kate Beagan

The annual St Patrick’s Day parade will be held through the town on Tuesday 17th March beginning on the Dundalk Road at 3pm, and passing along Farney Street to Main Street, where there will be a reviewing stand. Comhaltas members will be playing traditional music on the bandstand at 2.30pm in advance of the parade.

There will be a prize of €100 for the best dressed shop window in the town.

If you require more information or wish to take part, you should contact Carrickmacross civic offices, telephone (042) 9661236 or email: carrickmacross@monaghancoco.ie.

Courthouse, Carrickmacross  Photo: © Michael Fisher

Courthouse, Carrickmacross Photo: © Michael Fisher

Earlier in the day, the tricolour will be raised outside the Courthouse at 11.15am, with music by the Stedfast Shoes Brass Band.

Looking for something to do afterwards?

Hudson’s funfair will be in operation in the car park at Drummond Etra from Sunday 15th March.

On St Patrick’s Day, Carrickmacross Baptist Church will be providing live traditional music, a professional artist and hot drinks, all free of charge.

Music starts at 4pm in the marque outside the SoSaD offices at Bridewell Lane. International artist Ross Wilson will give a contemporary presentation on St Patrick at 5:30pm. All funds raised will go to Save our Sons and Daughters.

St Finbarr's Church, Carrickmacross  Photo: © Michael Fisher

St Finbarr’s Church, Carrickmacross Photo: © Michael Fisher

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