One Flu Over? | Gearóid Ó Cairealláin - The Definitive Activist | Israeli Barbarity Knows No Boundaries.
ONE
FLU OVER?
I
have the flu. It’s a sign of my loyalty to you dear reader, that I write this
column in my sick bed. Bathed in sweat. I’ve changed my T shirt four times
since Saint Stephen’s Day. I ran out of paper hankies and turned to kitchen
roll for nose cleaning duties. The snatters are tripping me. I’ve changed my
sheets as well. Three times. Everyone else is away so I phoned
Richard.
‘I’ve
got the flu’ I told him. ‘This could be my last call to you’.
‘I
would be so lucky,’ he retorted. ‘Try a hot whisky’.
‘I
still haven’t done my weekly column.’ I told him.
‘You
have until Saturday,’ he consoled me. ‘By the way, be careful you don’t have
Covid’.
‘I
got my Covid injection,’ I replied.
‘And
your flu one also,’ he countered.
That
was true. Richard is usually the most helpful person I know but he has had a
few days off. He seems to have forgotten that we are friends. A friend in need
is a friend indeed and all that. Or maybe he was just being
contrary. I’ve noticed that a wee bit recently. So I
ended our less than helpful call and hobbled into the bathroom to do my own
Covid test.
A
Covid test is a rather complicated process. Especially for someone as sick as
me. But I persisted. Despite the challenging size of the very small print of
the instructions - not helped by my short sighted tear filled eyes
- I eventually completed the rigorous poking up my nostrils with the
cotton buddy thingymebob
Then
the other intricate manoeuvres before checking the outcome after fifteen
minutes. Meanwhile I coughed and spluttered and sneezed and sweated my way back
and forth to the bedroom. I had to keep reading the instructions to be sure
what was negative and what was positive. Until eventually I got the all
clear.
I
don’t have Covid.
And
I also don’t have a column. But I do have some deadly illness which has reduced
me to a shivering, shaking, sweating blob of barely sustainable flesh.
That’s when I remembered Richard’s suggestion of a hot whisky. The journey to
the kitchen was like my last descent from Errigal. Slow and panicky. Most hill
walking and mountain climbing accidents happen on the way down. Ditto with
stairs, I suppose. But the hot Jameson was worth it. It also got me out of bed.
And the second one kept me up so there is hope for the column being done on
time.
Good
old Richard. He knew what he was doing. So a happy new year to him and to all
of you. If I survive this affliction I will be for ever indebted to hot
whisky. And Richard. Sláinte. Hic. Bliain Úr Faoi Mhaise
Daoibhse.
Gearóid
Ó Cairealláin – the definitive activist
Lots
has already been written about Gearóid Ó Cairealláin who died a fortnight ago.
He was such a vital part of the Irish language community in west Belfast over
so many years, and as someone I knew and greatly respected him, I cannot allow
his passing to go without a wee personal tribute.
Like
many others I was shocked to hear of his death. His passing has left a deep
void in the life of his family and also of the Irish language community in west
Belfast and across the island of Ireland. Gearóid was an extraordinary human
being who embraced life to its fullest. He was a writer, a musician, an actor,
a playwright, a theatre director, a journalist and a visionary. He packed into
his time with us an amazing amount of astonishing activism, most notably in his
unrelenting promotion of the Irish language.
Gearóid
had a boundless energy which even the terrible stroke that almost killed him in
2006 and left him in a wheelchair, could not diminish. He was passionate about
the Irish language. His determination to champion equality and parity for the
Gaeilge and for gaeilgeoirí was widely recognised and applauded. He was part of
that small and valiant group of activists who took a stand for Irish language
and civil rights. Their list of accomplishments is long.
At
a time when the British colonial office - the NIO - and government departments,
were actively discriminating against Irish speakers and denying Bunscoil
Phobail Feirste, and the hundreds of children attending it, of any funding,
Gearóid refused to be intimidated and silenced. In 1981 he published Preas an
Phobail. This was followed several years later by the excellent daily Irish
language newspaper Lá. He used his platforms to take a stand against the
discriminatory policies of Belfast City Council highlighting the inequalities
that confronted gaeilgeoirí every day in Belfast City.
With
others Gearóid pioneered Coláiste Feirste, Aisling Ghéar and Cultúrlann Mac
Adams-Ó Fiaich and Raidió Fáilte and between 1995 and 1998 he was the President
of Conradh na Gaeilge. Gearóid was also an internationalist, especially in
solidarity with the Palestinians. In 2001 along with Eoin O’Neill he travelled
to South Africa and made a documentary for TG4 which included a meeting I had
with Nelson Mandela.
There
is a Belfast seanfhocal - ‘Ná hAbair é, Déan é' – Don’t talk about it –
do it, which in many ways reflects the very personal approach Gearóid brought
to his activism.
His
standing as a Cranntaca of the Irish language community is evident in the many
statements in praise of him following his unexpected death, including from An
tUachtarán Michael D Higgins.
I
want to extend my solidarity and condolences to his wife Bríd, and sons Ainle,
Cairbre, and Naoise, his mother Theresa and to Gearóid’s extended
family circle and many, many friends.
The
Mass in his honour in Saint Peters where he was baptised had mighty singers and
musicians, all of them outstanding -Gráinne Holland’s Caoineadh Na Tri Mhuíre
captured the mood - and Fr Brian O Fearraigh paid a wonderful tribute to
Gearóid. No doubt this continued in An Culturlann and will continue for as long
as Gearóid’s name is mentioned.
Israeli
barbarity knows no boundaries
We
begin the new year as we ended the old one in the Middle East. The Israeli
military - its ground forces, and air force - continue their expansionist war
in southern Lebanon, Syria, the west Bank, the Gaza Strip and in the Yemen. In
pursuit of its land grab Israeli soldiers last weekend forcibly invaded Kamal
Adwan Hospital in northern Gaza and gave the staff 15 minutes to leave. The
Israeli forces then stripped the doctors, nurses and other medical staff and
forced the semi naked medics and gravely injured patients out on to the cold
and rubble strewn streets. There were 350 people in the hospital,
including 180 medical workers and 75 wounded people. Many of the medics were
taken away by the Israeli forces their plight uncertain.
The
weather in Gaza is very cold. At least four babies have died from hypothermia
in recent days. Many hundreds of thousands of displaced families are now
surviving in makeshift tents with no heating, little food and no warm clothes
or blankets.
Last
week the United Nations agency for Palestinian refugees, UNWRA reported that a
Palestinian child is killed in Gaza every hour. UNWRA said: “They are
not just numbers; they are lives lost in a short time without any
justification. Those who survive endure the trauma of displacement, are
deprived of education and are left scavenging for food among the ruins of their
homes.”
At
the same time Israel continued its deliberate targeting of journalists killing
five who were travelling in a clearly marked press vehicle in central Gaza.
Their deaths bring to over 200 the number of journalists killed by Israel in
the last 15 months.
2024
is at an end but Israeli aggression in the Middle East and in particular its
genocidal policy in Gaza, is unlikely to end unless those western states which
back it – the USA, Britain, Germany, France and others within the EU – refuse
to send weapons and bombs and chose instead to impose sanctions.
Comments