Showing posts with label dlrcoco. Show all posts
Showing posts with label dlrcoco. Show all posts

Friday, June 27, 2014

Ballybrack went to War


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Ken Kinsella wrote a book called Out of the Dark in which he presented the results of his extensive research into the South Dublin casualties at the front in WWI.


Marie Baker, Cathaoirleach, Tim Carey, Heritage Officer,
and Myles Dungan, Guest Speaker

When it came time to launch the book, his publisher, Conor Graham, MD of Irish Academic Press, approached Tim Carey, the Dún Laoghaire Rathdown Heritage Officer, about a launch in the County (formerly Town) Hall. Tim told him that the Council were putting on a WWI exhibition at a later time which would be dealing with this theme also. So they agreed to combine the two events and last evening's launch was simultaneously of the book and the exhibition.


Marie Baker, Cathaoirleach
Dún Laoghaire Rathdown Co. Council

Marie has become Cathaoirleach of the Council after the recent local elections and she takes over from Carrie Smyth whom we met at another local occasion recently. While new to this session she is not new to the job having previously been Cathaoirleach in 2009-2010.



Capacity audience

She welcomed the capacity audience on behalf of the Council and introduced both the exhibition and the book. She recalled that those WWI participants who had been cast aside in the past were now being brought to the fore.


Tim Carey, Heritage Officer
Dún Laoghaire Rathdown Co. Council

Tim, still in jet-lag from the previous day's flight home from the USA and partly exhausted from setting out the chairs in this vast hall, filled us in on the background to the exhibition and its linking up with the book. Tim has been a very active promoter of heritage in the DLR area over the last number of years and it is good to see much of his hard work coming to fruition.


Conor Graham
Managing Director, Irish Academic Press

Conor's company have made a huge contribution to academic publishing over the years. Conor himself was educated in a hard school, but that's another story.

He thanked Ken Kinsella for providing him with a wonderful book to publish and he was very complimentary about how Ken handled his relationship with his publisher. He also thanked the Council for the opportunity to participate in the launching of this great exhibition



Marie Baker, Myles Dungan, Ken Kinsella

While Conor is speaking, Marie is listening attentively, Myles is doing a final check on his notes, while Ken, as the next speaker, is reaching deep into his inside pocket for his own script.


Ken Kinsella, Author

Ken outlines the labours of 13 years intensive research and contacts. You only have to read the acknowledgement pages in the book to see how widely his net had been cast. He is particularly concerned to humanise and localise the experience of those locals who fell in WWI and to set them in the context of their times and their families.

The book falls into two broad divisions. The first 23 pages form a series of mini chapters setting out the background and to some extent condensing the experience of the participants. The next 270 pages set out brief histories and/or descriptions of the geographical areas covered, each followed by a roll of honour which sets out details of those who fell, their family background and so on.

I understand, from reading Major-General David Nial Creagh's foreword to the book, that it concentrates on families who were, or became known, to the author. So, while it is not comprehensive it is representative of a wide range of the experiences of those from South County Dublin who were involved, one way or another, in WWI.


Myles Dungan, Guest Speaker

Myles praises both book and exhibition for continuing the process of bringing these soldiers down from the attic. He recounted his own experience of finding out how little he knew of the country's WWI heritage when confronted with the probing questions of two of the countries great historians, F X Martin and Kevin B Nowlan, in the course of applying for a scholarship to UCD's history department.


Ken Kinsella and Marie Baker

I snuk this picture from behind the shoulders of the official photographer so I am not sure if it's Marie trying to inveigle Ken into attending some more of the Council's heritage programme over the summer, or, whether that was supposed to be the book rather than the heritage programme. To be fair, though, the first item in the programme is the WWI commemoration. The programme also includes Martello Tower No.7 in Killiney, which will be open with guided tours each Tuesday and Thursday afternoon over the summer season.


Dr. T. K. Whitaker, former Secretary Department of Finance,
former Governor Central Bank

All of this was eclipsed for me by the opportunity to meet Dr. T. K. Whitaker ("one t") and have a chat. When I went into the Department of Finance, he was what is now called the Secretary General, or otherwise my boss's boss's boss's boss. However, he was also chairman of the National Industrial Economic Council (NIEC) and I was on the secretariat of the Council, so I got (slightly) closer to him then than our respective grades might imply.

I reminded him that, at that time, himself and Professor Louden Ryan were, in effect, running the country, and that memory seemed to cheer him up enormously. They were a lean and hungry team, those two Northerners, when they got together.

I am aware that the Ballybrack and Killiney UDC made no small contribution in manpower to the war effort. By October 1915 some 60 men had joined up. I think there is a plaque in St. Matthias's church to 14 or so from Ballybrack who died. I assume there would be further Catholic names to add to that list, but, as we all know, it was not the Catholic thing to recognise this particular sacrifice at that time. In addition to which, strictly speaking, I was not allowed to enter this Protestant church on pain of mortal sin. Enough to be accepting the delivery of milk from a Protestant dairy in them days.

Some of the Ballybrack casualties are shown below, as listed in the exhibition's roll of honour.


When we came to Ballybrack in 1954, Alec Horner had a cab business at this address. My mother availed of it from time to time and knew Alec well.



I have drawn attention to this address before.



Madden's cottages on Madden's lane between Daleview and the Wyatville Road.


Born in Ballybrack, resident in Loughlinstown. Not really as far away as it seems. Ballybrack, Killiney and Loughlinstown villages were inhabited by a lot of the same families. I remember my mother telling me that if I was on shop duty and a local came in to complain about someone from Killiney or Loughlinstown, to listen and say nothing, as complainer and complained were quite likely cousins at least.


For some, it appears that Ballybrack itself is enough of an address. When we arrived in 1954, everyone knew everyone else, not to mention what they might have known about each other.


I started with the book cover and I'll finish with it.

A South African nurse places a wreath on her brothers grave at Delville Wood in February 1918. My uncle died at the adjacent High Wood in September 1916 when they were going the other way. The curse of the Somme on Haig and his bloody useless tanks.

Friday, October 18, 2013

White, Male, Catholic


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The title of this post describes my class in school, primary through secondary: white, male and Roman Catholic.

Not much cultural diversity there. Home life was, of course, a bit more varied. We had many Protestant heretics in our street and even one Jewman in the slightly posher houses on the bank of the river. But that was it.

No black babies, except for the little head-nodding fellow on the top of the donation box, and no foreigners. None.

So my first hand knowledge of Development and Intercultural Education (DICE) is nil. Mind you, I have a slight second hand knowledge via the next generation. My son's teacher in primary school threw a freaker when the son suggested that Jesus might have looked like a native of the Middle East. NO, NO, NO, he was WHITE. And this in front of the young Indian lad sitting next to the son.

However, fortunately, times appear to have changed, and I gather that my colourful stories are now the material of history.

But there is still a way to go. Schools today are faced with problems which would have been inconceivable in my time (come in No.2, your time's up!). They have to cope with multiple immigrant nationalities, cultures and languages. Some are coping well but others are just not equipped for the onslaught, the more particularly so at a time of diminishing resources.


So Thérese (above) and Aoife (below) thought it would be a good idea to condense best practice into a set of (very loose) guidelines for schools and colleges, particularly when it came to organising intercultural events.

The booklet was launched in Dún Laoghaire-Rathdown County (I nearly said Town) Hall last evening (17/10/2013). In introducing it, Thérèse outlined the background to its production, including the research and consultation, and she stressed that ideally an intercultural event should not be an end in itself but only the tip of the iceberg of ongoing cultural integration in the schools. Everyone needed to be constantly involved, children, parents, teachers and the whole school ethos.

The aim was not integration in the sense of uniformity, but positive acceptance of difference, the avoidance of negative discrimination and racism, and everybody pulling together to educate and develop the children in the richness of diversity and mutual respect.


Her co-author, Aoife, took us through the contents of the booklet, which is beautifully produced and clearly shows the amount of thought and effort which has gone into it. It is full of interesting thoughts which would certainly not have occurred to the likes of me, and the general feeling was that the two checklists, in particular, added to its usefulness as a guide.


The Immigrant Council of Ireland has a programme called Ambassadors for Change. The idea is that some immigrants, who have made a success of their life here, are trained up to go into secondary schools to mentor students and give them positive role models.

Two such ambassadors recounted their experience at the launch. Dovile Vildaite recounted her work with Lithuanian immigrants and Waseem Yousaf emphasised his Iranian/Pakistani background and childhood in Abu Dhabi and how he was now well integrated into Irish society.


The partner organisations involved in producing the booklet were: The DICE Project; Froebel College of Education; and Dún Laoghaire-Rathdown County Council's Social Inclusion Unit.

Councillor Niamh Bhreathnach (above) formally launched the booklet and she was an ideal choice. She is a native of the county and a Froebel graduate. She has been a teacher, Minister for Education, and Lord Mayor of Dún Laoghaire-Rathdown.

She is clearly very engaged with this whole area and made some very interesting references to practice abroad. She had visited Canada where she felt that integration was weak and the different communities more or less simply did their own thing. In the USA she found that it was simply a question of the lowest common denominator.

So, no wonder she was enthused by the approach being put forward here. Drawing on her background as the grand-daughter of the last weaver in the Liberties, she said she saw society as a tapestry with each thread and weave making its own contribution to the whole and not being lost in some mushy stew. The "mushy stew" image is mine, not hers. I'm sure she had a more elegant term but I don't remember it.


I managed to get Thérèse and Niamh to pose with the booklet.


And this is some of the team. Most you know by now.




Camila Portela Byrne, a student teacher in St. Pats, Drumcondra, shows off her artwork on the booklet's back cover.


And there would be no point in a launch to an empty concourse, so you can check out some of the audience above.


One of the two very useful checklists in the booklet.


And finally, the intercultural jigsaw . This is an image which has been used by DICE before and it is both telling and subtle. You can think about it yourself.

Neither of the missing pieces will fit into the whole as presented.

Neat.

We are all in this together.