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Irish calling their Diaspora home as times get tough - VIDEO

New effort to engage Irish Americans takes off says NY Times


Economist David McWilliams
Economist David McWilliams
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The New York Times is reporting on a promising new outreach effort to bring Irish descendants back home to Ireland .

‘Ireland Reaching Out’, a new organization created to link small towns in Ireland and the descendants of people who left them, some many generations ago, is off to a strong start.

“The project is based on a very simple idea: Instead of waiting for people of Irish heritage to trace their roots, we go the other way,”  founder, Galway man Mike Feerick told The Times.

Feerick’s first group, over 30 in all just completed a return to East Galway where their ancestors left from.

Cameo Wood who came on the trip works on Internet start ups in Silicon Valley and “didn’t even know she was Irish” until a few months ago. That was when she got a message from Feerick and his organization.

“We are trying to connect with members of the Ball family,” it read, identifying her great-great-great-grandparents, Patrick and Margaret, and the parish where they had been buried, Kilchreest. “Contact me for more information.”

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“I didn’t even know I was Irish until a few months ago,” she said. “My cousins wouldn’t believe me. We just thought we were random Americans.”

Wood had been on ancestry.com amongother sites seeking to trace her roots. While in Galway she found the grave of her ancestor.

 Feerick tapped local local historians and other experts to identify long gone relatives.

Sister Mary de Lourdes Fahy, was one of those contacted. .She searched 19th-century land surveys for the names of the families who had left. “I would go to the oldest lady in the locality, and I would show her the name, and she would say, ‘Oh, he went to Canada, he went to New Zealand, he went to America.”’

The success of the project has led to efforts to broaden it all over Ireland.

Some see it as about time the effort was made “The people who left Ireland were in some sense the best part of us,” said Stephen Kinsella, an economist at the University of Limerick. “They were the most dynamic, the most ambitious, the most willing to succeed, and we did not give them the conditions where they could succeed.”

Now the bad economy has made efforts to reconnect even more important.

Economist David McWilliams, a long time believer in the power of the Diaspora  is co- director of the project.

“The effects of the crisis are in midtown Manhattan, where you can see young Irish immigrants walking up and down the streets looking for work,”he says

“I want Ireland to start thinking of itself not as a physical place, but as a people,”Feerick now says.
Ireland Reaching Out is hoping to spread the effort to towns everywhere .

To contact Ireland reaching out visit Irelandxo.org.


Nster.com


25 Comments

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I was deeply touched when relatives of mine in Kerry contacted me to join a family tree project. And when my mother died, they sent condolences in Irish.It isn't just Galway.
GeorgeDillion: What exactly do you mean ‘illegally’ dissolved? Are you not aware that the Treaty was put to a democratic vote and the Pro-Treaty side won? Unfortunately, some Irish people didn’t accept the democratic process and a Civil War ensued, which caused the pointless deaths of many Irishmen and for what? Nothing, the Free State allowed the freedom to achieve the Republic. How much better things would have been had it not been for the foolishness of those who chose to ignore democracy and instead go to war against their fellow Irishmen. It was a tragedy which should never have happened.
Ancavker: Since the Outbreak of the Troubles the Irish Government used a variety of tactics in order to bring international opinion to bear on what was going on in Northern Ireland. That included using US pressure to force the British Government to reverse policy. When violence broke out in Derry in 1969 the Irish Taoiseach called for a United Nations peacekeeping force to be sent to Northern Ireland. In 1974 the Irish Government brought charges of torture against the British Government, and in 1976 it took the case to the European Court of Human Rights. If anyone would like to look at this area in detail, then they should read Dr. Eamonn O'Kane's 'The Republic of Ireland's Policy Towards Northern Ireland: The International Dimension as a Policy Tool'.
@CelticGypsy: I don’t know if there is anything necessarily wrong with ‘the picture’ as you put it. Irish citizenship is different to Irish ancestry. Considering you can trace your ancestry back to County Wexford 1169, one has to presume that your ancestors were originally part of the Norman invasion of Ireland, thus prior to that your ancestors were from Britain and Normandy in France; does that mean you should be entitled to British or French citizenship as well? The point I’m trying to make is where do we draw the line, where is the cut off point? I’m not against amending the requirements for citizenship, however I don’t think there is anything necessarily wrong with the current system either.
Ireland should have an outreach policy like Germany which welcomed home millions of ethnic Germans abroad and granted them citizenship. Ireland would benefit immensely from the witness that millions of her lost diaspora give to their Irish identity along with their industriousness. The Country should think beyond the box and put Irish citizenship on the table for those Irish abroad who can prove a tenable link to the land of their ancestors.
While I can trace my ancestry back to 1169 in County Wexford, because my Grandparents were born in the United States I am ineligible for Irish citizenship...what's wrong with this picture?
sunnyside: You mean he people of the north were trying to broker a peace. The south just came along for the ride, as most Irish in the south did not care. They were far too busy fancying themselves stylish Europeans,a nd criticizing the U.S. As far as Noraid, you are way way behind the times. That group has had no real existence in years.
I agree about the Irish Heritage paper.. it would mean that some pretty useless characters would be claiming heritage because the owned an Irish Wolfhound or they had slept with an Irish citizen at one time or another. Let those of us who have irish citizenship or those that are eligible claim there Irish citizenship certificates and be damned proud of our heritage.....!!!
That's a great idea
This article posted July 19th about Irish Welcomes that ran June 26-July 2nd. Appears to be only Galway, beautiful and enticing as it is, what about other counties?
Snowdrop, as you may notice from the above article, the banks have nothing to do with this initiative. It's solely a community based idea, and one which has long being campaigned for but ignored by previous governments. Despite what you may think there are Irish Diaspora in countries other than the USA, such as the UK where the Irish people have been reaching out to the Diaspora for many years and indeed helping many of the less fortunate emigrants..
Why now! Moola. US $$$. Bucks. Ireland's corruption and banks created the present Paper Tiger. Now, they seek to seduce money back into Ireland. Grant Irish Citizenship to proven great grandchildren, as was proposed. You think my 12 yr old g-g grandfather arrived in NYC parentless in 1847 by choice or starvation? Get rid of the meaningless Irish Hertiage Certificate idea; it's bogus toilet tissue. A feutal attempt by Ireland to build financial coffers! Give proven descendants citizenship, period. Then, we may return to the beautiful lilting land of our forebears, buy homes and build businesses.
One of the reason's you never saw the invite during the Celtic Tiger greensod, is because at a time when the people of Ireland were trying to broker peace on the island, the last thing they wanted was people like GeorgeDillion, below, arriving on their shores spewing the sort of pathetic bile he has here. It suited both sides if he stayed away and kept filing the Noraid boxes in Manhattan bar’s and spewed his garbage there.
Never saw this invite when the Celtic Tiger was flying high.Where is the vote for the Irish that left for what ever reason.The snobs and Government did not wnat to know or hear from those who left.Why now, I wonder.
@sirpeter: Looking for help from someone else is an admission of defeat. The only corrupt people in Ireland are the rich.




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