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Gaeltachts deeply effected by Irish recession

Numbers of children visiting the Gaeltacht is down by 30 percent



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The Gaeltacht summer school around Ireland have long been a rite of passage for Irish teenagers, three weeks away without their parents. However, the restrictions being felt by the Irish public mean that this year numbers are down by 30 percent.
 
Gaeltacht, summer schools, generate $65 million for these areas in rural Ireland where Irish is still the lingua franca. Irish teenagers travel to the Gaeltachts, stay with a local family and speak only Irish for three weeks.
 
However the decrease in numbers this year represents a loss of $19.5 million for some of the most disadvantaged areas in the Ireland.
 
The cost of sending a teenager to the Gaeltacht isn’t cheap (over $1,000, before spending money) and as unemployment is at an all time high the prices are just too much of average Irish families.
 
Around the country in Kerry, Connemara and Donegal numbers are down and the mná tí (women of the houses) are left with empty bedrooms.
 
Cathaoirleach Gearoid O Brosnachain, from Concos, a federation of 47 Irish colleges said that they are very worried. He said “There is such a degree of uncertainty in relation to jobs and money and in terms of mortgage arrears. It's not surprising that the number of children attending Irish colleges this year is well down.
 
“Last year, about 28,000 youngsters attended Irish colleges and we will be under pressure to reach 21,000 this summer.”
 
Frank Feighan, Fine Gael’s spokesperson for Gaeltacht affairs, has been criticized because of his limited Irish skills. An online petition is being circulated and will be sent to Enda Kenny. One comment on the petition said “It's the principle. I presume that the email is correct and he hasn't got a working knowledge of the language.
 
“How is he going to read reports about what is happening in the Gaeltacht?”


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I spent the ritual 3 weeks in the Gaeltacht of Connemara as a teenager, really enjoyed it. I even won a competition for story-telling; the prize was cash, which I was rapidly running out of in the last week and put a huge effort into memorising the story in Irish to win it. Whew! On Frank Feighan as Gaeltacht spokesperson, yes FG is mad to appoint him without a working knowledge of it. Irish as it's spoken has even changed so much since I was speaking it fluently in school. I can barely understand the Irish in our newspapers and on TV these days. Irish as it was spoken 150 yrs ago still survives in Newfoundland, where many off the Great Famine ships settled.
George below is quite right and his suggestion of Gaeltacht schools for non-Irish people is a good one. I know many foreigners are interested in learning the language - Chinese, Brazilians, Irish-Americas and even Africans. A point I'll add to George's - a majority of native Irish don't give a damn about their ancient language either. But it's ours and we should treasure it.
Ms Hayes needs an English spelling lesson. It's "AFFECTED" not "effected". Leaving that aside, I think the Irish government is missing out on an important source of tourism. There are folks all over the world learning gaelic. Why doesn't the Irish government set up schemes for them to go live in the Gaeltacht for a few weeks, an adult version of the teenage experience? There could be a system of prizes, scholarships etc. to help people go live for a little while in the ever dwindling Gaelic-speaking areas. This could be the last generation when that will be possible. Alternatively, the Irish government should set up a scheme for all those foreign immigrants in Ireland to go learn some Gaelic. It's really shameful to see how little interest the migrants have in Irish. 99% of the settlers don't give a damn about the language and culture of the country they are settling.
 




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