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Ireland’s former president Mary McAleese named Burns Scholar at Boston College

McAleese will be the visiting Scholar in Irish Studies a the Boston univeristy


Ireland’s former president Mary McAleese named Burns Scholar at Boston College
Ireland’s former president Mary McAleese named Burns Scholar at Boston College
Photo by Irish Sun

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Mary McAleese, who as president of Ireland helped bring about an end to The Troubles” she had known during her youth in Northern Ireland, will come to Boston College this fall as the Burns Library Visiting Scholar in Irish Studies, the university announced today.

As Burns Scholar, McAleese — now studying for a doctoral degree in canon law at the Gregorian University in Rome — will teach a course and present public lectures during the fall semester while pursuing research in the Burns Library Irish Book and Manuscript Collection.

“Coming to Boston, using that wonderful Burns Library, talking with students and faculty members from a variety of disciplines, including my beloved Irish Studies,” said McAleese, “will be for me a seminal opportunity to enrich and deepen the insights I can bring to my own research and also hopefully to add a little to the insights of others.”

A Catholic from Belfast, McAleese became the first Northern Irish native to be elected Irish president when she took office in 1997, bringing with her memories of sectarian violence that forced her family to move out of North Belfast. Believing the tides of history were changing, McAleese proclaimed “Building Bridges” as the theme of her presidency and advocated for peace and reconciliation through regular trips to Northern Ireland and by hosting visitors from the North at her official residence.

Following the 1998 Good Friday Agreement that established new political structures for Northern Ireland and dealt with civil rights, policing and other controversial issues, McAleese continued to promote a new era of understanding and cooperation. She also broadened her “Building Bridges” vision to focus on economic inequality in an Ireland that, at the time, was experiencing tremendous growth through the so-called “Celtic Tiger.”

McAleese first visited Boston College in 1998 to formally open Connolly House — the headquarters for the University’s Irish programs — and meet with members and friends of the Irish Institute and the Irish Studies Program. She praised BC for its various initiatives to aid the peace process, including a program to assist members of the new Northern Ireland Assembly in preparing for their roles as leaders in government, and the economic development of Ireland and Northern Ireland.

"We know that you shared our joy when the historic agreement was made in Northern Ireland last Good Friday. You take pride, too, in our economic success and you foster strong business links between Ireland and Massachusetts," said McAleese at the event. "I want to offer our profound appreciation for that and our continued reliance on your support as we enter a new phase in Ireland, but one filled with hope."

McAleese was reelected to office in 2004, and in 2011 rang down the curtain on her presidency with a history-making event: She hosted Queen Elizabeth II, marking the first visit by a British monarch to the Irish Republic.


See more: Irish American , Irish in Boston
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This very popular former president of the Free State will be remembered by many in NYC's Irish community as the person who snubbed that community by refusing the honor of being the Grand Marshal of the 2011 St. Patrick's Day parade. I'm also reminded that the Dáil crowd boycotted our great parade in 1983 and 1985 because they disapproved of the Grand Marshals, Mike Flannery, a veteran of the Anglo-Irish War, and Peter King, a strong supported of the ationalists in the Six-County statelet.
 




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