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Quinnipiac’s Dr John Lahey’s historic famine tribute

Quinnipiac's president dedicated to preservation of Irish history


Quinnipiac University President John. L. Lahey in the Lender Family Special Collection room.
Quinnipiac University President John. L. Lahey in the Lender Family Special Collection room.
Photo by Gale Zucker

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There is a profound moment in Tom Murphy’s play Famine where John Connor, the Irish tenant farmer, pulls up the potato stalk by the root to see if the blight is back.
 
It is 1846, after a bad blight the year before there is hope that the humble potato, the only staple food of his country, will be back to normal.
 
Instead he pulls up a rotting plant and the awful truth dawns. He spreads his hand wide in a crucifixion moment. He knows he and all his people in the little village of Glanconnor are doomed.
 
It was a recreation of a moment when Ireland changed forever, and so did America. By the early summer of 1846 the Irish had hung on to the bitter end after a bleak 1845 hoping against hope that the crop would come good.
 
It was not to be. What lay ahead was 1846 and then Black ’47, the worst year of the Famine which would send a million to their graves and a million to the coffin ships. Ireland and America would never be the same again.
 
Thanks to Quinnipiac University in Hamden, Connecticut and its visionary president Dr. John Lahey, New York audiences recently enjoyed Druid Murphy, three plays created by Murphy and directed by the Tony Award winner Garry Hynes at Lincoln Center.
 
I saw Famine last Thursday night and it was an incredible theater experience.
 
Lahey, a former New York City St. Patrick’s Day parade grand marshal, is a college president who deeply treasures his own Irish heritage and understands the massive importance of entwined Irish and American history.
 
In September, Quinnipiac will open its new Great Hunger Museum in Hamden, making it the first museum in America dedicated to the Irish Famine.
 
That will be a magnificent accomplishment by Lahey, one that will create a permanent structure and monument to the most significant event in Irish history and, arguably, one of the most significant in the life of America as well.
 
Murphy’s play, written in 1968, takes the audience through the terrible famine times, the blight, the British indifference, the evictions, the forced migration and the starvation.
 
But there was a place called America where the descendants of such men and women, and their cousins who followed after, would remember those who died so horribly.  Lahey is among those.
His ancestral town of Camp in Kerry was ravaged by the Famine.
 
He has spoken up for generations of Irish who never had a voice, and by creating a Great Hunger Museum has ensured that future generations will remember that too.
 
From a great tragedy generations later comes a wonderful reminder in the Great Hunger museum why we will never forget.


Nster.com


4 Comments

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The truth will be exposed some day.
What is Quinnipiac's purpose, and yours, if not to cover up a genocide? The playwright you so effusively praise is clueless about a core fact of potato cultivation. To see if a potato crop has been hit by blight nobody pulls up stalks. Blight hits before the potatoes begin to form on root nodules. Blighted stalks die before potatoes have formed. It first appears on the underside of the leaves and the sides of the stalk stems and spreads throughout the potato stalks. Is there any deed as vile as covering up a genocide while posturing as a concerned historian? Minimal research would yield the truth that, of the 137 regiments that comprised Britain's then-empire army, that gov't, to remove Ireland's abundant food at-gunpoint, deployed 69 of them to Ireland, slightly more than half.
methinks this guy might be a closet ethnic empathist, eh???
God Bless John Lahey, his success and the fact that he never forgot what happened to his family. I have to look up Camp in Kerry as I don't know where that is. We love to watch the St. Patrick's parade from upstate NY and am so thankful to him, Ford Motor Co and NBC. We consider the famine a "genocide" as the Irish were put off their rightful lands and food was being shipped out of Ireland, but that is semantics. It is so wonderful that this awful history has been kept alive so it won't happen again. One thing many people don't know about is that many of the starved people in the Kerry, Cork area passed on a debilitating chromosome disorder to their offspring. The starved person given sustenance would recover but his offspring's chromosomes would be changed. The medical people in Kerry and Cork are still coping alone with this disaster. The Netherlands received a huge grant from the "John and Catherine MacArthur" fund to study Chromosome changes in their WWII population, but the medical people in Kerry and Cork are dealing with this dilemma all alone. Many thanks to John for his tremendous success and all he had done to remember the forgotten, innocent souls who were left to starve.
 




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