Assimilating differently, Irish Americans re-discover Gaelic Ireland
Posted on Monday, September 20, 2010 at 03:28 PM
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President O'Bama said it best when he said "is féidir linn," "yes we can," at a Saint Patrick's Day reception last year in the White House.
More and more these days, Irish Gaelic is returning to Irish American life at functions and in art, as perceptions of what makes something Irish shift towards more detail and care. In multi-cultural America, the old Irish American assimilation model is giving way and making it possible for Irish Americans to rediscover what they were once told to give-up in the past.
Irish Americans have battled on behalf of "The Others" (themselves foremost) in American history for a hundred years, giving-up their language and culture as payment for acceptance. They did this until it became easier to become American for everyone. Subsequent cultures won more and more acceptance with less absolute assimilation demands.
Nowadays, the pride of other ethnic groups has taught Irish Americans to make use of the boon that cultural groundedness gives a person, and to reconnect to Ireland and Irish culture.
President Clinton has taken classes in the Irish language, for example. It goes with being Irish American now--to have some kind of familiarity and esteem for our ancient Gaelic heritage. The shamrock stuff has become a conduit to something deeper. Retaining this humbling connection to Irish history, Americans learn empathy, as we can see the Irish experience/potential in all other peoples.
Irish cultural centers have opened in scores of communities across the United States, helping to give center to people scattered across suburbs. Irish has become a common language-option for college students all over America, from Harvard to CUNY.
The popularity speaks to deepening connections between diaspora and Ireland, where popular renaissance in the ancestral language is rumbling across the Irish world.
Irish Americans were told to assimilate by proving their Americanness. The Irish have loved the American flag in the most sincerely kitschy ways possible. As we discover the richness of our Gaelic culture in America, we feel we can explore it, the way other ethnic groups have a kind of cultural safe space amidst so much questionable and sometimes dehumanizing pop culture.
American culture is frightening, I'll admit it, if you look at it with another eye. Irish Americans are opening their súil eile, and finding there is benign power to see and contribute to this rich cultural Babylon. Bob Dylan and Liam Clancy talked much about the artist's outside-inside relationship to belovéd America.
I'll be a guest on Dr.Séamus Blake's Irish Gaelic radio show, Míle Fáilte, on Saturday morning on the 25th of September on WFUV where we'll talk a little about Irish Gaelic in New York.
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imuverin | Sep 22, 2010, 02:34 PM EDT
MaryM get a life, you probably where Shamrocks on St.Patricks day. I was born in the Bronx and grew up in New Jersey, my parents where from Galway/Clare respectively, and spoke fluent IRISH in the house, unfortunately for me they felt their children where know born in America and did not need IRISH. How wrong they were I would love to speak the OLD IRISH language, I also love Shamrocks and Shillelaghs on St. Patrick's Day. All my cousins in Ireland speak fluent IRISH in there houses and more and more IRISH is spoken in business in Ireland, no matter what you say it grows every year
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slainte9 | Sep 22, 2010, 01:36 PM EDT
As a cellist and wine lover, I'm more interested at the moment in discovering my Celtiberian heritage. The food and wine are better.
James McManus, Phoenix
Santiago y cierra Espana!
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Searlit | Sep 22, 2010, 12:02 PM EDT
Brendan, I like your article, it really resonates with me. There is a consciousness of renewed hope that people will begin to fear less and love more.
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kell7757 | Sep 22, 2010, 11:56 AM EDT
MaryM, or should I say Mary Mary quite contrary. . . why the rant? If you're not interested in your heritage or culture, that's your perogative, what is the point of criticizing those who are. It doesn't make someone UnAmerican to want to learn about and celebrate their Irish heritage.
You are not correctly informed about the Irish language. First, the speakers and it's native country, call the lanugage Irish, not Gaelic Irish, or Irish Gaelic.
Secondly, the laws to prevent use of the Irish language were never completely successful. My Grandfather (1881-1868) was a native and fluent speaker of Irish and also spoke English, as did his parents and all of his brothers and sisters. His wife, her brothers and sisters, and her Mother, my great-grandmother were native Irish speakers who also spoke fluent English, all all and well in the 20th century.
Look at any of the census records of 1911 1901 of families in Cork, Galway, Limerick, Kerry, and you'll see how ubiquitous the Irish language was.
I don't understand the "illegal alien" angle. Personally I'm against anyone trying to enter any country illegally, be it this one or any other, and am opposed to amnesty. English is the official language of the US, and it's the officially spoken language of Ireland (though not the official language). Why would preserving one's heritage make you so angry? The Irish language is part of the soul of Ireland. Not to mention there still are thousands in Ireland for whom it is their daily and first language.
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susanfran11 | Sep 22, 2010, 11:33 AM EDT
My grandmother and grandfather spoke Gaelic to us all in the family home at Astoria, Queens. It was a magic language that you could glimmer as we walked down the sidewalks of New York. It was never spoken in the workplace; the "No Irish Need Apply" signs insured this.
It was not a "dead" language, but part of a suppressed culture- grudgingly in the United States, by law in Eire. But speaking Gaelic at home did not make my grandfather [who fought in WWI] or my uncles [USNavy; WWII and Korea] lesser patriots than my siblings [US Navy; Vietnam, Dessert Strom].
The right to speak a language which held the hearts of my grandparents, as well as the right to walk into whatever church they chose, makes them American first, and Irish-American proud.
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Cherishfan | Sep 22, 2010, 10:48 AM EDT
Growing up in the North Bronx in the 40s in a mostly Irish, Irish-American neighborhood, my experiences are the same as MaryM232.
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BrendanPKeane | Sep 22, 2010, 10:43 AM EDT
MaryM232: I'm going to guess that you are sitting on a crap-filled diaper, because you sound like a hateful old bag. No one is proposing the Irish give up English. Long live English!! Everyone should learn it, especially if you come to the United States. You have completely misunderstood my point. Irish Americans are connecting to Ireland in deeper ways, from Harvard to CUNY, with Irish language courses. You decided to turn that into an anti-immigrant and anti-Irish tirade.
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MaryM232 | Sep 22, 2010, 10:18 AM EDT
Oh cripes, another pro-illegal alien huckster.. do you believe that we're stupid! Gaelic was outlawed in Ireland centuries before the first Irish immigrants arrived on these shores, thus the reason for Irish schools making Gaelic classes mandatory because it had become a lost language in Ireland. All Irish immigrants to the US, throughout our history spoke English, they didn't give up their language to assimilate, in fact they gladly assimilated, and embraced the freedoms the US offered, my grandparents on my father's side among them. The same can be said of Italian immigrants, they embraced the US and not only took their rights seriously, they respected the rights of others.
Apparently, Keane thinks we've all just fallen off the potato truck, and are so ignorant, we believe any lies told to us. We know all about Ireland, our parents, grandparents informed us of the facts. Go peddle your BS elsewhere, try Ireland as they seem to fall for any baloney placed under their noses.
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emer333 | Sep 21, 2010, 10:46 PM EDT
As always, I agree and disagree with many of your statements. Just taking the comment: "Irish Americans were told to assimilate by proving their Americanness" --Depending on when the Irish-American emigrated, from where and to where. Also a grat factor are the many kinds of Irish. Also, some Irish-Americans never lost their culture , like me, for example. I was fortunate to have my grandmother speak traditional Irish as her first language, and play traditional music. I have taken study to enjoy a richer and deeper understanding of "my" culture. My point is that we can't be lumped into one batch of people having the same experience. Also, I am not "Irish" or "American", but a hyphenated version. Go raibh maith agat ;) (Thank you)
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BrendanPKeane | Sep 21, 2010, 01:19 PM EDT
súil eile = other eye
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BrendanPKeane | Sep 21, 2010, 01:08 PM EDT
GeorgeDillon: More Irish can speak Irish than you would think from actual use of the language. Irish suffers a not-in-public taboo. It's really nothing more than that. Irish people will one day feel free to use their language on the streets of Ireland again, the way Poles feel comfortable speaking Polish on the streets of Ireland today. There's a tipping point approaching, where Irish media is going to break the English-Irish sound barrier on the streets. Every county in Ireland boasts Gaelscoileanna. One day Ireland will allow Irish back in public life without some asshole Irishry person feeling the post-colonial need to mock this renaissance.
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GeorgeDillon | Sep 21, 2010, 12:52 PM EDT
Many Irish-Americans are more Irish than the Irish themselves. And I'm not even including all the foreigners in Ireland, the great majority of which (99.5%) show no interest in Irish language or culture. As to Seamus Blake, he's a treasure. I understand he was born here in the USA, but he speaks Irish Gaelic better than 98% of the Irish in Ireland.
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DennisQ | Sep 21, 2010, 12:14 AM EDT
Bill Clinton certainly made some unique contributions to the English language, but who would have thought he was a student of the Irish language? He gave the world such Clintonisms as I did not have sex with that woman and It depends on what the meaning of is is.
Hearing that Clinton was a student of the Irish language puts things in a different light. We now know what Clinton meant to say to the prosecutor: Tá an dá "b'fhéidir" ann - b'fhéidir go bhfuil agus b'fhéidir nach bhfuil.
(There are the two "maybe's" - maybe it is and maybe it isn't.)
Hearing that Clinton was a student of the Irish language puts things in a different light. We now know what Clinton meant to say to the prosecutor: Tá an dá "b'fhéidir" ann - b'fhéidir go bhfuil agus b'fhéidir nach bhfuil.
(There are the two "maybe's" - maybe it is and maybe it isn't.)
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