Please, let's keep political correctness out of Saint Patrick's Day -- Pressure mounts to make it about more than just the Irish in America
Posted on Sunday, March 18, 2012 at 09:42 PM
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| NYPD Emerald Society marching band in the St Patrick's Day parade in New York (Chang Lee/New York Times) |
Political correctness is making its move on St. Patrick’s Day I fear.
There were two articles over the weekend, one in The New York Times, the other The Irish Times, making the same point.
We need to be more inclusive and St. Patrick’s Day should become less Irish and more of an opportunity for all immigrants to celebrate.
To which I say, hooey.
Here are just two extracts.
This from Dr. James Flannery of Emory University in Atlanta in The Irish Times.
It was entitled "St Patrick's Day celebrates the role of all US migrants."
“My hope is that some day the celebration of St Patrick’s Day in Atlanta will become a genuine multicultural holiday, with every year a different ethnic group honored at the head of the parade.
“Imagine a St Patrick’s Day parade that, over time, included Chinese dragons, Mexican mariachi bands, Caribbean steel drummers and Korean acrobats, all marching alongside green-clad Irish pipers and step dancers.”
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I must mention that Jim Flannery is a dear friend of long standing, an inspirational figure in Ireland where he staged the Yeats Cycle of Plays at the Abbey Theater and introduced an unknown young composer called Bill Whelan later of “Riverdance” fame, to the world.
For decades he has been a bastion of Irish culture and influence in the south.
But on this occasion I respectfully disagree with him.
The second piece was in The New York Times with the same gist.
“This March 17, on this side of the water, we ought to be celebrating immigration, not just Irishness," writes the author Peter Behrens.
“It’s About Immigrants Not Irishness” was the title of the piece, which says it all.
It is suddenly becoming fashionable to recast the March 17th holiday as a one size fits all day that we can celebrate all immigrants.
But that is neither the history nor the intent of the day from time immemorial.
I embrace Martin Luther King Day for what it is, a celebration of an incredible American, who did for his risen people what no leader before him could do.
When you look at Barack Obama you know it could never have been possible without MLK.
I don’t want to interject an Irish element to Martin Luther King Day, as that would, frankly, be ridiculous.
It’s a day for African Americans to celebrate their success.
I feel the same about Puerto Rican Day here in New York and love the mariachi bands and the free and open atmosphere of their parade, so different to what we have on St. Patrick’s Day.
One year I remember the Grand Marshal was an Elvis impersonator -- that's not something you'll ever see on March 17th I assure you!
Good for them.
Equally, I don’t want to demand that we walk too in that parade, nor in the Israeli Day or the Polish Day or German Day parades that are such a feature of our American summers.
Some years back I went to the Chinese New Year parade in Chinatown. It was brilliant, exotic and different.
An Irish pipe band among the exploding firecrackers would have looked and sounded ridiculous.
The Irish have a right to their day too, the celebration of the rise from the coffin ships to the White House, the flowering of a culture and a history that has given much to this country.
I love that other nationalities love St. Patrick’s Day, that they clearly have a great day out of it too, that the streets are packed for the spring ritual that rivals Mardi Gras.
But let’s not have a multicultural Saint Patrick’s Day.
That defeats the very notion of what this country is all about “E Pluribus Unum,” from all, one, each separate but together as a nation.
So with due respect to Doctor Jim and the writer Mr. Behrens I say, let’s keep the Irish front and center on Saint Patrick’s Day.
Let's enjoy our different histories, not try and mesh them.
111 comments
Saoirse9 | Mar 20, 2012, 04:25 PM EDT
This isn't abut political correctness, but about dissolving what little political clout the Irish have here in NYC. If anything, it would be culturally insensitive to insert non-Irish tradition into an Irish cultural event. As pointed out earlier, how ridiculous would it be to see Irish pipers in a Chinese New Year's parade? There are Irish in China...but I think most level-headed people recognize that these parades are celebrations of each ethnicity's individual qualities.
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GeorgeDillon | Mar 20, 2012, 03:20 PM EDT
maceinri attacks some poster who had calculated that there are a million immigrants in Ireland. Of course maceinri offers no better statistic--it's easy to attack when you don't put forward an alternative. I can help maceinri, however. If you calculate the Irish government CSO statistics from say 2000 up to now, you'll find that way more than a million PPS numbers were alloted to foreigners. That doesn't count their children, or indeed the many thousands of illegal immigrants. Now of course a significant number of these foreign migrants left Ireland duing the past decade. Impossible to put a figure on it--maybe 20%? That still leaves a huge number of foreign migrants in Ireland. And you don't need to go by the statistics--take a stroll thru downtown Dublin any day and you'll find yourself surrounded by foreigners, maybe in a proportion of four to one against the Irish. Your eyes and ears don't lie. Similarly for countless towns and cities, Cork, Athlone, Galway etc. So it's a perfectly tenable hypothesis to say there's a million foreigners in Ireland, always with the caveat that Ireland is not the 26 Counties. That would yield a percentage of about 20% of population, which seems quite a reasonable guess to me. Maceinri would do better, instead of attacking someone who gave a good faith estimate of the extent of Mass Immigration in Ireland, to call for the maintenance and publication of good statistics on this matter by the Irish government. There are none. The fact is that right now Maceinri's objection to the statistics remains quite cowardly and senseless. Loomks like he has nothing better to offer.
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Irishiker60 | Mar 20, 2012, 03:09 PM EDT
What part don't they understand? IT'S AN IRISH PARADE, THEIR CELEBRATION. ONLY FOR THE IRISH. No one else need apply. Let the other folks get their own damn parade. If it's forced on them to allow others to march in our parade, then we should just cancel out the parade altogether.
IT'S AN IRISH CELEBRATION ONLY !!
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abhainn | Mar 20, 2012, 02:03 PM EDT
Niall O'Dowd has missed the obvious fact that Saint Patrick's Day has long been about Americans in general. I am from Ireland but have seen Saint Patrick's Day celebrated all over the United States by people of all ethnic backgrounds. It used to amaze me how enthusiastically Asian, black, and Latin people celebrated something Irish, but I finally understood it is not really just an Irish festival any more, and I am not as insecure as Niall O'Dowd that I am threatened by the joy of such diversity in togetherness. It cannot harm Irish people or Irish Americans to embrace anyone who wants to share their fun. We are all better off together than divided by petty and exclusive territorialities. Irish people are better than that. Saint Patrick would have approved.
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richard cahill | Mar 20, 2012, 12:47 PM EDT
Hi! Again! Irish American is correctly written without the hyphen. Irish in this context is an adjective not a (proper)noun. In ireland the reverse would be American Irish with 'american' being an adjective. Dick Cahill, Ballymote.
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richard cahill | Mar 20, 2012, 12:05 PM EDT
Niall,
generally I agree with your view on this matter. The however is that we don’t include all Irish expressions of the fabric of our irishness. I don’t mean the regrettable exclusion of Gay Pride. I do include the pre-famine Irish who went to America and contributed so greatly to the subsequent evolution of the USA. I am of course speaking of the Protestant Irish, the Ulster Scots Presbyterians, particularly.
This island of Ireland is at peace as you know better than most, so why not seek out these Irish to offer a place in the national (Whole island) celebration. The sight of Orange marchers on St. Patrick’s day might not shock the 21st century viewer. It might be more acceptable than opening the parades to all comers thus diluting the irishness of the celebration. Include all Irish before all inclusiveness.
Include all Irish and then we can see the full contribution made to the Revolution, its war and subsequent evolution of the USA. This is what has made the bond between us so strong.
Dick Cahill. Ballymote, Sligo. Ireland.
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bogsidebunny | Mar 20, 2012, 07:52 AM EDT
These articles are only aping what they see in Ireland, itself. The Irish have decided (shazaam) to become a multicultural nation. More Brazilians in Gort, Co. Galway than Irish. 19,000 Nigerians roam the bogs in the hinterland, etc. So why should a parade, which represents the REAL Ireland not include a polyglot of nationalities?
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Towngate | Mar 20, 2012, 05:00 AM EDT
Niall demands "Irish front and center" and would exclude all others! Does that include all those former Irish who have renounced all allegiance to the land of their birth and are now Naturalised AMERICANS ~ like him!? ~~~ Think on, big fella!
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PiperMac52 | Mar 20, 2012, 01:38 AM EDT
I totally agree with the article's premise. Political Correctness is killing us. Once Sexual orientation entered into the fray(nothing to do with being Irish)the can of worms was opened.
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Troops4Paul | Mar 20, 2012, 12:46 AM EDT
Italians have Columbus Day. Mexicans have Cinco de Mayo. Germans have Oktoberfest. This is ours. You are welcome to join us, but not to change it.
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Eamonnca1 | Mar 20, 2012, 12:03 AM EDT
Falun Dafa and other Chinese groups always have a handful of floats in our St Paddy's Day parade in San Francisco. Doesn't change the character of the parade, just makes it a bit more interesting. It's always going to be a predominantly Irish festival anyway. Frankly I'd be more concerned about how the event has turned into a big booze-up that only serves to confirm our well-earned stereotype as a nation of drunks. I think that this, aided as it is by the alcohol industrial complex, is a far bigger concern than a more diverse parade.
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Murph46 | Mar 19, 2012, 11:14 PM EDT
PhlutiePhan-Spot on I too have been warning of an Irish backlash,and have even asked Savannah to tell cities how to do St.Patrick's right.I'm stubborn enough to fight it and feel Phlutie Phan feels likewise.
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PhlutiePhan | Mar 19, 2012, 10:58 PM EDT
Bill Clinton once stated that it all depends on what the meaning of "is" is. What is the real reason for the assault on St. Patrick's Day? If you read exerpts from the book by Jodi Kantor, there is a real agenda involved to destroy for which it stands. African-Americans are 12.6% of the population. The Irish are 12.2% if you add in the 1% Scotch-Irish as Senator James Webb of Virginia. Timothy Cardinal Dolan has voiced real conerns over the nature of the agenda. There is no doubt of the radical socialist roots and the effort to destroy the family as the foundation of society, no doubt at all.
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fnfdesign | Mar 19, 2012, 10:28 PM EDT
St Patricks Day is for the Irish and I say to hell with anyone who tries to change it.
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