Playing Irish by Colleen Brogan & Zachary McCune
Running Time: 32 minutes
Creative Commons 3.0 Attribution Licensed
Note: video length may make loading slow. Please allow the film up to several minutes to load correctly.
Playing Irish by Colleen Brogan & Zachary McCune
Running Time: 32 minutes
Creative Commons 3.0 Attribution Licensed
Note: video length may make loading slow. Please allow the film up to several minutes to load correctly.
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Good to see Irish-Americans getting in touch with an Ireland that is not part of the Irish-American myth. Irish Americans tend to view the famine, a national humiliation, as the defining event in Irish identity. Not so the Irish. My parents fought in the Irish War of Independence, an event of pride and accomplishment, and that event became the defining event for them and my generation. Current Irish youth have no defining identity or have the EU or the peace pact in the north or high tech or the economic collapse of Ireland’s debt-fueled economy as the defining event.
But many continue to have the village or the neighborhood or parish as the defining reality, and the GAA plays a huge role in this, thank God.
The GAA was a big part of the Irish response to the famine, along with the Land League and the revival of Gaelic and the formation of organized efforts to build a separate cultural and psychological identity separate from that of the UK and the inferior position of the Irish in the UK. This cultural revival occurred alongside the formation of organizations that would be ready for complete Irish independence from Britain, an independence to be attained through either UK constitutional means (as with Canada) or through armed insurgency (IRB/IRA/Sinn Fein).
During the brief Irish Civil War that followed Irish independence, the GAA staged games that drew players drawn from both sides, who were pledged to keep politics out of the GAA (except for Irish independence).
If you want to go into ancient roots of the game, look to head hunting. The ancient Irish used the shrunken heads of enemies as the thing to wack around. In fact the oldest church in use in Ireland in Clare has a portal decorated with heads, evocative of the old sacred Celtic status of severed heads. This head hunting phenomenon can also be seen in France in the legend of St Denis.
Congratulations on learning to move beyond Irish-Americanism to discover Ireland. I too am an American, with parents born in Ireland but I avoid the entire Irish-American thing. Not my culture.
The GAA
Hi,
I work with a new Irish community internet TV channel, and wondered if you would allow us to run the documentary on the channel?
Please take a look and let me know what you think.
Regards
Susanne
AWESOME job. Fair play to you both. I forward your video to others whenever the opportunity presents itself. Remember, us Yanks “Play the Irish” too. Hope to meet you some day on the pitch. Take care. God Bless.
Slainte!
Mick Dunne
Philadelphia Shamrocks
[...] spring, when I began researching for the Heritage at Play project that brought me to Ireland to film a documentary on the sports in Irish society. Since then, I’ve been fond of the game, and love playing [...]