The great green retardation is upon us once again. St.
Patrick’s Day should be a sad day for Irish people. The day has been reduced to
an excuse to get drunk. Getting drunk is fine, but drinking to celebrate Irish culture
is like smoking crack to celebrate Black
History Month. The Irish Americans, for all the good they have done this
country, are quick to embrace the worst in themselves. No other ethnic group I
can think of so joyously trumpets its own most negative stereotype.
But it doesn’t have to be that way. There are better ways to
celebrate Irish heritage. Think about some of these between your overpriced
“pints” of green beer:
Celebrate April 24 or
June 20 instead. St. Patrick’s Day is a Catholic saint’s feast day. Catholicism
has had a tremendous influence on Ireland and I’m sure some of it has been
good. But for the most part Catholicism has helped keep Ireland divided and
promoted poverty and child molestation. The Catholic
influence is such that in the Republic of Ireland divorce wasn’t legalized
until 1996 and abortion wasn’t legalized until 2013. It will be a tremendous
help to divorce Irish identity from Catholicism. And if you are the religious
sort, I don’t think too many people left in the world have a holy or religious
association with St. Patrick’s Day anymore. If you let the day be just a
saint’s feast day once again, Irish Americans can join with
everyone else in puking their guts out on Cinco de Mayo.
Since we celebrate America’s Independence on the day the
Declaration of Independence was signed, let’s celebrate Irish heritage with the
anniversary of the Easter Rising of 1916, which is
April 24. It took longer before most of Ireland was free from British rule
(we’re still waiting), but that was the beginning of the end of most
of Ireland leaving the U.K., even though the rebellion was quickly crushed and
most of its leaders executed.
If you’d prefer a summer Irish celebration, June 20 is the
birthday of Theobald Wolfe Tone, the leader of
the 1798 United Irishman Rebellion. The United Irishman Rebellion failed
miserably (it would have worked if the French had gotten to Ireland in time to
help), but Wolfe Tone (who happened to be Protestant) is considered the founder
of Irish republicanism.
Read some Irish literature.
Ireland has produced more poets and playwrights than you can shake a shillelagh
at. Go try to wade your way through the more problematic James Joyce, but read Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man
and Dubliners first. In fact, June 16
or Bloomsday would be another great Irish national holiday in place of St.
Patrick’s Day.
So read Brendan Behan’s plays and Yeats’ poems. Did you know
that Bram Stoker, who wrote Dracula,
was Irish? Did you know Irish playwright Samuel Beckett used to drive Andre the
Giant to school? It’s true. Go see a Beckett play or a Martin McDonagh play.
Impress your lady friends with some witty Oscar Wilde quotes. You will be a
better person for it.
Learn some Irish (aka
Gaelic). Like most Americans, I am not fluent in the indigenous language of
my ancestors. The Irish language had been called Gaelic for a long time, but since there are other forms
of Gaelic, such as Scots Gaelic in Scotland and Ulster Scots, a form of Scots
Gaelic spoken in parts of the North of Ireland, the Irish Gaelic language is
now just called Irish. There are classes at the IrishArts Center in New York and in many cities around the U.S. It’s a beautiful
language and learning to speak Irish
will do your brain more favors than downing a fifth of Jameson.
Revive Irish
nationalism. Padraig Pearse famously said, “Ireland unfree will never be at
peace.” Ireland is still divided and while the paramilitary violence that
plagued it over the past several decades is over, there is still residual
sectarian violence and breakaway paramilitaries fighting for their causes. If
Irish Americans were as united in pursuing a united Ireland as Jewish Americans
are in advocating for Israel, we could have united Ireland next week. What will
happen in two years from now when it is 2016, 100 years after the Easter
Uprising, and we still have a divided Ireland? Also, self-proclaimed Irish nationalist groups
in Ireland have failed to address and in fact have supported large-scale
immigration to Ireland. Ireland has seen massive immigration of similar scale that
has already had very dangerous effects in places such as
England and France. Irish Americans, who were
instrumental in supporting the struggle for Irish freedom for centuries, should
help revive Irish nationalism in Ireland once again.
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