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January 2012

People

AOH Comes to the Aid of a Friend in Need

Andy Redmond

Andy Redmond

Andy Redmond has been there for the Ancient Order of Hibernians and other Irish causes when they needed him. Now the Irish community is returning the favor.

Redmond, who has been fighting prostate cancer for several years, is a member of the Philly-area Irish band Na’Bodach. A painter by trade, Redmond has been unable to work due to his illness, so the Monsignor Crean Division of the AOH is hosting a beef-and-beer bash to help him deal with mounting financial challenges.

Patrick Jockel, president of the Crean division, first came to know Redmond four years ago. Jockel runs the annual Smithville (N.J.) Irish Festival. “His was actually the second band we booked for the festival,” says Jockel. “We became friends afer that. He’s just one of those good souls. He doesn’t put on airs. He’s very intelligent, very funny. He’s just a good guy to know.”

Aside from friendship, hiring Na’Bodach also turned out to have been a wise business decision.

“They’re our headliners. The festival used to stop when his band played. The audience would just stand in front of them and watch them play. Bad for beer sales, but good for everybody else.”

Because of Redmond’s illness, the band was unable to play last October.

Over the years, Redmond and his bandmates have lent their services to many worthy causes, including local AOH fund-raisers. In fact, Redmond has proved to be one of the best friends the Irish Catholic fraternal organization has, Jockel says, even though Redmond himself is not Catholic.

Jockel is also a New Jersey state board member of the AOH, and he brought Redmond’s situation to the attention of Sean Pender, the state president. “As soon as I said ‘Andy has a problem,’ the first thing Sean said is, “We gotta do something for this guy.”

That something is a big benefit Saturday, January 14, starting at 7:30 p.m. at Monsignor Crean AOH Hall, 2419 Kuser Road, Hamilton, N.J. Tickets are $30, available at the door. Entertainment is by the Bogside Rogues, who are donating their time and talent.

There’ll be plenty of good grub, including roast beef, french fries and salad, draft beer and wine, and coffee and soda. You can also aid the cause in other ways, including a 50/50 and a raffle of a basket of cheer. There will also be a drawing for a guitar signed by Redmond’s band.

For more information, contact:

  • Patrick Jockel at patrickaoh@hotmail.com
  • Sean Pender at paddyspeed@yahoo.com
How to Be Irish in Philly

How To Be Irish in Philly This Week

Blackthorn is on tap this weekend--and for the following two.

A minor snafu last week put our calendar on the disabled list, but it’s back and you can post your events again, so please do.

Blackthorn is appearing this Saturday at MaGerk’s Pub, formerly The Bent Elbo, in Fort Washington. That’s always a good time. Looking ahead, the group is also going to be making return engagements to the Black Jack Kehoe AOH Div. 4 fundraiser on January 21 and Archbishop Ryan High School on January 28 for its benefit for the Ryan Tuition Assistance Fund, always a sellout.

Also this Saturday, the Centre Theatre in Norristown is presenting “She Moved Through the Fair,” a play adapted from the works of one of Ireland’s best known and critically acclaimed novelists and short story writers, Edna O’Brien, a native of Clare.

The Irish American Genealogy Group meets on Thursday at the Irish Immigration Center. This is a great way for family history newbies to get started on finding their Irish ancestors.

This is a slow week, Irish-wise, but we’re going to need a few slow weeks because the St. Patrick’s Day festivities always start gearing up earlier and earlier every year—like in February.

One thing that won’t be happening in February though, is the Scottish & Irish Festival in Valley Forge. No, don’t wring your hands and tear your hair out. It’s just been moved to the last weekend in March. Taking its place this year is a one-night (February 18) iconfluence of high-energy Celtic groups, two of which travel together so much they’ve combined their names, a la Brangelina. It’s Bronach—Brother and Albannach, two big favorites of the Valley Forge Festival. They’ll be sharing the stage in the Waterford Room (hope it’s big) at The Radisson Hotel in King of Prussia, adjacent to the Valley Forge Convention Center along with Barleyjuice and Arvel Bird. Bird is a Native American musician whose work is haunting and has a touch of Celtic because his father is Scots-Irish (his mother is Paiute). Listen here.

Another heads up for fans of the Vince Gallagher Irish Radio Hour. After moving his show to a new station (WNJC 1360 AM) for a few months, Vince is moving back to join his old partner-in-crime Marianne MacDonald at WTMR 800-AM at his old time of 11 AM the end of the month. That gives you two hours of Irish music without having to switch channels.

This week, you really can check out our calendar for all the details.

News

“We’re Not Looking for Favoritism”

Ciaran Staunton of the Irish Lobby for Immigration at Finnigan's Wake in Philadelphia this week.

If you belong to an Irish organization in the Philadelphia area, you probably got an email this week urging you to call Senator Pat Toomey (R-PA) to urge him to support Senate Bill 1983. It’s a measure, proposed by New York Senator Charles Schumer (D-NY) that, if passed, would pave the way for 10,500 Irish to come to the US on E-3 work visas every year.

The E-3 visa, now only available to Australians (thanks to a sweetheart deal brokered during the Bush administration), is not a green card for permanent residency but a renewable visa for qualified Irish workers to come to the US for specialty employment. Temporary work visas are available, but in 2010, only 2,700 of these H-1B visas out of a total of 85,000 ended up in Irish hands.

Schumer’s bill amends the bipartisan HR3012, Fairness for High-Skilled Immigrants Act, which paves the way for professionals from places such as China and India to come to the US and for families of legal immigrants in Mexico and the Phillipines to sidestep decades-long waits for green cards to join their loved ones in the US.

The leaders of many Irish organizations, from the Ancient Order of Hibernians to the St. Patrick’s Day Observance Committee to the Irish Immigration Center, met at Finnigan’s Wake in Philadelphia this week with Ciaran Staunton, New York-based founder of the Irish Lobby for Immigration. Staunton told them that those visas would come at a critical time for the Irish. “Ireland’s unemployment rate is 14 percent, which is the highest it’s been in 16 years. And, as they say on the weather report, it’s getting higher,” he said.

Staunton said his organization is targeting 15 Republican senators whose support is needed to pass the bill. “Schumer told us, ‘I can get you the bill, but you have to get me the Republicans,” says Staunton. Those key potential GOP supporters include both moderates, such as Maine’s Susan Collins and conservatives, like Toomey, Iowa’s Chuck Grassley, Kentucky’s Mitch McConnell, Arizona’s John McCain, and Scott Brown of Massachusetts who, with Mark Kirk of Illinois, introduced his own version of Schumer’s bill.

The main difference between the Schumer and Brown bills is that Brown’s does not include a waiver for Irish immigrants who stayed in the US after their temporary visas expired. Staunton, who supports the Schumer Bill, says having two opposing bills “doesn’t help us.” Asked by Liam Hegarty, a member of the Irish Immigration Center of Philadelphia’s board of directors, whether Staunton would be satisfied if the bill passed without the waiver, Staunton replied, “I’m not going to say I’ll take less than Senator Schumer wants.”

He urged the Irish leaders to “burn up the phones” to encourage Senator Toomey to break ranks and get behind the Democrat’s bill. “We’re not looking for favoritism,” he said. “We’re looking for fairness.”

View our photos to see some of the Irish community leaders who met with Staunton.

You can contact Senator Toomey’s office by calling 202-224-4254.

Columns

How to Be Irish in Philly This Week

Musicians of all ages at the Plough and Stars

Musicians of all ages at the Plough and Stars

After the long holiday hoohah, it looks like Philly’s Irish are taking a break.

The main event this week is a meeting Monday night to discuss Senate Bill 1983, which would allow Irish professionals to live and work in the United States on E3 work visas. The meeting starts at 7 p.m. at Finnigan’s Wake at 2nd and Spring Garden in Philadelphia.

If you’re a fan of the prolific Irish author Edna O’Brien, you’ll definitely want to take in “She Moved Through the Fair,” a comitragedy about the life and loves of an Irish countrywoman. The play, based on the works of O’Brien, is performed by actress Polly MacIntyre. It’s on stage at the Centre Theatre Montgomery County Cultural

Center, 202 DeKalb Street in Norristown. Show time are Saturday the 14th at 8 p.m. and Sunday the 15th at 2 p.m. For details, visit the website.

Other than that, there is something of a lull in the proceedings. (Don’t worry; it won’t last. It never does.) So it seems like a good time to draw your attention to the wonderful Irish music that happens all around us most days of the week. We’re talking about the traditional Irish music session, an often hours-long total immersion experience that draws in many of our best Irish fiddlers, pipers, whistlers and what-all. They circle up on their chairs and stools and they slam through reels, barn dances and jigs, and many other tunes whose names they can’t remember. The tunes are free, but because sessions usually are held in a bar or restaurant, you’ll have to order food and/or drinks. (We presume beer and fish and chips is not a hardship.)

One or more of these rollicking affairs takes place most days of every week, but if you really want to see what we’re talking about, let’s look at Sunday. We’re lousy with sessions on that day, including:

Traditional Irish Music Brunch
McCarthy’s Tea Room
534 Main Street
Bethlehem
610-866-3244
http://www.donegalsquare.com/mysitecaddy/site3/mccarthys.htm
11 a.m. to 1 p.m.

Molly Maguire’s Irish Restaurant and Pub
329 W. Main St.
Lansdale
267-421-9257
http://www.mollymaguireslansdale.com/
3 p.m. to 6 p.m.

Supper and Session
Molly Maguire’s Restaurant and Pub
197 Bridge St.
Phoenixville
www.mollymaguirespubs.com
610-933-9550
4 p.m. to 8 p.m.

Plough and Stars
2nd Street, between Market and Chestnut
Philadelphia
215-733-0300

Home


5 p.m. to 9 p.m.

Check out any one of them this weekend. Note well: Session times shift from time to time. At this time of year, that usually depends on the start time of the Eagles game. No more worries on that score.

News, People

We Need a “Little Christmas”

Having a great time: Irish Immigration Center Executive Director Siobhan Lyons and Irish Center President Vince Gallagher, who co-sponsored the event.

Roast pork, mashed potatoes, Geraldine Quiqq’s legendary salads, and Mary Crossan’s scone–if that doesn’t bring them in, nothing will.

This delicious lunch was part of the Little Christmas celebration for seniors at the Irish Center on January 6, the Feast of the Epiphany, which is always celebrated in Ireland. Traditionally, it’s when you take your tree and trimmings down. But the only “work” the attendees did was fill their plates at the buffet–and a few did a little dancing to tunes from the Vince Gallagher band.

We were there and took photos, which we’re sharing with you here.

News

Major Immigration Meeting Set


An email went out this week to Irish organizations throughout the Philadelphia area announcing a meeting Monday night with the Irish Lobby for Immigration Reform to discuss Senate Bill 1983 which would allow 10,500 Irish citizens to come to the US on E3 work visas. The visas  now are available only to professionals in specialty occupations from Australia. The E-3 provision was signed into law in 2005 by President George W. Bush.

The Bill, introduced by Democratic New York Sen. Charles Shumer, came on the heels of HR 3012, the Fairness for High-Skilled Immigrants Act of 2011, which eliminates the country-specific quotas on green cards for workers, mainly techies from India and China. Demand is high in the US for those highly skilled professionals. The bill also includes a measure that will more than double the available green cards based on family ties for mainly Mexican and Filipino immigrants who are in the US legally. Many of those family members now are faced with as much as a two-decades long wait. That GOP-sponsored bill passed the House and is awaiting Senate action.

The E3 work visa is not a green card, which grants permanent US residence to the foreign-born, but a visa program that allows foreign workers to come to the US for employment. It’s renewable every two years. Currently, a college degree is a requirement for an E3 visa and would likely be the case for E3s granted to Irish citizens.

Massachusetts Sen. Scott Brown (Rep.) has proposed a bill similar to Shumers’, except that under Brown’s proposal, undocumented workers—those already here illegally—cannot apply.

Ciaran Staunton, a Mayo native and New York-based founder of the Irish Lobby for Immigration, will be at Finnigan’s Wake at Second and Spring Garden Street on Monday night, January 9, starting at 7 PM to discuss the various proposals.

While it’s far from comprehensive immigration reform, says Siobhan Lyons, executive director of the Irish Immigration Center of Philadelphia, the Schumer bill, “if it goes through, will be a great first step toward a sensible solution to our current immigration problems.”

The HR 3012 family provision doesn’t apply to the Irish, she says, but it’s not necessarily discriminatory, as some have claimed. “There are countries other than Ireland with huge waiting lists of people who are already qualified for green cards,” she points out. “In some places, there are people who have been waiting for green cards for 15 to 30 years before they’re able to join their families. This is not much of an issue for the Irish. The problem is that the Irish don’t qualify for green cards in the first place.”

Music, News, People

Post-Christmas Pick-Me-Up

Modeling the latest in Wren Hats are Alexander Weir, his mother Katherine, and Haley Richardson. Photo by Carl Weir.

Every year in Ireland, on the feast of St. Stephen (December 26), the Irish celebrate in a way that has been handed down for centuries. They go out, hunt down a wren, kill it, put it on a stick and parade it around town while they’re dressed in funny costumes.

No, that’s not what they do. That’s what they used to do.  “Wren Parties” are still held, but they’re bloodless these days. People still get together, as they did December 26 at the Wren Party in Glenside sponsored by  the Delaware Valley chapter of Comhaltas Ceoltóirí Éireann. They even wear costumes. Well, hats anyway. And they eat, drink, play music, sing, and dance.

Thanks to Carl Weir, whose son, Alexander, was one of the performers and hat-wearers, we have photos from this year’s event (the 13th  Wren Party the Comhaltas has thrown). And here they are.

 

News, People

Aon Sceal?

The brand new gravestone for Irish-American boxer Eddie Cool and his brother.

True to his word, local boxing maven John DeSanto has made sure that Philadelphia Irish-American boxer Eddie Cool, the “Tacony Flash,” will no longer be forgotten. Recently, DeSanto placed a marker on the previously unmarked grave shared by Eddie and his brother, Jimmy, also a boxer, in Holy Sepulchre Cemetery in Philadelphia.

Cool, who died in 1947 at the age of 35 of liver problems related to alcoholism, compiled an amazing ring record to 95-29-15 with 15 KOs “against the very best fighters in one of the true golden eras of the sport,” says DiSanto, who has placed stones on the graves of three other Philly boxers of different eras whose final resting places weren’t marked. DiSanto is the founder of the website, phillyboxinghistory.com and the Philly Boxing History Gravestone Fund.

John DiSanto is serious about honoring the Philadelphia boxing fraternity. Over the past two years, he guided the project that placed a statue of former middleweight champion Joey Giardello in South Philadelphia. The bronze tribute to Giardello also honors 70 other South Philly boxers as well as a list of long lost gyms and arenas. It was dedicated in May.

“My job is to remember these guys, and to remind people of their stories,” DiSanto said. “There are so many Philly boxers in unmarked graves. I still have a lot of work to do.”

Read the story of our visit to Eddie Cool’s grave with DiSanto in September.

Piping His Thanks

After a serious heart attack three years ago, Philadelphia Emerald Society piper Joe Tobin could barely breathe, let alone squeak out a recognizable version of “Minstrel Boy” on the pipes.

But the heart team at Penn Medicine’s Heart and Vascular Center helped bring him back from the brink of a transplant and Tobin is back playing he heart out of “Amazing Grace” and “Garryowen.” In fact, there’s no place Irish you can go in the month of March without seeing him in his kilt, bagpipe under his arm.

So how does a piper say thanks? Last month, Tobin went back to Penn and serenaded his former heart team with seasonal music on his bagpipes. Way to blow, Joe!

An Appropriate Honor for Commodore Barry

Today, workmen will be installing the arch over the new “Barry Gate,” a pedestrian gate at the US Naval Academy in Annapolis, MD. Funded by the Ancient Order of Hibernians, the Commodore John Barry Memorial—named for the Wexford-born Commodore John Barry, founder of the US Navy, who made his home in Philadelphia—will also include a Barry Memorial and a Barry Plaza on the Annapolis grounds.

The AOH approached the Naval Academy with the proposal in 2008, and it was approved last May.

John Barry, who is buried in the graveyard of Old St. Mary Church in Philadelphia, a few blocks from his statue behind Independence Hall, was the first commanding officer of the US Navy, serving under Presidents George Washington, John Adams and Thomas Jefferson. Named Captain of the ship Lexington in 1776, he captured 20 British ships, was seriously wounded, and fought in the last naval battle of the Revolutionary War in 1783.

You can donate to the project by making out a check to “Hibernian Charity Barry Project” and sending it to Hibernian Charity c/o Frank Kearney, Secretary, PO Box 391, Meriden, CT 06450.

Aon Sceal is Irish for “what’s the story?” If you have a story to share, share it with us. Email denise.foley@comcast.net.