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Jeff Meade

Arts

Family Portrait

Cesar Viveros

Cesar Viveros

Margie Riccheza, a fine arts student at Temple’s Tyler School of Art, is sitting cross-legged on the floor in a wide open studio on Vine Street, carefully applying a ribbon of dark pink paint onto a five-foot-square sheet of parachute cloth. Thin lines of ink delineate the area where she applies the paint, and that particular area is marked with a number corresponding to the color of paint she is to use in that space.

The whole sheet is like that—streaks and squiggles and amoeba-shaped spots bounded by thin lines, each space marked with a roughly drawn number. This is paint-by-the-numbers on a huge scale. Many brightly colored panels line the wall. Some are completed, and others—like this one—are works in progress.

At a table nearby, Monica Matthieu sits, snipping small bits of colored glass into rough-edged shapes, gluing them onto large flower-shaped forms. “It’s like a puzzle, but with color,” she says, smiling, but not looking up from her work. “It’s very relaxing.”

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Music

They Are Women: Hear Them Roar

The ladies of Girsa

The ladies of Girsa

There was no grand plan. It didn’t start out this way. No one was advocating, one way or another.

But here’s what happened: The grand finale concert of the 41st Annual Philadelphia Ceili Group Festival (September 10, 11 & 12th) is going to shine a big, bright spotlight on female Irish musicians.

The sweet-singing Mary Courtney will open the Saturday night concert—a treat in and of itself—and the all-female Irish traditional band Girsa will wrap things up, most likely with their usual burst of energy.

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News

Hurlers on Fire

hurling replacement 785 pxIt only felt like hell on earth, but it sure was hot at the Limerick GAA field on Sunday when Allentown squared off against Philadelphia in a hurling match.

The Weather Service says the temperature hit a high of 93 degrees in the Pottstown area, but on the field, the athletes say, it gets a lot hotter. All that running back and forth doesn’t help much, either.

Fortunately, at the end of the game, officials turned the sprinklers on. Some of us couldn’t pass up a chance to add least stroll through the spray. (Including me.)

Final score: Allentown 3-19, Philly 4-4.

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Sports

Really Physical Therapy

From left: Justin Budich, Kate Bartnik, Brian Sullivan, Mauricio Magaña

From left: Justin Budich, Kate Bartnik, Brian Sullivan, Mauricio Magaña

Twilight is closing in on a scrubby athletic field toward the rear of Philadelphia’s Northeast High School. Twenty or so young men—and two women—are racing back and forth, wielding what look like canoe paddles in one hand, and slapping a ball back and forth with it. Occasionally, one of those balls goes sailing over a high chain-link fence into traffic on Algon Avenue.

What you’re looking at is mayhem, with a fair amount of body contact—but still, there’s clearly a rhythm and structure to it.

This moderately anarchic activity is hurling, an ancient Gaelic game transported to the United States by Irish immigrants. By some accounts, Irishmen have been playing some version of hurling for more than 3,000 years. The sport is now drawing steadily increasing numbers of American players.

One of them is MossRehab physical therapist Brian Sullivan. A few other Moss physical therapists are out there on the field, too, persuaded by him that playing this obscure Gaelic sport would be a good idea.

It’s always seemed like a pretty good idea to Sullivan, a graduate of Slippery Rock University of Pennsylvania, who hails from Pittsburgh. He has been with MossRehab for two years. Sullivan’s first exposure to hurling came during a trip to Ireland in the spring of 2010, when he saw his first hurling match.  “That was how I found out that there even was a sport called hurling.”

He was even more surprised when he returned to the United States and, while attending a Pittsburgh-area Irish festival, saw the game being played on U.S. soil. He was incredulous. “I thought: Wait … this is actually happening in America?”

Sullivan had played organized baseball and soccer, and the sheer athleticism of hurling appealed to him, along with the fact that the game combined aspects of many other sports—field hockey, lacrosse, and even baseball—so he joined the local club in Pittsburgh. In spite of the game’s complexity—and perhaps because of it—Sullivan was hooked right from the start.

“It’s just a great game,” he says. “I just wanted to do it.”

So what is hurling? We’ve written about it many times before, but for the benefit of you Gaelic athletic newbies, hurling is said to be the fast-moving game on grass. No one who has ever watched it would dispute the point. It’s also one of the most physical. Hurling has been described as hockey mixed with murder. Maybe that’s a bit of Hibernian hyperbole, but neither is hurling croquet.

Here are the basics:

Hurling is played with a flat-bladed bat called a hurley, and a ball, roughly the size and weight of an American baseball, called a sliotar. (That’s a word from Irish Gaelic, pronounced “slitter.”)

The object of the game is for players to use the hurley to smack the sliotar either into a field hockey-like net for three points, or between two American football-style goalposts on either side of the net for one point.

There are a lot of ways players can move the sliotar down the field. They can hit it in the air, carry it briefly in their hand or toss it to one of their teammates, knock it about along the ground, or balance it on the blade of the hurley and run like the dickens toward the opponent’s goal. This last move, if you’ve ever seen it, seems to defy the laws of gravity.

Purists will tell you it’s all more nuanced than that, but those are the broad outlines.

Over time, for Sullivan hurling became not just a hobby, but a passion.

After graduation, when it came time to explore various cities in their quest for work and a nice place to live, Sullivan informed his wife Michelle that he had but one condition. “My one stipulation was that I’ll move wherever you want,” he recalls telling Michelle, “but they have to have a hurling team.”

Happily, Philadelphia has a hurling team—the Philadelphia Hurling Club—and it has MossRehab, part of the Einstein Healthcare Network, one of the nation’s premier rehabilitation facilities. So they moved to Philly.

Sullivan took to bringing his hurley and a ball along to work at his new job to practice out on the lawn at lunchtime near Moss’s facility on West Tabor Road in North Philadelphia. Co-workers soon became curious. “They’d ask, ‘What are you doing with this weird little stick?’” In time, he’d persuaded four other therapists to find out for themselves.

He says the hurley and ball also have uses for some of his patients, since they’re good for balance and eye-hand coordination. Balancing a sliotar on the end of the hurley, he laughs, “is like balancing an egg on a spoon.”

Sullivan’s involvement in Philadelphia hurling proved to have a side benefit, also relating to Einstein and to the Irish: specifically, helping to determine the carrier rate of Tay-Sachs disease among people of Irish descent. Dr. Adele Schneider, director of Clinical Genetics at Einstein Medical Center Philadelphia, has been managing the study.

Tay-Sachs is an inherited neurodegenerative disease that afflicts a very small percentage of infants. If both parents carry the gene, they can pass it along to their children. (The parents are unaffected by the disease.) Children with Tay-Sachs typically do not survive past their fifth birthday.

Most people, if they have heard of Tay-Sachs at all, probably associate the disease with people of eastern European Jewish descent—and indeed, this group is most affected. But other ethnic groups have a higher-than-average carrier rate—for example, French-Canadians, Cajuns and the Amish. Recent research by Dr. Schneider strongly suggests that people of Irish descent also might have a higher carrier rate.

Sullivan heard about the study, and assisted in raising its profile in the local Gaelic Athletic Association (GAA) community. A Tay-Sachs study banner hangs from the fence at the GAA’s new fields in Limerick, and representatives of the Genetics Division will be conducting tests this Sunday during the weekly games.

“He (Sullivan) came to our St. Patrick’s Day testing at Einstein and brought his hurley,” says Licensed Genetic Counselor Amybeth Weaver, MS, CGC. “He and Kerry O’Connor (Einstein senior communications manager), who was there, talked about it. Nothing happened for a month or two. Then Kerry forwarded an e-mail from Brian to us, saying they (the GAA) were looking for sponsors for their field.”

It seemed like a good idea, so the National Tay-Sachs & Allied Diseases Association of Delaware Valley, which funds the study, became a sponsor.

Weaver is looking forward to this weekend’s games in particular.

“There are three games scheduled,” she says. “ Brian thought this would be a good Irish draw, and maybe we’d get some folks who are eligible to participate in the study.” (Learn more here.)

Sullivan is grateful that he was able to connect his love of all things Irish to the study—and all because of one crazy game that, for him, is incredibly fulfilling on so many levels. “You get to represent your city,” he says. “It brings in your Irish heritage, which I’m very proud of. It brings in aspects of so many sports, and athletes can relate their sport to it. To me, hurling is the best sport out there.”

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News

Raising Funds for Victims of the Berkeley Balcony Collapse

berkeley home

It was early in the morning of June 16. Thirteen students attending a birthday party at an apartment building near the campus of the University of California Berkeley were standing out on a fourth-floor balcony when the balcony suddenly gave way, plunging to the ground. Six died, including five from Ireland. The fifth held joint U.S.-Irish citizenship. Seven were injured.

Many had traveled to the Berkeley area on J-1 visas, allowing them to work in the United States temporarily.

The incident hit Ireland hard, but had no less an effect on local residents who came here from Ireland, and Irish-Americans as well.

On Sunday, local Irish emigrants and Irish-Americans gathered at Tir na Nog in Center City for a fund-raiser to help out the families of the students involved, with food and drink donated by Tir na Nog.

“We just felt that it was something nice to do,” said Máirtín O’Brádaigh, one of the event organizers. Speaking of his own journey and those of other Irish citizens who came to America in recent decades, he said, “We were all in that position 20 years ago.”

As if to reinforce the connection between the Tir na Nog event and the Berkeley tragedy, most of those who attended were young people, many of them Gaelic Athletic Association players, decked out in team jerseys.

Proceeds from the event will also be made to the Kevin Bell Repatriation Trust, which raises money to help families in these tragic circumstances.

You can donate via a special gofundme.com site.

Here are some photos from the event.

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Sports

A Day at the Delco Gaels Blitz

Not a lot of action on this little guy's end of the field.

Not a lot of action on this little guy’s end of the field.

None of the games counted in official standings of any sort.

So what was the point of the Delco Gaels Blitz, a day of Irish football and hurling played under the blazing sun on the athletic fields of Cardinal O’Hara High School last Sunday?

Probably nothing less than grooming the next generation of Philadelphia’s Gaelic athletes. And when it comes to the future of Gaelic games in the United States, there’s probably nothing more important.

Out on the artificial turf of the football field, the little kids held sway. While the big kids played on adjoining fields, some of the small girls and boys donned helmets and swung away with their hurling sticks—the really little ones played with plastic hurleys—at a ball that often seemed to elude a lot of them. Others hurtled up and down the field chasing a football.

On the sidelines, parents an coaches shouted encouragement: “Great kick, Brennan!” “Good goal, Siobhan!” (I’m making up the names, but trust me, the field was filled with Irish-sounding names.)

Some of the kids clearly knew what they were about—especially the footballers—and in some of the games they were evenly matched. There was some terrific action.

You could see that the future was in good hands.

We spent the afternoon slathering on sunscreen and slugging back water like everyone else. Here are some pictures from a really fun day.

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History

Local Irish Honored for their Support of Barry Memorial

The Irish Center's Frank Hollingsworth and Sean McMenamin accept the Barry portrait.

The Irish Center’s Frank Hollingsworth and Sean McMenamin accept the Barry portrait.

Persuading the U.S. Naval Academy that Commodore John Barry, a gallant son of Ireland and the “Father of the American Navy,” deserved a visible presence worthy of his stature should have been a no-brainer.

It wasn’t. In fact, for proponents of the it turned into a bit of a slog, with one rejection after another. John McInerney and Jack O’Brien, members of the Washington, D.C. Ancient Order of Hibernians, led the charge. With help from many supporters, including the Philadelphia Irish Center/Commodore Barry Club, the Friendly Sons of St. Patrick, the Philadelphia AOH, and the Commodore Barry Club of Brooklyn, the memorial eventually became a reality.

To thank Philly-area project supporters, Jack O’Brien presented a copy of the official U.S. Navy portrait of Commodore Barry to the Irish Center in a ceremony Wednesday.

Here’s our video from the ceremony.

Sports

The Boys of Summer

nator hurling homeAnd, technically, one young woman.

We dropped by Northeast High School a week ago to take in a practice of the Na Tóraidhe Philadelphia Hurling Club. As it happened, it was unseasonably cold, and the grass was soaking. (So were my sneakers and jeans.)

None of which stopped our hurlers, who came off the field soaked in sweat, regardless of the temperature. It’s the season for Gaelic Athletics in Philly, and we thought it’d be good to show you what a shirts-and-skins (OK, they were all wearing shirts) practice looks like. What it looks like is every bit as rough and tumble as what you’d see in a game.

You’ll also note that a lot of the photos are on the dark side. It’s because the players kept playing until it was just about too dark to see the ball.

Note: They’re always looking for members, regardless of age or gender. Details.

Here ya go.

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