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Denise Foley

Columns, How to Be Irish in Philly

How to Be Irish in Philly This Week

Last week, I had to be Irish in Florida and let me tell you, we have it good here. Not that I didn’t enjoy Creel, the house band at Raglan Road, the Epcot Center’s version of an Irish pub (it’s about the size of a junior high gymnasium, so “cozy” was totally off the table). And the strip mall Irish pub my son took us to served good food, but the entertainment couldn’t hold a candle to the motley crew of mostly amateurs that shows up every Tuesday night at The Shanachie in Ambler.

And to top it off, the waitress took my Jameson’s before I was finished, so now they’re dead to me.

Needless to say, I’m happy to be back to being Irish in Philly. And here’s how I’m going to do it this week:

The 9th Annual Delaware Valley Irish Hall of Fame Awards are being held on Sunday at the Irish Center. Read what Hall of Fame President Kathy McGee Burns has to say about this year’s winners.

Also on Sunday, one of my all-time favorite groups, Cherish the Ladies (with the inimitable Joanie Madden) will be at Penn’s Zellerbach Theatre, quite possibly raising the roof. (If you miss them this week, you’ll have to travel to the Appel Farm Arts and Music Center in Elmer, NJ, next week to catch them.)

On Monday, Penn is sponsoring a celebration of Irish poet Thomas Kinsella, with Kinsella himself reading from his works. Also on hand: Father John McNamee, retired pastor of St. Malachy’s Church in North Philadelphia, himself a published poet.

On Wednesday, consider joining the Irish Immigration Center at St. Lawrence Church in Upper Darby for a prayer vigil for immigration reform followed by a conference call with Rep. Bob Gutierrez.

On Thursday, another Irish act you shouldn’t miss: Karan Casey, who wowed audiences a year ago when she performed with Teada’s Christmas Show at the Irish Center (they’re bringing it back this year to the Kimmel). She’ll be at the Sellersville Theatre.

We’re heading into dance season (the Mid-Atlantic Oireachtas, a huge Irish dance competion comes to Philly at the end of November), but you can get a glimpse of some local talent next weekend when the McDade-Cara Dancers (two schools that have joined forces) put on an exhibition at Msgr. Bonner High School in Drexel Hill.

Columns, How to Be Irish in Philly

How to Be Irish in Philly This Week

Prepare to get spiffy this weekend! The 104th annual Mayo Ball is coming to town. All the Mayos—and they are a fun group of people—wlll be dancing to the Noel Henry Irish Show Band in the ballroom of the Philadelphia Irish Center on Saturday night. You don’t have to be from Mayo to attend (I know—they invited me) and they’re a very hospitable bunch.

It’s total immersion time in Jamison again—the Gaeltacht Weekend during which very little English is spoken. That kicks off on Friday night and goes through Sunday.

There are workshops on Saturday featuring (Pat) Egan, (Laura) Egan, and (Jim) Eagan who are performing on Friday night at the Irish Center, singing many of the songs written by local tunesmith Ed Reavy.

On Sunday, the Irish Club of Delaware County holds its monthly meeting at the Irish Immigration Center in Upper Darby.

And St. Thomas Church in Whitemarsh is holding a Celtic worship service starting at 5:30 Sunday night.

Also on Sunday night: The Swell Season at the Merriam Theater in Philadelphia. That’s Glen Hansard and Marketa Irglova, Oscar winners for “Falling Slowly,” a song from the movie, “Once.” In which they starred. This is their second visit to the area.

On Tuesday, look for a visit from Irish Consul General Niall Burgess to the Irish Immigration Center and the kick-off of a survey aimed at assessing the needs of the local Irish community. We’ll have more about that for you later.

On Friday, AOL and LAOH Div 22 are holding their annual awards dinner honoring Municpal Court Judge Patrick Dugan, retired fireman and past president of Div. 22 Thomas Meehan (Hibernian of the year), LAOH Div 22 President Maureen Daly (Hibernian of the year) and, as Irishman of the Year, Michael Callahan, president of the Philadelphia St. Patrick’s Day Observance Association (way to go, Michael!).

Also on Friday, the Catholic Leadership Institute of Exton will present its 2009 Award for Outstanding Catholic Leadership to Irish-born Sister Briege McKenna, OSC, and three other Catholic leaders at a reception and dinner at the Drexelbrook in Drexel Hill. Sister Briege, who entered the Sisters of St. Clare at the age of 15 was crippled by arthritis and then miraculously healed during a Eucharistic celebration. She supports the priesthood by hosting healing and support retreats. The other honorees are Barbara Henkels, national Catholic philanthropist and advocate for Catholic education; Cardinal Daniel DiNardo, the Archibishop of Galveston-Houston and Jim Nicholson, former Vatican ambassador.

But check out our calendar. Did you know that in any given week you could learn to speak Irish, pick up a few authentic set dance steps, get Irish guitar, tin whistle, or flute lessons, hear live traditional Irish music every night of the week, and tune into four radio shows playing Celtic tunes? If you can’t be Irish in this town, you can’t be Irish anywhere.

So get out there and be Irish!

News, People

Ireland’s “Immigration Bishop” Visits Philadelphia

Derry Bishop Seamus Hegarty with his Phillies shirt, a gift from the Philadelphia Derry Society.

Derry Bishop Seamus Hegarty with his Phillies shirt, a gift from the Philadelphia Derry Society.

As he prepared to say a Requiem Mass for the souls of the faithful departed at Philadelphia’s Irish Center on Tuesday night, Dr. Seamus Hegarty, the Bishop of Derry, Ireland, paused to acknowledge the living who are far from peace.

The chairman of the Irish Episcopal Council for Emigrants, in Philadelphia briefly on a multi-city tour to meet with immigrants, was clearly moved by the stories he heard from undocumented Irish who had lost loved ones in Ireland and were forced to grieve alone, far from family and friends, because they could not return home. Illegal aliens can’t risk returning to their country of origin for fear that they will not be allowed back in the United States where they may have American-born children.

“It’s one of the things that really got to me,” said the Bishop, who has served the Derry diocese since 1994. “It’s a double tragedy for people who have lost someone and then aren’t able to go home and grieve with their families. I lost my own mother when I was seven, so I know how they feel.”

Bishop Hegarty spent part of the day at the Irish Immigration Center in Upper Darby. But not far from his mind were the immigrants he’d met in Boston. “They’re hurting very badly there,” he said. “I met many people who were bereaved and unable to go home and they were just devastated.”

He used the message of the Gospel to urge those in attendance to put pressure on the political powers-that-be to pass comprehensive immigration reform bills that would create legal pathways for the undocumented to become citizens. In Matthew 25:31-45, Jesus promised that those who fed the hungry, gave drink to the thirsty, welcomed strangers, clothed the naked, cared for the sick, and visited those in prison will sit to the right of him in heaven “because whatever you did for one of the least of these brothers of mine, you did for me.”

“The attitude that ‘as long as I’m allright, I don’t care about you, is not the Irish way,” he said in his homily. “We had nothing and we shared our nothingness with each other. You need to forge a community here that carries out the message that the interest of one is the interest of all. Reaching out to people is a gift and certainly will not go unrewarded.”

The Philadelphia Donegal Association and the Derry Society participated in the Mass and the reception that followed. Bishop Hegarty also renewed old acquaintances, including Mary McHugh of Lindenwold, NJ, who knew the bishop as a youngster in Kilcar, County Donegal, where he was born. “I was born and raised in Scotland, but my mother grew up in Kilcar and my father was from the next village, so I spent my summers there,” she said. “The bishop is actually related to me through my mother. When you grow up in these little towns and villages, you keep the connections.”

Bishop Hegarty was on his way to Washington, DC, to meet with US legislators about immigration issues and was clearly aware of the effect the visit of one Irish bishop would have. “I’m sure they’ll be very gracious and as soon as I’m gone they’ll forget all about it,” he said to laughter. “That’s why you need to pressurize them. . . You can do something. We are all responsible for one another’s welfare. Use your voice in a responsible and constructive way to try to improve the welfare of immigrants.”

Siobhan Lyons, executive director of the Philadelphia Irish Immigration Center, was Bishop Hegarty’s host for much of the day.

“We were delighted to welcome Bishop Hegarty to Philadelphia.,” she says. “The Irish Apostolate has been a strong supporter of the Irish diaspora and we deeply appreciate the work they do on behalf of the Irish community in the United States. I particularly welcome their efforts in the campaign for comprehensive immigration reform and wish the bishop the best of luck in Washington DC.

“But Bishop Hegarty is right when he says we can’t sit back and wait for other people to solve our problems,” Lyons says. “We must use our voices and our votes to advocate for the most vulnerable in our community, and that includes the undocumented. I hope everyone will listen to his message and make sure their representatives know that the Irish community supports comprehensive immigration reform. “

News

Will the Parade Pass Us By?

During the worst recession in 80 years, with an unemployment rate inching up like holiday weight gain, you might think that whether the City of Philadelphia funds or doesn’t fund the St. Patrick’s Day parade is a non-issue. Petty. Paltry. Pale by comparison.

But not to parade director Michael Bradley. Nor to the thousands who plan their last Sunday before March 17 around the nation’s second oldest (starting in 1771, it has marched continuously every year) St. Paddy’s Day Parade. Traditions are by their very nature part of our history, allowing us to mark time or relive the past–a rare gift, which is what makes it so hard for us to let go of them.

So Bradley will be fighting City Hall again this year—not to have the city pick up the entire freight for the parade, but to give the Irish and all the other ethnic groups who march every year down the Parkway, Broad Street, or through a neighborhood, a break on the bill.

“We’re not out to get the city to cover 100 percent of everything,” says the Delware County businessman, who also runs the Irish Festival on Penn’s Landing in June. “Everyone should kick in. I proposed that the city provide $125,000 and the state another $125,000 and that will cover the expenses for all the ethnic parades. We need everyone to compromise. It can’t be us 100% and them zero.”

Bradley will be testifying next Tuesday before City Council which is holding hearings on the parade costs, which are higher than in most large cities. In Chicago, for example, the city not only allows parade organizers (the local plumbers union) to dye the Chicago River green, it only tags them with an $8,000 bill, says director Kevin Sherlock. The organizers make up the rest of the money they need—including $27,000 for “terrorist insurance”—at an annual fundraiser in January

“For $8,000 we get a lot,” says Sherlock, who is vice president of the Chicago Journeyman Plumbers Union Local 130. “I can’t complain. The street sweepers keep the streets spotlessly clean, the city supplies port-a-potties all over the place, they close the streets down for us, set up the staging area, all traffic is stopped. We get a tremendous amount of help and support from the city.”

Along with Michael Blichasz, co-host of the Pulaski Day March, Bradley formed a group called Ethnic Americans United which includes representatives from the Puerto Rican, Italian, German, Greek, and other ethnic communities whose parades might not get off the curb this year. Or ever again. As Blichasz said in a letter to Mayor Michael Nutter, “the unaffordable fees being charged this year threaten the parades’ continued existence.”

That was certainly true for the Columbus Day parade. It didn’t happen this year. Though the Mummer’s Parade is expected to march down Broad Street as usual, the city will be delivering organizers a bill too—one much larger than last year, when the last-minute announcement that the city wasn’t going to pick up the tab nearly caused the strutting to stop dead on Two Street. Last minute donations and fundraisers—and the gesture by the city to forgive $300,000 in costs because of the short notice– saved the Mummers’ parade. The city will not be so forgiving this year. Last year’s St. Patrick’s Day parade was also shortened to save thousands in police and sanitation bills, and shortfalls were made up by donations and 11th hour fundraisers.

Bradley has also asked for an accounting from the city on the fees they’re charging for items like portable rest rooms, police, and bleachers. “I looked at the sanitation fees and I felt they were fair,” says Bradley. “But I contacted the port-a-potty vendor and their price was half what the city is charging us. I’m also concerned about the security costs. The police are wonderful, but I can’t believe that some of them can’t be working straight time. They can’t all be on overtime.”

He pointed to the last year’s Phillies’ World Series parade which, he said, cost the city $1 million. “I was told they bring lots of money to the city,” he says, “but so do we. We hold all our meetings in Center City, put up out-of-town bands in the city, bring people into the city for the day where they spend money. I want some acknowledgement of that.”

Though some have suggested that the parade be moved out into the suburbs, Bradley doesn’t think it’s a good idea. Many suburban communities now have their own parades. And for 239 years—before the Declaration of Independence was signed–it’s been the Philadelphia St. Patrick’s Day Parade. “All of these ethnic parades celebrate city neighborhoods,” he argues. “We don’t want to see these traditions go by the wayside.”

What can you do? Write a letter to Mayor Nutter or the Philadelphia City Council in support of the efforts of Ethnic Americans United before next Tuesday’s City Council meeting.

People

The Ghost and Paul Gallagher

Kathleen Murtagh listens to Paul Gallagher tell his ghostly tale at the Irish Center.

Kathleen Murtagh listens to Paul Gallagher tell his ghostly tale at the Irish Center.

Paul Gallagher is used to being the last man standing at the Irish Center on Friday nights. After the final patron leaves, the longtime bartender closes up the center, latching windows, flicking off lights, locking doors. His last job is to clean up after the weekly Friday night Texas hold ‘em game in the front dining room.

But, on one Friday night just a few weeks ago, as he was just about to scoop up the poker chips, he discovered that his solitary work wasn’t so solitary. He was not alone. Someone was supervising the job.

“The doors were locked and I’d just closed the window and I don’t know who it was, but I felt something cold pass through me, like a breeze, right through my chest right here,” says Gallagher, patting the center of his chest. “And then I heard someone say, ‘What are you going to do now, Paul?’”

Later, he says, he took it as a philosophical question. But at the time, the answer was simple and practical. “I left the chips there, turned out the light, locked up and got out of there,” says the South Philly native, who says he’s not easily shaken. “I was scared to death.”

On his way home, he decided to stop at his neighborhood after-hours club for a stiff one. “I walked in and the bartender there who’s a friend of mine says, ‘Jesus Christ, Paul, you look like you’ve seen a ghost.’ I said, ‘I didn’t see one but I felt and heard one.’”

Gallagher has no explanation for the phenomenon. He’d just learned that morning that a friend and longtime patron had died, but he didn’t recognize the voice he heard. “I’ve heard stories about this place and other people have said they thought it was haunted.” In fact, confirms Irish Center manager John Nolan, one of his predecessors died in the office that Nolan uses now in the more than century old building that has been, variously, a car club, a Jewish center, and a caterer’s hall before it was purchased in 1958 by the Commodore Barry Society.

Gallagher had a previous close encounter with the ghost of Emlen Street, but only by proxy. “My girlfriend said that when she was sitting at the bar she felt a cold breeze brush by her legs. But this is the first time something has happened to me.”

His ghostly encounter hasn’t stopped Gallagher from being at his post on Friday nights, and he should be there this Friday, October 30, for the Samhain Rambling House event—an evening of jokes, songs, dancing, and stories to celebrate the Irish version of Halloween.

Maybe, if you ask him, he’ll tell you a real ghost story.

The Samhain Rambling House costs $5 and will feature music by Vince Gallagher, Kevin Brennan and Patsy Ward; quizzes with prizes; special awards for the best costume, scariest story, and best performance; and free refreshments and drink specials. Bring your best party piece, or just enjoy everyone else’s talent.

If none of that gets your broomstick off the ground, the center recently installed three new 42-inch plasma screen TVs where you can watch “Ghost Whisperer.” Or your favorite sport.

Or you can sit in on the Texas Hold ‘Em game. If you dare.

People

How To Be Irish in Philly This Week

This is the weekend that former Philly (and Galway) folklorist and musician Mick Moloney comes back to town with some friends to hold a benefit concert for St. Malachy’s School in north Philadelphia.

St. Malachy’s, founded in the mid 19th century by Irish immigrants, is unique among the area’s Catholic parochial schools. It doesn’t charge tuition or take money from the Archdiocese. It’s supported strictly by donation, and the concert on Sunday, November 1, is the big fundraiser. It’s usually standing room only, so get there early. The concert is held in the jewel of a church next to the school and we’re betting Clancy Brothers’ alum Robbie O’Connell is one of the “friends” this year.

It’s one of four fabulous concerts in the area this week. But before that. . . .

On Saturday, the Irish community celebrates national Ancient Order of Hibernians President Seamus Boyle—a Philly boy—at a testimonial dinner at the Radisson on Route 1 in Philadelphia.

Also on Saturday, the group Burning Bridget Cleary will be performing a Halloween Show at the Tin Angel in Philadelphia. This is an exciting, up-and-coming Celtic group that’s worth stiffing some trick-or-treaters to see.

Then, on Monday, the previously mentioned Robbie O’Connell will be doing a special peformance at The Shanachie Pub in Ambler. But save some of that yen for Irish music for Friday night, November 6, when Pat Egan, Laura Byrne Egan, and Jim Eagan come to the Irish Center and sing and play the songs of local composer Ed Reavy.

On Tuesday, November 3, author and filmmaker Mary Pat Kelly will be at Villanova reading from her book, “Galway Bay,” which is based on the story of her great-great-great grandmother who escaped from Ireland in the 1840s and settled in Chicago. Kelly has produced several award-winning PBS documentaries including “To Live for Ireland,” a portrait of Nobel Peace Prize winner John Hume. She has also worked as a Hollywood screenwriter.

On Tuesday night, Seamus Hegarty, Bishop of Derry, who is visiting the area will celebrate a Mass at 7 PM at the Irish Center.

On Friday, the Church of the Holy Family in Sewell, NJ, has invited the Hooligans to help them celebrate their first Irish Festival, which will include dancers, bagpipers, and food.

Details? You know where to look.

Columns, How to Be Irish in Philly

How to Be Irish in Philly This Week

We could all use a few laughs and there will be more than a few when the Irish Comedy Tour rolls into town on Sunday at the Sellersville Theatre. It’s also your chance to see former Philly guy, Pat Godwin, late of the John DeBella Morning Zoo and Howard Stern radio programs.

But, before that happens, local documentary maker John Foley’s poignant and patriotic film, The Color Bearers, which features former Eagle Vince Papale, will be shown at the FirstGlance Philadelphia Film Festival at the Franklin Theater at the Franklin Institute on Saturday. The film explores the courage of those who carried the flag in the Revolutionary and Civil wars.

So, you think you can dance? Or sing? Or play a bodhran? America’s Got Talent Season 5 auditions are being held at Pennsylvania’s Convention Center on Saturday and they’re looking for Irish acts. So drag your harp or your pipes on down and show them how it’s done.

There are also a couple of fundraisers on Saturday. AOH/LAOH Div. 87 is holding a benefit to raise money to help member George Lees repair his motorized wheelchair. Paddy’s Well is at Brittingham’s Irish Pub in Lafayette Hill on Sunday afternoon to drum up support and money for Jessica Reed, daughter of Paddy’s Well bass player Frank Reed, who suffers from cystic fibrosis. Jessica recently underwent a lung transplant and her medical costs are high. Also on the bill, Oliver McElhone, The King Brothers, and Seamus McGroary.

What happened to the Celtic Tiger? That’s the focus of a panel discussion on Tuesday at the Rittenhouse Hotel, sponsored by the Irish American Business Chamber and Network. Dublin representatives from Baker Tilly, one the world’s leading accounting firms, will explore the issue of Ireland’s economy.

On Friday, don your scariest costume (yes, anything you wore back in the ‘80s will be fine) and head over to the Irish Center in Mt. Airy for the Samhain Rambling House and celebrate Halloween Irish style. We’ve heard that there have been some ghostly manifestations at the center (no, really), so you may want to bring your ouija board. Check back with us later in the week to get the whole story!

People

Sinn Fein’s Gerry Adams Meets with Local GAA Footballers

Gerry Adams, center, with the Mairead Farrell Ladies Junior Football Club in Philadelphia.

Gerry Adams, center, with the Mairead Farrell Ladies Junior Football Club in Philadelphia.

It seemed like the perfect name, says Angela Mohan. When she and Siobhan Trainor were casting about for a name for their new ladies Gaelic football club, they wanted to honor a strong Irish woman. They picked Mairead Farrell, the Belfast-born IRA fighter who spent 10 years in prison and was killed by British soldiers on Gibraltar in 1988.

The insignia associated with Farrell was a phoenix rising from the ashes. It seemed appropriate. Mohan and Trainor have both been involved with other football teams in the Philadelphia area that have folded and later been reborn as interest and the number of seasoned Irish players waxed and waned.

Their new team still relies on the Irish—often with summer visitors that Mohan recruits—but is now bucked up by Americans, many of them superb athletes on the basketball courts, but who have never played the game that started in Ireland the early 14th century.

Nevertheless, the women took home the Sean P. Cawley Cup as Philadelphia’s regional champions after a tough game against the Notre Dames last summer on the fields of Cardinal Dougherty High School.

But it was the name of their team that caught the attention of Gerry Adams, a member of Northern Ireland’s parliament and longtime head of Sinn Fein, the political party closely affiliated with the IRA.

A few months ago, he sent them a letter,commending them for commemorating the life of Mairead Farrell who, he said, “was a very special young woman whose love for her country encompassed its history and culture, including Gaelic games.”

The letter concluded, “I wish you well and hope to see you in Philadelphia in the future.” A typical sign-off. . .except that Adams meant it.

Last Friday, October 16, before Adams attended the annual banquet of the Irish Society in Philadelphia at the Penns Landing Hyatt, he spent half an hour chatting, laughing and posing for pictures with members of the team who came suited up and with a gift—a Mairead Farrell jersey. “I hope it’s extra large,” he joked.

With him was Rita O’Hare, the Sinn Fein representative to the United States, with whom Farrell had stayed in Dublin after her release from prison. “I’m glad Mairead’s name is being used and still being heard,” said O’Hare. Adams, she said was very enthusiastic about meeting the team that bears her name. “Plus he’s mad about GAA,” she laughed.