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Aon Sceal?

Jamesie Johnston of Albannach

Albannach drummer Jamesie Johnston of Glasgow, Scotland, is recovering in the University of Louisville Hospital after being stabbed in the liver and thigh by an intoxicated fan after the Glasgow, KY, Highland Games on June 5. He’s expected to fully recover.

Johnston, his band mates, and members of several other bands were relaxing post-Games at a cabin at the Barren River Lake State Resort Park. According to published reports, a fan, James E. Null, 42, of Glasgow, KY, had been hanging out with the band and started to become belligerent. Johnston attempted to force the man to leave, which is when, reports say, Johnston was stabbed. Albannach drummer Colin Walker also was scraped by the knife. Null was arrested and charged.

The popular Scottish percussive group appears every year at the Mid-Winter Scottish-Irish Festival in Valley Forge and performed on May 22 at a street fair at Molly Maguire’s in Lansdale. They’re managed by Bill and Karen Reid of East of the Hebrides Entertainments in Plymouth Meeting.

“Jamesie is on the mend,” Bill Reid assured us this week. “It will take some time but he’s physically fit so that will speed things up. If it was me I’d be in bed for years.”

The band has gigs in the US through mid-July, including the annual Celtic Fling at Mount Hope Winery in Manheim, PA, June 24-26, Camping Weekend Festival in Barto, PA, July 1-3. They plan to keep those commitments, though Jamesie will sit out the first few. “”The others can do the job and from the fan reaction, the vibe is good and the shows will have that high energy everyone loves,” says Reid, who joined the band at its gigs in Rhode Island this week.

Our Rose Moves Up!

Philadelphia’s Rose of Tralee, Beth Keeley, is heading to the finals in Tralee this August! Keeley, a 25-year-old writer, competed last week in the International Rose of Tralee Regional Finals in Portlaoise and was one of 23 Roses from around the world chosen to compete in the main event in August. Congratulations to Beth!

John Byrne and the Blind Pig

Like many musicians, John Byrne (The John Byrne Band) has a secret “other” life. Until recently, the popular local Irish musician was an English teacher and a part-time bartender (at Kelliann’s on Spring Garden Street). Soon, he’s about to be part-owner of his own pub, along with Debra Ciasullo (another tap-meister from Kelliann’s) and David Hentz.

The Blind Pig is scheduled to open soon at 702 N. Second Street in the young and trendy Northern Liberties section of Philadelphia. The menu will be “pork-centric” and the atmosphere, “neighborhood bar.”

“I’ll be working there a bit and playing music fulltime, and putting the teaching on hold for at least a year,” Bryne told us.

Know Someone Who Should be Honored?

The Delaware Valley Irish Hall of Fame (DVIHOF) is looking for a few good Irish people. For the eleventh year, the Hall of Fame will be honoring people from the Delaware Valley region who have contributed to the preservation of Irish culture.

Last year’s honorees include Vince Gallagher, Donegal-born and president of the Irish Center and founder of DVIHOF; Msgr. Joseph C. McLoone, son of Irish immigrants and chaplain of several Irish organizations including DVIHOF, the Donegal Association, and the Danny Browne AOH Div. 80.; and Kathleen Sullivan, vice president for government and community affairs at Comcast and vice chairperson of the Irish Memorial.

Send your letter of nomination by June 24 to The Delaware Valley Irish Hall of Fame, c/o Kathy McGee Burns, 2291 Mulberry Lane, Lafayette Hill, PA 19444, or call 215-872-1305.

The Hall of Fame Event Dinner is scheduled for Sunday, November 13, at the Irish Center, 6815 Emlen Street, Philadelphia.

The Irish and Their Horses

Irish native Kevin Babington of Gwynedd Valley captured first place in the Grand Prix at the Devon Horse Show last week. He was riding Mark Q, a horse owned by a friend in Ireland.

Babington is the principal in Kevin Babington LLC, a large equestrian facility in Gwynedd Valley that provides training, boarding, and sales.

Babington, born and raised in Carrick en Suir in County Tipperary, has represented Ireland more than 30 times on National Cup teams, came in fourth as an individual in the 2004 Summer Olympic Games, and contributed to a team gold medal in the 2001 European Championships. Recently, he placed first in the $25,000 Ted Grant Welcome Grand Prix and second in the $40,000 Essex Troop Grand Prix on Mark Q.

Babington came to the US in 1987 to work as a riding instructor at a Vermont summer camp. He met his wife, Dianna, at a horse show in Pennsylvania. They have two children.

Aon sceal means “what’s the story?” in Irish. If you have a story you’d like us to tell, email denise.foley@comcast.net.

Dance, Music, News

Hot Fun in the Summertime

Not all the dancers belong to a dance school.

Not all the dancers belong to a dance school.

Memorial Day is seen as the official start of summer. But for those of us following a slightly different calendar, summer doesn’t truly begin until the annual Penn’s Landing Irish Festival.

This year’s festival kicks off Sunday at 12 noon, going all the way to 8 p.m., at the Great Plaza at Penn’s landing, Columbus Boulevard at Market Street.

If you’ve never been, here’s why you should go…

Music (and lots of it, all day long), with Blackthorn, Jamison and the Hooligans headlining on the main stage.

Dance, with so many of the Philadelphia area’s schools of Irish dance prancing all over the place that we can’t list them all.

Food and drink, including traditional Irish noshies like shepherd’s pie, along with water ice, ice cream, and appropriately seasonal liquid refreshment.

Vendors galore, so you can pick up all of the T-shirts, hats, mugs, home decor, jewelry and other goods necessary to confirm in the eyes of all the world that you are, yes indeed, Irish.

Kiddie stuff, including face-painting, of course.

Atmosphere. Yes, Penn’s Landing lacks shade and technically, kids aren’t supposed to wade in the fountains (but they do anyway), and it can get a little hot out there along the river. But, hey, you’re along the river, which you can bet will be dotted with pleasure boats, some of which stop dead in the water to take in the music emanating from the main stage.

OK, so we’ve told you. But if you still need convincing, let us show you. Check out our photos from past years.

News, People

Honoring the Inspirational Irish Women of 2011

Honorees Carmel Boyce, Anne McDade Keyser Hill and Karen Boyce McCollum

Honorees Carmel Boyce, Anne McDade Keyser Hill and Karen Boyce McCollum

It’s not for nothing that they’ve earned the description, “inspirational.”

The 12 recipients of the 2011 Inspirational Irish Women awards are really quite remarkable, accomplished people, coming from all walks of life—the judiciary, law enforcement, music, religious orders, fire and rescue, nursing, business, broadcasting and more.

The honorees were:

  • Sister Christine McCann
  • Margaret Reyes
  • The Honorable Pamela Pryor Dembe
  • Kathy Fanning
  • Anne McDade Keyser Hill
  • Mary Ann McGinley, Ph.D., R.N.
  • Kathy O’Connell
  • Carmel Boyce
  • Karen Boyce McCollum
  • Christine M. Coulter
  • Liz Crehan Anderson
  • Sister Peg Hynes, S.S.J.

(To read more about them, click here.)

For all their accomplishments, they remain quite humble—and more, as they accepted their awards in a special ceremony Sunday afternoon at the Philadelphia Irish Center, all credited the key people in their lives who helped guide them along the paths they ultimately followed.

Speaking of her parents Barney and 2011 honoree Carmel Boyce, communications executive and singer Karen Boyce McCollum thanked her parents for “bringing us up in a household where growing up Irish was a blessing and the greatest gift they could give.”

Businesswoman Anne McDade Keyser Hill, her voice quavering just a bit, thanked her husband Joe for his loving support. (And he blew a kiss back at her.) But she also recalled the strong influence of her father in her life: “My dad, when I was 14 or 15 years old, took me aside and he said, ‘Sis’—he called me ‘Sis’—don’t let anyone ever tell you that you can’t do what you want in your life because you’re a girl.”

The highly regarded nurse leader Mary Ann McGinley spoke lovingly of her own parents and credited them for setting a good example: “My dad clearly inherited the Irish talent of telling stories. My mom was a ‘Type E’ personality—everything for everybody each and every day.”

And, finally, WXPN Kids Corner host Kathy O’Connell recalled one exceptional woman in her life: “I want to dedicate this award to my grandmother, who became a widow 10 seconds before the Depression hit.”

Attending the event were more than 400 family members, friends and co-workers who attended the ceremony, who cheered and applauded as each woman (and representatives of two women who were honored posthumously, social activist Sister Peg Hynes and musician Liz Crehan Anderson) accepted her award. They also had a chance to admire the striking black-and-white portraits of the honorees, created by photographer Brian Mengini and commissioned by the Inspirational Irish Women committee.

In addition to honoring women of high achievement, the awards program benefited the Philadelphia Irish Center.

We’ve assembled an extensive photo essay from the day. We also present video highlights.

News

Phoenixville Celtic Street Fair 2011

This year's fair featured an impromptu visit by a passing bride and groom.

This year's fair featured an impromptu visit by a passing bride and groom.

It drizzled, it rained, it poured.

A lot like the weather in Scotland and Ireland, come to think about it. But a bit of moisture from the skies did little to dampen the enthusiasm of festival-goers along Phoenixville’s main drag on Saturday.

It pretty much had everything.

There was great music, to start… Barleyjuice, Oliver McElhone, Charlie Zahm, The Brigade, Ted the Fiddler Band.

Irish Thunder Pipes & Drums performed throughout the day, as did the Pride of Erin dancers.

Vendors sold everything from Celtic jewelry to Guinness baseball caps to fish and chips.

One last thing … props to the bride and groom who stopped their limo and jumped out to share a quick dance in front of the stage. Every marriage should get off to such a good start.

News, People, Sports

Walking Softly, Carrying a Big Stick

Jeff Cavanaugh demonstrates Irish stick fighting with partner John W. Hurley.

Jeff Cavanaugh demonstrates Irish stick fighting with partner John W. Hurley.

Sure, it’s not the same old shillelagh your father brought from Ireland.

Commonly crafted from blackthorn or oak, the shillelagh (from the Irish “sail éille” and pronounced: shuh-LEY-lee) is best known as a simple walking stick, about four feet long, with a large fist-sized knob at the top.

Well, take another look at that blackened, gnarly cane and picture it in the hands of a hard-nosed Irish peasant tasked with defending a moonshine still, or taking offense at a few poorly chosen words at a wake. You can see the potential for some highly creative violence.

Welcome to the world of “bataireacht,” also known as Irish stick fighting—or, more lyrically, whiskey stick dancing. It’s Ireland’s own martial art, hundreds of years old, the lethally balletic techniques passed down from father to son.

Nobody is whacking anyone else over the head with blackthorn sticks any more, but the tradition—in a milder form—lives on here in the Delaware Valley.

Jeff Cavanaugh of Upper Southampton, Bucks County—a multiple black-belt holder and longtime practitioner of the more commonly known martial arts—stumbled upon bataireacht (pronounced “BAHT-air-ahct” three years ago while surfing on the Internet for news and information about martial arts in general. He found a link to the Web site of Glen Doyle, a Milton, Ontario, martial arts instructor. What caught his attention was a reference to Irish stick fighting. It was the first he’d ever heard of it, and right away, he was hooked.

“I contacted Glen and he put me in touch with one of his students, a guy up in Boston named Rob Masson,” Cavanaugh recalls. “I drove up there for a four-hour class, and then back home again. it was Thanksgiving weekend, but the effort was worth it.”

His interest piqued, Cavanaugh asked Masson to come down to Philadelphia to teach a two-day total-immersion seminar for local martial arts aficionados. And after that, he traveled up to Ontario for a weekend workshop with the Celtic sensei himself, Glen Doyle.

Doyle teaches a two-handed style of stick fighting practiced only by his family, going back generations from one Doyle to the next. Until the Doyles came along, most stick fighting was one-handed, the shillelagh wielded like a sword. That style would have been popular among military men. But the Doyles had a different perspective.

“The first Doyles who originated this system were boxers, not people who were experts with swords,” Cavanaugh says. “Their style was developed to fight the single-hand stick fighter. They (the Doyles) just took stick fighting in a different direction.”

The two-handed system, using a shorter three-foot stick held horizontally across the body, allowed for some creative new defensive moves, but it also gave practitioners the flexibility to thrust the stick outward with one hand when needed, like throwing a punch—boxer-style.

Once developed, the Doyle approach became a closely guarded family secret. “It always stayed within the family,” Cavanaugh says. The techniques of Doyle stick fighting made their way to Canada in the 1800s when one of Glen Doyle’s ancestors, Eddy Doyle, migrated to Newfoundland. Over the years, the Doyles continued to maintain the ancient tradition—and their secrets.

That is, until Glen Doyle decided to share his knowledge with any and all interested newcomers.

Cavanaugh continued his relationship with Doyle after that first weekend of teaching and learning. He traveled up to Doyle’s training school several times.

“I was able to pick it up fairly quickly,” Cavanaugh says. “Stick fighting is fairly straightforward. It doesn’t require a lot of strength or flexibility. You have a three-foot stick in your hand, and that’s what makes it so powerful. You’re taking a very heavy stick, and moving it very fast.”

Eventually, Doyle judged Cavanaugh skilled enough to teach. (Cavanaugh, a longtime woodworker, also learned how to create his own fighting sticks.)

And so began Cead Bua Philadelphia, Cavanaugh’s school for Irish stick fighting housed at United Martial Arts in Oreland, Montgomery County. (Cead Bua means “100 victories.”)

For Cavanaugh, who continues to practice the martial arts he grew up with. Irish stick fighting has a very different appeal.

“Having spent years studying martial arts from other cultures, it was great to find something where I could understand the history,” Cavanaugh says. Also when compared to Eastern martial arts, Irish stick fighting was less flashy, more pragmatic.

“Stick fighting is 100 percent useful,” says Cavanaugh. “Stick fighters had a job to do. Anything that didn’t work, they threw away. It was serious business, something that could save your life. You have to accept it on your own terms. There are no high kicks or flashy moves to share with your friends.”

This distinctly Irish martial art does have one thing in common with its ancient Eastern cousins, says Cavanaugh—mental discipline. Also like judo, aikido, tae kwon do and all the rest, the goal of learning it is to never to have to use it. Odds are, no one is going to walk softly through the streets of Philadelphia carrying a big stick, anyway. “The whole idea of getting into an actual stick fight,” Cavanaugh readily concedes with a laugh, “ is pretty far out there.”

Interested in learning more? Cavanaugh is sponsoring an introductory class on Sunday from 1 to 2 p.m., at United Martial Arts, 109 Allison Road (nearest cross street: Bruce Road) in Oreland. Click here for details.

News

Plotting a Course for the New Anti-Defamation Federation

Joe Fox and Tim Wilson moderated the meeting.

Joe Fox and Tim Wilson moderated the meeting.

Out-of-control pub crawls.

Offensive St. Patrick’s Day merchandise.

Members of the new Irish Anti-Defamation Federation really have their work cut out for them. How are they going to do it? A little at a time, it seems, and with considerable diplomacy.

The Federation hosted a meeting at the Philadelphia Irish Center in Mount Airy Thursday night, drawing representatives from a wide sampling of Delaware Valley Irish organizations, from the Rose of Tralee to the Ancient Order of Hibernians to Clan na Gael.

The discussions were also fairly wide-ranging, but two issues of pressing concern moved to the fore: Pub crawls conducted around St. Patrick’s Day, featuring some noteworthy exhibitions of public drunkenness; and tasteless, insulting t-shirts, mugs and other Irish-themed tchotchkes of the like sold by many merchants around the saint’s day, with Spencer Gifts apparently regarded as Offender No. 1.

Joe Fox, president of the AOH Philadelphia County Board, chaired the meeting, with help from Tim Wilson. The purpose of the meeting was to help determine where the group should focus its efforts—and how to do it.

Starting off the meeting, Fox was at pains to stress that the IADF is for anyone and everyone who is interested. “Even though Tim and I are with the AOH, this is not just an AOH thing, he stressed. “This is all of us.”

With that, he opened the floor, and a free-wheeling discussion ensued. What emerged was a consensus that the defamation of the Irish did not happen overnight, and it won’t be solved overnight.

Too, there was a sense that the Federation will need to choose its battles and try not to come across as—to employ a phrase offered up by one attendee—”Irish crybabies.”

Deciding which problem to tackle and how to tackle it, many in the room acknowledged, is also going to be an issue of some delicacy. After all, several noted, AOH divisions themselves run pub crawls, and the North Wildwood Irish Weekend—where public drunkenness is hardly unknown and derogatory Irish merch can be easily located and bought—is sponsored by a division of the AOH in South Jersey. Other Irish and Celtic organizations run similar festivals and fairs, and they have similar problems.

Fox noted that the AOH in particular rigorously rides herd over pub crawls to ensure that members behave in a manner that will not bring dishonor to the organization. And as far as North Wildwood is concerned, he added, the local AOH specifies in contracts with sellers that insulting and derogatory merchandise must not be sold—and when such merchandise is found, sellers are warned to cease and desist.

That said, it was clear to many that the Federation can’t and won’t declare war on bars and purveyors of Irish-themed apparel. People are allowed to make money, and what’s more, they’re allowed to have fun. “There’s nothing (inherently) wrong with pub crawls,” Fox said by way of example. “We’re not looking to stop people from drinking. It’s only when they go too far. We need to think about these matters and how to be successful with them.”

Joe Roan, from the Dennis Kelly division of the AOH in Havertown, concurred. “We can’t come across telling pub owners that they can’t have a pub crawl,” he said. But he suggested that the Federation have frank discussions with pub owners to see about moderating the conduct of pub crawlers. “When we’re calling someone down, we can’t be doing it with a hammer in our hands,” he said. “And let’s not lose our sense of humor. Every time someone paints something green, let’s not get all upset over it.”

The group plans to reconvene to continue discussing these issues, and to hold an election for a new board in coming weeks.

Music, News

To Dingle and Back

Marching through the streets of Dingle.

Marching through the streets of Dingle.

The Swedesburg Ancient Order of Hibernians pipe band Irish Thunder recently returned from a trip to Ireland’s southwest Dingle Peninsula, where they took part in the annual Pan Celtic Festival.

As the photos and video show … it looks like band members had a good time.Pete Hand, Irish Thunder’s drum major, passed along the group’s many visual memories of the journey, and we happily share them here with you. 

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News

When Irish Eyes Stop Smiling

Joe Fox, second from left, during the Spencer Gifts protest.

It’s not that the Irish have suddenly lost their sense of humor or gotten touchy about their heritage, says Joe Fox, president of the Philadelphia County Ancient Order of Hibernians Board.

The reason he and other leaders in Philadelphia’s Irish community have formed a new Irish Anti-Defamation Federation is because there’s a big difference between the Lucky Charm’s “magically delicious” leprechaun and things like restaurant chains offering free potatoes in honor of the Irish famine and t-shirts that read “When my Irish eyes are smiling you know I’m drunk”—and worse.

“’Kiss me I’m Irish’ is not offensive,” says Fox, whose maternal grandparents came from Ireland.  “’A Million Mick March’ is mildly offensive. What’s really offensive is the “Irish Today, Hungover Tomorrow” type of merchandise that we’re seeing that is very derogatory towards Irish people.”

That’s why the newly minted organization is holding a community-wide meeting on Thursday, May 12, at the Philadelphia Irish Center, 6815 Emlen Street in the Mt. Airy section of the city.

“We’re trying to create a united front of Irish organizations that will address defamation issues all year long, not just in March,” says Fox.

What’s providing the impetus now is a set-to the AOH had this winter with Spencer Gifts that culminated in a peaceful protest outside the Franklin Mills branch store which, like every other Spencer’s, sells all kinds of gag gifts, risqué items, and raunchy t-shirts and cards. At the time, Spencer Gifts’ general counsel Kevin Mahoney told www.irishphiladelphia.com that there was “an enormous market in the Irish community who are willing to buy these shirts. Most of them have a good sense of humor and understand it’s all meant as a joke, not to be demeaning or derogatory.”

Several other stores in the Philadelphia, including Old Navy and Acme, removed questionable Irish items when the AOH requested it. Last year, Denny’s, the restaurant chain, yanked a TV ad offering free potatoes to commemorate the Irish Famine after AOH National President Seamus Boyle along with hundreds of other angry Irish-Americans flooded them with calls and letters. Local radio stations have also scuttled on-air St. Patrick’s Day promotions at AOH request, says Fox. On St. Patrick’s Day, Philadelphia Councilwoman Joan Krajewski rallied support for the cause by reading a proclamation denouncing Spencer Gifts and other outlets for selling the merchandise that raised Irish ire. But Spencer Gifts refused to remove the merchandise.

Now, the AOH is seeking community-wide support, says Fox, because they’ve seen that without it, the problem gets worse every year. “And that’s because we’re so laid back about it and don’t let them know,” he says. “Not acting on it sooner allowed it to escalate. They’ll push it as far as we’ll let it.”

Fox is hoping representatives from many of the region’s Irish organizations show up for the strategy meeting. And he particularly hopes to see plenty of Irish immigrants. “I know from my own experience that there are things that I of Irish descent may find offensive, while the Irish born may not,” he says. “We need their input. But we want to expand this to all Irish organizations to show that this is not just an AOH thing—this is an Irish thing.”