Ciaran’s Peculier [sic] Blog

A view of the world from an Irish hole

Category: Uncategorized

Adult education classes in Cavan

This month sees the re-launch of Cavan Adult Education’s range of evening classes, and to the fore will be the usually over-subscribed “Basic Potty training for Adults”. Last year there was anger when it emerged that employees of the County Council had been secretly awarded places ahead of the general Public, and that they were not expected to pay the full fees.

 In an attempt to provide appropriate courses fitted to people’s needs, a special course is to be offered for senior managers who have problems who lack basic numeracy skills. The problem was highlighted by the recent budget overruns associated with the fleadh, and then by a recent survey which showed that the problem was widespread. amongst senior highly-paid management, and not confined, as had previously been thought, to janitors. The course will start with an introduction to the numbers, followed by simple arithmetic using the fingers. Course participants will then migrate to learning tables. Those who pass the course successfully will then be able to start working with calculators

 It is hoped that this course will be more successful than previous ones which aimed to help senior executives in local government with low literacy and letter writing skills. It transpires that even after completing previous courses many participants were not able to type even simple salutations on keyboards. Instead they were only able to scratch simple words like “cat” and “shit” in chalk or crayon on toilet and lift walls in the County Council offices. What’s more, when presented with a letter they fell back into old behavioural types, preferring to play “Spot the Ball”. Alternatively they would seek to gain the identity of the person who had written to them and who deserved a reply, and spread vile and unsubstantiated rumours about them. It is said that the walls of their offices (which reek of the nauseating odour of Preparation H)are festooned with photocopies of press photographs showing football players looking blankly into space, upon which lines in red and black ink have been drawn.

Disability in Cavan 3

 One of the most egregious examples of the way in which the achievements of Cavan’s disabled have been rubbished came last March. The National Council for the Blind, the largest Irish charity working for the benefits of blind and partially sighted people in the country, wanted to hold a meeting in Cavan’s County Library, run by Cavan County Council. They were encouraged to organise a talk on “local history”. However, they didn’t turn to the partially-sighted holder of a PhD in history in their midst, someone who had years of experience as a writer and lecturer on the subject, (myself) but to the council’s dream-boy Dr Brendan Scott, son of Councillor John Scott of Belturbet. Unfortunately the NCBI’s organiser here in Cavan, Ms Helena McDonald, did not realise how she was being set up, and I didn’t realise what was happening until I received an invitation to the event, featuring the aforementioned Scott as “special guest”. Alas Dr Scott, though holding a doctorate in history, is such a craven example of humanity that he felt it was but one more occasion for him to humiliate me and to repay me for the “trouble” that had existed between me and the museum (though before his time), that he jumped at the occasion to give a talk on Cavan’s “Franciscan abbey” (wherever that was). He accepted this invitation so as to rub in my disability to me and at the same time to say that, even though I had a doctorate and considerable experience as a historian, he stood higher amongst the miserable scum of Cavan Co. Council’s establishment. Years of experience has shown that many of the greatest academics are not people you’d willingly associate with, but I wonder do Dr Scott’s colleagues realise what a craven piece of excrement he is? I’ve never met him but since his appointment to Cavan’s County Museum he has pursued a vendetta against me, something in which he has been aided by many in the county council’s executive, including its highest members.

 Now I had thought of Cavan County Library as a home-away-from-home and its ever-helpful staff as friends. I had enjoyed carrying out research there. Sadly, one of the other users of the library did not feel I belonged there, and complained of my whispering into my hand-held tape-recorder. I do not know the identity of my accuser, but I think I’d be able to pick him out in an identity parade. Libraries can be noisy places, yet I ensure that I do not add to the existing background noise level in any way. It was quite clear that I was a wheelchair user and that I needed to use a low-vision aid in order to read text, but a fellow human being responded to my plight not by seeing whether he could help me in any way, or even ignore me, but by making a complaint that I was causing a disturbance. I can assure my readers that my whispers were less loud than the noise made by him and his troupe of hangers-on, who seemed to think that they owned the library’s research area and to resent the presence of strangers there. This was disturbing, but more disturbing was the fact that the library authorities took these vexatious complaints on board. This was enough for me to be banished from the library to the eyrie of the Genealogical Office that has a rather disturbing view over the County Council car park, and it can only be reached by a rather narrow and awkward lift. I was rather embarrassed when I was told of my fate, for no matter how justified I personally felt it was as if I were a schoolboy who had been caught out picking my nose during Morning Assembly. My non-presence ion the public parts of the library frees the county library of the obviously too distressing visage of a partially sighted library user. How capricious is Father Time. I have in my possession a photograph from the Anglo-Celt from a number of years ago, showing me using a piece of magnification equipment in the main body of the old library. I am obviously an inappropriate fixture of the newer library.

 (Let me add that I do not blame the rank-and-file of the library’s staff for this sea change in my fortunes. I feel that this has come from higher up, and from those who do not like being called “Whacko Jacko”. Let me assure him that this epithet is mild compared to the one I feel he is more entitled to.)

Birthday greetings

I want to thank all of the lovely people who sent me greetings on my forty-fifth birthday. I was really touched.

 I joke that, at my age, I should be seized with a sense of the tide going out, but I look at people like Rod Stewart, not to mention Diego Maradona, and Think that life is only just beginning.

 In my forty-five years’ on planet earth I feel I’ve made a good account of myself so far, in spite of what fate has thrown at me. But it is nothing to what I intend to do with the rest of my life…

The Slieve Russell Hotel, Ballyconnell

I recently dined in the Slieve Russell Hotel, Ballyconnell. The occasion was Sunday lunch and I have to say that I thoroughly enjoyed the experience, both the setting and the food.

 The Slieve Russell may be a four-star hotel, but it is a welcoming location. When one arrives one is not greeted by a uniformed retainer looking for one’s car keys. The building is fronted by a large fountain in which children were playing. Movement around the hotel for those who like my are confined to wheelchairs is easy. There are no lifts down dark corridors concealed by curtains. The atmosphere in the hotel is warm and bubbly. This comment extends to the dining area which is decorated by chandeliers and has an atmosphere that is at the same time lively and intimate. When I was there diners were entertained by a pianist, and while I am not a fan of piano music the fact that the music was not canned muzack added sparkle.

 I cannot speak highly enough about the food. I had for a starter a beautiful dish of grilled goat’s cheese served with a plum compote and garnished with salad leaves, baby tomatoes and walnuts. For a main course I opted for salmon served in a sancerre-flavoured sauce with Cajun-style roasted vegetables. The dish was as delicious on the plate as it sounded on the menu – a transformation by no means universal in four=star hotels. My desert was a selection of ice cream served in an edible wafer basket with chocolate sticks. The meal represented amazing value for money.

  I certainly will be back .

Cavan in the news in the hermit kingdom

People in Cavan are blissfully unaware that events swirling around their heads interest far more than themselves but are actually the subject of comment far, far away. It has recently been learned that happenings here have been mentioned in the North Korean media. Items to have made their way onto the nation’s news broadcasts have included the recent Hen night festival, the rumoured closure of the Cavan County Headshop in Ballyjamesduff while mention has also been made of the forthcoming fleadh. Check it out.

There are persistent rumours that the secretive Dear Leader Kim Jong-il is planning a rare foreign ttrip to Cavan later in the year to inaugurate a link between Cavan’s Johnston Central Library and the Kim Il-Sung Central Library in Pyongyang. This will include a public lecture in the library on “The Diocese of Kilmore and Korea in the Later Middle Ages”, given by the library’s preferred little darling of a historian, Dr Brendan Scott.

Our journey?

Rosie, my sister Gill and myself have received an invitation to an event to be held in the Irish Wheelchair Association headquarters at Corlurgan, on May 28th. This is a play about disabled people and starring disabled people from Co. Cavan. It is a most worthy project and I wish it the greatest success to those taking part.

 There are a number of aspects that trouble me however. First, as far as I can discern, the play has not been written by disabled people, but by an able-bodied dramatist, maybe commissioned by Cavan County Council’s Arts Office. There seems to be the implication here that disabled people’s thoughts are too raw and coarse to be consumed by the general, able-bodied public, and have to be interpreted by someone else. Is it about disabled people’s journeys but in the words of the able-bodied? Apart from those unfortunate enough to suffer from aphasia or any other condition that causes loss of speech, all the disabled people I know (including myself) can speak very well and clearly.

 Bound up with this may be the assumption that disabled people wouldn’t be able to formulate their thoughts intelligently, let alone write a play.

 As I have a prior engagement I won’t be able to attend. This should not be seen as a snub by me towards those taking part in the play, who have my boundless respect and admiration. Unfortunately I feel I know what is going to happen. The event will be turned into a photo opportunity. My good friend Brian Mulligan will be on hand to take the pictures of the disabled who will be lined up for the shot. They will thus appear as nice, well-behaved and non-threatening cripples. This will then appear in the pages of the Anglo-Celt as exhibits in the ego-trips of those able-bodied people who want to appear caring. It might be said that the disabled are therefore being cynically used.  Bridget Boyle will be there of course, and I wouldn’t be surprised if she doesn’t have her friend Whacko Jacko Keys there. Bridget enjoys the privileged position of being the only disabled person he deigns to communicate with.  Another sure show will be the chairman of the County Council, Winston Bennett, who will play the role of the self-important courthouse jester by wearing a silly chain round his neck. (Now men who wear jewellery are often ridiculed and called names like “trannies”. What’s more the only people I know who are called Winston are from the West Indies.)

 The drama has been assisted by Cavan County Council’s Arts Office. I used to enjoy very close relations with the office’s staff but I seem to have dropped out of their orbit. I cannot understand why the Arts Officer, my dear (or at least I though dear) friend Catriona O’Reilly never told me about this project. No doubt it would have been inappropriate for her to have contacts with me. How could she own up to being the friend of someone who has said such dreadful things about poor Brendan Snott and his neurotic predecessor in the Ballyjamesduff County vomitarium? She could have contacted me by ‘phone while out walking were she afraid that contact me through her office would be overheard.

 I cannot second-guess the play’s contents, but I do hope that it is realistic and not a dire panegyric singing the praises of the Irish Wheelchair Association or telling of Cavan’s disabled community’s gratitude to Cavan County Council for putting them on the housing waiting list – and keeping them there – where they know that any criticism of the council’s policies will earn them backward movement on the said list. Funny thing is that I don’t think there are that many houses being built, but no doubt the council will restart their construction once they get some of the 25 million euro they’re owed by developers.)

 Now I am confined to a wheelchair, although thankfully I can walk for about half a mile each day. The play is called Our Journey, but I don’t feel it’s my journey, as nobody ever contacted me for my input. This is not prompted by churlish resentment. I do believe that my story, which is not superior to anyone else’s, might be of interest. It is certainly of no lesser value, but it seems that some of those behind this project just don’t want to hear it. They may think that it would be too embarrassing and too likely to offend “certain people”. Yet my disabled journey is a joyful story. I see my disabilities as gifts from God; they are challenges which have been given to me and which I see myself as having a duty to overcome as best I can. I know that there would be many who would bristle with discomfort were I to say the unutterable, that I am actually proud of my disabilities and how I continue to deal with them on a daily basis.

 But it seems as if there are some in Cavan who want to ignore me. The great lie is spread that I am angry.  I am portrayed as someone who has never accepted my position as a cripple, one of God’s accursed. My outlook is heretical, because I do not humbly accept my disabilities as the actions of a wrathful God, (and it goes without saying that the people who think this know God well). What is more I refuse to come to terms with the “fact” that no mater how many books I write or languages I learn I can nevcr, never be as good as the laziest and most incompetent able-bodied person.

 I am therefore not worthy of charity, (not that I want it), or kindness. The nun who used to wipe clean the blackboard when she would see me attempting to discern what she had written, and who forbade any of my classmates to give me their notes, was thus justified because I had stood up to her tyranny. I haven’t changed. In the past I have offended the petty local establishment and thumbed my nose at organisations like the knights of St Columbanus. Did I not go to a Protestant school and refuse to kiss Bishop McKiernan’s ring? I must therefore be punished by being airbrushed out of Cavan’s reality like someone who doesn’t exist, never has and never will.

 Let me repeat that I wish the event all the very best luck. At least I was invited. In the past Tess Kennedy of the Irish MS Society, which has close links to the IWA, has invited me to give talks on local history and other subjects to members in St Christopher’s, and I hope that those who attended enjoyed themselves and found the experience as instructive and rewarding as I did. This action stands in marked contrast to that of the National Council for the Blind in Cavan. Now both Tess and Bridget Boyle knew of my skills and abilities, and both of them were well aware of my contributions to the sadly defunct Cavan Echo. They have never been afraid to count me as a friend and indeed an equal.

 No doubt Dr Snott, so long employed by Cavan County Council and taken to their collective heart, thought that he was a real clever boy when he accepted the invitation to speak from the NCBI on a topic that I had worked on for over two decades. The apposite adjective for him is, I believe unprintable even on my blog.

Patrick Lyons wartime bishop of Kilmore

Patrick Lyons was the bishop of Kilnmo9re at the time of the immolation suffered by the girls in the Poor Clares’ Convent of February 1943.

 He was not a Cavanman, but a native of colon, Co. Louth. He was ordained for the archdiocese of |Armagh. He was appointed bishop of Kilmore in August 1937 after the death earlier that year of Bishop Finnegan.

 His response represented the chilling heartlessness o9f the time, when he spoke of ““… the terrible ordeal it has been for the good nuns to have the fierce glare of publicity turned on their quiet sheltered lives.” While barely mumbling an type of commiserations to the families of the unfortunate victims.

 In Cavan of course he was a true prince bishop. In fact, like many prelates of the time God was a mere junior colleague who lived and worked somewhere else. He had a chauffeur-driven car which was always supplied with petrol even at the height of war time shortages.

 He had access to other items beyond the purchase of most of his flock. These included oranges, which he doled out as presents to altar boys at Confirmation ceremonies throughout the diocese. There was another fire, far less serious, which affected Bishop Lyons’ Episcopal residence. In 1944 soldiers were asked to put out a fire at Cullies House. Among the items they rescued was a large crate of whiskey. Sensing that its disappearance could be blamed on the flames they consumed its contents, leading to some drunken antics observed by a then resident of the nearby St Patrick’s College Cavan.. Thus deprived of his tipple poor Bishop Lyons was unable to drown his sorrows at the defeat of the Nazis in 1945 and the death of Adolf Hitler.

 At the first public performance of the Cavan International Drama Festival in 1946 Bishop Lyons took the opportunity to express his admiration for the play “The Righteous are Bold”. What’s more he felt that it was in such plays that the “true nature of the Irish” was expressed, and not in the scribblings of disaffected degenerates (he didn’t use the term) like Joyce, Beckett et al, whom he and his cronies made sure were banned anyway.

 He died in April 1949.

Orphanage fire victims’ commemoration

Our efforts to commemorate the victims of the convent fire of February 1943 are going from strength to strength. A panel containing the names of those who lost their lives is to be unveiled shortly near the entrance to the convent complex from Cavan’s main street. An ecumenical service is also to be held next month at the convent.  Carina Charles of Shannonside Northern Sound Radio is preparing a documentary about the tragedy, which will feature interviews with residents of Cavan town at the time, as well as contributions from Sean Galligan and yours truly.

 The aspect which h is most pleasing is the strength that the members have been able to muster internally from the group by acting as a team. It is always edifying to know that ordinary people with a purpose and a focus can get results.

Cloverhill booklaunch

This Friday evening, May 28th, sees the launch of a history of the church and community of Cloverhill Co. Cavan, written by my good friend Dr Jonathan Cherry.

 St John’s Church Cloverhill was built by local landed proprietor Mary Ann Sanderson. in the 1850s. It is like an old friend to me as I have passed it on innumerable occasions. The compilation of a history of the church and community since 1725 is long overdue. Thankfully this has now been remedied.

 Jonathan is a local man, from just down the road at Drumellis. We have a certain amount in common. We both went to the same school, the venerable Royal School in Cavan. What’s more we have both been “doctored”! He currently lectures in St Patrick’s College, Drumcondra.

 It promises to be a marvellous event and there can be no better time for a book launch than the wonderfully light-suffused evenings of May.

Cumann Seannchais Breifne at it again

Lately I’ve received lots of emails asking me what’s wrong. Why are so many of my posts taken up with gardening and herbs, to the exclusion of commentary about things in Cavan. The truth is I’ve wanted to devote my energies to pleasant things, to the exclusion of the pea brained bastards of Cavan who leave the pleasant Cavan landscape, at its most beautiful at this time of year, covered with the rodent-like casts of their intellectual banality.

 But unfortunately the foul stench of Cavan’s petty filth invades my nostrils. I learned through a friend of a friend that the Cumann Seannchais Breifne was holding a meeting where the speaker was Micheal Mac Craith OFM from Galway. Now as one of Co. Cavan’s most qualified and experienced historians (this sticks in their craw) I might have expected to have received notification of this event, rather than learning of it third hand. But sadly one of the top honchos in that organisation is an insecure and envious little jerk-off pipsqueak. This meeting was no doubt held in the Ballyjamesduff bomitarium.

 The talk, which I know was excellent, was on the Franciscans, a worthy topic. But it seems too redolent of the days when the C.S.B. was the plaything of the former Bishop of Kilmore, Francis “Frankie goes to Hollywood” McKiernan, when the society’s talks were dominated by discussion of priests and primary teachers. Given that the status of the priesthood has been so badly damaged by the actions of the priesthood’s aberrant members, I am confident that to the general public, the continuing obsession with the clergy must seem inappropriate.

 Rumours abound that the talented Dr Snott is engaged in writing two books. Is one of them a Festchrift (a book of commemorative essays) to the memory of Dr McKiernan? I doubt very much if I will be invited to contribute (my article in Jim Lydon’s Festchrift is one of the most significant of my papers).  Were I to be asked I would have to decline on the grounds that I was barred from so doing by a confidentiality clause aka gagging order imposed upon me in the 1970s. I can’t no how Dr Snott finds the time, with his hectic schedule which includes giving public lectures to the blind and partially-sighted.

Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.