Sunday, August 24, 2014

Irish lessons

Just after we returned from Ireland, I posted a brief blog about the trip—mostly pictures, accompanied by an obliquely informative limerick. I said I’d write more, but I’m finding it difficult to distill the variety of moments into some manageable form. So I decided to write about a few interesting things I learned and see where that takes me. 


First, the short, simple lessons:


  • There are more shades of green in the world than I ever imagined. My earlier blog talked about 40 shades, but I’m sure I saw far more than that over the course of two weeks. For one thing, the green fields and hillsides look very different recently washed by rain than they do on a dry, sunny midday walk to the top of the cliffs, and there are colors in the heather, the bog, and the moor that are simultaneously shades of green and shades of … other colors. Green is not simply green. 
  • Irish soups are out of this world. I had my first bowl early in the trip, and it became my absolute staple for lunch for the next two weeks. They’re mostly pureed, mostly vegetables, entirely delicious. The seafood was excellent, too, as we’d been told by friends. But I’d trade even that for a bowl of Irish soup and a hunk or two of dark Irish bread. 
  • You are virtually prohibited from visiting Ireland without drinking Guinness, the dark, heavy beer (“stout”) for which Ireland is famous. I don’t drink, and usually saying that will stop people from pushing … but not with Guinness. I can’t count how many times I was prodded while I was there and queried after I got home: “… not even a little Guinness when you’re in Ireland?!” 
  • James Joyce closed his famous book Ulysses with a super large period (although our period is called a “full stop”). He worried that the printer would mistake it for a drop of ink on the manuscript, and it was the first thing he checked when he received the final product from the printer. 
  • It is not always rainy and windy in Ireland. We had virtually no rain, except, fortuitously, a couple of times while we were traveling in the bus. And we had no wind. Not even on the cliffs, where it would have been wonderful and idyllic to feel windblown and wild. Of
    course, we had the help of a friend, who grew up in Ireland and told us the best time to go. Still, we took sweaters, light jackets, down vests, and rain jackets for the cold, rainy, windy conditions others had warned us about—and never took any of them out of the suitcase.
  • The Irish have their own game of football, played for centuries in slightly evolving forms. There’s even a national Irish football league; all of the players are amateurs (really!). It’s a bit like soccer, except that the field is bigger, the ball is larger and heavier, you don’t “head” the ball (unless you want an instant skull or neck injury), you can handle the ball, sort of like in rugby, but there’s no tackling. They play another game called “curling,” which is a bit like lacrosse, with a goal and all, except there’s no basket on the stick but rather a bat sort of like a baseball bat except that it’s curved and flat. The ball is hard and heavy and seems to have evolved only very slightly from a rock. We didn’t get to see or play either of these (though some folks watched football on TV), but we got a bit of a “lesson” about both from some real players. 
  • The Irish also have a distinctive language—not Celtic, but Irish—that’s still spoken by many folks in more rural areas, although most folks also speak English, sometimes heavily accented. The road signs always have two names for locations—the first in English and the second in Irish. Our tour leader speaks fluent Irish, and we’d hear her converse with local folks in this tongue that sounded totally foreign to the rest of us. Like many Irish children, as a child, she spent summers living in areas where Irish is the first language, at language schools where their time was devoted to mastering Irish. In these locations, designated as Irish-speaking areas, the first name on all the signs is in Irish, and the second in English. There are several local dialects of Irish, so sometimes folks from one area have difficulty understanding folks from another. 
  • It’s hard to play an Irish tin whistle, although we brought some home, and I could practice if I were so inclined. Similarly, the simplest steps in Irish dancing are not simple. Fortunately, I have no incentive to practice that. We got to try both musical forms, just for fun, but no one in our group seemed inclined to take them up as a new avocation.
  • You can live on a diet of almost nothing but potatoes. In fact, people have. It turns out that prior to the potato famine in the mid-1800s, many poor Irish folks, especially sharecroppers who farmed tiny plots of rented land, relied almost entirely on potatoes—especially a type called “lumpers”—to feed their large families. It turns out that potatoes have adequate nutrition, especially if they’re supplemented with buttermilk. So that’s what most peasant families lived on: potatoes, with maybe buttermilk for the kids. Today, this affection for potatoes lives on. Potatoes are served with every meal, sometimes in multiple forms. We had one meal that included meat, mashed potatoes, boiled potatoes, and potatoes au gratin.

From potatoes to the Catholic church (and back again) … the more complicated lessons:

  • My most surprising lesson began when I realized that my understanding of the role of the Catholic church in Ireland was far too simplistic. I had come to think of the church as a vast, often morally compromised institution that had violated the trust of Ireland as much as that of any nation. The sexual abuse scandal; revelations about child abuse in “work homes” for children; the discovery of hundreds of death certificates and scores of corpses of babies, all found at Catholic homes for unwed mothers in Ireland. All evidence, in my mind, of the church’s abuse of power. But I was quickly introduced to information that challenged that view: 
  • Historically, the Catholic church and its members in Ireland (especially poor Catholics) were sorely oppressed. During some periods, Catholicism was banned, churches and monasteries were destroyed, priests and monks went into hiding or were killed, and Catholics were prohibited from voting, owning property, or working in any but the most
    menial of jobs. This treatment stemmed largely from England’s imposition of the Anglican /Protestant faith, which was the state religion of England and therefore of its territories (including Ireland). Despite all this, Catholicism has been the majority religion in Ireland since Pagan times.
     
  • Irish Catholics therefore tended to be relatively poor and generally powerless—no surprise, if you’ve learned lesson the previous lesson, but totally new information if you haven’t (as I had not). Protestants, on the other hand, had not experienced the same sort of oppression. They tended to have more land, better access to jobs, and higher social status. They also had political power. The rural poor of Ireland were disproportionately Catholic, often sharecroppers working fields owned by wealthier (Protestant) landlords, with only a small rented plot to grow their own crops. Since they were Catholic and the church prohibited birth control, they had large families to support with few resources. So families grew and grew, and poverty grew and grew.
  • The potato famine that struck Ireland in the middle of the 1800s was especially cruel to these peasants. Those who lived from their crops (potatoes; see the lesson above on potatoes) had nothing to eat. Those who were unable to pay their rent because they had no crops were evicted. Over a period of about 5 years, about a million people died—disproportionately peasants, most Catholic—and about a million more emigrated (though figures vary; I hear even higher estimates). Remarkably, during this time, Ireland, then under the rule of England, continued to export substantial amounts of grain, even as its citizens starved or fled.
  • The late-20th-century “troubles” in Northern Ireland had their roots in this long history of English domination and of Protestants’ relative wealth and power in contrast to Irish Catholics’ relative powerlessness and poverty. The struggle in Northern Ireland was a battle over the wish for an independent Irish state that included all of Ireland vs. the desire to retain allegiance to England, at least in part of the island. The former position was held largely by working class, mostly Catholic “Republicans,” and the latter represented the stance of generally wealthier, largely Protestant “Loyalists” or “Unionists.”
And all of this brings me to the most important lesson of all, one that evolved from my shifting thoughts about the role of the Catholic church in Ireland.
  • That lesson seems simple now: “Right” and “wrong,” “privilege” and “oppression” are always a matter of context, of time and scale. I arrived in Ireland skeptical of the Catholic church. As I learned Ireland’s history, I found myself totally siding with the Catholic peasants of the 19th century, joining in their allegiance to that very same church. But the time and the scale, the context were not the same at all. 

It was an excellent reminder of the fact that the urge to consider an institution or an individual to be simply and thoroughly good or simply and thoroughly bad always risks losing sight of the complexity of real life. People are far more complex than that, and so are institutions, nations … and individuals. The Catholic church, the Anglican church, the English, and both sides in “the troubles” have been, over time and at different levels, both targets of oppression and agents of privilege. Surely the same can be said of other churches, of other nations, of any group … and of any individual (except maybe Leprechauns).



My Irish lessons, from the simplest to the most profound. All happy souvenirs of a grand trip.


© Janis Bohan, 2010-2014. Use of this content is welcome with attribution and a link to the post.

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Friday, August 15, 2014

How I spent my summer vacation ...

It's no doubt obvious to those of you who follow this blog at all that I’ve been scarce around these parts, having spent the summer in an assortment of (other) tasks and pleasures. Besides the usual tasks and summer activities, you already know about my trip to Ireland—although I’ll have more to say about that soon. That adventure took a lot of preparation, especially given that I'm definitely not a seasoned international traveler. I also spent some time in the DC area, part of it at a conference and part visiting family.

Still, you might wonder what's taken up the rest of my time. Well, here's the answer, the fruits of many hours of fun and labor (with a great deal of help from a friend): the new website for Resonance Women’s Chorus of Boulder. I invite you to take a spin … and then join us for a concert or two during the upcoming season.

Just click on the link below, and enjoy!

resonancechorus.org  




Sunday, August 3, 2014

Forty shades

If you're reading this blog by email, you might want to go to the actual website. 
The pictures work much better there. Just click on the title, "Forty shades."

My partner and I just returned from a two-week Road Scholars trip to Ireland, a much-needed break after a wild few months for us both. More to the point, it was a long-awaited opportunity to spend some time on this gorgeous, complicated island. I’d heard for years about how beautiful Ireland is, and I’d seen plenty of pictures that proved the point. I’d also heard about “the troubles” that dominated Ireland’s political story in the late 1900s and about the potato famine that decimated the land in the mid-1800s. But, to be honest, I didn’t know much about either of those things, only the rather simplistic interpretations I'd gleaned from reading US-centric textbooks and news reports. It turns out I had much to learn on all counts, and the experience inspired me to re-ignite my enjoyment of blogging with photos and tales from the “Emerald Isle.”  

To that end, I want to launch what may be a (short) series of blogs with something simple and overview-ish.

At the end of our time in Ireland, the group we were traveling with, which included 24 tourists and a native guide, had a farewell dinner where folks were invited to share a thought, a song, a poem dedicated to the trip. I usually avoid these things, but at my partner’s suggestion, I wrote a limerick—a fitting form for Ireland—that wrapped up some of the trip’s highlights. I share it here not as a thorough travelogue but as an introduction to some thoughts I’d like to explore over another blog or two. It’s also a chance to stick in a few pictures to illustrate the verses.

So here it is, my untitled ode to two weeks spent in Ireland in the company of other “Road Scholars”:


There once was a gang from the states
Whose journeys were joined by fate
To Ireland they came
Road Scholar their name
And Béibhinn their chosen first mate.



Blue sheep and milk cattle they spotted
Large rocks all the countryside dotted
The castles of yore
The steep Cliffs of Mohr
They traveled the west coast besotted (with love for the scenery, that is)




They learned about boats made of logs
And bodies left dead in the bogs
Of peat that was burned
And Orange who yearned
To rule all of Ireland, that dog!

Potatoes were often a theme
They came mashed, sliced & diced, cooked by steam
But they stand as a marker
For years so much darker
When their absence meant times deadly lean 




These folks shared “short walks” lasting hours
‘long cliff sides and pathways and bowers
They viewed museums and homes
Explored churches and tombs
And found feminism somewhere still flowers




They ate creamed soups until they were bloated
And drank “one more pint” ‘til they floated
Most had hoods for their heads
Stopped when signals were red
And “whisperers” faithfully toted.

On and on this long limerick wends
A long story my poetry sends
It goes on not because
Of poetry’s laws
But because I can’t think of an end .

(Closed by on over-sized 'full stop' in honor of James Joyce, who closed his book Ulysses with just such a period.)

Despite the fun of writing that limerick, though, my poetic sense was actually much more happily awakened when one of our local guides, describing the scenery along the coast of the Dingle peninsula, recited the lines of a Johnny Cash song, "Forty Shades of Green."   

I close my eyes and picture the emerald of the sea

from the fishing boats at Dingle to the shores of Donadea
I miss the River Shannon and the folks at Skibbereen
the moorlands and the meadows with their forty shades of green


(You can listen to Johnny’s version here

I found myself repeating the last line over and over as we wound along the coast of western Ireland. Everywhere, we saw green—not, as these lines reminded me, a single color, but countless shades of green. Most of western Ireland is very rocky, and the local farmers (mostly peasants in the old days, often tenant farmers) had to clear the fields of rocks in order to plant crops (almost entirely potatoes) or raise livestock. So they built rock walls, which served many purposes: they provided a place to pile the rocks and they marked off each farmer’s plot(s).











Many of these plots are tiny, both because there were so many rocks and because peasants often had only small holdings—they got smaller and smaller as fathers divided land among sons. Since any land is precious, the plots are sometimes in improbable places, running up and down steep slopes as well as across meadows. Those old walls and the small plots they delineate remain today, so many farmers now own multiple plots, often scattered among others’ plots over an area of acres or miles. The impulse to demarcate one’s land, whether owned or farmed as a tenant, seems so strong that all across Ireland, people fence off, wall off, and hedge off their property. Where the land is less rocky, as it is farther inland, fields are often separated by hedgerows.

A few examples of scenes in forty shades:






And there you have it, the prologue to some tales about Ireland. Coming soon.




© Janis Bohan, 2010-2014. Use of this content is welcome with attribution and a link to the post.
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