Hello Monday...Happy St. Patrick's Day...
I
was raised a in an Irish-American house in Queens, a tribe of friends
and family about me. Our shared background hovered, a constant,
coagulating force. Communal knowledge bonded us as did Ireland's
presence. It never seemed too distant, our history was just east, across
the same ocean that touched the shores of Long Island.
I went from one Irish name to another -- Graney to O'Connor without a hitch when I got hitched...
I went from one Irish name to another -- Graney to O'Connor without a hitch when I got hitched...
My
childhood friends had names from the phonebooks of Galway, Kilkenny,
Tralee, and dear Donegal. "Mc” and “O”, and “Fitz” this and “Fitz” that.
There were Kristina McGann, The O'Connor Brothers, Joanie John Gibbons,
Pat McInerney, Pat McKenna, Pat Kelly, Liz McNelis, Matt McLaughlin,
Jim O’Driscoll, Deirdre Duggan, all those Bradys, Kevin O’Shea, Timmy
O'Flaherty, Siobhan Flynn, Tara Welch, and all those Leahys who had
cousins everywhere, and so many more.
Some had parents with brogues, some said “h” as “hAy-ch”, and all were proud little Irish-Americans.
This
place where "we" had come from was heralded as a hauntingly beautiful,
full of soft days and green meadows that rolled to cliffs hung on the
Sea.
But,
it was full of pain for those that had left in haste, in hope, or in
hunger...making our familiar heritage, sometimes fearsome.
What did this mean to us as collected ethnics?
We competed for who had the most freckles.
When people asked, “Where is your family from?”, they meant, “Which County?”, not which Country.
We
cut school – quite forgivingly – to attend the St. Patty’s day parade
en masse. We relished the green line painted down Fifth Avenue in our
honor and watched in awe as the thousands upon thousands of "New York's
Bravest" and "New York's Finest" marched by, all of them Irish in
descent.
We
sang “Molly Malone”, “The Fields of Athenry” and "The Wearin’ of the
Green”. And, we knew with a brave certainty, and hitch in our chest,
that U2 was not just another band and that, “Sunday, Bloody Sunday” was
not just another song.
We knew too that The Irish are prone to wit and festivities, and so were we, and so I am.
So Hello Monday...
Hello
to joining us, be Irish for a day if you like. But most of all, be
proud to be an American where we can celebrate our shared traditions and
our differences.
Hello
to the wearin' of the green in this house.. and after all, everyone
really is Irish on St. Patrick's Day...or so we like to amuse ourselves.
Hello Ireland...I miss you. I think it's time to make another trip to see you soon...
xxoo Jen (and for the generations of my own Irish American forebears)
let's make that....
Jen
Graney Sullivan Moran Brady Fitzpatrick Nichols..and all those
generations of Irish American grandparents, and great grands that got me
here today
....O'Connor
PS
and yes, to the avid readers of me, this is a re-post from '08, but
then again, we Irish Storytellers are known to repeat our tales now and
again...
1 comment:
Dear Jen, What a compelling, heartfelt, well-written, book-worthy post. xoxox Steph
Post a Comment