BBC
television recently broadcast a documentary about Ruan Pienaar, one of South
Africa’s greatest rugby players. He has
played for Ulster for the last 7 years with the greatest of distinction and outstanding skill.
Because the Irish Rugby Football Union is not
renewing his contract, he must depart.
Glowing tributes were paid to the great man not least because he was
seen to have immersed himself "in the culture," sporting and otherwise, of his
adopted Province.
Similar
sentiments have been articulated at Connacht rugby where their Samoan coach,
Pat Lam is departing for another job elsewhere.
Wholesome tributes have likewise been
garlanded in his direction because, in addition to delivering sporting success
to a perennially underachieving team, he has been applauded for immersing
himself in the culture of his adopted Province.
He charmed fans by starting or ending television interviews by saying a
few well-rehearsed words in Irish.
Could
there just be a lesson from these positive role models for those who deny that
our shared linguistic heritage is the culture of us all?
For reasons lost in the ethereal mists of counter-intuition, Irish has become an unnecessary political football in Northern Ireland. The squabbling is based on ignorance, an ignoring of fact and practice.
For reasons lost in the ethereal mists of counter-intuition, Irish has become an unnecessary political football in Northern Ireland. The squabbling is based on ignorance, an ignoring of fact and practice.
The Irish
language has the oldest literary tradition in Europe[i], second only to Greek.
It belongs to the Indo-European linguistic family, as do its closest relations - Scots Gaelic, Manx Gaelic (known as Q-Celtic languages) and Welsh, Cornish and Breton (the P-Celtic languages).
It belongs to the Indo-European linguistic family, as do its closest relations - Scots Gaelic, Manx Gaelic (known as Q-Celtic languages) and Welsh, Cornish and Breton (the P-Celtic languages).
Irish is apolitical; it is not a political construct. It belongs to all of our citizens.
Consider,
for example, Cumann Gaelach na hEaglaise, the
Irish Guild of the Church. It was founded in 1914
“to preserve within the Church of Ireland the
spirit of the ancient Celtic Church; promote the use of the Irish language in
the Church; collect from Irish sources suitable hymns and other devotional
literature; and encourage the use of Irish art and music in the Church.”
To help
mark the centenary of the Guild, the Church of Ireland promoted a project under
the title "Towards 2014: Promoting the Irish language within the Community
of the Church of Ireland."
The Anglican Guild keeps a list of its clergy who speak Irish fluently. One of them is Archdeacon Gary Hastings from East Belfast, and currently Rector of the Collegiate Church of St Nicholas in Galway. Religious services in Irish are conducted on occasions in Belfast, for example at St Georges Church of Ireland and also in Fitzroy Presbyterian Church.
Recognition
of the key historical role played by Presbyterians and Methodists to preserve
the Irish language was articulated last year by Assemblyman Paul Givan. The same point has been made by an academic
at Queen’s University Belfast.
She
asserts that
“The support given to Irish may be regarded as
vexatious by unionists. Many Ulster
Protestants are unaware that Irish is a legitimate part of their cultural
heritage, and see it primarily as the tool of Sinn Féin in promoting republicanism. They reject Irish as something that would
taint them by association...Yet in the past, Protestants have done much to
promote Irish. It was an object of
affection and admiration for many influential nineteenth century Protestants
and unionists.
[ii]”
Consider
these two examples - Robert Shipboy MacAdam (1808 - 1895) and Alice Milligan
(1869-1953).
“Educated at Royal Belfast Academical Institution,
MacAdam was of that generation of Presbyterian industrialists who saw no
contradiction between the encouragement of the Irish language and loyalty to
the Crown... At the age of 22 he founded the Ulster Gaelic society - the first
of its kind in Ireland - collected many Irish manuscripts, and publishing a
Gaelic dictionary.” [iii]
“There was no other person in the whole of Ireland
who had spent so much in preserving these literary treasures. Especially, in a time when the English efforts
were to stamp out all traces of the Irish culture. Before long, he had put together the first
collection in Irish of song, proverbs, folktale, and folklore.”
The
Plantation of Ulster in the seventeenth century witnessed the immigration of
many settlers from Scotland. Many of
them were Gaelic speakers. When, for
example, the Marquis of Argyll brought his troops to Antrim in the 1640’s, most
of them were Gaelic speakers who later settled in Ireland [iv].
Dr
Blaney’s account adds that some of the Gaelic-speaking Scots were
Presbyterians, some were Anglicans, and others Episcopalians. It observes, to take one example, that
Rasharkin was settled by Anglican Highlanders who petitioned the Bishop of
Connor to provide them with a Gaelic-speaking Minister.
As if to prove that there was little
difference between the settlers’ Gaelic and that of the natives, MacAdam is
quoted in 1873 that he had conversed with “Glensmen and Arranmen” and “can
testify to the identity of their speech.”
Myra
Zepf, the daughter of Dr Blaney, is an Irish speaker and author of three
children’s books in Irish. She was
appointed earlier this month as Northern Ireland’s first Children’s Writing
Fellow. The role was created by the Arts
Council and Queen’s University’s Seamus Heaney Poetry Centre.
She is quoted as explaining how Irish has been
an enriching and beautiful part of her life, but that she is pained at its
politicisation at Stormont. [v]
Alice Milligan
was born in Omagh to a middle class Methodist and Unionist family.
“In 1891 she was profoundly affected by the death
of Charles Stuart Parnell and converted to the cause of Irish nationalism,
despite her family background. She
promoted the Irish language as a member of the Gaelic League (the number of
Irish language speakers in Belfast rose from 900 to almost 4000 within 10
years)... She co-edited journals, the Northern Patriot and Shan Van Vocht...
Along with Anna Johnston and Maud Gonne, she helped organise the centenary
commemorations of the 1798 rebellion. When
Maud formed the radical women’s organisation Inghinidhe na hÉireann (in
1900), Alice wrote plays to support its cultural activities.”[vi]
These
Daughters of Ireland aimed “to discourage the reading and circulation of low
English literature, the singing of English songs and to combat English
influence which is doing so much injury to the artistic taste and refinement of
the Irish people.”
Quoting
these objectives, a distinguished Cambridge University historian observes:
“The last phrase should be noted. For all their militant anti-Englishness, this
and other movements on the broad Gaelicist front were cultural, not political.[vii]”
A
convincing range of additional examples has been published recently [viii] by an
eminent Presbyterian Minister Brian Kennaway as evidence that “the language of
the Gael is not the preserve of any one section of the community.”
His references include the first book ever printed
in Gaelic, John Knox’s 1567 Book of Common Order; the Dundalk Presbyterian
Minister Rev William Nielson’s 1809 book An Introduction to the Irish Language;
the use of Irish by Orangemen, such as the banner of Lodge 1303’s inscription “Oidhreacht Éireann” and the advocacy of Irish by Rev Richard
Routledge Kane the County Grand Master of Belfast Orangemen (1895-98) and a
patron of the Belfast Gaelic League.
We are surrounded by the Irish language every day. One of the best examples is its reflection in most of our place-names and in many of our surnames. Kathleen’s Island (Enniskillen) is the county town of The Men of the Manaigh Tribe (Fermanagh) [ix], one of whose many attractions is Owen’s Height (the Ardhowen theatre). The Mouth of the River Farset (Belfast) is our capital city.
One of
the commonest surnames in Ulster, McCullough, bears testament to the Provincial
name, Uladh. MacConUladh means son of a hound of Ulster. A researcher[x] says that the surname
originates in Scotland where it is spelled McCulloch. The latter is and was common in Galloway,
whence stemmed so many of Ulster’s settlers during the Plantation period.
Incidentally,
the place-name Galloway is Scots Gaelic, and the term Gallowglass [xi] derives from two words Gall (meaning foreigner) and óglach (meaning young warrior).
On the
subject of Scotland, the beach that was in the news recently from which a young
warrior from Glasgow, the surfer Matthew Bryce departed before his dramatic
rescue and recovery in the Ulster Hospital, is called Machrihanish. This is Scots Gaelic and might mean the Plain
of the Isle (or of Ness, or possibly the Plain of Shanais).
One aspect of rural Ulster life with which all people intimately identify is our townlands. For example, Derebard (Doire an Bhaird in Irish), translates into English as poet’s oak-wood. The townland is serendipitous as a birth-place, if you are WF Marshall, “the bard of Tyrone,” sometimes referred to as a Scots-Irish poet.
One
journalist[xii] paid homage on the fiftieth
anniversary of his death. Marshall
became a Presbyterian Minister in Castlerock, but was brought up in one
Tyrone’s few English toponyms, Sixmilecross,[xiii] 6 Irish miles from Omagh.
Marshall’s
writings are recounted in what he called the Tyrone dialect. In so doing, he revelled in Gaelic place-names
reflected in the lilt of “Tyrone Jigs.”
“There’s Cavanamara and dark Derrymeen,
There’s Carrickatane and Munderrydoe,
With Strawletterdallan and Cavankilgreen
All dancing a jig with Cregganconroe.”
Drumlester townland
is synonymous with Marshall. In Irish it
is Droim leastair meaning Ridge of wooden
vessels.
Not to forget
the poet’s own surname. The name Marshall
occurs all over Ireland, but is common only in Ulster. Found in Ireland from early medieval times[xiv], it is commonest in Down,
Derry/Londonderry, Antrim and also in Dublin.[xv] Bell adds that its northern prevalence stems
from The Plantation of Ulster by Scottish settlers.
The name
is Norman, originally le Maréschal.
This stems from the same word in Old French, meaning “horse
servant.” Appropriate pathos for the
bard, living and dying in clabber to the knee.
Irish, in common with the other Celtic languages and most of Europe’s languages, categorizes nouns as either masculine or feminine. A brilliant book by an authoritative international linguist [xvi] makes amusing and informative play of this fact. He makes a persuasive case to show how English is at a disadvantage expressively and poetically without grammatical gender differentiation.
As Deutscher puts it, "genders are language’s gifts to poets."
Poetic and prosaic Irish loves alliteration and it does onomatopoeia better than any other language. It is this beautifully sonorous quality that the M.P Gregory Campbell’s parody may have sought to mimic with satirical and controversial effect.
Learning Irish or Scots Gaelic as a second or third language has proven educational advantages. Travellers arriving in Inverness airport cannot fail to observe the publicity which promotes this fact. Students who learn Gaelic, becoming conversant in more than one language, perform better across all other subjects than those who are mono-lingual.
One of
Great Britain’s leading arts and culture journalists, Richard Morrison of the
Times, commented on the importance of the UK’s non-English languages thus.
Britain’s Gaelic languages, he argued, are thriving. Welsh has 500,000 speakers, Scots Gaelic has 50,000, there are 3,000 fluent Cornish speakers, and 600 people speak Manx.
Britain’s Gaelic languages, he argued, are thriving. Welsh has 500,000 speakers, Scots Gaelic has 50,000, there are 3,000 fluent Cornish speakers, and 600 people speak Manx.
He added[xvii]:
“When a native language dies, a lot of other things
disappear too. Place names and family
names become inexplicable. Local traditions
vanish because people no longer have the words to describe their customs....And
the world’s stock of useful words (that only occur in one language yet identify
something we all need to articulate...) is diminished....
© Michael
McSorley 2017
[i] “Lingo, a language spotter’s
guide to Europe” p207-212 Gaston Dorren
[ii] “Protestants and the Irish
Language: Historical Heritage and Current Attitudes in Northern Ireland,”
Professor Rosalind M.O. Pritchard
[iii] The Ulster History Circle
website.
[iv]. “Presbyterians and the Irish
Language" (1996), Roger Blaney
[v] Ivan Lyttle Belfast Telegraph 6
May 2017 news p.10
[vi] “Celebrating Belfast Women: a
city guide through women’s eyes,” p 38 Women’s Resource & Development
Agency
[vii] Modern Ireland 1600-1972
R F Foster pp 449-450(Penguin Press 1988)
[viii]12 May 2017 Belfast
Telegraph
http://www.belfasttelegraph.co.uk/opinion/letters/look-to-rich-history-of-local-gaelic-speakers-35707216.html
[x] Robert Bell “The Book of
Ulster Surnames.” P 51. 1988.
[xi] Collins English Dictionary
millennium edition p 627,Gallowglass means heavily-armed mercenary soldiers,
originally Hebridean (Gaelic-Norse), from Irish gall (foreigner) + óglach
(young warrior-servant)
[xii] Paul Clements Irish Times 27
January 2009 p 15 An Irishman’s Diary.
[xiii] Patrick McKay “A Dictionary of
Ulster Place-Names” 1999 p 132 ISI QUB.
[xiv] Edward McLysaght “The
Surnames of Ireland.” P209. 1991 reprint
[xv] Robert Bell “The Book of
Ulster Surnames.” P 187. 1988.
[xvi] Guy Deutscher “Through the
Looking Glass , why the world looks different in other languages” chapter 8 Sex
and Syntax
[xvii] Richard Morrison “When languages
die whole worlds die too” The Times 1 June 2013 p19.