IF YOU GO
The Gathering
www.thegatheringireland.com/ . The site offers details of all gatherings and a list by date and county.
Powerscourt House and Gardens
Open daily 9:30 a.m.-5:30 p.m. Adults, euro 8.50 ($11); children under 16, euro 5 ($6.50); family ticket, euro 25 ($33). Enniskerry, County Wicklow, www.powerscourt.ie/gardens .
Glasnevin Cemetery and Museum
Open Monday-Friday, 10 a.m.-5 p.m., Saturday, Sunday & Bank Holidays, 11 a.m.-5 p.m. Tours daily at 11:30 a.m. and 2:30 p.m. Finglas Road, Glasnevin, Dublin, www.glasnevintrust.ie/ .
Dun Laoghaire
A seaside town (pronounced “dunleary”) about seven miles (12 kilometers) south of Dublin. The harbor is one of the largest in the country and the pier is a popular walking spot. The town is also home to the National Maritime Museum, housed in a former 19th century Mariners’ Church.
Tall Ships
There are several tall ships gatherings taking place in the summer, but visitors should check The Gathering website for details. There is also a wonderful replica of the 19th century tall ship, the Jeanie Johnston, which sailed from Kerry to North America during the height of the Famine. The ship, which includes a Famine museum, is docked at Custom House Quay in Dublin and there are daily guided tours, www.jeaniejohnston.ie/ .
The tall ships looked majestic as they sailed into the bay — replicas of the masted, rigged vessels that once transported millions of emigrants from these shores.
The ships had departed from Liverpool, England, three days earlier, carrying descendants of Irish emigrants in a reverse voyage billed as an opportunity to “Sail Home to Your Roots.” A crowd on the docks cheered as they entered Dublin port and the crew unfurled a giant green banner with the words, “Welcome to Our Gathering.”
The May voyage was just one event among thousands taking place throughout Ireland, part of an ambitious yearlong tourism drive to boost the country’s battered economy by luring its diaspora home.
Billed as The Gathering, the initiative is really multiple gatherings, large and small, ranging from the cultural and historic to the sporting, the quirky and the poignant.
“Bring them home. Treat them well. The Gathering is ‘Project Ireland’. Do your bit,” Taoiseach (Prime Minister) Enda Kenny exhorted fellow countrymen and women when the initiative was launched earlier in the year.
In every county, town and parish it seems that some group has taken his words to heart.
Highlights include flagship events like a July 21 Riverdance extravaganza, in which 2,013 master dancers are expected to kick up their heels along the banks of Dublin’s River Liffey and attempt to break the world record for step-dancing. The last record was set in Nashville with 632 dancers in 2011.
Popular annual cultural events such as the Galway Arts Festival, the Cork Jazz Festival and the Dingle Tradfest are all incorporating “gathering” programs, as are big sporting events. Choral gatherings are huge. It seems like every little village or town is hosting a gathering and inviting choirs from Europe and the U.S. to join them.
There are busking gatherings and blacksmith gatherings, scientist gatherings and even an “Evil Eye” spiritual gathering in Donegal in August.
There are quirky gatherings to raise money for charity — for example the redhead convention in Cork in August. And bog-snorkeling, sheaf-tossing and welly-throwing (Wellington rubber boots) gatherings.
The goal, tourism officials say, is to tap into the estimated 70 million people who claim Irish descent worldwide and bring at least 350,000 additional tourists home.
But The Gathering has its share of critics too, notably actor Gabriel Byrne, who spent two years as Ireland’s cultural ambassador to the U.S. In interviews last year, he dismissed the initiative as a cynical government effort to “shake down” emigrants “for a few quid.”
Whether the effort can draw enough tourists to dent Ireland’s economic woes remains to be seen. Ireland has been in economic turmoil since the real estate boom collapsed in 2008. Unemployment stands near 14 percent and emigration is once again commonplace among the young.
Regardless of the economic backdrop, there seems plenty of good will toward gatherings — gratitude even, that they are showcasing aspects of Irish heritage that might otherwise be bypassed by tourists.
Glasnevin cemetery in Dublin, for example, is hosting gathering-related “Family Weeks” urging the numerous clans (O’Neills, O’Donnells, O’Briens) to start their gatherings with a walking tour of the cemetery and a visit to its unique museum. The cemetery staff is also offering expert help in tracing kin.
The gated 1832 cemetery with its soaring Celtic crosses and lush grounds (it was designed as a garden as well as a burial place) is a gold mine for anyone interested in Irish history. It was founded by Irish politician Daniel O’Connell (known as “The Liberator” for championing the right of Catholics to vote) and a giant round tower above his crypt dominates the grounds. Visitors can enter the crypt and stop by the graves of other historical figures including 19th century nationalist leader Charles Stewart Parnell (dubbed the “uncrowned King of Ireland”), and founders of the modern Irish state, Eamon de Valera and Michael Collins.
The great houses, castles and gardens of Ireland are also celebrating The Gathering with additional tours and lectures like the recent “tracing your Wicklow roots” talk by genealogist Nicola Morris at the Powerscourt Estate in Enniskerry, County Wicklow.
With stunning views of the Wicklow Mountains and vast ornate gardens reminiscent of Versailles, the 18th century estate (originally a 13th century castle) is often described as Ireland’s most beautiful. The great house burned down in 1974 and much of the interior was destroyed; today there’s a gift shop and cafe on site and visitors can spend an entire day exploring the grounds — over 47 acres (19 hectares) of formal gardens, sweeping terraces, statues, ornamental lakes and trails.
South of Dublin, the Wicklow Mountains once provided a haven for rebels fighting British rule. Morris’ lecture focused on their stories and on helping attendees trace their connections to some of the historical characters, Irish and English.
While The Gathering has been a boon for her profession, Morris views it as more than just an economic initiative.
“There is a wonderful, grass roots nature to it all,” she said. “It’s a mixture of history and culture and community spirit and just giving emigrants a great big welcome home.”
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