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Hibernia

Standing Proud

By Daisy Carrington, Contributor
June / July 2005

June 1, 2005 by Leave a Comment

Mary Pat Kelly, director, producer, screenwriter and contributor to Irish America magazine, doesn't always pick topics that interest the mainstream media. In 1984, she was commissioned by Rolling Stone to write about President Ronald Reagan's visit to Ireland. While in the country, she covered the elections. "In those days there was still a lot of violence. The idea of going … [Read more...] about Standing Proud

An Icy Thaw for Belfast

By Daisy Carrington, Contributor
June / July 2005

June 1, 2005 by Leave a Comment

In the town of Belfast, the word "Titanic" is still met with downcast eyes and a grimace. The Titanic was the world's largest moving manmade object. It was the grandest and most advanced mechanism of its time, and was, rightly, viewed with pride by the inhabitants of the then-booming industrial city of Belfast. When the ship, built in the city's Harland and Wolff shipyard, sank … [Read more...] about An Icy Thaw for Belfast

The Irish
Immigrant Experience

By Daisy Carrington, Contributor
June / July 2005

June 1, 2005 by Leave a Comment

  Tucked in a corner of southwest Baltimore, the grand dome of the country's largest railroad museum looms over a run-down area that was once an Irish enclave. On the site of the once revered but now defunct Baltimore &Ohio Railroad Company, the museum pays homage to the country's first passenger and freight railroad. The surrounding area, which hosts a number of … [Read more...] about The Irish
Immigrant Experience

The Galway Arts Festival

By Daisy Carrington, Contributor
June / July 2005

June 1, 2005 by Leave a Comment

Ireland's changing. Fast. Where once the country stirred up images of threadbare tweed jackets, alcoholism and an omnipotent church, Ireland has become the new Land of Opportunity. Nowhere is the change more apparent than in Galway, the heart of Ireland's west and, once a year, host of the country's largest arts festival. "In the late '80s, unemployment was at 20 percent, … [Read more...] about The Galway Arts Festival

Politics and the Pulitzers

By Laura Capuano, Contributor
June / July 2005

June 1, 2005 by Leave a Comment

Politics always makes good fodder for art. This year, two Irish-American Pulitzer Prize winners -- playwright John Patrick Shanley and San Francisco Chronicle photographer Deanne Fitzmaurice -- found inspiration in recent events. Fitzmaurice won in the category of feature photography for her images of an Iraqi boy's reunion with his mother. Irish America Top-100 honoree Shanley … [Read more...] about Politics and the Pulitzers

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June 23, 1985

329 passengers were killed in a plane crash off the coast of Ireland. Air India flight 182 was en route from Montreal to Dehli, when it was blown up in Irish airspace by a bomb. Investigation into the flight led Canadian officials to believe that a Sikh militant group called Babbar Khalsa was responsible for the bombing. 280 Canadian citizens, 27 British citizens and 22 Indian citizens were lost, resulting in the largest mass murder in modern Canadian history. A monument remembering the event was unveiled in 1986 in Ahakista, Cork.

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