Resurrection altar in St. Mary’s



This annual display on the side altar, as well as all the symbols of Easter includes animals. flowers, water and light.
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Commemorative Manhole Covers

These permanent memorials of 1916 are literally under our feet in town. I photographed this one on Church Street. Try to notice them next time you are out and about.
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Memories of an Influential Teacher

“And still they gazed and still the wonder grew
That one small head could carry all he knew.”
Oliver Goldsmith’s The Village Schoolmaster
The late John Molyneaux had a wealth of knowledge and he imparted it to cohorts of pupils in St. Michael’s. He had a prodigious knowledge of football, running and later golfing strategy.
One of his past pupils, David Kissane, published an obituary to his former teacher on line. I am including it here. As it is very long, I will give it to you in instalments.
Semper Invictus
A tribute to Mr John Molyneaux, St Michael’s College, Listowel
By David Kissane, Class of ’72
It is fifty years ago since a group of about thirty young fellas headed out the gates of St Michael’s College, Listowel and into the wide, wild and wonderful world of the 1970s. As a member of the class of ’72, there is a compulsion to remember the year and its hinterland. Its place in our layered lives. What contributed to what we are cannot go uncelebrated. It just keeps on keeping on.
But how can one capture the colours and contours, the shapes and shadows of half a century ago when the world had a very different texture to what we perceive now in the bóithríns of age? The ships we sailed out in may be wrecked or dismembered. The ports we set sail from are hidden in the mists of time and memory, and our fellow sailors are scattered.
So where does one begin?
The writer Colm Tóibín once asked the artist Barrie Cooke how he began his paintings. Cooke answered “I make a random mark on the canvas and see what happens”.
Just as I follow Cooke’s suggestion and type a random “J” on the screen, the phone rings. It is Jim Finnerty from Glouria. I look at my J and wonder if Cooke was right! “There’s a man you knew well after passing away in Listowel” Jim announced. Listowel, I thought out loud as Jim let the news simmer in the wok of my memories. A number of names came to mind before Jim said “John Molyneaux”.
And then my canvas began to fill in. I write the name of Mr John Molyneaux, my Latin and English teacher, my athletics and football coach, and the dam opens. For the five years I spent in St Michael’s College, Listowel, he was an enduring presence, a multi-dimensional man who had a huge influence in our lives for those budding years. An icon.
Of course the first question that challenged my memory was “when did I last see John Molyneaux?”
About three years ago I parked my van down by the Feale off the Square in Listowel. Near Carroll’s Yard. Near the entrance bridge to Listowel Racecourse where you’d hear “Throw me down something!” on race days in sepia Septembers. As I returned to the van with a brand new chimney cowl, I saw him coming along the bank of the river. Lively as always, thoughtful, loaded with intention, energised quietly by the magic of the Feale walk, eyes down. I knew immediately if was him although I hadn’t met him in thirty years or more.
I almost said “Sir”. There is something un-shielding about meeting our old teachers. For us teachers, there is often a similar feeling when we meet former students.
“Hallo”, I said. He looked up and at me and it was that same look that I had forgotten with the passing of the years. Stored in the subconscious though. A moment of silence. I heard myself say my name. “I know” he said and a pathway opened up between the two of us and five minutes of reacquaintance. The older face transformed itself back through the years and the voice reframed its undeniable Mr Molyneaux-ness.
“We might have a chat about athletics sometime?” I broached timidly and he nodded. I was talking to the man who helped discover Jerry Kiernan and a host of other athletes. We parted and my day was enriched and changed.
Time and Covid played their cruel games and the chat never took place.
I will regret that for as long as memory is my colleague.
A group of raw first year students entered St Michael’s College in September 1967 having done an entrance exam the previous May. From the hinterland of Listowel and the town itself. There were only two from Lisselton NS some eight miles away off the Ballybunion-Listowel road. Francis Kennelly and myself, coincidentally from the same townland of Lacca. And distantly related as well.
The novices of 1967 were the first beneficiaries of Donagh O’Malley’s free education bill with free transport and no fees. Up to then second-level education was the premise of the wealthy. Now we were part of a historical educational development which would change the face of Ireland forever. Educate that you may be free, Pádraig Pearse had said long before he was executed in 1916.
In we went to the famed, and sometimes feared St Michael’s College, imposing and immobile. Two storeys of history and education above the ground and one storey below looking out on our little minds. Long walk in like an estate house with manicured lawns and apple trees. We were told by those in the know that if we picked the apples that were growing on those trees that autumn that it would have worse repercussions than when Adam was persuaded by Eve to prove his manhood by picking the Granny Smiths in the Garden of Paradise. The principal, Fr Danny Long would punish the picker with impunity. We were herded up the spotted clackety marble stairs and looked down on the trees to our right and pondered the decree of ne tangere. Do not touch.
(more tomorrow)
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Turf

CUTTING THE TURF.
A poem by Martin O’Hara
Ah god be with the
Good auld days.
And the times, of long ago.
For to get the peat,
for our household heat,
To the bog, we had to go.
No modern ways, back
In those days.
All in life, you would require.
Was a fine turf spade,
That the blacksmith made.
To secure, yourself a fire.
With Patrick’s day,
out of the way.
It was time, to make a start.
With the bike and dog,
Off to the bog.
And some, by ass and cart.
From countrywide, to
The mountainside.
The journeys, would begin.
To replace once more, the
Old turf store.
For the wintertime again.
Now the cutting of a
Bank of turf,
This job was done, with pride.
The cleaning first, was
Taken off,
And placed down at the side.
The peat exposed for
Cutting now,
Was cut out, with the spade.
And the sods of turf
Upon the bank,
In rows, were neatly laid.
With the turf now dry,
As time went by.
The footing, would begin.
From countrywide, to
The mountainside.
The people came again.
With pains, and aches,
And many breaks.
We stood them, row by row.
And to season then, they
Would begin.
Where the mountain breezes
Blow.
In harvest time, with
Weather fine,
Once more, we would return.
The turf by now, in perfect shape.
Was good enough to burn.
With the ass and cart, we
Made a start.
To take them to the road.
And a stack did rise,
Before our eyes.
Growing bigger, with each load.
Now to take them home,
For wintertime.
To the bog, we came
Once more.
With a fine big stack, built
Out the back.
We renewed, our winter store.
That was our way, and
Still today.
This tradition, carries on,
but In time they say.
It will pass away, and
Forever will be gone.
No bog, no more, for
The winter store.
Only memories, that
Live on.
Of our working ways, back
In the days.
That are now, long past and gone.
Martin O’Hara 3 /3/2020. ©
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Just a Thought
My reflections from Radio Kerry which were broadcast last week April 18 to April 22 2022
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