This blog is a personal take on Listowel, Co. Kerry. I am writing for anyone anywhere with a Listowel connection but especially for sons and daughters of Listowel who find themselves far from home. Contact me at listowelconnection@gmail.com

Tag: Namir Karim Page 3 of 4

The Gallant Greenville team, Namir Karim and Blackbirds

Zebra in Fota



Photo by Chris Grayson




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There is nothing like a bit of local rivalry to inspire a poet.

The Gallant Greenville Team 

by John B. Keane

Come all ye true born
Irishmen

From here to Healy’s Gate

And I’ll sing for you a verse
or two

As I my tale relate.

You may speak about
Cuchulainn bold

Or the mighty men from Sneem,

But they wouldn’t hold a candle

To that Greenville team.

“Ha-ha!’ says Billeen
Sweeney,

“Sure I’ll tackle up my ass

And I’ll put on my brown suit

That I wear goin’ to mass.

I’ll hit the road to Listowel
town

By the morning’s airy beam,

And I’ll bring home Berkie’s
mutton

For the gallant Greenville
team!

“The dry ball won’t suit
’em”,

Said the pundits from the
town,

But they pulverized the Ashes

and they mesmerised the
Gleann.

Next came the famous Boro,

Their fortunes to redeem,

But they shriveled up like
autumn leaves

Before the Greenville team.

“’Twas the white trout that
done the trick,”

John L was heard to say.

“We ate them morning, noon
and night

In the run-up to the fray.

They hardened up the muscles

And they built up the steam

Until no power on earth could
beat

The gallant Greenville team.”

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Dear Old Athea

From; Born in West Limerick on Facebook

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This is Namir Karim with his friend and work colleague, Brigitta pictured in Scribes of Church St. Listowel



From Iraq to Listowel


(a love story)

There is nothing ordinary
about Namir. Just one of the extraordinary things about him, is that he is an
Iraqi Christian. Above and beyond that he is a Christian, a living example of
Faith Hope and Charity. His latest Christian act is to start a Friendship Club
in his restaurant in Ballybunion. Twice a week he  hosts a kind of men’s
shed for everyone. He  provides the venue and people can come and sit and
talk and just enjoy a bit of company. Everyone is welcome and if people would
love to come but have no way of getting there , Namir will do what he can to
solve that problem too.

So who is Namir Karim and how
did he find his way to North Kerry?

Namir met his wife who was
then his girlfriend in Iraq. Namir’s mother was very seriously ill and she was
being cared for in a hospital which was run by an Irish organization on behalf
of the Iraqi government. Kay Carr was nursing in this hospital and she grew
fond of her very ill patient and maybe a little fond of her son as well. Kay
advised the Karim family to take their mother home to die. She told Namir that
his mother would go straight to heaven. She had done her suffering on earth.
Namir remembers that as his mother left the hospital, Kay had tears in her
eyes. “ I wondered if the tears were for my mother or for me. Either way it
made me feel good.”

Namir contrived an excuse to
return to the hospital to see Kay. He said that he was having trouble with some
of his mother’s equipment. Kay offered to come to help the family sort it out.
Kay took a big risk in visiting an Iraqi home. Fraternising with the local
people was forbidden for the staff at the hospital. Kay stayed for dinner at
the Karim home that evening . Both she and Namir knew that this was more than
good friendship.

When Kay returned from a
short visit home to Ireland, Namir asked her out. They began seeing each other in
secret and they pledged their love to one another. All students in Iraq at the
time had to spend at least two years in the army. Namir was doing his
compulsort service in the army. He was in his final years of training to be a
civil engineer. A fellow soldier told a superior officer that he had seen Namir
with a ‘foreign’ girl. He got five days
in jail for the offence.

When Iraq invaded Kuwait
Namir’s national service was extended by a year. Initially Kay and the other
Irish citizens were not allowed to leave. Saddam Hussein’s regime was at its
height and it was very dangerous to flout any of his laws. Eventually Kay and
the others were allowed to leave. She bad a tearful farewell to Namir and they
promised they would find a way to be together once the war was over.

When the Gulf war started in
January 1990 all communication with Baghdad was stopped. Namir wanted no part
of the war and he devised a plan to escape active service. There was a rule
that if a soldier donated blood, he was given a week off. During this week,
Namir escaped with his family to a Christian area in northern Iraq. Due to a
very happy coincidence, his disappearance went unnoticed as the office building
based in Baghdad was bombed and destroyed and all records of who should or
should not have been present were destroyed.

When the war ended, Namir
returned to the city and gave a Red Cross worker he met a letter to get to Kay,
who he knew would be worried sick about him. Namir began to plot his escape. He
planned to get over the border into Jordan and if Kay still wanted him he would
sell up what he had in Iraq and fly to her.

Easier said than done. Iraq
did not want skilled engineers leaving at a time when it was trying to rebuild
the country after the devastations of war. Kay still loved him but getting to
her proved very tricky and involved a lot of lying. Love found a way and Namir
and Kay were reunited at Dublin airport on November 5 1992, a day before Kay’s
birthday. They married in a registry office when Namir’s visitor’s visa ran
out. They had their proper church wedding in Kerry in June 1992 with lots of
music, dancing and celebration.

Namir lost no time in assimilating into the Kerry community in which he now lived. He built on the skills he had learned from his mother who was a great cook and crafter. Namir started work in his brother’s restaurant, The Captain’s Table. Since leaving there he has gone on to own his own restaurants and  shops. Nowadays in 2017 Namir has two restaurants, Scribes in Listowel and Namirs in Ballybunion. He also has Craftshop na Méar in Listowel.  Namir has played badminton with the Listowel club and soccer with Lisselton Rovers.

Namir and Kay have two lovely adult children, Roza and Peter. Roza is named after Namir’s beloved mother who was the Cupid who brought Namir and Kay together.

Namir and Roza

More tomorrow


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 Blackbirds singing in the Garden of Europe


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Mea Culpa


Frozen River Feale 1963

Totally my fault that the link to this great video didn’t work previously.  I have now made the video public. I am grateful to  Charlie Nolan for alerting me to the problem.

This short video was shot by Jimmy Hickey and digitised by Charlie Nolan. It shows some local people walking and skating on the frozen river. Charlie has accompanied the track with the heavenly voice of Joan Mulvihill, who is far too young to remember the frozen river, singing My Silver River Feale.  It’s well worth a watch. Sorry again for messing it up the first time.

Listowel in The Fall, Christmas Shop and John R.’s accommodation

The Garden of Europe in Autumn


It is lovely to walk through The Garden of Europe at any time of year. It is particularly beautiful in Autumn. You have heard of Vermont in The Fall and how it attracts so many visitors. Give me Listowel any day.



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Your Daily Dose of Christmas Goodies





If your Christmas theme calls for white decoration, Listowel Garden Centre has them in abundance.

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Luxury Accommodation in Listowel Town Centre


A family prepared to invest in the future of the economy in Listowel is the Walsh family who have traded on Church Street for generations. They have converted their accommodation offering to a top class bed and breakfast option for visitors to Listowel.


The business is located next to and over John R.’s and Café Hanna.

 Marion gave me the guided tour.

 There is a literary theme throughout. At the top of the stairs is this limited edition John B. Keane picture, a present from the Keane family.

These framed posters celebrate local and national stage performances.

An old fireplace is cleverly adapted as a showcase for souvenir Writers’ Week brochures.

The ultra tasteful tea and coffee nook is kitted out with this beautiful vintage tea set.

The three bedrooms are tastefully furnished.

There is a charming mixture of the vintage and the modern.

This sofa space in the communal area invites you to sit and read or just get away from the family for a while.

 This beautiful Dresden lamp is one of the many luxurious touches here.



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Namir has given a home to this lovely little kitten…..soon to be named as soon as sex is determined.

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Nice Gesture


A bunch of flowers was left at the door of Listowel Garda Station last week. It was a thoughtful token of support for the Gardaí who are still mourning the death of Garda Tony Golden who was murdered as he went about his duty in Omeath.

Things to do; Places to go; People to see

I have been silent for a while but I will be back soon.

I have had the flu which has scuppered some of my Christmas holiday plans. I’m, therefore, going to enjoy one of the perks of being self employed and extend my holidays until February. Meanwhile, if you have any old photos or stories, you know where to find me.

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Nollaig na mBan 2015 in Scribes

Namir cooked a lovely dinner for his Knitwits and Craftshop friends.

All hands on deck:  Abraham, Kay and Roza pitched in to help out on the night

 Patricia Borley and Maureen O’Connell admire Una Hayes’ dashing Christmas jumper.

 Kaie Heaton

 Ruth O’Quigley and Eileen Fitzgerald.

 Eileen O’Sullivan and Mary Sobieralski

The gang in Scribes on Jan 6 2015

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Changing the Focus


This is Listowel post office.


Its present location at Upper William Street is not ideal. Parking is difficult and vulnerable old people often have to make their way across a busy street to collect pensions or do other business. The sight of customers queueing in the rain sends a message to all and sundry that the post office needs more space. So with a change of management structure, now was the time to consider relocation.

BUT

Relocation to a shopping centre at the edge of town is not the answer.

 A shopping centre? you ask.

Yes, for that is what this location will become. People will come here for the post office and then do all their business in this area and never come into town at all.

In my humble opinion a far better location would be any of the empty shops in the town centre, where the post office could stand alone as it always has done. Listowel people have seen their post office relocate to several different locations and have never objected to any of the moves because the service was always centrally located and accessible.

An Post customers in Listowel need a big, well staffed post office. They need an area to queue in reasonable comfort. They need a degree of privacy to conduct their business. They need safe parking close by. They would like to have been consulted in the process to find the premises which would best answer these needs.

That is why I am supporting the march on the 17th. I have no hopes that the protest will achieve anything but it will demonstrate to An Post that people would like to be consulted on these very important issues in future.

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New Year, new project






(National Archive photo)


It all began in 1842 when Fr.
Darby Mahony, the then Parish Priest of Listowel, decided to build a
Presentation Convent in Listowel. In May 1844, four nuns came to Listowel from
Milltown, to run the convent. Their main objective was to open a National
School in Listowel.

On the day of the opening 300
pupils attended but this number soon rose to 500. Pupils were not only from
Listowel but many attended from the surrounding areas. Amongst the attendance
were some adults who were preparing for Confirmation. The nuns had just begun
to raise funds for the building of an adequate school and chapel, when disaster
struck. The famine of 1845.

With money of their own and with
the help of donations, the nuns sought to make the pupils as comfortable as
possible. They served the pupils a breakfast of bread, a mug of boiled rice and
a little milk almost every day thourghout the famine. Money subscribed in
England for famine relief was distributed by the authorities and some was
raised by the nuns to purchase rye bread. This, again, they gave to their
pupils. Because of their dedication to their pupils and comunity, many of the
nuns died due to overwork and under-nourishment.

After 1848 the situation
improved. Due to hard work, perseverance and a 

little help from God, the nuns
raised enough money to go ahead with the previously planned construction. In
1849 the convent chapel was built and in 1852 an infant school with a number of
classrooms was also built.

Mainly due to the fact that the
Presentation Sisters are dedicated to the Holy Cross, a large cross was erected
in 1853 on the Infant School. Because of the rules of the National Sschool
board, the Comissioners of National Education ordered it to be taken down. The
order was ignored. A series of letters from the Comissioners ordering the nuns
to obey were all rejected In 1856 Fr. J. McDonnell the Parish Priest of
Listowel at that time, refused to become Manager until the cross was removed.
This didn’t bother the nuns and to this day the cross is there to be seen by
everyone.

The reputation of the nuns as teachers was so good that parents from
outside areas, ambitious for their children found them board in town so that
they could attend the convent school. An average of 80 girls were boarding in
Listowel at this time. The nuns, as charitable as ever, distributed clothes and
goods to the needy pupils.  The clothes
were distributed on certain days of the year. 100 to 500 pupils received a meal
of bread and milk or bread and coffee (when milk was scarce) and soup in winter.

Presentation Secondary school celebrated a significant milestone with the appointment of the first lay principal in 2014. It is time to write the history of the school so far.

If you are a past pupil of the school or if you have any memories of the school or the nuns, Kay Caball and I are in the process of gathering material for a project on the school. 

If you have photos or stories, please contact me.

World Cup Winner 2014: the listowel connection and Namir Karim of Iraq and Kerry

We knew him when he was only a lad

Mario Goetze who scored the winning goal for Germany in the 2014 World Cup final played in Listowel in 2008 in an under-16 international against Ireland.

You read about his Listowel connection right here first in April 2013.

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From Iraq to Kerry with love

This is your blogger with my friend, Namir Karim. The photograph was taken in Craftshop na Méar in Church St. 

Namir has 2 businesses in town, Scribes and the craftshop and I can attest from personal experience that he is one of the kindest and most generous people you will meet in a day’s walk.

This is Namir with his lovely daughter, Rosa, who manages the craftshop. Rosa is blessed with a beautiful singing voice and her parents’ outgoing and cheerful personality. Namir also has a son, Peter who is destined to go places in this life. I’ll write about him at a future date.

This is why Namir is in the news. On Ryan Tubridy’s show on 2FM on the 10th July 2014 (you can listen back on the RTE Player) Namir told his fascinating story. With Namir and Ryan in the photo is Namir’s wife, Kay.

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Namir’s story in brief



 There are very few Iraqi people in Ireland.  But Namir is well used to belonging to a minority.  He comes from one of the few Christian families in his native Iraq. As he told Ryan, Iraq has about 20 different religious sects in all. We are familiar with the majority Shia and their enemies, the Sunni, but there are several smaller faiths as well, including a very small scattering of Christians.

Namir was doing his compulsory military service in 1991 when all hell broke loose in his troubled country. Iraq, under Sadam Hussein, invaded Kuwait. The U.S. entered the war. Namir along with his fellow soldiers were given a week’s leave in exchange for a donation of a pint of blood. Iraq was expecting massive amounts of casualties and so was stockpiling blood. During his week’s leave, Namir fled with his family to the north of the country and to relative safety.

A year earlier Namir had met the love of his life, an Irish nurse called Kay Carr from Ballydonoghue. Namir’s mother had suffered a stroke and was in hospital in Bagdad. The family heard of an Irish hospital/hospice  which had a very good reputation and they were anxious to move their very ill mother there. This hospital was staffed entirely by Irish nurses. While his mother was here, Kay and Namir met and fell in love. Namir described Kay as ‘the most caring person in that hospital”. The lovers had to be careful as any association between a soldier and a foreigner would be treated with suspicion.

To cut a long story short, Kay returned to Kerry. Her contract had ended and she was free to leave. She and Namir vowed to meet again when the war was over.

When the war ended in September 1991, Kay could not believe her ears when she got a phone call from a very relieved and now free Namir.  Kay had heard nothing from him since she left Iraq and she feared that he was killed in conflict. She was overwhelmed with relief to hear that he was alive and still in love with her and willing to come to Ireland and make a new life with  her.

Namir remembers that the film Not Without my Daughter was showing in all the cinemas at the time. This did not paint the best picture of an Iraqi son in law.

The Carrs however welcomed Namir into their family. Kay and Namir married and started a family of their own.  Namir’s first business was a a shop at Fealesbridge. Since then he has had a succession of different businesses. Now he enjoys his time in Scribes and Craftshop na Méar. He is very much part of the Kerry community now.

Namir’s Iraqi family were into different kinds of craft and Namir, when he takes a break from the café, loves to make candles, paint pictures and to try his hand at new crafts. He is in his element in Craftshop na Méar or chatting to the Knitwits knitting group in Scribes. His beloved late mother was a knitter.

Namir Karim is a lovely man with a great back story. Ryan Tubridy said he thought that there was the makings of a book or a film in the story.

What about George Clooney to play Namir?

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Listowel Heritage Trail


These signs are popping up around town. They are signposts for Listowel’s Heritage Trail, a walking tour of the town with stops at various landmarks. You can collect your map in The Seanchaí and off you go. Number 4 is St. Michael’s Graveyard.

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The Boomtown Rats in the 1970s  (Eric Luke)

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An Utterly confusing road sign




Kenmare  (Photo; Irish Central)

Official opening of Craftshop na Méar and Bishop O’Brien in Listowel

Historic day in the making for Listowel Emmetts

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Christmas on the Western Front WW2

An elder of the town told me this week that many German boys were housed in Listowel with local families after the war. Does anyone remember these boys? Are there any photos?

There used to be huge boy scout jamborees with tents in the field where Kerry Group now stands. Junior Griffin remembers campfires on the river bank. He promises to put his memories of that time on paper for us. While Junior is on the task, I would welcome contributions from anyone else who remembers that time or the priest  who was responsible for it all. He was Listowel born, English based Fr. Leo Walsh.

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Some more photos from the official opening of Craftshop na Méar

Canon Declan performs a blessing
Ruth, Maureen and Mary
Frances with Christmas tea cosy
Viveca felting
Máire and Bernie
Proud Dad, Namir and Rosa
Namir makes his speech
Mairead and Mike

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An old picture of Bishop O’Brien preaching in Listowel. People have identified Joan Rochford in the congregation. Any other people identifiable in this very attentive crowd. Any idea of year or occasion?

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Work is progressing on the library roof.

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