![]() |
|
|
Home The Saga Archives Wild Geese Shops Bookstore Classifieds Heritage Key Dates Events WGT Forum Gallery Lands of Exile Living History Resources Bibliography Guest Book Contact WGT About Us
PROUD SPONSORS OF WGT:
For the latest headlines about "Bloody Sunday" and Northern Ireland, visit Newshound, at Nuzhound.com
VISIT THESE OTHER FINE IRISH SITES:
Tara Hall, Headquarters for 'Fighting 69th' and Irish
Brigade Memorabilia, online at Fighting69th.com.
Irish
Culture and Customs: Traditions, folklore, and more.
|
The father of Norman Washington Manley married the postmistress at Porus in Manchester. She was the daughter of a man named Shearer, who was the son of an immigrant from Northern Ireland. Her mother was previously married to Clarke, for whom Alexander Clarke, or Bustamante, was the eldest son. Bustamante and Norman Manley were cousins and went on to found Jamaica's two great political parties. If ever a man could have been said to have kissed the Blarney Stone and have "the gift of the gab," it was the Right Honorable Michael Manley, twice Prime Minister of Jamaica and president of the People’s National Party. Claude McKay, that great Jamaican radical poet, also of Irish descent, wrote at the height of the Black and Tan War, "I suffer with the Irish. I think I understand the Irish. My belonging to a subject race entitles me to some understanding of them."
The Brownes of Busha Browne fame (legends in authentic Jamaican food production), Tryall Estate, and the Marquess of Sligo, are alive and kicking at YS Farms in St. Elizabeth -- and still breeding great horses. A Browne has now married a Lanigan, joining two great Jamirish families. The McConnells of Bog Walk and United Estates have worked the land for over 300 years in sugar, rum, and citrus. There are still some Irish priests, nuns and teachers.
One of the world's foremost authorities on coral reefs is Dublin native Ivan Goodbody, a retired professor of zoology at Kingston's University of the West Indies (UWI, for short). Freemasonry's Irish Lodge is a vibrant part of the lives of many Jamaican male folk. That Jamaica did not only receive "saints and scholars" can be seen from a report from the "Gleaner" in 1842. It complains that the Irish who settled in Jamaica in March of 1841 are "repeatedly intoxicated, drink excessively, are seen emerging from grog shops very dissolute and abandoned, and are of very intemperate habits!" The leading trainer in the sport of kings is Phillip Feanny, whose mother Molly is from County Cork, and who learned his craft from Vincent O'Brien in Tipperary and at the Irish National Stud in Kildare.
Chris Blackwell, the founder of Island Records, who helped to put Bob Marley on the map as well as the Irish rock group U2, was born in Jamaica of an Irish father. His award-winning hotel is situated in Kingston's Irish Town. Sir Phillip Sherlock, former vice chancellor of the University of the West Indies and Jamaica's greatest historian, is also descended from an Irish family who arrived in Jamaica in 1691.
You see there is much more to us than Irish potatoes, or spuds as we both call them, or ganzies for t-shirts, or Kerry Gold butter, or Irish moss, which both peoples use as a tonic. Well, let‘s not get into that. One of the Rastafarians favorite expressions is "Irie," meaning everything is "jus cool." ... I would love to say that this too is Irish, but that might be pushing my luck a little too far. There is more of the Irish in Jamaicans than perhaps they realize, and more of the Jamaican in us than we care to admit. It's there in our accents, our love of laughter, of wine, women and song. It's present in our love affair with the turf and horses -- and the gambling that goes with it. It's there in our shared fondness for Arthur Guinness and John Barleycorn, and our willingness to live for the moment and let tomorrow look after itself. These are the traits that others readily identify in both nations and why at home and abroad we are "bredren!"
Copyright © 2001,GAR Media. |