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The Irish in Britain, including those of Irish descent, make up a significant part of the UK population. Here, you will find news, entertainment, events, sports and features from the local Irish Post newspaper.

 
 
 
 
The Joe Horgan Column

By Joe Horgan

New Ireland was on holiday this summer and like a lot of things in new Ireland it has to be seen or it isn’t worth anything. Hey, what’s the use of being well off if no one knows you are. As one denizen of this new republic said recently it would make far more sense to have her new sun room built around the back of the house, but then no one would see it.

So if you can afford to bring a pleasure boat out in to the bay you sure as hell don’t want to do it quietly. Those of us scattered on the rocks and the sand enjoying the wide sweep of the water and the soft afternoon Irish sun only had the tranquillity of the countryside for as long as it took to rev that engine. Now a lot of water craft use this bay and there are often boats of one sort going up and down the water adding to the general pleasure of the place and the sights. This was of a different kind. This one had to halt just off the rocks and to idle there with as much noise as possible. This was the young cubs of the Celtic Tiger at play. These were the lucky souls who’d inherited a country of comfort and ease. It was some sight. Music, drinking, swimming in the sun, who wouldn’t take pleasure in that?

But somehow it wasn’t like merely watching people have a good time. It had that sheen of modern Ireland about it. That crass selfishness that characterises something essentially empty. Those watching soon began to drift away from the spectacle, from the hard in-your-face display of it all. Which probably spoilt the fun a bit too because wealth in the new Ireland has to be ostentatious if it is to be enjoyed. The boat for these Irish is something to be shown off in the bay, not something to take them away to a different country. It is not something to leave in but something to be seen in.

Of course in isolation I realise that complaining about that does make me sound like a retired barrister writing to The Irish Times about young people and noise. But it wasn’t in isolation. This summer saw the new Irish popping up on every beach you thought you might laze on. Another sunny afternoon was brought to a grinding halt by jet skis roaring up and down the surf and virtually driving everyone else out of the water. This was a stretch of sand I have known since childhood and the contrast between it then and now could not be sharper. Some local authorities have talked about banning these jet skis but the real eye opener as you sit in the sun on the strand and listen to those engines roaring is how gadget drenched this new Ireland is and of how all that tortured nation building has merely resulted in big toys for big boys. It makes you laugh all the way back to your pint.

On another sheltered beach someone tells me, on a lazy Sunday, a scattering of people dozing into their newspapers watched in amazement as a large jeep drove onto the beach, disgorged a small family and then drove the all of 20 yards back on to the small slip road. No point in a big off road toy like that if you don’t go off road with it every now and then and let everyone see you doing it. So what if you then have to walk back the short distance to the beach with a rake of people looking at you. It might make a young child a bit embarrassed, but not the big boys of the new Ireland.

Still I wouldn’t want to give you the impression that summer was all play here in this sunny republic. Far from it. One more day we sat on a small, well-hidden beach watching the children play and thanking our lucky stars that we were there. Another family arrived shortly after, the father rowing one of the children in on his small dinghy, the mother trailing another well manicured child along the sand. As she called out to the kids I noticed once more the strange social phenomenon of how as Irish society becomes less and less identifiably Irish that those who are most successful in it and most often like their comfortable counterparts anywhere else are those with children whose names are Irish language names. Don’t ask me why. Anyway, as we sat in the glorious sunshine and our kids played off in the distance with theirs, their father walked up and down the beach the whole time speaking loudly in to his mobile phone. Business. New Ireland on the beach. God help us.

 
 
 
 
 
 
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