It came as no surprise that on Taoiseach Enda Kenny’s recent swing through Boston, he met with a politician named Kennedy. In this case it was the new Kennedy on the political block, Joseph P. Kennedy III, who is running for Congress.
The remarkable Chieftains, now marking their 50th year of bringing traditional Irish music to venues around the world with an extensive tour of Europe and North America, will be performing for the 24th time in Boston when they gather at Symphony Hall on Wed., March 14, for an 8 p.m. show entitled, “Voice of Ages” with Paddy Moloney & The Chieftains and Special Guests [one of whom is former member Seán Keane].
By Greg O’Brien, Special to the Reporter March 6, 2012
Greg O’Brien, Special to the Reporter
Matthew Power is a study in risk and redemption. The 49-year-old Boston insurance man – he is executive vice president of Lexington Insurance Company, the nation’s premier excess and surplus carrier— has been well acquainted with the concept since his days as a youth on the streets of West Roxbury during Boston’s bruising busing crisis.
By BostonIrish.com... (not verified) March 5, 2012
14 from its pews boarded the Titanic, only 3 survived; Memorial Week is April 8-15
Lehardane
Catherine Bourke, Nora Fleming, Delia Mahon, Annie McGowan, John Bourke, Annie Kate Kelly, Pat Canavan, Delia McDermott, Mary Mangan, Kate McGowan, James Flynn, Bridget Donohue, Mary Bourke, and Mary Canavan.
The names don’t mean much to most of us but they bring tears to the eyes of many in the North Mayo parish of Addergoole. The Addergoole Fourteen, as the group is known, struck out from the hills and valleys around Nephin Mountain 100 years ago next month – some in jaunting carts, others on foot – and crossed the Windy Gap into Castlebar where they took the first of several trains to Queenstown (now Cobh.) There they settled into steerage (third class) on the RMS Titanic to laugh, chat, dance, and sing as they prepared for the long ride to America and their bright new lives.
By Ed Forry
An Academy Award-winning short film made in Northern Ireland, a new feature film made in County Tip starring American favorite Martin Sheen and supporting actor Stephen Rea, and a documentary about Barack Obama’s Irish cousins and his mother’s roots in Moneygall, Co. Offaly, are among the lead attractions at this month’s annual Irish Film Festival, Boston.
IRISH-AMERICAN HERITAGE MONTH, 2012
BY THE PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
A PROCLAMATION
For centuries, America and Ireland have built a proud and enduring partnership cemented by mutual values and a common history. Generations of Irish have crossed the Atlantic in pursuit of prosperity, and today nearly 40 million of their proud descendants continue to make their indelible mark on the United States of America. Their stories, as varied as our Nation's people, humble us and inspire our children to reach for the opportunities dreamed about by our forebears
Irish-Based Charity Is Scammed – The Chernobyl Children International charity founded and run out of Ireland by humanitarian Adi Roche is one of the most admired and successful efforts of its kind anywhere in the world.
By Ed Forry
BIR Publisher
Ireland held a national election last March that changed the face of government. Amidst every indication that the boom years of the “Celtic Tiger” had long since passed, the worldwide economic meltdown struck Ireland with catastrophic consequences.
By Bill Forry
Managing Editor
Boston College has appealed a US District Court judge’s order to turn over seven additional tapes from their Belfast Project archives to British authorities, opening up a new front in a complex, year-long battle to preserve the university’s pledge to keep the controversial records of IRA and Loyalists interview subjects secured — to the extent of US law— until the deaths of individual participants. The latest appeal, which will likely be heard in June, marks what could be a climactic turn in the legal struggle.
By Melissa Tabeek
Special to the Reporter
The American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) of Massachusetts filed a motion last week requesting an extension of time in order to prepare an amicus brief in support of two former researchers for Boston College embroiled in an ongoing fight to keep historical records involving the conflict in Northern Ireland from being released to the British government.