Wednesday, April 30, 2014

Free Vision Screening for 12-16 year-olds

Nichola C Kennedy FAOI Optometrist, Kilcullen are offering free vision SCREENING to all 12-16 year olds for the month of May in conjunction with EyeZone to highlight another deficiency in the state Eyecare service.

In the state system the first vision test a child will receive is a screening in Junior or Senior infants. This test is based on being able to read capital letters (at age 5!!) and being able to see. It is carried out usually by public health nurses who are under immense time pressures given the large class sizes these days. If a child fails the screening they are referred for further investigation, the waiting time for this in our area is 42-48 months!! Too late for any child with a lazy eye. They then may be called back for review depending on their vision needs but this does not always follow through as children fall out of the system etc.

When the child finishes primary school the eyecare service discharges the child and they then have to continue their eyecare privately unless they are a medical card holder — when they turn 16 they can use their medical card, leaving a gap in Eyecare services for 12-16 year olds.

Ideally your child’s vision should be assessed before starting pre school as vision is essential to learning and yearly thereafter. Continuity of eyecare is vital in order to ensure that your child is reaching all their milestones in relation to their eyes development & health, vision development and ability to learn.
 
Don’t let your child life go by in a blur, get their eyes checked. 80% of what a child learns is learned through vision.

If you feel your teen is having vision problems, or if you simply would like to have their eyes and vision assessed, call us on 045-484643 to make an appointment.

Nichola is passionate about children’s eyecare, she has developed her skills and knowledge in the area of paediatric eyecare and has invested heavily in age appropriate equipment to assess children of all ages including special needs and specific learning difficulties such as dyslexia. (Other areas of interest to Nichola are visual stress and behavioural optometry).

Sinn Féin political clinic planned

A Sinn Féin clinic will be held in the Hideout on Saturday 10th May at 3pm.

Sorcha O'Neill, the Sinn Féin candidate in the Naas Municipal Area, will attend. A profile provided by the candidate is here on the Election 2014 - Kilcullen blog.

All welcome.

Another win for the badminton Rags

There is one league match and one Open to report on this week as the season comes to a close and our feature match come from Men’s 1 in their DDL semi Final, writes Enda O'Neill, PRO of Kilcullen Badminton Club. This match was played in Baldoyle to an equally good KADKA team from Dublin.

Paddy and Gareth were out in the first men’s and lost the first set to the KADKA pairing but quickly recovered winning the second set and taking the third set in a gripping 22-20 final set, so going in the second game KBC were one nil up. It was now the turn of the second men’s pairings to play. Dave and young gun Darren won their game in two sets 21-17 and 21-18 which meant if the third pairing of Dave and Gareth won KBC would make another final. This game went to the wire with Dave and Gareth loosing the first set but taking the second and third sets to win the match. If Dave, Paddy, Darren and Gareth win this final KBC will have a Division 2 team in the Leagues which is such a massive achievement for the lads and the club. Well done to the lads and good luck in the final on Thursday May 1.

Sunday 27 April saw the Leinster Individual Inter County Cup and again KBC took home some silverware. Lynsey and Dave continued on their winning steak after taking the Grade E All Ireland Championships by winning the Grade 3 Mix competition in 3 sets. There was also some success in the Singles competition with for young gun Darren Lee winning the Grade 3 Final, well done to all involved.

Finally a big thanks to our Men’s 1 team of Dave, Paddy, Gareth and Darren who took time out of their busy schedule to do a demo for the Juvenile club last Saturday morning. Kilcullen Juvenile Badminton Club also had their awards day on Saturday. In photo are the KBC Juvenile Club along with our award winners of Avon Dempsey Matthew Kelly Rachael Downey Caoimhe, Ben Phelan and the Downey twins.

KCC Marathon Race report



The annual Kilcullen Canoe Club National Marathon ranking race took place on Sunday 27th April, writes David McDonnell, PRO of Kilcullen Canoe Club. This year’s race was held on the river Barrow in Athy.



Kilcullen Canoe Club members placed well on the day with perfect race conditions. In K1 Div 2 David McDonnell finished 3rd. In K1 Div 4 Lar O’Brien finished 2nd and Johnny Barry 3rd. Maria Wilmot was 1st in Women’s K1. The junior trio of Ronan Foley (above), Aaron Thorpe and Joe Brown were 1st 2nd and 3rd respectively in Junior K1. In Women’s GP Mary Fitzgerald placed 1st and Alison Miley 2nd and Sinead Foley 3rd. In Men’s GP Eamon Moran finished 1st.

Beginners courses have begun at the club on Monday and Wednesday evenings. With all equipment provided and experienced instructors, why not give it a try? For More information on Kilcullen Canoe Club, check out kilcullencanoeclub.com, Facebook, Flickr (Kilcullen Canoe Club) or contact Diane Brown by email secretary@kilcullencanoeclub.com, or why not drop down to see us at the club where there is activity most evenings.

Top picture is Paddy Fitzgerald who competed in the Marathon Race.

Tuesday, April 29, 2014

Parish Lotto Draw

The numbers drawn in the Kilcullen & Gormanstown Parish Lotto on Tuesday 29th April 2014 were 5, 15, 30 and 31. There was no Jackpot winner and next week's main prize will be €8,000.

The winners of the €50 Open Draws were Erica Sherlock (Promoter Adrienne Byrne); Steve Keneavey (Miriam McDonnell); and Ellen McDermott (Vivienne Clifford).

The winners of the €50 Promoters Draws were Breda Mc Cormack and Claire Boyle, and Breda McCormack won the draw for those in the Parish Centre on the night.


Truck fire dealt with at Nicholastown



There was some excitement this evening when smoke began to pour from an articulated truck at Nicholastown green. A local resident provided a hose to deal with the matter until the Fire Brigade arrived from Newbridge. Nobody was hurt in the incident.

KCC votes for variation on development plan, re energy transmission

The Grid Link Action Group has welcomed the news that Kildare County Council has voted in favour of varying the County Development Plan (CDP) with regard to transmission infrastructure, service providers and energy facilities.

Grid Link Action Group lobbied strongly over recent months on transmission infrastructure, in particular pylons and overhead lines, and acknowledges the support councillors and county management have given to this — in particular councillors Martin Miley Jnr, Mark Wall and Ivan Keatley.

The process will now allow members of the public to have their say on this section of the CDP. The Public Consultation period will run for a limited period, and it is expected that the closing date for submissions will be 4 June.

Kieran Connor, Chairman of the Grid Link Action Group urges all Kildare residents, as well as those from further afield who have an interest in this issue, to make a submission to Kildare County Council about the variation to the CDP. “It’s not enough to think that someone else will do it for you. If we do not act now then what legacy will we be leaving for our children and future generations," he says.

Over the coming weeks Grid Link Action Group will host a number of workshops throughout the county to inform people of relevant issues and how they might go about completing a meaningful submission. Further information on these workshops will be released on the group’s Facebook page at www.facebook.com/gridlinkactiongroup.

To find out more information, visit the Grid Link Action Group’s Facebook page at www.facebook.com/gridlinkactiongroup or email gridlinkactiongroup@gmail.com.

KCA sets date for AGM

The Annual General Meeting of Kilcullen Community Action will be held on 12 May, at 8pm in Kilcullen Heritage Centre.

It will include presentation of the KCA officers' reports, the financial statements, and election of officers for the next year.

All are welcome to attend, and participate.

Swinging launch of Joe and Noeleen's CD



There was a swinging afternoon had by all at the recent launch the the Naas Town House Hotel of the latest 'Stardust' CD, Nobody's Darling But Mine, by Kilcullen Post Office duo Joe O'Neill and Noeleen Eston. The CD is going great, they say, and Kevin Lawler Fitzpatrick of Midland Radio 103 was MC for the event.

Monday, April 28, 2014

The passing of Rory Mackey

The Diary has learned with sadness of the death of Rory Mackey, Grangemore.

Rory is reposing at his residence from 4pm tomorrow, Tuesday. Removal will take place on Wednesday moring at 10.30, to arrive at Kilcullen Parish Church for Requiem Mass at 11. Interment will take place afterwards in St Brigid's Cemetery.

To Rory's family and friends we extend our condolences. May he resit in peace.

Further information from PJ Willis Funeral Director.

Heritage photographs — the Fenelons



The Diary has just received some photographs from Elizabeth Adams (nee Fenelon), for our Heritage Photographs Collection.

The first one is of Elizabeth's dad Myles, his sisters Myra (Mary), Joan and Pan (Susan), and his parents Patrick — whom Elizabeth thinks worked for Nolans — and Susan (nee Byrne).



A second picture is of Myles Fenelon and another lad in front of he bridge, and Elizabeth has attached a copy of what was written on the back of the photo.





The third is a school picture, and Elizabeth thinks her dad is in the second row in the middle, fourth from left.



The Fenelons' house on Hillside, number seven.



Myles Fenelon with with his eldest sister Myra.

We really appreciate these, Elizabeth. Many thanks.

UPDATE: Annette Coyle (O'Connell) tells us that the writing on the back of the photo of the 'two lads' is that of her aunt, the late Anna May O'Connell, whose shop was where Brendan O'Connell's insurance business is located now. Hence the 'our backyard' reference.

UPDATE 2: Jim Collins notes: At 76 years I remember well Paddy Fenelon who worked for years in Nolans butchers. In the evenings he also was in charge of the ticket door on the local cinema; he was a strict man but he still would let us young lads in free to the pictures as we had no tickets. From 1950 he was also caretaker and key holder of the new tennis pavilion.

As for Myles I remember him so well with his lovely brown wavy hair. A real gentleman, every year in August there would be two weeks of dancing in a carnival marqee — Myles was a good dancer and always in demand for ladies choice. The fellow with Myles in the photo at the bridge is Jim Smyth, who went to England around 1950.


Sunday, April 27, 2014

A rocking night from Harlequin at Joeys

There was a real rockin' occasion at Joey's Hideout last night where Shane McGrath's Harlequin band kept a full house jumping, writes Brian Byrne.

The event was in aid of the local effort for the Make A Wish Foundation, and organised by the usual bunch of ladies who have been doing this gig for a number of years now.

There are more pictures from the night here.

Saturday, April 26, 2014

Good causes fundraise in Kilcullen



Two good causes to support in Kilcullen this morning. Above, Celia Travers and her grand-daughter Lia doing collection duty for the KCA Tidy Towns Summer Flowers Project, and below, Anette McCarthy and friends enjoying a Coffee Morning in the Heritage Centre in aid of her Global Classroom trip to India this summer.



Local areas to benefit from broadband fibre plan

Brannockstown, Calverstown and Narraghmore are three local areas which will eventually benefit from a new €1bn broadband fibre network to be rolled out by the State across rural areas of Ireland.

The scheme will make it much easier for broadband companies to offer high speed internet access in areas of the country which currently have little or no commercial speed broadband. About 1,000 communities around Ireland have been identified for the upgrade, including 18 in south Kildare.

Deputy Martin Heydon has welcomed the announcement, and says he's continuing his survey to identify other areas in the constituency which need the access.The survey can be accessed here.

Nolans are new GAA sponsor



Kilcullen GAA are delighted to announce Nolan Butchers of Kilcullen as our new Club Sponsor, writes Martin Murphy.

Our new partnership brings the sporting & business hearts of Kilcullen together and is a great example of local business & clubs working together... for long term success.

Our Senior team are now ready for their top of the table clash with Nurney on Saturday evening with their new set of jerseys with the famous Nolans of Kilcullen logo on their chests.

Friday, April 25, 2014

Billy Redmond is on a mission



Among the regular good community things our local stalwart Billy Redmond does is keep the church grounds tidy, writes Brian Byrne. It's maybe something not many notice, but they certainly would if the work wasn't done.

Well, in the course of his efforts recently, Billy happened on something he thought was long gone. More than four decades, gone, in fact. And now he's on a mission, to have it reinstated to where it was prior to Vatican II.

It's the pulpit, from which many of us of a certain age will remember hearing the reading of parish notices, Sunday sermons and even the hellfire-threatening Mission Week oratory from visiting specialists in that kind of thing.

In line with the general architecture of Kilcullen Parish Church, considered a really good example of architect JJ McCarthy's works, the pulpit really is a lovely example of its kind of church furniture. Billy remembers being quite exercised when the edifice, and the altar rails, were removed in the post-Vatican II reforms.

Finding it again has given his life an extra lift of purpose. He says it's in good condition, just needs some cleaning, new velvet on the top and a new timber floor. He has talked privately with a number of parishioners and got a positive response to the idea of reinstating it in the church. Now he's waiting on official feedback from the priests and, presumably, the Parish Pastoral Council, on his proposal.

You can read the full version of his thoughts on the matter in the next issue of The Bridge. In the meantime, as he glances from time to time at a photograph of his own wedding which clearly shows the pulpit and the altar rails, he hopes that — like everything in the circle of life — the pulpit's time might come again.

Annette's fundraiser to mentor teachers in India is tomorrow

Just a reminder that a fundraiser event tomorrow, Saturday, morning, April 26 in Kilcullen's Town Hall, will include tea and coffee, cakes, music ... and more and more cakes. Along with great neighbourly conversation, it runs from 10.30am till lunchtime, and is in support of Annette McCarthy's Global Schoolroom trip to north-east India in July.

The Global Schoolroom initiative was set up in 2005 by two teachers. Its mission is simple, to share educational experience and expertise, working directly with local teachers to help in their own education.

Over nine years, the Global Schoolroom scheme has sent trained Irish volunteer teachers to this area of India each summer to act as mentors to local teachers. To-date nearly 200 Irish teachers have worked with over 700 Indian teachers. For Indian teachers involved, the sessions in July form part of a 3-year diploma in teacher education accredited by UCD, a framework that is sustained locally by the Don Bosco University in Assam.

In a region that is geographically and economically separated from the rest of India, the work of Global Schoolroom empowers local teachers to educate local youths and in turn act as agents for development in their region.

Annette McCarthy, who retired last year after 37 years working in Scoil Bhride, will share her knowledge and expertise with teachers in India who are just starting out on their careers. She has been carrying-out an involved process of training and preparation, both on-site at Global Schoolroom in Dublin and remotely at home, learning how to be the best mentor in a cross-cultural setting.

Global Schoolroom volunteer teachers help with fundraising to support the programme. Global Schoolroom covers all costs for Indian teachers to participate in the programme, including training, accommodation, food and travel and their continued support through the Global Schoolroom alumni following contact sessions with Irish teachers.

So! Come join us for all the treats that make a Saturday morning a Saturday morning. Expect the finest cakes, buns, biscuits and cookies, tarts, pies and puddings. Donations will be gratefully accepted, as well as options to buy delicious delights to take home. Music will be provided by Camphill's super-lady, Gesa, who will be joined by musical friends.

If you can't attend, but would still like to support, please contact Annette on 087-6320040.

Annette is pictured above on left, receiving a Community Award from Margaret O'Shea at last October's KCA Community & Tidy Towns Awards Night. Pic by Ray Kelly.


Thursday, April 24, 2014

More silverware for the badminton Rags



This week's report starts with the Good Friday Open which was played in Whitehall Road on 18 April 2014, writes Enda O'Neill, PRO of Kilcullen Badminton Club. Dave McClean and (recent returnee from his travels in Brazil) Paddy Burke competed in the Grade 3 Men’s Doubles tournament. It was to be a successful day for the lads when they were runners-up in a close final. Well done to the lads on another great day for them.

It was an all KBC Final in the Grade 6 Mixed Finals with Jen Monaghan and Vincent taking on their fellow team mates of Sarah Walshe and Fintan Phelan. In a close fought-match Jen and Vincent came out victorious beating Sarah and Fintan 2-1. Well done to Jen and Vincent in their great win and also to their worthy opponents Sarah and Fintan.

Tuesday 22 April saw Enda and the Mix 3 team contest the Grade 5 South West League Cup Final. The Final was held in Athy Rugby Club and the opposition was Abbeylix of Laois. This turned out to be the match of the tournament with both KBC and Abbeylix swapping blows from the start. First ladies of Jen and Helen lost to a strong Abbeylix female pairing, while Enda and Vincent took the first Mens levelling the match 1-1. Ladies 2 of Anna Marie and Sarah lost their second Ladies but John and Fintan took the Mens in their match in two sets.

The two teams were now level at 2-2 going into the mixed matches, it was Anna Marie and John lost the first mixed match in two sets putting Abbeylix back in control of the match. Jen and Vincent made amends in the second mix match winning 2-1. It was Helen and Enda up in the third mixed and they won easily in two sets, so Kilcullen were 4-3 up in games but if Abbeyleix could win their last mixed match against KBC in two sets they would win the final on set difference. So daughter and father pairing of Sarah and Fintan had it all to do in the last mix game and they didn’t disappoint. This match was definitely the match of the final Sarah and Fintan took the first set 21-17, the second was a lot tighter and Sarah and Fintan pulled it out of the bag to clinch the Cup for Kilcullen in a nail-biting 21-20 win and capping off a great season for the club.

A big congratulations goes out to Helen, Jen, Sarah, Anna Marie, Vincent, John, Fintan and of course yours truly Enda! Also thanks so much to all the supporters who travelled to Athy to cheer us on, you were the ninth player and your cheers really helped us over the line.

Pictured above are (back) John, Vincent, Enda, Fintan; and (front) Anna Marie, Jen, Sarah, Helen and Tara.

Up the Rags!!


Wednesday, April 23, 2014

Earth to earth, and Joseph Keating

Obviously I didn't know Joseph Keating from Usk, writes Brian Byrne. He was killed in WW1 in France. But I came very close to him yesterday.

I heard about him some weeks ago, when Julie O'Donoghue told me the details she had only then uncovered about her great-uncle who was killed in the Battle of Cambrai on 8 December 1917. She had found letters from him on the front, kept by an aunt. The recent launch of the website about the Irish killed on the Fields of Flanders gave her more information, which she shared with the group which has set up to commemorate Kilcullen's Great War dead.

Yesterday I was in northern France, courtesy of Peugeot who were launching the wagon version of their European Car of the Year 2014 winner 308.

I had checked out where the memorial on which Lance Corporal Joseph Keating is commemorated is located. It is further away than the designated test route we were given for the event. So I asked my co-driver if she wouldn't mind foregoing a visit to the factory where the engines for the car are made and go instead to the Cambrai Memorial at Louverval. That wasn't a problem.

Navigating there was a little more difficult. The sat-nav wouldn't accept Louverval, let alone a memorial. Even under points of interest with the label 'Culture' ... closest we could think in terms of the labels available. We solved the problem by stopping at a motorway service area and buying a map. Old-fashioned, but unbeatable when you want to see where you are in the big picture that sat-nav just doesn't do.

Anyhow, two and a half hours from leaving Le Touquet Airport, I found myself at the memorial. It had rained on and off for the previous hour, but at Louverval the sun came out clear.



It's a quiet spot, except when cars or lorries swift by on their way from or to or to beyond the town of Cambrai itself some 15 kilometres to the east. With the sun shining on the memorial edifice and its small graveyard, it felt just as I thought it should. Warm, and a place of peace for those who were being remembered for their trials in the bitter cold and atrocity of war.



I picked up a stray piece of paper, the only litter in a place impeccably maintained by the Commonwealth Graves Commission, and put it in my pocket because it seemed that was the best thing to do. I knew from their excellent cwg.org website where Joseph Keating's name was inscribed in a panel commemorating those of the Irish Guards who had died somewhere in this area. It was high on the wall, in a corner, with others who had not come home from the regiment amongst the 7,043 soldiers which this particular memorial gives the opportunity to remember.



'Keating J'.

For me, prayer is not a religious thing. More a thought about somebody, or something. So the prayer I said was an acknowledgment of the fact that a Kilcullen man had gone, for whatever reason, to a war that began a hundred years ago, and who had died about seven months before it ended.

Thanks to Julie O'Donoghue, I have been recently reading stories of the Irishmen who went to that war, and in many cases didn't return. Others did survive, but came back to an Ireland, and sometimes to their own families and neighbours, which shunned them because they had fought in the service of an England which still ruled us. Our Taoiseach has recently given back to them all, and to their descendants, their dignity in doing what they felt was right.

I didn't have any family involved in that war. But I thought yesterday at that memorial in the village of Louveral about those who were my antecedent family neighbours, who had gotten involved, for whatever reason. Particularly about Joseph Keating from Usk, as I emptied a little box of earth, which I had brought from Kilcullen, onto the ground in front of his memorial.



I took from the same area, earth into which conceivably had bled the lives of Joseph and his soldier compatriots almost a century ago. It will be incorporated into the soil which will nourish a tree to remember all Kilcullen people who fought, and sometimes died, in that conflict which had little to do with them as individuals, which will be planted next August in Kilcullen.

In the meantime, Joseph Keating from Usk, and all your comrades from whatever country, but especially those who came from the Kilcullen area, rest in peace that we are thinking of you.

Parish Lotto Draw

The numbers drawn in the Kilcullen & Gormanstown Parish Lotto Draw held on Tuesday 22nd April 2014 were 8, 10, 11 and 13. There was no Jackpot winner and next week's main prize will be €7,800.

The winners of the €50 Open Draws were Ross Coughlan (promoter Robert Archbold), Mary Orford (Valerie McTernan), and Pat Martin (Vivian Clarke).

The winners of the €50 Promoters Draws were Wednesday Bridge Club and PJ Lydon, and Ronan Murray won the Draw for those in the Parish Centre on the night of the Draw.

Tuesday, April 22, 2014

A man before his time: Robert Dunlop

This Appreciation of the late Robert Dunlop was published in The Baptist Times on 4/4/2014.

Pastor Robert Frederick Dunlop: 1938-2014
robtdunlop---20.jpg

A man before his time: former President of the Baptist Union of Ireland who was widely respected for his theological and analytical skills and had a passion to see a peace process in Northern Ireland

Pastor Robert Dunlop, who was best known as a local Baptist Pastor in Co Kildare for almost 50 years, died peacefully at his home in Brannockstown on Saturday 15 February 2014. His Funeral and Thanksgiving Service was held on Tuesday 18 February when over 400 people crowded into St Bridget’s Cathedral in Kildare to give thanks for his life and ministry both as a preacher of the gospel and a friend to all. Everyone who spoke in the service shared rich testimonies to Robert’s unshakeable confidence in the gospel of Jesus Christ and of his willingness to go wherever he had opportunity to share the good news of Christ. Robert won the hearts and minds of many people irrespective of their class or creed.

Robert was born in Emyvale, Co Monaghan. His early years were spent in the border counties of Monaghan, Tyrone and Down where his father farmed. Life was uncomplicated with plenty to eat, adequate clothing and abundant exercise. In July 1954 on a lonely mountain road in Tyrone Robert had a “spiritual awakening” on his way home from an evangelistic service in a tent. He described it as a sort of Damascus Road experience when, like John Wesley “I felt my heart strangely warmed”. He went on to study at Belfast Bible College. As a mature student he later went to Trinity College Dublin and researched religious conflict in 19th century Ireland.

As a young man, he was appointed as a Baptist Home Mission worker in Athlone and was placed there for three years.

In 1964 Robert was invited to become Pastor of the Baptist Church in Brannockstown, where he served for 42 years. He had a desire to proclaim the “good news” of the gospel far beyond the boundaries of his small local community. He was energetic and creative. Robert and a small group of other Baptist Pastors, mainly from the Republic, regularly headed to different towns, villages and fairs in many parts of Ireland to preach the redeeming love of God in Christ. They preached in all kinds of public places; in those days their passion to share Christ was sometimes met with misunderstanding and often they faced considerable hostility from some of their audiences. This did not deter Robert who then devised a unique approach to take the message to the people. The idea of the ‘Churchmobile’ was born. A bus was acquired and adapted as a small “church on wheels”. With Robert in the driving seat for 12 years it was taken to many places for regular services as Robert endeavoured to reach out to those who had lost touch with the regular Church because of distance or lack of interest.

He became President of the Baptist Union of Ireland in 1982 - an indication of the wide respect in which he was held by his fellow Baptists in Ireland, both north and south.

Robert’s voice became familiar to RTE listeners as he was given the opportunity to broadcast and preach on his favourite subject of God’s great salvation. His writings became important as he commented on faith as it affected every part of life. His passion to see a peace process in Northern Ireland took him to events and activities that many evangelical leaders might have hesitated in attending, but for Robert this was a practical outworking of the gospel of peace and reconciliation.

Robert was widely respected for his theological and analytical skills. Over the years many people sought his advice both personally and as an evangelical pastor who wanted the voice of evangelicals to be heard beyond their own congregations. He provided leadership, encouragement and training for others who worked for collaboration among evangelicals. He was the editor and inspiration behind the book Evangelicals in Ireland that sought to explain evangelicals to those beyond their own circle. He was also a persistent voice in challenging his fellow evangelicals to look beyond their own immediate circle and to be involved more widely and more deeply in Irish society. This meant that at times he was misunderstood and challenged by those who disagreed with his willingness to be a ‘cautious ecumenist’.

He was a man of many parts; he was a wordsmith and an avid reader of theological and other writings. Yet his central belief in handling the Word of God is that the gospel is profoundly simple.

Spending a lifetime in a rural community gave him a great interest in the history of the Brannockstown area, especially of the Baptist Church and its connection with the La Touche family of Harristown. Robert became widely respected as a local historian, and as a writer. His poetry was a means of inspiration to many. But his interests were much wider through Christian Endeavour, Notre Dame University, Glenstall Ecumenical Community, Mennonite and Aughrim Summer Schools and were global as well as local. As the dynamic and highly dedicated Chair of the Board of World Vision Ireland, he had a passion for the wider world. In a personal tribute he was recently described as…“a man of magnanimous heart who crossed all kinds of borders with courage and imagination”.

After his retirement in 2006 Robert’s health deteriorated and he had to come to terms with a severe visual, impairment and reduced mobility. When he could no longer read he had a regular arrangement for friends to come and read to him. One of the most moving tributes to the life and influence of Robert occurred when in April 2007 the Brannockstown Community Committee organised a Service of Thanksgiving for his Ministry and prayed for his healing. This unique service celebrated his sterling contribution to the community over more than 40 years.

It was back in his beloved Brannockstown, in a small graveyard beside the Baptist Church where his mortal remains were laid to rest. Well over 200 people from all sections of the community gathered around the graveside. With sun shining through the trees and a small male voice choir singing a stirring gospel song about Heaven, everyone was reminded of the amazing eternal hope because of all that Jesus has done - a message which Robert knew and shared with everyone.

Our thoughts and prayers are with his beloved wife Olive who cared for him through his declining years and his daughter Julie and son Jeremy.

In a personal reflection written some years ago Robert said he would like to be remembered as “….someone who tried to be fair minded.” Those who knew him in every walk of life can heartily agree with that sentiment.

The memory of the righteous is a blessing: Proverbs 10 v 7a

Monday, April 21, 2014

Lions tour jersey for auction in Hideout



This is the big prize for next Saturday night's Auction in aid of the Make-A-Wish Foundation in Joey's Hideout, writes Brian Byrne.

(No, not Trish ... the jersey, which is fully autographed by the squad of the British & Irish 2013 Lions tour of Australia.)

As well as bidding on the night, you can leave a bid behind the bar between now and the event.

It promises to be a great night, and a great prize, so don't just come along, bring a friend.

'The Girl' is home again

When Hazel Gaynor's novel 'The Girl who Came Home' is published in Ireland and the UK this week by HarperCollins 360, it will be very much a case of deja vu — but with a difference, writes Brian Byrne.

The book from the Kilcullen-based Yorkshire woman has already been published twice. First as a self-published Kindle eBook in 2012, which was very successful. And again a week or so ago when HarperCollins launched it in the US, where it is already on the top picks of major book outlets like the gigantic Target and Costco supermarket chains.

With a copy of the US one in her hands last week, Hazel admits that she was surprised how much having the physical book meant. And that it was done so by one of the world's biggest book publishers. "I know that there are authors who want the independence of self-publishing, but that was never my dream," she says. "I always wanted the physical book in bookshops. And having so many people behind me in the publishing house has been an amazing experience. It really blew me away how meticulous they are, all the stages the work went through."

The story of 'The Girl' is fiction, but based in a west of Ireland village where 14 people left to join the Titanic on a voyage to seek better lives in America. Writing it was the result of a lifelong fascination with the Titanic from the time she was growing up in her native Driffield, Yorkshire. But it was the book she subsequently wrote which gave her the opportunity to get picked up by a major global publisher. Due for publication in January 2015, 'Daughters of the Flowers' tells the story of little girl flower sellers on the streets of 19th century London. It was that manuscript which a NY agent happened to find, loved it, and asked Hazel if she had any more? "So I got a two-book deal for books which were already written, and that's probably the reason that they are scheduled for publication so soon after the deal was signed in June 2013."

As part of the process, Hazel was assigned an editor who helped her tweak The Girl for print publication. There weren't really substantive changes, because it had already been through many edits by Hazel itself prior to the eBook. "My editor's approach is not to tinker with the author's 'voice', but obviously she has an eye for narrative flow and just tightening it up. In addition to sharpening the pacing and the dialogue, obviously some Americanisations needed to be put in for publication there."

Being part of a team of editors, designers and marketing people has given Hazel a real buzz, and a much better understanding of an enormous effort that goes into producing a book when the writer has done her initial bit. "Writing is a lonely profession, and having so many people behind me has given me wonderful confidence. It's all just phenomenal."

Friends have asked her if she had to go to New York to deal with all this, but the fact is that all of the process has been done across the internet and via Skype. "I'll be honest, I'd have bitten the hand off them if they'd offered to bring me to New York, but it wasn't necessary. That will come, maybe towards the end of the year or early next year, when there are people who want to meet me."

She's getting pictures from friends, of her books on shelves in various parts of the US. "They tell me they're quietly shifting them around so they're more prominent, and even onto the best sellers areas," Hazel says with a grin. "I guess I'll be able to do that myself when it's launched here on April 24." Meantime, all the same work is going on with 'Daughters of the Flowers', and Hazel also has another book done. Again it is in a historical setting, 'but it's not sold yet so I don't want to talk about it'.

From starting out a few years ago with a blog about being at home with her two little boys and baking for them, she has come a long way relatively quickly. She's entitled to be proud, and she is. But it's not the big publicity that's on the way which is important. "When the deal was announced, and I was featured on the front page of the Driffield Times, that's been the best. My dad doesn't have internet, and it was difficult for him to realise all that was going on. But seeing the piece on the front page of the local paper brought it all home."

Like The Girl. Home again.

This article was first published in The Kildare Nationalist.


Sunday, April 20, 2014

'Apparently he paid too much for it'

Though the Irish Civil War only lasted 11 months, ending in May 1923, it left a terrible legacy in death and economic destruction, writes Brian Byrne. Numbers killed have never been fully documented, but figures of up to 4,000 people have been suggested, while a lower number of 1,000 is a minimum believed dead whether as combatants or civilians.

The conflict is believed to have cost up to £50m in terms of actually waging the war and in dealing with compensation claims afterwards. The Free State Government undertook to pay such compensations for damage to and theft of property from the July 1921 date of the Anglo-Irish Treaty which precipitated the Civil War until its end.

Generally, these compensations were dealt with by local courts. A report in the Kildare Observer of 20 December 1924 gives a Kilcullen microcosmic insight into the kind of recompense people were looking for.

Denis B Brennan, trading as the Kildare Motor Co, Kilcullen, gave evidence that on 20 June 1922, a number of armed men came to his garage at about 7am and demanded that he open the premises. He told the court that the men looked at the vehicles there, and took a 2-seater motor car and a 1-ton truck. They also took a quantity of petrol and oil.

Mr Brennan said he had bought the car the previous January for £100 and had spent £61 13s 8d on repairs and he had expected to sell it for £200. At that point, the judge noted that the claim was for £300. After some discussion, Mr Brennan was awarded a total of £171 4s 8d, made up of what he had paid for and spent on the car, and petrol and oil worth £9 10s.

James Brennan of Old Kilcullen claimed at the same sessions for a quantity of boots and other property, taken from his shop on 29 November 1922. He told the court that 'four or five' armed men had entered his shop and taken the boots and cash to a total value of £72 3s 3d. The judge decided that the £16 stolen in cash would have to 'come off' the award, and gave a decree for £55 13s 3d.

James J Byrne of Kilcullen sought compensation of £236 9s for a Ford motor car stolen from his shop on 28 July 1922, as well as £30 worth of boots and damage to the door of the shop to the cost of £5.

He told the court that he was awakened by loud knocking at the door of his residence sometime between midnight and 1am. When he asked who was there, he got a reply that they 'were the IRA', and they were going to take his car as a 'reprisal' as they claimed he 'had got someone shot or arrested'. They then broke into his premises and took the car.

The State representative, Lieut Luby, told the court that the car would only be worth about £120 at the time it was stolen, to which the judge suggested that 'apparently he paid too much for it'. A Dunlavin motor dealer, Walter Coleborn, gave evidence that Mr Byrne had paid the claimed price for the car. The judge allowed an award of £140 for the car and £5 for the door damage, as well as £29 13s 4d for a plate glass window in the same shop smashed on 14 November 1922.

William Cooper of Harristown claimed for a Douglas motor bicycle taken by armed men on 16 July 1022. He showed a receipt signed 'Provisional Government IRA, Commanding Officer Kildare Brigade'. Mr Cooper claimed £79 10s and was given a decree for £50.

Mrs Anne Butterfield of Colbinstown was awarded £40 12s for a Massey-Harris reaper and binder and two covers, burned when it had been left in a field after corn had been cut.

All these monies might seem quite small today, but in terms of livelihoods of the time, they were significant. All put together on a national basis they added a large amount to the country's financial deficit. Especially as the war had debilitated the fledgling nation's economy to the point where in 1924-1925 the Free State had to forego any further negotiation on the boundaries of the Six Counties in return for forgiveness of an agreed 'Imperial Debt' in the Treaty.

But of course, the most serious cost was in people killed, families divided in some cases for many future generations, and a bitterness between factions which can still be raised today.