Kilkenny Observer 22nd December 2023

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The Kilkenny Observer Friday 22 December 2023


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Santa Pause for so many An Irish mother-of-three was forced to sit her children down and tell them Christmas was cancelled this year due to financial hardship, a charity has revealed. New Action For Children says families are struggling more this year than they were last Christmas, with parents having to make desperate choices just to afford the essentials. Two children assisted by the charity were having to walk 1.5

miles to school in cold weather without winter coats because their parents couldn’t afford suitable clothing and didn’t have a car. Many others are living with damp and mould because they are unable to afford heat or electricity, according to its front-line workers, who say most of their time is taken up with making sure children have basic provisions. There are some 14,000 Irish

COMMENT people homeless, of which 4,000 are children. There are more than 100,000 refugees and asylum seekers in Ireland this Christmas, the majority from Ukraine. Not all families, in the main women and children, are lucky enough find a roof over their head. One report cites 200 single male asylum

seekers as living in tents. The horrors of Israel’s onslaught on Gaza rages on – with some 18,000 Palestinians dead. Playing with dolls on a Gaza hospital bed where she sits with her leg in a plaster cast and scars on her face, 10-year-old Razan Shabat does not know that her mother, father and siblings were

killed in the strike that wounded her. The little girl is one of a large and growing number of children in Gaza who have lost both parents, and in some cases their entire families, in the war between Israel and Hamas, and who are being cared for by distant relatives, friends or even strangers. Like the Christ child, children are, in the most, at the centre of Christmas, Santa Claus and all. Not every child here, and around

the world, will have happy Christmas. More than 2,000 years ago Mary and Joseph fled Judea and the wickedness of King Herod so Mary could give birth to Jesus Christ. There was no room at the inn and the baby, so many believe was the Son of God, was born in a stable. Let’s give thanks for what we have... See Paul Hopkins Page 8

Mary the mother of Jesus Christ The role of the Virgin Mary in Christian history is pivotal but yet there is little that we know about this girl from Galilee who still sparks massive veneration and also occasional controversial debate. So who was Mary then, known to Christians as the mother of Jesus, the Mother of God, a virgin whose conception of the Christ child was immaculate, who wept at His Crucifixion and who, like Jesus, was assumed into Heaven? Pages 18 &19

Silent night, holy night...

Santa’s 45,000 gifts for kids Legacy Communications has unveiled an exclusive guide to Santa’s magical journey across Ireland. Following An Taoiseach’s announcement granting unrestricted airspace access, Legacy’s detailed guide explores the delivery of more than 3.5 million gifts nation-wide. In Kilkenny, Santa Claus will deliver 45,000 presents. Darting through the medieval streets, Santa’s sleigh will be guided by the twinkling lights of Kilkenny Castle. At Kilkenny Castle, a burst of light and laughter might signal his visit. You better watch out...

All is calm, all is bright as after Mass the infant Jesus is reverently placed in the crib, hushed with mystery and love. The miracle of Christmas. The presence of Christ, palpable almost in this ancient, hallowed place of worship. GERRY MORAN on his memories of Christmas past. Page 20

world is Fairytale made some €10m for MacGowan The still at war ‘Fairytale of New York’ , The Pogues and Kirsty MacColl’s beloved Christmas duet has charted at No. 1 in Ireland this week 36 years after its initial release. And it comes following the recent death of Pogues frontman Shane MacGowan.

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While the song hit the top of the Irish charts for five weeks upon release in 1987, it was only last year that the song went 5x platinum after amassing three million in combined sales. Slade frontman Noddy Holder is reported to earn

annual royalties of £1m for ‘Merry Xmas Everybody’ each Christmas, and Mariah Carey has fully embraced promotional tie-ins to encourage more streams of ‘All I Want for Christmas Is You’ every year. MacGowan and bandmate

Jem Finer, meanwhile, are reported to have earned €250,000 to €300,000 each from radio and television airplay of ‘Fairytale of New York’ every year. Expect those figures to increase this year with the outpouring of love for Mac-

Gowan following his death at the age of 65 three week ago. Adding up the figures reported, the former Pogues frontman amassed somewhere between €9m and €10.8m in royalties for that one tune alone, with Finer pocketing a similar amount.

The ongoing horrific onslaught in Palestine and the relentless ongoing war in Ukraine apart, a point at any given point in time will show a number of countries currently at war. However, some wars last longer than others,. Global Reort Page 22

PAUL HOPKINS

MARIANNE HERON

JOHN ELLIS

GERRY MORAN

Telling it like it is. And with no holds barred

A straight shooter. Considerate and wise words

Great advice. Your money in mind

Quirky take on bright side of life


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How Dickens gave us back our Christmas Every season there is much hand-wringing and think-piece-writing about Christmas traditions, and how they are being ruined by non-denominational carols/window displays/ coffee cup designs. The idea in certain circles seems to be that good old fashioned Christmas has been corrupted by the boogeyman of ‘political correctness’. But... are things like cards and trees and goodwill towards men actually part of a “traditional” Christmas celebration in the first place? Or do we owe them almost entirely to everyone’s favourite wet blanket SJW, Charles Dickens? Of course, there is no suggesting that Dickens himself invented carol singing or Christmas trees (there were “Christmas” trees in Europe long before there were Christians). But it is his fault that the holidays are still celebrated this year. Christmas was actually falling out of fashion in the early 1800s. Puritanical religious leaders disapproved of the decadent feasting and the pagan influences of medieval Christmas. Most businesses did not allow time off for the holiday, and most people were extremely poor – the Great Famine

was just around the corner – and overworked at the end of the Industrial Revo-

lution that there was little money or energy for merrymaking, anyway. Child

labour was common. The dominant political ideology of the rich was that the poor

should be allowed to starve to “decrease the surplus population.” Enter Charles Dickens. He’d grown up working in factories as a child, and he did not agree that torture and an early death were effective methods to end poverty. He was already a popular fiction author by 1843, and he desperately wanted to use his clout to help impoverished children. So he started writing a stirring political pamphlet, titled An Appeal to the People of England, on behalf of the Poor Man’s Child, set to be published near the end of the year. But Dickens was worried that no one was going to care about his passionate social justice rants. He decided to re-brand his pamphlet as a ghost story (because the Victorians may have hated the poor but they loved ghosts). The book came out on December 19th, titled A Christmas Carol. By Christmas Eve, the entire first edition had sold out. The book was so instantly, wildly popular that it started a revival of Christmas and traditions we still hold today. should be made miserable in order to motivate them to stop being poor, or else they

See Paul Hopkins Page 8


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The Kilkenny Observer Friday 22 December 2023

Opinion

The Fact Of The Matter Paul Hopkins

Family, friends, traditions – for the lucky ones that is Most talk of having a ‘traditional’ Christmas, though for some it might mean one thing, and for someone else something else altogether. My wonderful daughter-law Genevieve way back on her maternal grandparents side comes from the Jewish tradition. She is non-practising, though does mark Hanukkah. But her inherited traditions do no stop her with my son Paul from celebrating Christmas in America as a ‘holiday’, with daughters Madeleine and Mariele. Although, most Americans of whatever persuasion will tell you Thanksgiving is a bigger day, traditional turkey the main dish, whereas Christmas you could end up with a pizza! The word ‘tradition’ is solid and reassuring, as is turkey for Christmas dinner, vegans aside. We may want tradition to be mystical and ancient but it’s not necessarily so. Take the turkey. For decades now, serving the Big Bird on

Christmas Day is as important a part of the festivities as the tree and the angel on top. And Santa Clause, of course! It was Dickens’ A Christmas Carol which established the bird’s primacy. Before that, while turkey was popular, beef was far more so. The working classes had goose and the upper classes had more than one kind of meat. Then Dickens presented an ideal of the feast, while glossing over a significant problem. The poor Cratchits wouldn’t have had an oven in which to roast the gift that Scrooge had given them. Like the rest of the community, they would have relied upon the baker to roast their bird and by Christmas morning the baker would have shut up shop. We should not see any of this as undermining our sense of tradition. Rather, as liberating. Because, if tradition is exactly what we say it is, then, like the bottle of

Baileys or box of Roses, we can just invent our own. Traditionally, Christmas is the time of year when people gather around each other and enjoy time with family and friends and eat, indeed overeat, good food and exchange gifts. The fortunate among us, that is. Let’s not forget not everyone looks forward to what is – let’s face it – an over-jollification of a day. There are nearly 14,000 people homeless in Ireland, of which some 4,000 are children. Perhaps, the ones that Santa Clause forgets. There are refugees sleeping in tents. There are those who simply cannot ‘afford’ Christmas, living on a paltry pension. There are those spending their first Christmas having lost a loved one. The Empty Chair we are all familiar with. There are the terror-struck children of Gaza and Syria and Lebanon; Ukraine and wars and rumours of war. Let’s count our blessings

while we can and celebrate Christmas as that time to be thankful for what we do have, whether that be family or friends or simply a roof over our head. For many there is no room at the inn. The older I get I realise how important these simple things are. And I am grateful for that and for

The word ‘tradition’ is solid and reassuring, as is turkey for Christmas dinner...

the fact that my youngest son Louis and partner Jade – home from Brooklyn – will spend Christmas with me as will my daughter Niamh, husband Gary and little girls Faye and Abby. The mother of my children is pulling out all the (traditional) stops. As I say, Christmas is a tradition for so many around the world. And traditions are important. Traditions help us feel connected to those where now stands that Empty Chair, whether it was one of Grandma’s secret recipes or an aunt’s silly game played on the day. Traditions can bring families and people together in meaningful ways, at no time better than Christmas. Once, its tradition was that we actively celebrated the birth of a man born 2,000 years ago with prayers and songs, in church. That said, Christmas should also be a time for reflection and for giving to those less fortunate.

Christmas may well be about family but, while many older people are still embedded in the heart of their family and community, others have become increasingly isolated. A sad indictment that, in an age when we are more connected than ever, so many feel socially marooned. One in every 10 on this island faces being alone over Christmas, according to Alone. In the end, Christmas isn’t special because of what it was or where it came from. It’s special because of what it still is: a gathering where we will see the faces of loved ones – perhaps for the last Christmas – with whom to be of good cheer. Nollaig shona dhaoibh... ------------------------------Paul Hopkins is the author of Affairs of the Heart (And Other Writings), new from Monument Media Press, €14.99, described as a collection of stories to warm the emotions and light the soul. The book is available at select bookstores and from monumentmediapress.com


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Pope blesses same-sex couples Pope Francis has approved a ruling allowing priests to bless unmarried and same-sex couples in a significant change of position for the Catholic church. A report from the Vatican’s doctrinal office, details of which were published on Vatican News, said such bless-

ings would be permitted, albeit with caveats. “It will be possible to bless same-sex couples but without any type of ritualisation or offering the impression of a marriage,” the report said. Furthermore, “the doctrine regarding marriage does not change, and the blessing does not signify

approval of the union”. Despite the limitations, however, the announcement marks a significant step forward by the Vatican, which in 2021 said the Catholic church could not bless samesex couples as God “does not bless sin”. One Vatican observer de-

scribed the move as “likely the most concrete pastoral shift on the church’s stance toward gay couples in the church’s 2,000year history”. The report said priests should decide on a case-by-case basis and “should not prevent or prohibit the church’s closeness to people in every situation in

which they might seek God’s help through a simple blessing”. However, it stressed that the gesture must avoid “any form of confusion or scandal”, so that when a same-sex couple sought a blessing, it “should never be imparted in concurrence with the ceremonies of a civil union, and not even in

connection with them. Nor can it be performed with any clothing, gestures, or words that are proper to a wedding.” Instead, such a blessing “may instead find its place in other contexts, such as a visit to a shrine, a meeting with a priest, a prayer recited in a group, or during a pilgrimage”.

to €100 extra on groceries in the two weeks before Christmas, with a third (30%) spending up to €200 extra, and almost one in five (18%) spending nearly €300 extra on groceries - that’s almost three times the average family weekly shop. When it comes to festive food waste, Irish people admit the top reasons for overbuying include: 1. Being scared of running out of food (39%) 2. Catering to a lot of different food preferences (44%) 3. Being tempted by food offers and discounts (31%) 4. Not knowing how much food is enough for the

people they are catering for (27%) 5. Being worried the weather will change and they won’t be able to get to the shops (15%)

South East urged to consider all healthcare options The HSE is urging the public to consider all care options this Christmas and New Year period and is asking people to consider other methods of care including their GPs, pharmacists and Caredoc out of hours services before presenting at Emergency Departments (EDs). As always, people who do require emergency care are encouraged to attend EDs where they will be prioritised. When there is a large volume of ED attendances, patients are prioritised in terms of clinical need and wait times for nonurgent care can be lengthy. Chief Officer of HSE/South East Community Healthcare Grace Rothwell said: “Patient safety is at the forefront of everything the HSE does. People across counties Carlow, Kilkenny, South Tipperary, Waterford and Wexford, however, can help HSE staff at a busy time such as this Christmas and New Year period by remembering when care is needed and to consider all the options for non-emergency care – such as Injury Units, Out of Hours GP (Caredoc) and pharmacies before attending an ED.” “For information on when you should go to the ED visit https://www2.hse.ie/emergencies/the-emergency-department-ed/. You can get advice on a number of illnesses that can be treated at home at

https://www2.hse.ie/conditions/common-illnesses/. The HSE’s https://www2.hse.ie/ my-child/ website also has lots of information on children’s illnesses, see https://www2.hse. ie/conditions/colds-coughschildren/.” “Our partners in Caredoc out of hours GP co-operative are open 24 hours on Saturday, Sunday and Bank Holiday Monday. Caredoc can be contacted on (0818) 300 365 or (059) 913 8100. See www. Caredoc.ie” “Many local pharmacies will be open on particular days too, including bank holidays, to help with minor illnesses. Find out more about the services offered by your local pharmacy here: https://www.hse.ie/eng/ services/list/2/pharmacy/” “As with any time of year, it’s also important to look after your mental health, in addition to physical health. If anyone has any concerns in relation to their mental health, there are a number of resources supported by the HSE that you can turn to. There’s a free text service on 50808 and it’s available 24 hours a day, seven days a week. It is a safe space to share anonymously, where trained volunteers will engage with you. You can also check out www.YourMentalHealth. ie or Freephone our information line on (1800) 111 888 any time, day or night.”

Building risk breakdown warns MEP Kelleher Ireland risks becoming a place where building important infrastructure projects will become a thing of the past because of a lack of qualified staff in An Bord Pleanála, according to Fianna Fáil MEP Billy Kelleher. Mr Kelleher was commenting after being contacted by a school that had been told it must wait an extra 12 to 18 months for a decision on a planning application for a new school that should have originally been decided upon last September. “The school has been told by

An Bord Pleanála that ‘due to a significant backlog due to staff capacity’ their decision would be delayed,: Mr Kelleher said. “We are facing demographic challenges in nearly every public service area. We need to be building quicker and at scale, yet this school is now being delayed by at least a year before it can even break ground. “I have no doubt that this is just one of a myriad of examples of how ineffective An Bord Pleanála i≠≠s. We are running the risk of complete inertia in our planning system,” he said.

Stop wasting 40% of your festive food! New research by Too Good To Go reveals that unwanted presents aren’t the biggest problem this Christmas – it’s unwanted food. The research reveals 40% of Irish people admit to wasting more food than usual over the festive season – not a very merry Christmas for the global food waste problem. That’s why Ireland’s #1 food saving app Too Good To Go is encouraging people to use their leftovers this Christmas and help avoid an even bigger food waste problem. The app, which has operated in Ireland since 2021 has just marked its two-year anniversary here allows users to rescue unsold food from retailers

and restaurants at a fraction of what it might otherwise cost so it doesn’t go to waste. The app recently announced a major milestone of saving a staggering 500,000 Surprise Bags of food from going to waste in Ireland. There are 447,251 registered users currently in Ireland and more than 1,600 partners big and small across Ireland including Fresh, KC Peaches, SuperValu, Café Nero, Off Beat Donut Co. and other local independent eateries / stores around the country. Despite the cost-of-living crisis continuing, nearly a quarter of Irish people (23%) admit to spending up

Too Good To Go is unwrapping the truth about food waste, revealing the top 10 items most likely to be thrown out on Christmas day… 1. Bread (37%) 2. Brussel sprouts (29%) 3. Potatoes (22%) 4. Carrots (19%) 5. Christmas pudding (19%) 6. Turkey (21%) 7. Parsnips (17%) 8. Mince pies (17%) 9. Cranberry sauce (16%) 10.Stuffing (16%)

ESRI warning on critical shortage of carers Carers need better pay and conditions if they are to continue to meet the needs of our ageing population, according to Dr Brendan Walsh, a senior research officer at the ESRI. The State also needed to gain a better understanding of who was working in the sector, so that skills gaps could be filled and suitable care directed to patients or clients. Only limited data is available on the carers who work

in the sector and Dr Walsh said it was critical this is addressed quickly. The ESRI has recommended the establishment of a national database of carers, to get a better understanding of who is working in the sector. Separate research from the health watchdog Hiqa identified that, apart from HSE carers, there was a very limited knowledge of the profession. This means it is very difficult to get an

accurate understanding of the numbers working in the sector. “Limited data hampers policymakers’ ability to plan and allocate resources effectively,” Dr Walsh said. “Matching carers and their specific skillsets to the clients’ needs is still very challenging, due to the data gap. “The HSE is implementing an assessment tool to understand the clients’ support

needs but data on carers’ skills and availability to meet a client’s needs is still lacking,” he said. “From the carers’ perspective, a better understanding of their working conditions is crucial. Caring is a vital profession and becoming more important, but it’s still low paid and precarious. It lacks the same level of respect and information that other social care professions are given.”


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Opinion

As I See It Marianne Heron

More care needed on women in the home referendum It’s a busy time of year – officially a holiday but if you are the one in charge of making Christmas happenit’s a full-on labour of love. All that present buying, wrapping, shopping and cooking is where it’s generally women who shoulder the lioness’ share of the tasks. Let’s face it Christmas wouldn’t be Christmas without women. We women are to be given a belated present on March 8, International Women’s Day with the long- promised amendment to Article 41 of the Constitution. That’s the one which in addition to dealing with the family based on marriage states that the state shall “endeavour to ensure that mothers shall not be obliged by economic necessity to engage in labour to the neglect of their duties in the home”.

In some ways it will be welcome to see the back of that clause, not just because it’s sexist – it is) – positively Victorian (neglect of duties, indeed) or because it limits mothers to a domestic role (it doesn’t stop mothers working outside the home) but because, while it is good to have women’s special contribution to society recognised, it was an utterly empty promise. What happened to women and wives and mothers in particular didn’t matter a damn or begin to merit State protection until the start of the 1970s. There were deserted wives, battered wives, unmarried mothers who got neither financial nor practical support. There were Mother & Baby Homes, no contraception nor equal pay. Any entitlements for

women were not willingly given but that had to be fought for in court or by campaign groups. But here’s the reality. Nothing will change with the removal of the offending clause from the Constitution. Mothers will continue to be obliged by economic necessity to work outside the home (if they even have one as there are currently more than 14,000 homeless). They will battle to meet childcare costs, juggle work and home responsibilities often with long commutes caused by the high cost of housing in Dublin and other cities. And they will continue to bear the brunt of those “duties within the home”. According to the European Institute for Gender Equality around 30% of Irish women spent four hours a day or more

on housework compared to less than 15% of men in 2020. The Citizens Assembly deliberated long and hard on its recommendations on the wording of the proposed referendum and the definition of family and care within the family. And, while few would argue with the need to widen the definition of families beyond those based solely on marriage – where 40% of births now take place outside marriage – the recognition of, and support for, carers looks like being another toothless promise. Whereas the assembly voted by a heft majority (81%) for wording which “would oblige the State to take reasonable to support for care within the home and wider community”, the Government have opted

for weaker, unenforceable wording where the word home is omitted. “The State recognises the that the provision of care by a family to one another by reason of the bonds that exist among them, gives to society a the common good ... and shall strive to support such provision.” Caring, whether it be voluntary or waged, has traditionally fallen to women and because it is done by women is undervalued and low waged. Family Carers Ireland reckon that there are 500,000 carers providing an average 19 hours a week of unpaid care saving the State €20bn a year. I just wonder that if it was men’s work there would have been wages for stayat-home parents, free child care and better pay for carers long ago. It’s up to us to join a

debate about what we want in the new wording for the referendum. The word mother is gone in the cause of gender neutrality. Do we need to be careful that women may become neutralised in the sex war? Meantime, let’s raise a cheer for women and mothers wherever they may be. Maybe they are at home preparing for Christmas, or homeless or far from home as immigrants fleeing war. Maybe they are trying to keep hope alive in the face of bombing, starvation and disease as the Israeli army forces continue to obliterate the population of Gaza. Just maybe they might be women who can convince Putin and Benjamin Netanyahu that wiping out civilians, homes or hospitals is a crime against humanity. The wars must stop.

Climate Change

– are we all playing our part?

Christmas is not for everyone CLAIR WHITTY

WEEK 48

‘We live between two worlds’

Christmas can be a lonely and sad time for those of you who are missing someone you have lost. I now know how you feel, my father passed away on 7th December. Even though he had been failing in health his death was sudden and was a shock. He will be a huge loss to our family. This year my thoughts go to you and to your friends and family as well as my own as we deal with the loss and pain of los-

ing someone we love. Christmas is a lovely time of the year, don’t get me wrong. But, it is not for everyone. The financial strain is huge and it is easy to say not to put any pressure on yourself, it can be difficult to manage. Social anxiety too can be a problem for some of you, as you are likely to be exposed to a larger volume of people in the work place or at home. The pressure for you to go out and socialise can be huge. Not everyone enjoys the social gatherings, big or small. It can be difficult to say this to your friends and family. Christmas can be lonely and difficult for those of you

with addiction problems or if you are in recovery. There are very few places that you can go where a drink is not the first offering on the table. We can’t change that today, but I wish for you that you will get through this festive season one day at a time. Some of you would simply just rather curl up on the sofa with a good movie or book. For you being alone is the celebration, you enjoy the peace and the quietness of it all. Whatever your plans for Christmas this year, I hope it is a good one for you. I wish you all a very happy Christmas and New Year.


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SPECIAL REPORT Christmas is well and truly upon us. And Christmas is one of the biggest occasions across the globe for waste generation, with Ireland expected to produce 100,000 tonnes of packaging waste this year. In a survey of 1,000 people conducted by not-for-profit environmental organisation, Repak, 92% said that they make a conscious effort to recycle packaging correctly over the festive period. Buying better, buying local Although price is a key factor when purchasing gifts this Christmas (60%), quality is also important, with more than half (55%) opting for it as a key consideration. A total of 21% of those surveyed agreed that they most likely bought Irish this Christmas, with 29% saying that buying from Irish retailers and supporting local businesses was a key priority. Sustainability Sleighs this Christmas On average, Irish people have spent €375 on gifts this year. However, people were more likely to buy presents that could be reused or kept for a long time, with almost half (49%) saying sustainability was a significant consideration when shopping for others this Christmas, just 5% stated that they never considered sustainability as a factor. When it comes to decorating, research showed that an increasing amount of people were opting for a more environmentally conscious approach this year. A total 72% of those surveyed said they would use last year’s decorations in a bid to reduce their environmental impact, with a further 43% choosing to use low energy sources when it comes to lighting. A further 18% said they would create homemade decorations from reusable materials instead of buying new ones this Christmas. When it comes to wrapping gifts in a more sustainable way, 44% used reusable gift or tote bags, while 30% opted for recycled wrapping paper or newspaper. Across the board, the research indicated there was a considerable uplift in those willing to put sustainability at the forefront this Christmas to reduce their environmental impact and mitigate the over production of waste. Reducing Impact This Christmas, Repak is encouraging shoppers to make a conscious effort to reduce waste and recycle their packaging correctly, helping Ireland transition to a circular economy. This means placing

We’re not going to be naughty, but nice about the festive environment

the appropriate packaging items in the recycling bin clean, dry and loose. Ireland currently recycles 28% of all plastics but needs to increase this to 50% by 2025 to meet EU targets. Research shows that almost half (46%) say they are

making a conscious effort to reduce their consumption this Christmas. Of those surveyed, 60% said they planned to reduce the volume of food and drink they buy to prevent excess waste, with 38% buying fewer gifts. A total of

34% opted for more sustainable gifts, such as buying locally made gifts, with 33% made a conscious effort to give sustainable presents. A total of 23% planned to get crafty this Christmas by upcycling and creating gifts to give to others.

Re-imagining a ‘Greener’ Christmas A greener Christmas was top of mind for many Irish people this year. A total of 92% made a conscious effort to recycle packaging items correctly, and 72% planned to ensure all

packaging that could be recycled was placed in the correct bin and would be clean, dry, and loose. A total of 62% will dispose of batteries in a local WEEE facility, while 56% will go to their local recycling facility. Almost half (48%) will contribute to the circular economy by saving and storing packaging for use next year. Repak is calling on the public to keep up the good work and ‘re-imagine’ packaging this Christmas and give a second life by recycling more and better this Christmas. CEO of Repak Séamus Clancy, commenting on the research findings, said: “As many of us know, the festive season is a hugely busy time for our waste operators, and we are calling on the public to support by recycling their packaging this Christmas. It is important that we all play our part in recycling our packaging effectively to contribute to a circular economy and meet our EU goal of recycling 50% of all plastics by 2025. We can all make a huge impact by recycling and by ensuring our packaging is clean, dry and placed loosely in the correct bin this Christmas. “We’re encouraging Irish shoppers to shop with a Repak Member and join Repak Team Green. By working with our 3,400 Members, helping them to recycle and optimise their packaging for a circular economy Repak is committed to supporting Ireland in becoming greener for us and for future generations.” According to a survey by Repak in 2022, the vast majority (95%) know that when items are recycled correctly, they can have a second life. With packaging waste generation at its highest at Christmas, recycling correctly over the festive season is critical to supporting the reduction of waste and maintaining a circular economy, which ensures that all recycled products continue to be used in the manufacturing of new items. * For more information about Repak, visit repak. ie.

Top tips for a greener Christmas • Wrapping paper – Wrap up this year in style by re-imagining and recycling wrapping paper from gifts received, remembering to keep it clean, dry, and pop it in loose. • Sweet and biscuit wrappers – Indulge in those essential holiday treats, but remember, the party isn’t over until you recycle the wrappers. Re-imagine plastic this Christmas by placing all your empty sweet and biscuit wrappers into the recycling bin clean, dry and loose. • Paper/cardboard boxes – Don’t forget to recycle all the paper, cardboard boxes and Christmas cards. • Soft plastics – Give plastic a second life by placing it in the recycling bin – all plastics, including soft plastic (anything you can scrunch in your hand) can go in the recycling bin. • Glass bottles – Get into the festive spirit of re-imagining glass this Christmas by recycling your glass bottles. Once you’ve enjoyed your drinks, make sure those empty bottles find their way to your local bottle bank.


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Opinion

Your Money & You John Ellis

Staying between the covers this Christmas Reading and the words we read are among the greatest gifts given to mankind (and the printing press!) Here are a several books that not only make for excellent presents but also offer valuable insights (and a few laughs) not only for this Christmas and New Year but for the rest of your lives. ‘Noise: A Flaw in Human Judgment’, co-authored by Daniel Kahneman, Olivier Sibony, and Cass R. Sunstein This book throws light on the overlooked impact of inconsistency in decisionmaking. the book explores the pervasive influence of ‘noise’: “Imagine that two doctors in the same city give different diagnoses to identical patients — or that two judges in the same courthouse give markedly different sentences to people who have committed the same crime. Or that, when a company is handling customer complaints, the resolution depends on who happens

to answer the phone. “ “Now imagine the same doctor, the same judge, the same interviewer, or the same customer service agent makes different decisions depending on whether it is morning or afternoon, or Monday rather than Wednesday.” These are examples of Noise: worth a read. ‘Obliquity’ by John Kay This book challenges the conventional wisdom surrounding goal setting. Kay argues

that indirect approaches often yield greater success, especially during challenging times. Discover how the most successful individuals and companies achieve their objectives through oblique, unconventional paths. ‘Atomic Habits’ by James Clear As the New Year approaches, resolutions come to the forefront. This book addresses the perennial struggle with habits and personal development.

Clear contends that lasting change is not about lofty goals but about building effective systems. Learn how to form good habits, break bad ones, and master the small behaviours that lead to remarkable results. And when you purchase the book, you get access to his website and will receive regular snippets of advice every week and there have been some really good ideas to spur you on.

‘The Money Doctor’ by John Lowe Again this is a must-read for anyone in Ireland, will be updated for 2024 and will continue to enhance our financial management skills. Written in plain English with case histories and actionable advice, Lowe’s book is a comprehensive guide. There are additional resources on the free website www.moneydoctor.ie it’s a wealth of information tailored to diverse financial needs. ‘Financial Jokes for Financial Folks’ Why couldn’t they sell the Tower of Pisa? There was a ‘lien’ on it. This financial jokes book is full of all original accounting and finance jokes and could be the perfect gift for anyone who works in finance who loves telling cheesy, corny jokes, or jokes that make people roll their eyes! “If you know anybody that has a problem with telling too many bad jokes

then give them this book and make it worse!” If you have a Prime account with Amazon its free as a kindle book. ‘A Christmas Omnibus’ by John B Keane Finally, a book by the late, great writer to rest your weary brains Be enthralled by Canon Coddle who “routs scoundrels” who are trying to take the scouts collection box on Christmas Eve from the wall of the Church and Masterman, a seasoned traveller who finds salvation at Christmas time. In the words of John B himself: “The Spirit of Christmas has survived Stalins’, Hitlers’ and the Mussolinis’ and those who have perpetrated injustices since the birth of Christ. It has survived human greed and human jealousy and every human failing one cares to mention.” I wish you all a very happy Christmas and New Year. john@ellisfinancial.ie 086 8362622


The Kilkenny Observer Friday 22 December 2023

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News Comment

So, who was Mary, the mother of Jesus?

COMMENT: BY PAUL HOPKINS

The role of the Virgin Mary in Christian history is pivotal but yet there is little that we know about this girl from Galilee who still sparks massive veneration and also occasional controversial debate. So who was Mary then, known to Christians as the

mother of Jesus, the Mother of God, a virgin whose conception of the Christ child was immaculate, who wept at His Crucifixion and who, like Jesus, was assumed into Heaven? Indeed, such is the portrayal of Mary, of her definitive place in history, that Muslims acknowledge her, with a whole chapter in the Koran titled Maryam, in which Mary and Jesus’s story is recounted according to the Islamic view of Christ — that He was not the Messiah but a great prophet before the time of

“Wept at His Crucifixion and who, like Jesus, was assumed into Heaven...

Mohammed. This Christmas, as Christians everywhere assemble in churches to hear the story of the Nativity, one line, from Luke 2:19, speaks particularly to women: “But Mary treasured all these things, and pondered them in her heart.” This Mary — silent, obedient, observant — has echoed down two millennia, fixating a potent ideal in the Western imagination. Until, that is, our own Colm Tóibín some years back put a cat among the pigeons regarding the safe, Christmas-

card version of Mary. In his novel The Testament Of Mary, the Irish writer imagines the mother of Jesus many years after the Crucifixion, living alone in the ancient Asia Minor town of Ephesus, where two of the Gospel writers supply her with food and shelter. They come to her with regularity. She is not co-operating. “They appear more often now, both of them, and on every visit they seem more impatient with me and with the world,” Tóibín writes in Mary’s voice to open his story.

“They think I do not know the elaborate nature of their desires. But nothing escapes me now except sleep. Sleep escapes me.” To the hardcore faithful, Colm Tóibín’s temerity is a shock, of course, but it pairs with an avidness to imagine a Mary who speaks, and to hear what she might have kept locked away in her heart. Just as the historical record indicates a physical Jesus existed, so must he have had a mother, a woman who ate figs and oranges, pulled water from a well and perspired in


The Kilkenny Observer Friday 22 December 2023

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Comment

“We are never told that she cradles the dead body of her Son...

the Mediterranean sun. Tóibín’s Mary is long widowed, illiterate, handy with a knife. She doesn’t think Jesus’s death was “worth it”. She dwells with “the remnants of a terror we all felt then”. Like other traumatised people, she “has forgotten how to smile,” and, also, how to weep. The short novel contains a couple of complex notes: Mary, at her life’s end, for instance, won’t say Jesus’s name. And Tóibín gives us no concept of knowing her as a person with a uterus.

Yet, he chisels away at centuries of plaster-of-Paris Marys, dissolving some of the oil-on-canvas that encases this historical figure. Some may see it as blasphemy, others merely dangerous but, if nothing else, The Testament Of Mary is a reminder that Jesus indeed had a mother, and she was nobody’s fool. So, to reiterate, what exactly do we know of Mary? The Gospels provide no information about when Mary was born or when she died. If, however, Jesus was born in 4

BCE and was her first child – the alleged fifth Gospel, that of Thomas, contends that Jesus had siblings – then Mary was likely born no earlier than 20 BCE. Christian traditions have filled in the considerable gaps here by creating numerous stories of Mary’s life — stories which, in the end, are probably no less credible than what little information is contained in the accredited four Gospels which were also probably created to fill theological and communal needs. The Gospels do, however, describe Mary’s family as living in Galilee. Luke, Matthew and John, though, describe her origins as being in Bethlehem, which is in Judea. Mark portrays Mary negatively, showing her as among those who think Jesus is delusional. The other Gospel writers depict her more positively and as helping Jesus’s ministry in some instances, like the Wedding Feast at Cana where, at his mother’s request, Jesus changes water into wine — his first recorded miracle — to placate the wedding guests. Luke places her at the Last Supper with Jesus’s apostles and as one of those who receives the Holy Spirit. Mark’s early Christian community was different from Luke’s, which may explain why they created different tales. In Catholic tradition, Mary is referred to as the Virgin Mary because of the doctrine of her perpetual virginity: even after giving birth to Jesus she never had sexual relations with her husband, Joseph, and never gave birth to more children. Many Protestants also believe that Mary remained a virgin, but for most it’s not a doctrine of faith. References to brothers and sisters of Jesus in the Gospels suggest that Mary did not remain a virgin. Mary’s perpetual virginity, as espoused by Roman Catholicism, means that she is the one human to be both a mother and a virgin — unlike other women, she escapes the curse of Eve. This I think created in Christian tradition the virginwhore dichotomy: all women are either virgins who follow in the foot- steps of Mary (for example, by be- coming nuns) or who follow in the footsteps of Eve (by tempting men and causing them to sin).

This, in turn, helped limit opportunities for women throughout Christian society, as we have witnessed only too well up to even today. Although such is not exclusive to Christian societies – consider Afghanistan and Iran, Mary has for many become the focus of feminine aspirations within Christianity, much to the chagrin of those Christian leaders who would prefer to keep Christianity the maledominated religion it has long been, Rome the very epitome of such standing. Jesus and God are typically described in exclusively male terms, so Mary has become the most immediate female connection to divinity that Christians have. The strongest focus on Mary has occurred within Catholicism, where she is an object of veneration and seen as an intermediary between believers and God. Many Protestants see this as worship, something blasphemous. After the Crucifixion, Mary disappears from the New Testament, although some latter-day fundamentalists believe she is again portrayed as the heavenly Woman Of Revelation in the Bible’s last book. In recent history, Mary has been at the centre of alleged visitations to children in Fatima in Portugal, Lourdes in France, Medjugorje in Bosnia/ Herzegovina and, indeed right on our own doorstep, in Knock, Co Mayo. These sites have become places of pilgrimage for religious people, many of whom would also have flocked to Ballinspittle, in Co. Cork, back in 1985 to see the statue of the Virgin Mary supposedly weep and move. And this not long after and a mere 200 miles away from where one young girl, Joanne Hayes, allegedly gave birth to possibly two babies in a field on the family farm and allegedly murdered them, because she, some argued, could not face down a society that spurned an unmarried mother as one who had tempted a man and sinned. Joanne Hayes has since been exonerated but only this year did the woman receive an apology from the Government. The name Mary comes from the Hebrew name Miriam. The New Testament describes her as a young maiden although the Greek word parthenos was used and this traditionally signifies a virgin. Mary is often depicted as wearing blue and white clothes, but an actual depiction of what she wore is not given in the Gospels Even though Mary is present at Christ’s Crucifixion, we are never told that she cradles the dead body of her Son, although this is a common motif in art Mary’s death is not recorded in Scripture but tradition has her assumed, or taken, into Heaven when her tomb is found empty by the Apostles.

The tree is a symbol of life in the midst of winter

The evergreen tree was an ancient symbol of life in the midst of winter. Romans decorated their houses with evergreen branches during the New Year, and ancient inhabitants of northern Europe cut evergreen trees and planted them in boxes inside their houses in wintertime. Many early Christians were hostile to such practices. The second-century theologian Tertullian condemned those Christians who celebrated the winter festivals, or decorated their houses with laurel boughs in honour of the emperor. He said: “Let them over whom the fires of hell are imminent, affix to their posts, laurels doomed presently to burn: to them the testimonies of darkness and the omens of their penalties are suitable. You are a light of the world, and a tree ever green. If you have renounced temples, make not your own gate a temple.” But by the early Middle Ages, the legend had grown that when Christ

was born in the dead of winter, every tree throughout the world miraculously shook off its ice and snow and produced new shoots of green. At the same time, Christian missionaries preaching to Germanic and Slavic peoples were taking a more lenient approach to cultural practices — such as evergreen trees. These missionaries believed that the Incarnation proclaimed Christ’s lordship over those natural symbols that had previously been used for the worship of pagan gods. Not only individual human beings, but cultures, symbols, and traditions could be converted. Of course, this did not mean that the worship of pagan gods themselves was tolerated. According to one legend, the eighthcentury missionary Boniface, after cutting down an oak tree sacred to the pagan god Thor (and used for human sacrifice), pointed to a nearby fir tree instead as a symbol of the birth of Jesus and the solemn celebration of such.


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The Kilkenny Observer Friday 22 December 2023

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Opinion

Furthermore Gerry Moran

Childhood memories of Christmas revisited Christmas was truly Christmas back then, precious and pure, like the children we were. I am maybe seven and the Christmas lights are twinkling, shimmering in the December dark; the shops on High Street, glittering, glowing, even the butchers with their pinky, red glow I find entrancing: turkeys, plump and pimply hanging in rows, chops, hams and steaks, all juicy red, promises of plates of plenty to come. I see Liptons, the L&N and Elliots all bright and bursting at the seams with exotic Christmas fare: Turkish delight, fancy biscuits, figs. But our shop, the Mecca for us children is Griffin’s in Rose Inn Street, its windows crammed with toys; we were captivated by trains and tracks, Meccano sets, cowboy suits and guns,. And there are tea-sets, dolls, dolls’ houses and girly toys that go unnoticed by us boys

mesmerised by some metallic robot that beeped and blinked and actually walked. ************************ Now I am twelve. It’s Christmas morning, the stars still out, the sky jet black and there’s a frost in the 5am air. Gently my father rouses me from sleep. “You’re serving,” he whispers and soon the kettle is singing and sweet, warm tea fills my belly. Out into the pitch-black darkness I slip, no street lights on, way too early. I rendezvous with Bobby, my best friend; we link each other down the street, fall in with Tommy Gaffney and Paul Short. Soon we’re skidding down Moore’s Hill, treacherous with ice, towards the Black Abbey, glowing like a lantern in the dark. Christmas morning in the Black Abbey, six o’clock Mass and we four are serving, looking angelic almost, our surplices snow-

white, freshly starched, our faces pale and wan with sleep. A stillness permeates the church. All is calm, all is bright as after Mass the infant Jesus is reverently placed in the crib, hushed with mystery and love. The miracle of Christmas. The presence of Christ, palpable almost in this ancient, hallowed place of worship. For me there will never be a more sacred Christmas memory. My soul as crystal clear as the frost, my young heart pure and pumping; my mind a glorious communion of Christmas joy and awe. ************************ Christmas will always hold for me the memory of my mother making the Christmas cake. I see her now, standing in the soft light of the scullery, sleeves rolled, surrounded by cake tins, greaseproof paper, a battalion of bowls and an assortment of titbits

that smelled strange and wonderfully different. I see that absorbed look on her face as she mixes butter,

“It’s Christmas morning, the stars still out, the sky jet black and there’s a frost in the 5am air..

coarse brown sugar and chunks of candied-peel together, churning them into a crunchy mix that made my mouth water. I can smell the thick, dark treacle; can see the almonds, soaking, waiting to be peeled and chopped and the bottle of whiskey, standing silently to attention, soon to add its feisty taste to this festive concoction. And later the family ritual of scraping the bowl as we’d attack the leftovers with soupspoons and the wooden spoon. And always it tasted better off the wooden spoon; perhaps it was the taste of timber mingling with the lingering licks of that creamy, treacly cakemix. The cake itself, I often thought never quite tasted as exotic when cooked. Finally, the icing of the cake and that wonderful lumpy brown, almond undercoat that I would eat all night if I were let.

Then the pure white sweetness of the REAL icing and the tiny bottle of raspberry essence dominating the entire kitchen with its potent smell. And to finish it all off, the icing ON the icing. The writing on the top of the cake as my mother, with a cone of grease-proof paper, carefully and meticulously wrote ‘Happy Christmas And A Happy New Year”’ in startling pink across the snow-white caketop. Even in this modern age of microwaves, and what-have-you, nothing can compare to the warmth and magic of a family kitchen at Christmas time – the sights, the sounds, the smells, the scraping of bowls, the licking of lips, the picking at tidbits. And there, in the middle of it all, the woman of the house, mixing, measuring and making ready for the Big Day, the rich, mouthwatering Christmas Cake.


The Kilkenny Observer Friday 22 December 2023

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Global Report

Pope Francis on the true meaning of the Nativity This Christmas, in Paul VI Hall, the Holy Father Francis received in Audience the Delegations for the gift of the Nativity Scene and the Christmas Tree installed in St Peter’s Square. In his address to the delegations, Pope Francis highlighted the significance of the Christmas tree and the crib as symbols of hope and peace. The tree, he said, is a sign of life and rebirth, while the crib represents the birth of Jesus, the Saviour of the world. The Pope also stressed the The ongoing horrific onslaught in Palestine and the relentless ongoing war in Ukraine apart, at any given point in time, a map of the world’s armed conflicts will show a number of countries currently at war. However, some wars last longer than others, and countries embroiled in long, ongoing wars frequently experience massive destruction and enduring hardship as a result. These war-torn countries are typically plagued not by an invading country, but by armed conflict between different groups of their own citizens. In addition to lost lives this Christmas, war-torn countries must often contend with unstable economies and heavily damaged infrastructures, which range from hard to impossible to repair while conflict is ongoing and can take years (even decades) to rebuild even after fighting ceases. Afghanistan Afghanistan has been embroiled in a series of civil wars, international wars, and inter-ethnic conflicts continuously since 1978. In 2001, US forces entered Afghanistan to eradicate the Taliban, a violent group of religious extremists, and help the country rebuild after years of conflict. The US has also provided troops to protect the civilians of Afghanistan from Taliban attacks and enable the government to rebuild and reestablish power. Despite these efforts, Taliban attacks continued, killing several thousand people a year most years. Moreover, when US troops left Afghanistan in 2021 as part of a plan to return control of Afghanistan to the Afghan people, the Taliban reemerged and retook control of the country within months. Iraq Iraq also has a long history of war, particularly since Saddam Hussein rose to power in 1979. The Iran-Iraq War ran from 1979 to 1988 and ended in a stalemate despite costing 500,000 to 1.5 million lives. The Gulf War saw Iraq invade Kuwait and ran from 1990-1991, and was followed by a civil conflict as a segment of Iraqi people sought to depose Hussein. From 2003-2007, following the 9-11 attacks on the US, a coalition of forces from the US and its allies entered Iraq,

importance of humility and simplicity in the celebration of Christmas. He recalled that Jesus was born in a manger, among the poor and humble. For this reason, he said, Christmas is an opportunity to remember those who suffer most and to work for a more just and equitable world. In particular, the Pope referred to the current situation in the world, marked by war, poverty and injustice. In this context, he said, the Christmas tree and the crib are a

message of hope and peace. They are a reminder that God’s love always conquers evil. The Pope said: “Dear brothers and sisters, good morning! I welcome you with joy on the day in which the tree and the Nativity display decorating Saint Peter’s Square and this hall are officially donated and inaugurated. “The Nativity display set up in Saint Peter’s Square aims to evoke, after eight hundred years, the Christmas atmosphere of the year 1223 in

the Rieti Valley, where Saint Francis stopped. His journey to the Holy Land was still vivid in his mind and the caves of Greccio reminded him of the landscape of Bethlehem. Therefore, he asked to depict the Christmas scene in that small village: many friars arrived from various parts and men and women also came from the cottages in the area, creating a living nativity scene. “Thus, the tradition of the nativity scene as we understand it was born.”

No Happy Christmas, the war’s not over

deposed Hussein, and occupied Iraq while a new government was installed. Al-Qaeda and other internal regimes fought back, and the resulting violence resulted in 151,000 to 1.2 million Iraqi deaths. Since the US and its allies pulled out, Iraq has suffered extended and violent political instability, including civil war between the Iraqi peacekeeping forces and the militant group Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL). Syria The Syrian Civil War is the second-deadliest war in the 21st century. The conflict arose from discontent with the Syrian government and escalated with protests in 2011 that called for Syrian President Bashar alAssad’s removal. These protests were violently suppressed and led to war. The opponents of the war in Syria are the Ba’athist Syrian Arab Republic led by al- Assad (and their allies) and the domestic and foreign forces opposing the Syrian government. All sides involved in the war, including the Syrian

government, opposition rebel groups, the US, Turkey, and Russia, have been criticised by international organisations for massacres and human rights violations. The civil war has also caused a severe refugee situation, with over six million people internally displaced in Syria and over five million seeking refuge in other countries. Yemen Yemen is currently experiencing a civil war that claimed over 20,000 deaths in 2019 alone. The Yemeni Civil War began in 2014 between two sides that both claimed to constitute the official government of Yemen: the Abdrabbuh Mansur Hadi-led government and the Houthi armed movement. Saudi Arabia launched airstrikes to restore the former Yemeni government, an action that has been condemned by the international community because of the number of civilian deaths. The bombing campaign has killed over 17,700 civilians as of March

2019. It’s estimated that over 100,000 people have been killed in the Yemeni Civil War, including 12,000 civilians. Moreover, the widespread food shortages caused by the war have placed an estimated 13 million Yemeni people in danger of starvation. Mexico The Mexican Drug War is an ongoing conflict between the Mexican government and various drug trafficking syndicates. The war also consists of violence between competing drug cartels throughout Mexico. Since 1982, federal law enforcement has been reorganized five times to attempt to reduce cartel violence and control corruption. Since 2006, at least 120,000 people have been killed and 27,000 have gone missing as a result of the Drug War. President Andrés Manuel López Obrador has declared the war over since taking office in 2018, but critics point to the homicide rate as evidence that this claim is premature.

Somalia The Somali Civil War started in the 1980s and rose out of resistance to the military junta (military dictatorship) led by Siad Barre. From 1988 to 1990, the Somali Armed Forces began engaging armed rebel groups but the opposition groups overthrew Barre’s government in 1991. Following Barre’s ousting, a counter-revolution attempted to reinstate him as the leader of Somalia. The opposition groups began competing for power and conflicts in the south were particularly. The already impoverished country not only faced violence-related deaths but also deaths from starvation. In April 2020, humanitarian researchers voiced particular concerns about the country’s ability to handle the COVID-19 pandemic due to the damage to its infrastructure and health care system. The Somali Civil War has resulted in at least 500,000 deaths. Libya The Libyan Civil War started

in 2011 when Libyans were inspired by the uprisings in neighboring countries, like Tunisia and Egypt, and began violently protesting against the government. The rebels were met with opposition from Colonel Muammar Gaddafi’s troops. The conflict ended in October 2011 when the rebels took Benghazi and Tripoli and killed Gaddafi. It’s estimated that 20,000 people were killed an additional 50,000 were injured in the first Libyan Civil War. The Second Libyan Civil War erupted in 2014 between rival factions seeking control of Libya. The conflict is mostly between the House of Representatives and the Government of National Accord. About 9,000 people have been killed and over 20,000 people have been injured in the Second Libyan Civil War. Other war-torn countries: Ukraine, The Democratic Republic of Congo, Central African Republic, and The Kurdish-Turkey Conflict (Turkey, Iraq, and Syria)


The Kilkenny Observer Friday 22 December 2023

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The Kilkenny Observer Friday 22 December 2023

News Christmas carols have a timeless authenticity about them. With their rich history, they are equal parts popular, joyous, solemn, religious and, yes, secular. To some, the secular is profane at Christmas, making the holiday a perennial site for debates over how it should be celebrated. The so-called War on Christmas is how conservative commentators have framed the increasing secularisation of the holiday. What this outcry misses is that cultural festivities that mark the winter holidays have always blended the religious and secular celebrations of multiple events, including Christmas, St Stephen’s Day (a day that commemorates St Stephen, the first Christian martyr, and in some countries is now more commonly known as Boxing Day), New Year’s, and the Epiphany. Over the centuries, as Christmas celebrations shifted between secular and religious festivities, so too did the carols we now associate with the season. (Sadly, in Ireland there seems to be much less of this tradition). And, if you listen closely, the songs reveal that the secularisation of Christmas isn’t destroying it. It’s taking the celebration back to its roots. Carols have long been fundamental to celebrating the Christmas season and, as such, evolved through generations of swinging cultural norms. The traditional carols we know today can be traced back to the carol revival of the early to mid1800s — from music that had been sung for centuries before. But they are also relatively new: it is thought that there were virtually no carols before the year 1200, though The Oxford Book of Carols dates the earliest carols back to the year 1400, or roughly the start of the Renais-

The origins of timeless Christmas carol

sance in England, after which they exploded in popularity. It was during this period that music progressed from twotone polyphonic chanting and songs to the harmonies that laid the foundation for modern Western music. Over the following centuries, as the Protestant Reformation took hold in Europe, carols were influenced by the back and forth between puritan repression and festive allowances. The Oxford Book of Carols, a definitive anthology, was published in 1928 by Percy Dearmer, Martin Shaw, and the composer Ralph Vaughan Williams. The book features what the authors thought were the finest carols, mostly from the Ireland and England but also France, Germany, and other European countries. One cannot be but fascinated

by Dearmer’s description of the history of carols. The Oxford Book of Carols explains where many of the songs — lyrics and tunes included — came from. The authors drew from archival records, such as antiquarian William Sandys’s 1833 anthology, Christmas Carols, Ancient and Modern, and also from memories: they went into the countryside, asked people to sing songs to them, and wrote them down. Vaughan Williams and Shaw arranged many of the tunes into harmonies that remain standard to this day. Carols are simple songs that can be sung in harmony or not, accompanied by a keyboard or strings, and usually written to praise God and used within religious Christian service. But not always. When carols first appeared, they were closer to

today’s pop music than anything else: a mix of dance music and religious worship, drawing on folk influences and reflecting the politics of the time. Many carols were sung for other festivals or to welcome spring and celebrate May Day. In the preface to The Oxford Book of Carols, Dearmer, a priest and committed socialist, explains that carols first appeared in contrast to solemn melodies that were standard within church walls, forming the foundation of modern Western music. “Because the carol was based upon dance music, it did not appear until the close of the long puritan era which lasted through the Dark Ages and far into the Medieval period,” he writes. “The carol was in fact a sign . . . of the emancipation of the people from the old puri-

tanism which had for so many centuries suppressed the dance and the drama, denounced communal singing, and warred against the tendency of the people to disport themselves in church on the festivals.” Throughout the 1400s, another form of music grew alongside the carol: the ballad. Both were types of narrative songs with descriptive lyrics. The songwriters were often poor, though ballads were also popular among the elite. Carols often took ballad form, writes Dearmer, employing what’s known as common measure, an arrangement of poetic stanzas of four lines alternating between eight and six syllables (think ‘O Little Town of Bethlehem’). It isn’t an accident that these two genres emerged together at a time when storytelling,

celebration, joyousness, and lamentation were finding new expression in music. Carols, in particular, became synonymous with festive celebrations, especially Christmas, Dearmer writes. And they often made reference to gathering, eating, and being merry. The carol ‘Make We Merry’, a secular tune written around the early 1500s, calls for men to come to the Christmas festival to sing. If a man can’t sing, he should present another fun activity. If he can’t do that either, he is to be sent to the stocks and dealt with by the Lord of Misrule. While the title varied depending on the region, the Lord of Misrule was often appointed to be a ‘King Of Fools’ who oversaw Christmas festivities over the usual 12-day period, until The Epiphany on January 6

As population ages, we’re running short of care homes With many nursing homes already closing for varied reasons and an increasingly. Ageing population, the building of new nursing homes in Ireland will come to a halt “for a long time to come”, even as the population continues to age, one of the biggest investors in the sector has warned. Laura Dillon, partner at Waterland Private Equity Ireland, said the sector was struggling to match high labour and other costs with revenue and low Government funding. Waterland is a Dutch private equity group with €14bn of

assets under management. In 2019, it bought into Silver Stream Healthcare Group in Ireland, which since then has expanded from seven to 11 residences and will open another early next year in Co Wicklow. “It’s a very tough sector,” Ms

Dillon told the Irish Independent. “The biggest challenge is that we’ve been getting approximately 2% revenue increases from the Government when inflation and staff costs are running at over 10% a year. “What you will find is that people will not now be building new homes going forward. Anyone who has sites or has committed to building will finish the build, but some will not. But then I’d say there will be no more new builds of nursing homes, or at least it will be very minimal for a long time to come.” Waterland is continuing to

hunt for investment opportunities in Ireland, having entered the market in 2019. It is poised to announce its latest deal, with an Irish company involved in the sustainability sector, in the coming weeks. Since it arrived in Ireland, Waterland has taken majority stakes in two other businesses - Westmeath-based corporate fire protection business Writech and Meath-based specialist cabling firm MTM Engineering. Since it invested in Writech in 2021, the Irish firm has completed eight merger deals across Europe and added 580 staff.

That has seen Writech’s annual group revenue jump to €130m compared with €22m when Waterland first invested. Writech has just completed another acquisition, buying Irish firm SRS Alert Fire Systems in a deal that will add €10m in annual revenue to Writech. Since Waterland invested in MTM, the Irish firm has completed two acquisitions and now employs 620 people. Its annual revenue has jumped to €80m compared with €38m before Waterland took a stake. Waterland’s partner firms in Ireland now generate annual

revenue of more than €350m and employ more than 1,000 people. The Dutch company typically takes between a 50% and 90% stake in firms. Ms Dillon said that, while a private equity partner doesn’t suit every business, more family-owned firms are open to exploring growth opportunities now compared with in the past. “What we do see is that maybe they’re a bit more open now, and certainly as the firms go through the generations,” she said. “Maybe there are succession issues or some want to branch out with other ventures.”

MEPs finally propose end to endless hi-tech scrolling A large majority of members of the European Parliament have voted in favour of a report on tackling the ‘addictive design’ of online services. The Greens in Parliament have long advocated for measures to tackle big tech’s methods to keep you hooked to screens, and this is perhaps the first time

the European Parliament has made that explicit. The report introduces a number of new concepts for consumer law in the text, which will be of particular importance for the Commission’s current overhaul of consumer protection legislation.

Following the vote, Grace O’Sullivan, MEP for Ireland South said: “Irish people spend more time in front of the phone and the computer screen than most other countries on earth, on average about 6 hours a day according to some studies. Time is valuable, and it is especially

valuable to media companies who can quite literally put a price on it through advertising, in-game purchases, and selling our personal data. “The Parliament has sent a strong message to the Commission that in forthcoming legislation, it must put forward measures to end ma-

licious addictive practices designed to keep us online but with our brains turned off.” The report includes, among other things, a proposed ban on the most addictive design features, such as endless scrolling and automatic movie playback, a reversal of the burden of proof for these

addictive systems, action against social media’s addictive recommendation algorithms and clarity on what goes on behind the scenes, with access to the dashboards of big tech companies. It is now up to the Commission to make these a reality with legislative proposals.


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Opinion

The Magnificent Nine

Part five

Church Street in Parramatta in 1861

BY JOHN FITZGERALD

The energetic Callan nuns in Parramatta didn’t waste any time: Early next morning, December 9th, they opened their school. On that first day, fifty-five pupils enrolled for classes. Christmas arrived and the nuns spent much of the day reading letters from home. Their pals back in the Convent of Mercy sent them greetings and shared all the latest gossip

about the goings-on in Callan. And the Reverend Mother offered words of spiritual encouragement. In a letter, she urged them to “face the future with determination, faith, and courage.” In the months and years that followed, Mother Clare and her eight colleagues made astonishing progress. Their activities spread to the wider Sydney area, where a dual commitment to education and charity transformed the lives of many people. Mother Clare’s convent stood the test of time, standing firm against initial prejudice and misunderstanding,

the ravages of poverty and economic recession in later years, and even the decline in vocations to religious orders in the second half of the twentieth century. The nine brave but homesick women from Callan who set foot on foreign soil in the winter of 1888 would have been heartened if they could have foreseen just how successful their mission was to be: By 1930, the community of nine Irish nuns had grown to one hundred and eighty. Other Callan girls and past pupils of the Convent of Mercy joined the Parramatta community in the years that

followed the foundation. Sister Monica Molloy was an aunt of Pat Molloy, the legendary stonecutter and one of Callan’s most popular undertakers of the twentieth century. Sister Rita Kerwick (of Kerwick Newsagents) devoted forty years of her life as a nun in Parramatta and elsewhere before returning to her native Callan, where she spent her final years as the librarian of the school. Though the original nine volunteers never returned to Ireland, they and their successors maintained strong links with Callan. There has been no let-up in the flow of letters

between the convents in Callan and Parramatta. In the 1950s, the first two Parramatta nuns visited Callan, Mother Lynch and Sister Aidan. The school threw a party for them and the streets of the town were bedecked with banners and flags. A Guard of Honour lined up to welcome them. The scene was reminiscent of the one that greeted the nine sisters on the day of their departure from Callan in 1888. In January 2001, a large group arrived from Parramatta: School Principal, Sister Ailsa, three teachers, and fourteen students set foot in Callan, anxious to see the town their founders had left behind so long ago. The school from which they had taken a break to visit Callan now has more than 900 pupils. Like the Convent in Callan, Our Lady of Mercy College in Parramatta is today renowned for its exceptionally high educational standards. Apart from the academic excellence and an unmatched reputation for musical tuition in schools run by the Parramatta sisters today, the successors of the nine women who founded the community are noted for their acts of mercy, caring for the aged, nursing, and a bewildering range of voluntary efforts. This work is partly a tribute to the courage and remarkable foresight of those pioneering nuns back in 19th century Callan: The Reverend Mother, who was as tough as old shoe

Callan Convent of Mercy today

leather but had her heart in the right place; Mary Clare, whose uncommon valour and wisdom held fast in the darkest days of their mission; and the other young women who sacrificed everything to help make the world a better and kinder place for the rest of us. In our ultra-modern age, they might be seen as naïve or spaced–out in their thinking and severe authoritarian lifestyles. The veils and habits too might be laughed at and dismissed as relics of an antiquated and obsolete way of life: But not in Callan, hopefully. Here, the Magnificent Nine will be recalled with joy and pride, tempered with humility… as modest, self-effacing but heroic women. Their memory will be enshrined forever in the town’s Roll of Honour.


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The Kilkenny Observer Friday 22 December 2023

News

MASS TIMES

ANGELS by Phil Kennedy

Sometime ago, this poem was sent into the Gay Byrne Show, it was sent in in relation to a topic which had been discussed on the show, there may have been a discussion on gender balance on the programme and this prompted Phil to send it in. Gay read the poem out on radio and Phil was so chuffed. It is topical now with Gay's Daughter publishing a book on the letters written to Gay over the years. They were sitting by the fireside One evening with their toys, When my little daughter turned to me And asked, “Mammy, are all Angels boys?”

KILKENNY CITY PASTORAL AREA Christmas Eve 5.30 p.m. St Canice’s Church

Christmas Day 10.30 a.m. St Bennett’s Church - Bennettsbridge

6.00 p.m. St John’s Church St Mary’s Cathedral St Fiacre’s Church

BALLYRAGGET BALLYOUSKILL Christmas Eve 6.30 p.m. Church of the Assumption - Ballyouskill 9.00 p.m. St Patrick’s Catholic Church Ballyragget

6.10 p.m. Black Abbey 7.00 p.m. Church of Most Holy Trinity - Dunmore 7.30 p.m. St Canice’s Church St Patrick’s Church 8.00 p.m. Church of John the Baptist - Johnswell 9.00 p.m. St John’s Church Capuchin Friary Black Abbey Christmas Day 8.00 a.m. St John’s Church 9.00 a.m. St Mary’s Cathedral Black Abbey 9.30 a.m. St Patrick’s Church 10.00 a.m. Church of John the Baptist - Johnswell St Canice’s Church 10.30 a.m. St Joseph’s Church - Foulkstown Capuchin Friary (Irish Mass) 11.00 a.m. St Mary’s Cathedral Church of Most Holy Trinity Dunmore 11.30 a.m. St John’s Church St Canice’s Church 12.00 p.m. St Fiacre’s Church Capuchin Friary Black Abbey 12.30 p.m. St John’s Church (Polish Mass) BENNETTSBRIDGE TULLAHERIN Christmas Eve 10.30 a.m. & 6.00 p.m. St Bennett’s Church Bennettsbridge 8.00 p.m. St Kieran’s Church - Tullaherin

Christmas Day 10.30 p.m. St Patrick’s Catholic Church Ballyragget FRESHFORD - TULLA Christmas Eve 11.00 a.m. St Lachtain’s Church - Freshford 7.30 p.m. St Nicholas’s Church - Tulla Christmas Day 11.00 a.m. St Lachtain’s Church - Freshford CONAHY - JENKINSTOWN Christmas Eve 11.30 a.m. St Colman’s Church - Conahy 6.00 p.m. St Colman’s Church - Conahy (Children’s Mass) 8.00 p.m. Our Lady of Perpetual Help Jenkinstown Christmas Day 9.30 a.m. Our Lady of Perpetual Help Jenkinstown 11.00 a.m. St Colman’s Church - Conahy

GORTNAHOE GLENGOOLE Christmas Eve 6.00 p.m. Church of St Patrick and St Oliver Glengoole 8.00 p.m. Church of the Sacred Heart - Gortnahoe Christmas Day 10.30 a.m. Church of the Sacred Heart - Gortnahoe JOHNSTOWN URLINGFORD - GALMOY GRAINE - CROSSPATRICK Christmas Eve 10.15 a.m. & 9.00 p.m. Church of the Immaculate Conception - Galmoy 6.00 p.m. St Patrick’s Church - Graine 7.30 p.m. St Michael’s Church - Crosspatrick Christmas Day 9.30 a.m. St Kieran’s Church - Johnstown 11.00 a.m. Church of the Assumption - Urlingford GRAIGUENAMANAGH SKEOUGHVOSTEEN Christmas Eve 7.00 p.m. Duiske Abbey Graiguenamanagh 5.15 p.m. Our Lady of Lourdes - Skeoughvosteen Christmas Day 8.00 a.m. & 11.00 a.m. Duiske Abbey Graiguenamanagh 9.30 a.m. Our Lady of Lourdes - Skeoughvosteen

GORESBRIDGE PAULSTOWN Christmas Eve 6.00 p.m. Church of the Assumption - Paulstown 8.00 p.m. Church of the Holy Trinity Goresbridge

HUGGINSTOWN - NEWMARKET STONEYFORD Christmas Eve 5.30 p.m. St Brendan Stoneyford 7.00 p.m. Church of the Most Holy Trinity Hugginstown

Christmas Day 10.00 a.m. Church of the Holy Trinity Goresbridge 11.30 a.m. Church of the Assumption - Paulstown

Christmas Day 10.00 a.m. St Brendan Stoneyford 11.00 a.m. Church of the Most Holy Trinity Hugginstown

Now the thought had never occurred to me But it struck me forcibly then, They are running this world at present, Will Heaven also be run by men? I have never heard of a girl Angel With golden hair and curls, But of course it doesn’t follow That there are no angelic girls There was the Angel Gabriel Who appeared to Mary to say

That she would be the Mother of God On that memorable day. Then there was Archangel Michael Who led them all so well, When they had the battle in Heaven And threw the losers down to Hell. Now another thought has struck me When we talk about lads with tails, I have never heard of a girl devil, So I take it they are all males. Now ladies, we have some consolation, So listen while the last bit I tell, We may not be ruling Heaven, But we’re certainly not running Hell.


The Kilkenny Observer Friday 22 December 2023

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The Kilkenny Observer Friday 22 December 2023

News Main image: From L to R: Michelle Colclough, Civil Defence Officer, John Collins, Chief Fire Officer, Seamus Kavanagh, Senior Engineer, Kilkenny County Council, Cllr. Michael Doyle, Cathaoirleach, Cllr. Matt Doran, Chairperson of SPC and Inspector Paul Donohue, An Garda Síochána.

Be safe on our roads this Christmas: Kilkenny County Council launches road safety plan 2022-2030 Photo by Vicky Comerford In a combined effort to enhance road safety and address the alarming rise in road incidents, Kilkenny County Council unveils its Road Safety Plan 2022-2030. Aligned with the Government's Road Safety Strategy, this strategic initiative is the result of extensive consultation and collaboration with the Road Safety Working Together Group—a diverse group of stakeholders dedicated to promoting a safer road environment.

At the launch of the Road Safety Plan, Cathaoirleach of Kilkenny County Council Council, Cllr. Michael Doyle, stated: “As we launch the Road Safety Plan 2022-2030, our commitment to the safety of every road user in Kilkenny is priority. This plan signifies our collective dedication to reducing road collisions and fatalities. We ask everyone to join us in prioritising road safety, especially during the upcoming Christmas season. By working together and embracing the initiatives

outlined in this plan, we can create a safer road environment for all.” The Road Safety Plan 20222030, an essential document outlining Kilkenny County Council's commitment to safeguarding lives on our roads, outlines clear aims and objectives. In the wake of a year which was marked by an increase in road collisions and fatalities, this plan signifies a step towards mitigating such incidents and promoting a culture of responsible road use.

The plan, a detailed roadmap encompassing a range of targeted measures, is now accessible to the public on Kilkenny County Council's official website. It provides insight into the strategies, interventions, and initiatives that will be implemented over the next eight years to enhance road safety within the community. As the festive season approaches, Kilkenny County Council appeals to all road users to increase their commitment to road safety.

The holiday season, often accompanied by increased travel and festivities, demands more vigilance and responsibility on our roads. By adhering to traffic regulations, respecting fellow road users, and prioritising safety, we can collectively contribute to a safer and more secure road environment for all. Cllr. Matt Doran, Chairperson of the Strategy Policy Committee for Transportational Policy/Mobility Management and Water Services on launching the plan said: “As Chairman of the Strategic Policy Committee for Transportation Policy/Mobility Management and Water Services, I am proud to see the launch of the Road Safety Plan 2022-2030 by Kilkenny County Council. This strategy serves as a roadmap to improve safety, reduce collisions, and save lives.” The Road Safety Working Together Group, an instrumental force behind the development of this plan, comprises representatives from the Road

Safety Authority (RSA), Ambulance Service, Transport Infrastructure Ireland (TII), Elected Representatives, Fire Service, An Garda Síochána, Director of Roads & Transportation, Cycling Officer, Road Safety Officer, and Roads Engineering Staff. This collaborative effort reflects the shared commitment of these key stakeholders to create lasting positive change. By working together, we can make significant strides towards a safer and more secure road network for everyone. For further information and to access the Road Safety Plan 2022-2030, please visit Kilkenny County Council’s website at the following link: Road Safety Plan 2022-2030.


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“The Magic of Local Lore” exhibition recently launched at Castlecomer Library Kilkenny County Council Library Service was delighted to host the launch of “The Magic of Local Lore” exhibition on Friday the 8th of December, at Castlecomer Library, where families and friends of the students from the 5th & 6th class students in the Presentation Convent National School in Castlecomer gathered to hear stories of local lore. Under the guidance of our Storyteller in Residence, Helena Byrne and with the assistance of their class teacher, Louise Walshe, pupils have been working for many weeks collating stories from various

sources. These stories are an excellent record of local lore from Castlecomer and further afield, with Lithuania, India and Poland featuring, too. Accounts of hurling champions, local shops and shopping, spooky tales, wedding traditions and family memories are well documented. At Friday’s event, each student had the opportunity to read aloud their story to an enraptured audience. Speaking at the event, Executive Librarian with Kilkenny Library Service, Aideen McDonald, said, “We would like to extend our thanks to our Storyteller

in Residence Helena Byrne, who facilitated and curated the project, assisted by class teacher Louise Walsh. The stories gathered and told by the 5th and 6th class students reflect the rich cultural history within the Castlecomer community and the growing cultural diversity. The project highlights the valuable role the public library provides as a keeper and recorder of these stories.” The exhibition can be viewed in Castlecomer Library until the Christmas holidays, so there will be plenty of time to pop in and enjoy the “magic of local lore.

Purchase of St. Patrick’s Centre, Kilkenny will not be proceeding Kilkenny County Council members were informed today that the purchase of the 17-acre site at St. Patrick’s Centre on the Kells Road in Kilkenny will now not proceed. The Council executive were informed today, 20th December 2023 by the Technical Working Group (TWG), comprising of Department of Children Equality Disability Integration and Youth, the Department of Housing Local Government and Heritage, Department of the Taoiseach and City & County Managers Association, that the project submitted by the Council earlier this year was deemed no longer viable. The TWG have concluded that the “timelines for delivery of the project have placed the project into the realm of there being a possibility that it will not be available to house BoTPs (Beneficiaries of Temporary Protection) within the timeframe of the European

Directive No. 2001/55 EC and the implementing decision EU 2022/382 of 4th March 2022”. In a proactive move to support the Government's Humanitarian response to the ongoing crisis in Ukraine, Kilkenny County Council had approved borrowing up to €3.5m to purchase St. Patrick’s Centre to repurpose it into temporary accommodation for Ukrainians for a period of 5 years. This decision was made based on a number of principles including that the purchase of the Complex would be cost neutral as any costs incurred by the Council in the purchase would be recouped through a contract with the Department of Children, Equality, Disability, Integration and Youth. However, the Council’s proposal is no longer deemed viable by the TWG and the borrowing will now not be required. While this decision is regrettable it is

accepted by the Council. The St. Patrick’s Complex is currently owned by Aurora, a community based service providing supports to people with intellectual disabilities. The Complex was formerly used as a residential facility providing daycare and respite care up until 4 years ago and has been vacant since then. The Complex was being considered for purchase by Kilkenny County Council and during the period of the proposed contract with the Department of Children, Equality, Disability, Integration and Youth, the Council had undertaken to prepare a Masterplan to inform the future development of the strategic site that includes a campus of approximately 17 acres, 8 residential buildings with shared cooking facilities, a period building with a dormitory to the rear, a swimming pool, a sports hall and a training centre.


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The Kilkenny Observer Friday 22 December 2023

News

Castlecomer Pantomime: down through the years Kilkenny County Library Service was pleased to mark the launch of the latest addition to our Kilkenny Digital Archive at Castlecomer Library on Tuesday the 5th of December. This digital exhibit is a collaborative venture with the Deenside Players and aims to record the longstanding tradition of local theatre & pantomime in the Castlecomer community. Over 30 programmes have been digitised to date along with some photos of various productions over the last 60 plus years. Castlecomer Library staff, Aideen O’Reilly and Luke Brennan worked diligently to organise and digitise these programmes and photos to make them available for everyone to enjoy on the Kilkenny Digital Archive. The launch was attended by Deenside Player committee members past and present, current cast members and local elected representatives, Cllr. Pat Fitzpatrick and Cllr. John Brennan. Current chairperson of Deenside Players, Chubby Brennan noted how important this project is to acknowledge the significant contribution made by the past members of the Deenside Players and also to record this history for future generations. Former Dame, Fonsie Mealy was also invited to speak and

he recalled some memorable moments and characters from previous pantomimes. Leas Cathaoirleach of Castlecomer Municipal District, Cllr. John Brennan and Cllr. Pat Fitzpatrick were delighted that Kilkenny County Council was supporting digitisation

projects such as this one and has recently provided funding for a new archivist whom will play a pivotal role in preserving historical records for the future. Speaking at the launch, Branch Manager of Castlecomer Library Karyn Deegan

said that “this project highlights the valuable role the public library provides as a custodian of history, culture and heritage and its ability to make that accessible to all using technology. These programmes and old photos will no doubt evoke many

wonderful memories of people and businesses long past.” To view this online exhibit, visit the Kilkenny Digital Archive via our website at https://digital-archive. kilkenny.ie/ This is an ongoing project and if anyone has any pro-

grammes from the Deenside Players Castlecomer Pantomime from previous years, that they wish to submit for inclusion, please contact Karyn Deegan, Branch Manager Castlecomer Library, on 056 4440561 or email castlecomer@kilkennylibrary.ie


The Kilkenny Observer Friday 22 December 2023

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Mike Denver and guests in concert at Hotel Kilkenny Mike Denver, one of Galway's favourite sons is riding the crest of a wave. His audience is vast throughout Ireland, North and South and he is now making inroads in the UK with some sellout concerts in England and Scotland over the past couple of years. Mike's meteoric rise in popularity culminated with him being voted Entertainer of the Year 2016 together with No.1 Album of the Year - 'Cut Loose' - at the ACMA Awards on RTÉ TV. Mike to date has had 15 hit albums and 5 DVD's. With his excellent backing band, Mike presents a two and a half hour high energy concert show which features all his hits including 'Tommy K', 'Wasn't that a Party', 'Galway Girl', ‘Blown Away' along with hits from the 60's and 70's. Mike will be in concert at Hotel Kilkenny on Saturday January 27th at 8pm. Special guests with Mike are Philomena Begley and Ray Lynem. Get your tickets at Hotel Reception and on Ticketmaster.ie

All roads lead to North Kilkenny this New Year's Eve

Preparations are underway for the annual ‘Light up the Night’ tractor and truck run, which grew from a group of North Kilkenny natives’ desires to highlight suicide awareness, mental health issues, resources and supports. Established in 2016, its next event will take place in just 2 weeks time on New Year’s Eve. The initial aim of Light up the Night was to highlight suicide awareness and positive mental health going into the New Year and we are delighted to say over the past

number of years we have done just that with hundreds of highly illuminated flashing beacons from Tractors & Trucks lighting up various roads throughout North Kilkenny. Since the run was set up in 2016 we have raised over €60,000, which has been distributed to local mental health and suicide awareness charities. Unfortunately, nearly every family in Ireland has been touched by mental health issues, and if Light Up The Night

helps just one person to speak out and ask for help that is the best outcome that we can ask for. Details of this year’s Truck & Tractor Run: Tractor Parking – Holland’s Yard, Ballyragget, Co. Kilkenny Truck Parking – Cillín Hill, Kilkenny City Registration starts from 1pm with departure due to take place from 4pm. There is no registration fee but all donations are greatly appreciated."


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The Kilkenny Observer Friday 22 December 2023

Picture special Festive celebration

Newpark residents Winner - Best Commercial Flower Display -Hibernian Hotel

Jbs photos kilkenny Newpark residents gathered, in large numbers last Saturday for the annual older peoples Christmas Dinner. It proved to be a fun filled evening of reminiscences as friends and neighbours chatted and swapped some exaggerated stories of bygone days. Proceedings began when Una Lennon lit the Remembrance Candle acknowledging all deceased members of the estate particularly those that had passed away during the last year. Guest of Honour Sgt John Duffy said he felt very much at home with the people of Newpark as his mother Ena (Lennon) was born in the estate. Sgt Duffy acknowledged the interaction between the Newpark Residents Association and the Garda Community Engagement team and insisted these connections promoted understanding and positive community development that are beneficial to society. The festive celebration was embellished by the attendance of Mayor Joe Malone who praised the residents of Newpark as a shining example of constructive community interaction. He had particular words of praise for the young Litter Heroes and for those that encourage nature and enhance the aesthetics of the estate with colourful and pollinator friendly planting schemes. Representing St John’s parish Fr Dan Carroll remarked that he always found the residents of Newpark to be friendly and welcoming and with his colleague Fr Ray Dempsey and church sacristan Jane Dineen, he felt privileged to be involved in organising the annual outdoor community Mass. Music provided by ‘The Talented Troubadour’, Tom Hickey resonated with the guests and the singing and party atmosphere continued late into the evening. A musical interlude by Liliya Niemtsova and Oksana Kurovets added an unique Ukrainian flavour to the festivities. Vice Chairman of the Newpark Residents Association, Jack Fahy thanked local businesses who had sponsored prizes and encouraged everyone to shop local. He also had words of thanks for all who helped make the day a memorable and successful occasion. Finally, on behalf of the Newpark Residents Association, Jack wished everyone a happy and a peaceful Christmas.


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The Kilkenny Observer Friday 22 December 2023

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Kilkenny celebrates grand opening of Kilkenny Countryside Park: A remarkable transformation of former landfill site Photographs by Vicky Comerford. A big crowd turned out to mark the official opening of the new Kilkenny Countryside Park at Dunmore on Friday the 15th December. Kilkenny’s newest amenity offering was opened by Minister Malcom Noonan of the Department for Nature, Heritage and Local Reform in the presence of the Cathaoirleach of Kilkenny County Council, Cllr. Michael Doyle. This project sees the development of a new countryside park on the site of the closed municipal landfill at Dunmore which occupies an area of circa. 24 acres and is located just 5km north of Kilkenny city centre. The new park offers visitors three themed trails, the Mass Path

Minister Malcom Noonan officially opening the new Kilkenny Countryside Park in the presence of Cathaoirleach Cllr. Michael Doyle along with Mayor Cllr. Joe Malone, the Elected Members of Kilkenny County Council and Deputy John McGuinness

Trail which starts at Dunmore village along with an Accessibility Trail and Biodiversity Trail. The new Park also provides a myriad of other attractions including two ball walls, a bespoke viewing area,

Viewing area at the highest point within the new Kilkenny Countryside Park

play and exercise equipment and novel relaxing spaces that include hammocks, and loungers along with Kilkenny’ s first dedicated dog-friendly enclosure. Speaking at the event, Minister Malcom Noonan, acknowledged the importance of outdoor recreation amenity spaces for peoples physical health and mental wellbeing. He noted his particular delight about the ethos of the new Park in terms of the preservation, enhancement and awareness of the importance of biodiversity to society. Also speaking at the opening, Cllr. Michael Doyle, Cathaoirleach of Kilkenny

County Council, noted “the transformation of this site is nothing short of remarkable, adding the construction of this Park marks a new chapter in its history, turning what was once a negative on the landscape into a sanctuary that aims to restore and protect our natural environment and heritage. He added it will elevate the appeal of our City and County, contributing to the 'Outdoor Kilkenny' brand and solidifying Kilkenny's status as a premier outdoor tourism destination”. The new Park, which was approved planning back in 2021, sees an investment of c.€1.2 million into Kilkenny’s newest large scale amenity offering. The funding to deliver this project was secured from the Department for Rural and Community Development, under the Outdoor Recreation Infrastructure Scheme and the Community Recognition Funds, along with Sports Capital funding and the Council’s own funds. Also, speaking at the event, the Mayor of Kilkenny City, Cllr. Joe Malone, stated “This exciting day marks another step in our ongoing efforts to position Kilkenny as a regional hub for outdoor recreation. Our commitment

to maintaining Kilkenny as an attractive place to live and visit, characterised by high standards, is represented in this Countryside Park—a testament to what can be achieved when there is the ambition, the will, drive and dedication to deliver for the people of Kilkenny.” Mr. Frank Stafford, A / Senior Engineer, Kilkenny County Council, thanked the local Dunmore community

and Kilkenny GAA County Board for their support for this project since its conception. He also paid tribute to the Council’s Management Team for having the foresight to see the potential of the site. He thanked the Elected Members for always being very supportive of this project and indeed all projects that deliver an amenity space that promotes health and wellbeing for the people of Kilkenny.

Practicing their hurling skills, with Minister Noonan, at the new ball wall were Duiske College Students:Frankie Stafford, Senan Kelly and Killian Redmond

Minister Noonan with invited guests at the official opening of the new Kilkenny Countryside Park


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Short story

'23 In this our final week of Christmas short stories, we welcome Kilkenny Theatre company Lake Productions. Founding member of the company Emily Kelly told the Observer newspaper that their contribution was looking at the festive season from the point of view of those who could not (for one reason or another) come home. They present their work in poetry format. Poem by Ger Cody. Photos Aoife O’Neill ‘Aidona Photography’ Missing Christmas

The Legend of the Men Who Never Came Back

“For him and all those other men, disappearing was easier and the constant work and drinking helped take their mind off things.” This quote, taken from writer Jimmy Murphy, perfectly sums up his play, “The Kings of the Kilburn High Road.” This was the harsh reality for many of the Irishmen who moved

over to England in search of work in the 1970’s. The men had moved over to England, dreaming of making their fortunes as young men. Now as older men, they rethink their decisions that brought them to England as they think of home especially at Christmas . In an Irish times review

on the play, Peter Crawley wrote: “It is hard to think of a more persuasive image of hell than this: a back room in an Irish bar in Kilburn. The year is 2000, but nobody told the bar, which settled snugly into the mid-1970s and refused to budge. That was also when the characters of Jimmy Murphy’s lugubrious play first came to London, seek-

ing work on its building sites with the intention of returning home successful, something else that has been endlessly delayed. Lake Productions include a poem about Christmas away from home and photos from their previous production of The Kings of the ‘Killburn High Road’ in The Community Hall in Thomastown.

By Ger Cody Christmas morning 1982 Phone ringing, Same time every year -10.30 am Her eighty year old frame makes its way nervously And picks up the receiver Hello? Hello is that you Tommy? Tommy? Happy Christmas Tom. Tommy hangs up. Tears well up as he strolls down Shepherds Bush Content in the knowledge that his mother is still alive. He has made that same silent call every year now since 1974. That was the year of the Birmingham bombings The year Paddy was no longer welcome in town. Go back to the bog Paddy Irish pig, shag off back to your sty. Hard to blame them. 21 dead and 182 injured The Mulberry Bush was where I supped porter Now a scene of destruction The IRA cost me my life too. Make it 22 I gathered what I had and moved to the ‘Bush’ From the frying pan into the fire No Irish need apply Fell in with a few decent skins and settled Still kept the head down Minded me own business Worked with big Ivan from Tyrone and Charlie Chaplin from Dundalk A few Welsh and Scots in the crew Shovelled clay and mixed cement eight hours a day Six o’ clock every evening and we ended up in the Crown and Sceptre Eleven o clock and enough drunk to help him sleep, I often think back to Brother Doyle in the home You’ll get nowhere Grace. The only thing ahead of you is a wheel barrow. Sent to reform school in Longford the first time for robbing apples. Six apples in me geansai when I was caught A month for each apple. Twelve years of age and locked up Sweeping horse manure and hosing down a yard Later, sentenced to six years for robbing a car. Next time I robbed something it was my brother’s birth cert Headed for Birmingham to work in the Dunlop factory. New name, new start 1974 was the explosion. The beating in the toilets of the Crown was brutal White tiles turned red How do ye like that Paddy. The second beating left me in hospital with a wired mouth And a damaged eye that would never see the light again A serious break at the thoracolumbar junction was how the coloured Doctor described it I said something stupid like was there at tube station at that junction He didn’t laugh This is serious he said It was Thirty eight years of age now And a cane to help my limp where a size twelve boot left me paralyzed Drink has been my friend for years Couldn’t go back home now Never made it Shame covers my life Over here they don’t judge or comment Or care I remember a few lines big Ivan recited About a navvy going up to the pearly gates “What did you do on Earth enquires Peter, I worked a shovel and mixer for McAlpine I did another ten years for Murphy on the Kango as well Come in said St. Peter, you’ve served your time in Hell” A one room filthy flat to call home Habit makes me shave every morning Face lathered with soap Eyes staring into the mirror. Hello. Hello. Anyone there? Body on the cold damp tiles in a foetal position. Ma. Ma. Are you there?

Lake Productions was founded in 2018 and since then has produced over thirty shows which includes theatre, radio plays and documentaries and the publication of three poetry books. In 2024 Lake will present Da by Hugh Leonard, and Shirley Valentine by Willy Russel. They will also launch their third collection of poetry in conjunction with The Recovery College and The Involvement Centre, and will broadcast four radio documentaries in association with Community Radio Kilkenny City and The Involvement Centre Kilkenny.


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Scaffolding in place ensured Rafters success By Anthony Crawford The Marble City Music Festival, the brainchild of Kilkenny violinist Patrick Rafter, was launched in Kilkenny last week. People from Kilkenny and further afield will one day look back and be able to say that they were in attendance when this new festival was launched. And it is fair to say that it was a launch with a difference. It had a panache and charisma about it that seemed to set it apart from other such festivals. The two-day event boasted three stellar concerts at St. John’s Priory in Kilkenny. And what a venue it proved to be. The sense of history, the acoustics, the sheer ambience of this fantastic building complemented the rich and beautiful music on offer. Prior to the 4pm Sunday performance, a delighted Patrick Rafter took time out to speak with The Kilkenny Observer Newspaper. Patrick explained that of course he was nervous starting a new festival. “I can assure you this has taken a long time in coming to fruition, and of course we are just getting started”, said the very affable Rafter.

Patrick continued “We are of course delighted that all three shows sold out. I would be telling a lie if I didn’t say that this is what we hoped for, but while the arts and the staging of festivals is a wonderful thing, it is a hard graft from start to finish”.

For this punter, it was a festival where certain things stood out. The quality of the music and musicians of course. The award-winning violinist was blessed to have at his disposal such great and talented

people to join him in his first festival. But there was more. It was quite obvious that Patrick Rafter had put a ferocious amount of time and effort into the planning for this event. It brought to mind lines from Seamus Heaney's poem ‘Scaf-

folding’. ‘Masons, when they start upon a building Are careful to test out the scaffolding Make sure the planks won’t slip At busy points Secure all ladders, tighten bolted joints.’ Rafter definitely had everything in place before the first note rang in St John’s Priory. There was a warmth and a welcome that was personal and special. Family members and friends gathered over the two days and volunteered as humpers and helpers, ticket collectors and runners. All for one and one for all as they say. Patrick Rafter - an incredible violinist - who has built an international career through awards and performances in just about every major concert hall worldwide, will look back on this new festival with pride. No doubt things, as they always do, will not have gone as planned. But to be fair, if they did, they were not noticed by the public who raved about the performances. One member of the audience who had travelled from Mallow in Cork, spoke of ‘breath taking performances.

With Rafter himself to the fore, the audience was treated to a host of Ireland’s most captivating performers - Fiachra Garvey, Contempo String Quartet and Rachel Factor. Unlike your typical classical concert - Rafter told stories from the stage resulting in much laughter which left musicians and audiences alike on an exhilarating high. And going that extra mile, following each performance there was a complimentary glass of mulled wine and mince pies and chats with the musicians. If one was pressed to pick a highlight from the festival.? For me it was the electric and dazzling performance of Vivaldi’s 4 seasons. All musicians were simply outstanding. The interaction and smiles from the stage were infectious and the atmosphere was magical. Speaking to the audience at the end of an emotional and no doubt exhausting event, Patrick Rafter promised bigger and better for 2024, with festivals scheduled for May and December. More information of Marble City Music festival can be seen on their website. www. marblecitymusicfestival.com


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The Kilkenny Observer Friday 22 December 2023

Yulefest

Yulefest to end on a high this weekend with fireworks spectacle over River Nore With Yulefest scheduled to conclude on Saturday, December 23rd, anticipation is building for a final week of festivities. It's the perfect opportunity for visitors to immerse themselves in the festive ambience, buy last-minute gifts for the entire family, and gather with friends for a singalong at the bandstand on the Parade. The final weekend promises to be a highlight, as a lowlevel fireworks display will illuminate the night sky over the River Nore, providing a spectacular conclusion to the Yulefest celebrations. The entire community is invited to join in the joyous occasion, making it a memorable and magical experience for all.

Thursday December 21st A special performance by Morning of School Choirs will take place on Thursday December 21st with the regular market traders open for their last event before Christmas. Friday December 22nd Yulefest Christmas market will be open from 11am to a later time of 8pm. Following the market, the annual fireworks display will take place at 8.15pm at the Abbey Quarter side of the River Nore. The fireworks can be viewed all around Kilkenny City, with the best viewing spots noted at John’s Quay and Michael Street. This is a free event, sponsored by Kilkenny Chamber. On Friday, free public performances will take place between 12 noon and 8pm on the bandstand. There will be four performances including Mick Walsh, Bobbie Carey& Carole Nelson, Burnchurch and Code of Behaviour. There will be a special kiddies Christmas disco at 4pm where everyone is encouraged to wear a Christmas Jumper! There will also be Face painting available on The Parade on Friday December 22nd from 12pm to

5pm at a cost of 3 euro. Saturday December 23rd On Saturday, Yulefest market runs from 11am to 6pm. This is the last day the markets will be open before Christmas. Plenty of music, dancing and family entertainment will take place at the Yulefest Bandstand on The Parade. There

will be a children’s magic show at 11am and 3pm on The Parade as well as balloon modeling at 12 noon and 4pm. Both events are free of charge. The Yulefest Bandstand is located on The Parade in Kilkenny city, alongside the Yulefest Christmas Market. The grand finale will feature

Sola, Banna Cheoil Traidisiunta with Clann Sabhaois and Raindogs. Visitors to Yulefest will also have the opportunity to take part in a musical workshop with acclaimed drummer Jeremy Hickey of R.S.A.G. This Rhythm Makers event will give participants an opportunity to enjoy a fun, relaxing and creatively stimulating drumming workshop. The final Rhythm Makers event will take place on December 23rd, on the Parade in Kilkenny city, 12 noon is for 5–7-year-olds, 1pm caters for 8–12-year-olds and 2pm is for adults. Music on the Yulefest Bandstand is free. Workshops cost €3 + booking fee and must be booked in advance. There will also be dancing demos on the bandstand on Saturday 23rd December at 3pm. The demos will be run by John Nolan of Xquisite Dance. John is a professional dancer who took part on RTE’s Dancing with the Stars. While thousands of people have taken to the streets of Kilkenny since the festival began on November 25th, organisers are encouraging those who haven’t yet experienced

Yulefest to come. Festival Manager, Marian Flannery, said: “We’ve had a fantastic turnout at Yulefest 2023 to date and we have one more weekend to really showcase all we have on offer from the markets, to the music, to the children’s entertainment and to the fantastic fireworks display we have planned for Friday night. Equally importantly, we want people to come and enjoy all the shopping and entertainment opportunities in the city centre and to ensure they spend as much as they can of their last-minute shopping locally in the heart of the medieval city. Our festival is all about keeping Kilkenny businesses busy and providing the fantastic choice and value in retail, entertainment and the finest of food. Families from near and far have been out in force over the last few weeks and we’re very much looking forward to our next two weekends in the run up to Christmas. There’s no better place to be than Kilkenny this festive season.” For more information see www.yulefestkilkenny.ie


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News

MacDonagh train station recognised as Ireland's first Age Friendly train station at National Awards New Pedestrian Walkway at MacDonagh Junction linking train station to adjacent shopping centre

MacDonagh Train Station in Kilkenny City has been honoured with the prestigious Age Friendly Transport Award at the National Age Friendly Awards ceremony held on November 30, 2023. Developed through a collaborative effort between Kilkenny County Council, Iarnród Éireann, Age Friendly Ireland and MacDonagh Shopping Centre, this achievement marks a significant milestone in making public transport more accessible and suitable for users across the course of life. The Age Friendly Recognition and Achievement Awards, a showcase of initiatives contributing to Ireland's commitment to creating an age-friendly environment, highlighted MacDonagh Train Station as

the pioneer in age-friendly transportation. The station underwent a comprehensive World Health Organisation four-stage process to secure its Age Friendly status. Cllr. Michael Doyle, Cathaoirleach of Kilkenny County Council, emphasised the collaborative success of the project, stating, "This award acknowledges the significant work undertaken by all stakeholders, contributing to improved lives for older people. MacDonagh Train Station exemplifies what can be achieved through collaborative working." A pivotal aspect of this initiative involved a Walkability Study, examining station areas, roadways, and bridge access. The subsequent action

plan, devised by a dedicated working group, emphasised the importance of age-friendly considerations to enhance the experience for older customers. A Key feature of this initiative was the introduction of a new walkway connecting the station to the nearby MacDonagh Junction Shopping Centre. This not only significantly reduces walking distances but also improves accessibility to shops, local government services, and medical facilities for all users. Anne Marie Shortall, Age Friendly Programme Manager at Kilkenny County Council, expressed her satisfaction, stating, "MacDonagh Train Station underwent the World Health Organisations process in order to achieve Age Friendly Status. Older people's confidence is greatly enhanced by the delivery of the safety features such as good lighting, pedestrian crossings, set down areas, and trained staff availability. We are delighted that our collaborative efforts have been recognised with this prestigious award." The Strategic Oversight Committee for this Age Friendly project included representatives from Kilkenny County Council, Age Friendly Ireland, Kilkenny Chamber, Iarnród

Éireann, the National Transport Authority, the Department of Transport, Kilkenny's Older Persons Council, and MacDonagh Shopping Centre. Emmett Cotter, Iarnród Éireann's Regional Manager for the South East, stated: “We recognise the significance of our senior citizens as valued

customers who have contributed immensely to society. Iarnród Éireann is committed to ensuring every train journey is user-friendly and enjoyable for them. We anticipate achieving Age Friendly Ireland recognition at more stations across our network, following the success of MacDonagh Station”.

National Age Friendly Awards, From left, Cllr Michael Doyle Cathoirleach, Kilkenny County Council, Kieran Kelly Iarnroid Eireann, Emmett Cotter Iarnroid Eireann, Annette Fitzpatrick Town Regeneration Officer, Kilkenny County Council, Garret Doocey Assistant Secretary General, Department of Transport, Mary Butler TD Minister for Mental Health & Older People, Anne Marie Shortall Age Friendly Programme Manager, Kilkenny County Council, Alison McGrath, Kilkenny County Council, Mary O’Hanlon, Chair of OPC Kilkenny, Lar Power, Chief Executive Kilkenny County Council Age Friendly Parking Spaces

Painting has taken place to highlight steps of entrance to make wayfinding age friendly

The improvements at MacDonagh Train Station, outlined in a case study publication by Age Friendly Ireland, include: The new walkway which links the station with the adjacent MacDonagh Junction Shopping Centre • Two Age Friendly car parking spaces • Tactile paving for customers with visual impairment • Newly installed tactile paving pedestrian crossing points • Enhanced way finding with painted steps • "Just A Minute" (JAM) signage and staff training • Increased font size on ticket machines • Safety decals on glass doors • Widening of the door to the disability bathroom • Repainting the station interior with a calmer colour • Alterations to kerbs and landscaping for improved access Minister Malcolm Noonan awarded a Charter to MacDonagh Train Station on November 21, 2022, recognising it as the first Age Friendly Station in Ireland. The station is now acknowledged internationally by the World Health Organization as a model of good practice for Age Friendly stations.


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A visit to Knockroe -Kilkenny’s Stonehenge!

Paddy O Shea addresses the group on the archaeological significance of Knockroe

BY JOHN FITZGERALD

The Kilkenny Heritage Walkers re-connected with our Megalithic past at the weekend when they converged on the ancient passage tomb at Knockroe, near Windgap. I was honoured to accompany them on their trek. Situated in idyllic countryside, the site is located close

to the Kilkenny.Tipperary border. Facing it about ten kilometers across the Lingaun Valley is the Neolithic cairn on Slievenamon. Though Knockroe gets a mention in Canon Carrigan’s History and Antiquities of the Diocese of Ossory (1890) it wasn’t excavated until 1990 under the direction of Professor Muiris O’Sullivan of UCD. The walkers ventured out in the early hours of the morning on their annual visit to this 5000 year-old site, deemed an archaeological

wonder of the South East. Though not as well known as Newgrange in the Boyne Valley or Stonehenge in England, Knockroe is of immense significance in the bid to understand the ways of our ancestors. Having arrived at the site via a maze of country roads and fields, the walkers took turns expounding on a cultural gem that assumes its special place in the sun at this time of year. The tomb, which was built on a colossal clay rampart, has two chambers, and on

December 21st -the mystical Winter Solstice- the rays of the great golden orb filter through the southwestern chamber. This creates an uplifting radiant spectacle. Another big attraction for the walkers was the complex series of hieroglyphics (an assortment of squiggles and spirals) on the thirty stones at the site, which may been intended either as artwork or as markings aimed at calculating the passage of time and the seasons. The walkers This time had a lively exit was change on the the High subject, with Crosses at some favourAhenny, ing the art standing theory and on the others opinTipperary ing that our side of the ancestors in Lingaun this instance River; that might have drew them been in funcforth. tional rather And what than celebratory Church Street stunning mode when they in Parramatta in tributes to set to work on 1861 craftsmanship their carving. and religious After Knockroe devotion await the the walkers headed off visitor. The crosses were towards their second descommissioned in the 8th tination, tackling steep hills century by the High King of and lonely boreens to enter Ossory. On the larger of the another portal of Old Ireland.

The walkers discuss ancient symbols at Knockroe

two you’ll find elegant carved depictions of Biblical themes and motifs. Even non-religious folk over the centuries have been wonderstruck by the artistry. Having dome homage to a breathtakingly rich and diverse heritage, the walkers assembled for light refreshments at a cross-road somewhere near the Kilkenny/Tipperary border. They reflected on another fulfilling twelve months of learning, teaching, and sharing ideas and paid tribute to members who’d said goodbye to the world during the year. The Kilkenny Heritage Walkers plan further excursions into the past and down the pathways of memory in 2024.


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Kilkenny Employment for Youth KEY 40th Birthday

Kilkenny employment for youth celebrates 40 years of community, education and training for learner’s aged 16 to 21 years All pics by Vicky Comerford

Carmel, KEY

Over 100 people attended the opening of an amazing tribute to KEY’s 40 years of helping young people move forward. The past and present trainees of KEY CTC stole the show on Tuesday 5th December at the Friary Hall in Kilkenny city where guest speakers shared their experience and fond memories of the last 4 decades along with their visions for continuing the success into the future. Jim Maher, one of the original 1983 staff members, MC’d the event, Karl Johnson, Chair of the Board paid tribute to former management of the Centre, Gillian Ryan, Deputy Training Services Manager, acknowledged the fantastic work that went into the event and showcase and to the Learners in making KEY such a much needed and inclusive

Jim Maher

contribution to society. Mayor Joe Malone shared his honest story of how a traditional schooling system may not be for everyone, and Majella Nugent – the first female Centre Manager of KEY, thanked all of the staff, supporters and trainees of KEY and vowed to continue the ethos of KEY: helping young people move forward. The highlight of the day

Majella Nugent, first female Centre Manager

was when Carmel, a current VTCT trainee, followed by Ultan and Melanie, two past trainees, took to the podium and shared their journey with a captivated audience. They each did themselves proud with their heartfelt and inspiring stories of how they gained confidence, friends, skills, experience and QQI qualifications through KEY. The showcase which ran

Mayor Joe Malone

from Wednesday 6th to Friday 8th December welcomed members from the public, employers, guidance counsellors, resource centres, education centres and more. Visitors got to see a snapshot of what it’s like to attend KEY and how it has progressed over the years. Kilkenny Employment for Youth CTC is run by a voluntary Board of Trustees and is funded by KCETB, the Government of Ireland and the European Union. KEY has helped over 1,500 young people find alternative pathways to careers and education and welcomes any early school leavers aged between 16 and 21 years of age to contact the Centre to find out more. They also offer a 6 month link-work experience for ages 16 to 25. A training allowance is paid and facilitation and instruction is on a

Melanie, past KEY

one to one basis. For anyone interested in joining KEY or interested in learning more, contact info@keyctc.ie or call 056 7762774 KEY would like to thank all the Learners past and present, Jim Maher, John McGuinness, Malcolm

Ultan, past KEY

Noonan, Kathleen Funchion, Andrew McGuinness and Mayor Joe Malone. Huge thanks to the Kilkenny People, KEY’s suppliers, partners, KCETB, Staff, Employers of Kilkenny, and everyone who has supported KEY in helping young people move forward.

Andrew McGuinness, Dominique Dumecz, Jim Maher, Mayor Joe Malone, Karl Johnson, Ivan Porteus


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The Kilkenny Observer Friday 22 December 2023

News

Foster & Allen’s Irish tour 2023/2024 Foster & Allen TV show’s back on TG4 for Christmas and New Years International Recording artists Foster & Allen look forward to Celebrating 49 years in the Music Business with a 22 date Concert Tour of Ireland. Mick & Tony will of course be performing all their Hits like ‘Bunch Of Thyme’, ‘Old Flames’, ‘Maggie’, ‘After All These Years’, ‘We Owe It All To You’, as well as some of their new recordings from their latest album ‘We’ll Meet Again’. From the opening title track, the evergreen ‘We’ll Meet Again’, to their

rendition of popular classics such as ‘Grace’, ‘The Cliffs Of Dooneen’, ‘Cotton Fields Back Home’, Foster & Allen are well and truly back in stride. Foster & Allen aren’t showing any signs of slowing down and their recording and touring commitments prove how popular they remain for their fans who like to hear them at home and see them in a live experience. For a night to remember don’t miss Foster & Allen’s Irish Tour 2023/ 2024.

Following on from the success of their No.1 TV Show on TG4 Mick Foster and Tony Allen return in December in the run up to Christmas with a 13 half hour series of The Foster And Allen Show, which started on Monday 4th December at 9pm on TG4. It runs every Monday to Thursday each week for 3 weeks. Foster and Allen continue to scale new heights after nearly five decades in the

music business and the series was recorded in HD and features some on location videos, including ‘The Fields Of Athenry’, ‘My Lovely Rose Of Clare’ and the ‘Green Hills Of Sligo’ to mention a few. The Foster & Allen Show, as always, includes a diverse mix of Easy Listening, Folk, Country, Irish and Tradition music throughout the series as well as a sprinkling of Foster and Allen’s own hits. The Foster & Allen Show

– We’ll Meet Again will continue in the New Year, starting on Tuesday 2nd January for 4 nights at 9pm. The 4 episodes feature the Show that was recorded at Kilbeggan Distillery Visitor Centre in County Westmeath, in the heart of Ireland. It is the World’s Oldest Whiskey Distillery, established in 1757 and still makes one of Ireland’s finest whiskeys. It is very familiar to Mick and Tony as they

recorded one of their very first videos ‘The Old Rustic Bridge By The Mill’ at the Distillery back in 1983. The Foster & Allen Show – We’ll Meet Again also features 12 new recordings from their latest album ‘We’ll Meet Again’ released on Vinyl, CD and Digital. It includes some of Ireland's Best Loved Songs: ‘Grace’, ‘The Wild Rover’, ‘Maggie’ and features a special guest, Brendan Shine, on a couple of songs.


The Kilkenny Observer Friday 22 December 2023

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The Kilkenny Observer Friday 22 December 2023

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Fr. McGrath Centre

Party time at Fr. McGrath Centre Photos: jbsphotoskilkenny The Fr. McGrath Centre was a hive of activity on Wednesday morning as diverse cultures gathered for the annual Failte Isteach Christmas “bash”. They came from South America, Asia, Africa and Eastern Europe, with a big gathering of our new Ukrainian community. This convivial gathering brought together men and women from all over the world and is playing an important role in integration in our community. Tutors, students and staff enjoyed food from different countries, sang songs, played music and danced together. This was indeed proof positive that people from different cultures can get together in harmony and enjoy each other’s company.

There was recognition too for those who help make the project possible; fifteen volunteer tutors were singled out by Stephen Murphy, Director of Services, Fr. McGrath Centre, who said that through their tremendous commitment they are making a real and lasting difference to the community by helping migrants improve their English language skills. Being able to speak English helps families get to know their Irish neighbours and so become part of the community. Fluency in the language is also helping new migrants find work and so take their place and contribute to Irish life. Certificates of achievement were presented to two South East University work experience students, Holly and Molly for their sterling work

Pictured at The Christmas festivities at The Fr McGrath Centre Kilkenny were Theresa Delahunty, Stephen Murphy Director of Services and Mike Kelly Chairman of the board of St. Canice’s Community Action


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Fr. McGrath Centre

Rounding off the morning’s festivities at the Fr McGrath Centre , a presentation was made to coordinator Theresa Delahunty by Stephen Murphy Director of Services for her commitment to the project over this past 12 years

A Certificate of achievement was presented to South East University work experience student Molly Dawson for her sterling work during their placement

Tutors at The Fáilte Isteach Christmas gathering at The Fr.McGrath Centre Kilkenny

during their placement. There was also acknowledgement of Kilkenny Leader Partnership who have supported the project since its inception Rounding off the morning’s festivities, a presentation was made to coordinator Theresa Delahunty by Stephen Murphy Director of Services and Mike Kelly Chairman of the board of St. Canice’s Community Action, for her commitment to the project over this past 12 years. The Failte Isteach English & Integration Project is run by Immigrant Services under the auspices of the Fr. McGrath Centre. The Project works at breaking down the barriers that immigrants and communities face by extending the hands of friendship and goodwill through the practical, welcoming and inclusive manner in which the programme is delivered. The Project can be contacted at Fr. McGrath Centre 0567751988 or immigrantservicekk@gmail.com

South East University work experience student Holly Browne received A Certificate of achievement for her sterling work during her placement at The Fr McGrath Centre


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The Kilkenny Observer Friday 22 December 2023


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The Kilkenny Observer Friday 22 December 2023


The Kilkenny Observer Friday 22 December 2023

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Kilkenny City and County Bridge results Rothe Bridge Club – Monday Nights Results 4th December 1st Prize Colin Shaw /Pat Hickey 2nd Prize Geraldine O’Sullivan/Linda Darlington 3rd Prize Myrtle Wellwood/ Joan Cullinane 4th Prize Noreen Bergin/ Celine O’Sullivan Results 11th December 1st Prize Ann O’Shaughnessy/Maureen Sheehan 2nd Prize Maura O’Brien/ Aine Murphy 3rd Prize Hugh DonnellySwift/Colette O’Neill

4th Prize Geraldine O’Sullivan/Linda Darlington 5th Prize Phil O’Reilly/Pat O’Briain 6th Prize Margaret Mullins/ Mary O’Reilly 7th Prize Joan O’Gara/Breda O’Donnell 8th Prize Joan Murphy/ Catherine Lynch 9th Prize Eileen Fox/ Kathleen Hogan 10th Prize Colin Shaw/Bernie O’Connor 11th Prize Liam Holohan/ Brigid Holohan 12th Prize Colette Ganley/ Maura Delaney 13th Prize Mary Lawlor/Una Crowley

14th Prize Josephine O’Reilly/Siobhan Roberts Club 17 – Tuesday Mornings Results 5th December 1st Prize Christine Leonowicz/Linda Darlington 2nd Prize Liam Holohan/ Brigid Holohan 3rd Prize Mary Walsh/Ann O’Rourke Results 12th December 1st Prize Noreen Bergin/ Mary T Murphy 2nd Prize Kathleen Ferguson/Kathleen O’Shaughnessy 3rd Prize Margaret Mullins/ Mary O’Reilly

4th Prize Breda O’Donnell/ Ann O’Shaughnessy 5th Prize Catherine Brady/ Paul Brady 6th Prize Phil Mahony/ Miriam Kennington 7th Prize Bernadette Denieffe/Yvonne Grant 8th Prize Ann Kelly/Ann Gubbins 9th Prize Fiona Ward-Tynan/ Eamon Everard 10th Prize Liam Holohan/ Brigid Holohan Abbey Bridge Club – Tuesday Nights Christmas Competition 5th December 1st Prize Susan Higgins/

Frances Graham 2nd Prize Josephine Cuddihy/Gretta Brennan 3rd Prize Joan Cashin/ Catherine Costello 4th Prize Mary Norton/Mary Moynihan 5th Prize Brian Kiely/Joe O’Neill 6th Prize Brian Keane/Dave O’Mahony 7th Prize Ann Widger/Phyl Doyle 8th Prize Mary Fawsitt/Mary Saunders 9th Prize Helen Tynan / Eileen Bolger 10th Prize Sandra O’Driscoll/ Mary Condon

2nd Prize Pat Wall/Michael Delehanty 3rd Prize Mary Egan/Breda Deevy 4th Prize Maura O’Mahony/ Teresa Dunne

Results 12th December 1st Prize Mary Moynihan/ John McMahon 2nd Prize Mary Morris/Dor Lanigan 3rd Prize Joan Mannion/ Brian Kiely 4th Prize Noreen Bergin/ Helen Tynan

Nore Bridge Club – Thursday Nights Results 30th November 1st Prize Susan Higgins/Áine O’Caoimh 2nd Prize Gretta Brennan/ Catherine King 3rd Prize Donald Higgins/ Ciaran Ruane

Kilkenny Bridge Club – Tuesday Nights (Resumes 9th January 2024) Results 5th December 1st Prize Liz Jennings/Peter Ryan 2nd Prize Collette O’Neill/ Hugh Donnelly-Swift 3rd Prize Margaret Knowles/ Catherine McGoff

Christmas Competition Best Gross Colette O’Neill/ Hugh Donnelly Swift 1st Prize Peter Ryan/Liz Jennings 2nd Prize Angela Carroll/ Teresa Dunne 3rd Prize Margaret Knowles/ Ellen Dowling 4th Prize Gretta Brennan/ Catherine King 5th Prize Susan Higgins/Áine O’Caoimh 6th Prize Donal Higgins/ Ciaran Ruane

Christmas Competition 12th December 1st Prize Ellen Dowling/ Maria Troy

Confederation 350 Bridge Club – Wednesday Nights Christmas Competition 6th December 1st Prize Maureen Sheehan/ Anne Treacy 2nd Prize Margaret Kiely/ Phil Kenealy 3rd Prize Dympna White/ Breda Murray 4th Prize Mary Fawsitt/Anne Brennan


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Planning notices

Planning notices KILKENNY COUNTY COUNCIL

I, James Stapleton Farming Ltd. intend to apply to Kilkenny County Council for planning permission to a) construct a cattle house over an existing slatted tank, b) construct a silage base and apron and c) apply for retention permission on an existing slatted slurry storage tank on my lands at Booly, Ballymack, Cuffesgrange, Co. Kilkenny. The planning application may be inspected or purchased at a fee not exceeding the reasonable cost of making a copy at the offices of the Planning Department, Kilkenny County Council, County Hall, Johns Street, Kilkenny during its public opening hours 9am-1pm and 2pm-4pm Monday to Friday. A submission or observation in relation to the application may be made to the Planning Authority in writing on payment of the fee prescribed fee (€20.00) within the period of 5 weeks beginning on the date of receipt by the Authority of the application, and such submissions or observations will be considered by the Planning Authority in making a decision on the application. The Planning Authority may grant permission subject to or without conditions, or may refuse to grant permission. Signed: James Stapleton Farming Ltd.

KILKENNY COUNTY COUNCIL

I, Michael O’ Meara intend to apply to Kilkenny County Council for Retention Planning Permission to retain as follows: 1. existing detached garage to the rear of my property 2. existing garage attached to the side of my dwelling house 3. entrance wall to the front of my site and all associated site development works at 116 Ashfield East, Golf Links Road, Kilkenny R95 P2C1. The planning application may be inspected, or purchased at a fee not exceeding the reasonable cost of making a copy, at the offices of the Planning Department, Kilkenny County Council, County Hall, John Street, Kilkenny, during its public opening hours 9 a.m.- 1.00 p.m. and 2.00 p.m. – 4.00 p.m. Monday to Friday, and a submission or observation in relation to the application may be made to the Planning Authority in writing on payment of the prescribed fee (€20.00) within the period of 5 weeks beginning on the date of receipt by the Authority of the planning application, and such submissions or observations will be considered by the Planning Authority in making a decision on the application. The Planning Authority may grant permission subject to or without conditions, or may refuse to grant permission.

KILKENNY COUNTY COUNCIL

RE: Planning permission is sought by Caroline Walshe to construct 1. an extension to the rear and the side of an existing agricultural shed, 2. the change of use of an existing agricultural shed, 3. a 40m2 exercise facility, 4. Renovations to an existing shed 5. A dog hotel with the provision of 7no. kennels and 1no. isolated kennel 6. And all associated site development works at Watree Lodge, Watree, Gowran, CO.Kilkenny, R95YP23. The planning application may be inspected, or purchased at a fee not exceeding the reasonable cost of making a copy, at the offices of the Planning Department, Kilkenny County Council, County Hall, John Street, Kilkenny, during its public opening hours 9 a.m.- 1.00 p.m. and 2.00 p.m. – 4.00 p.m. Monday to Friday, and a submission or observation in relation to the application may be made to the Planning Authority in writing on payment of the prescribed fee (€20.00) within the period of 5 weeks beginning on the date of receipt by the Authority of the planning application, and such submissions or observations will be considered by the Planning Authority in making a decision on the application. The Planning Authority may grant permission subject to or without conditions or may refuse to grant permission. Signed: Gittens Murray Architects Ltd., No. 5 William Street, Kilkenny. Tel No: 056-7753933. web:www.gmarch.net


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Community & GAA Notes

Kilkenny GAA clubs and Community news CLARA SEASONS GREETINGS I would like to take this opportunity to wish all readers of these notes a very happy and peaceful Christmas. Look after each other and take special care of those less fortunate than us. Nollaig Shona Dhaoibh! O’ LOUGHLIN GALES CLUB LOTTO We need your support more now than ever to help prepare for an All-Ireland Final. Please play and support our club lotto. There’s a generous pot at the moment which would be a nice windfall this Christmas time. All the details at www. oloughlingaels.com/lotto There was no winner of club lotto dated Dec 12th. Numbers drawn were 13, 16, 18, 24 Bonus 2. Play now at www.oloughlingaels.com/lotto Promotors draw. 1. O’Brien C/o Ml Doran. 2. Catherine Murphy C/o Johnswell 3. Molly/MJ/Tom C/o Ml Nolan. 4. John Healy C/o Ml Nolan. 5. Esther Maher 6. Eileen Cleere. 7. Tom Butler C/o Ml Nolan. 8. Tom Hutchinson C/o Online 9. Leanne Hickey C/o Online. 10. Ann Marie Sheridan C/o Online Thank you for your continued support ALL-IRELAND CLUB FINAL At the end of last Sunday’s epic nail biting semi-final the Gaels piped Ruairí Ógs of Cushendal to claim their place in the All-Ireland Club Final on January 20th.2024 It’s going to be a great occasion and a proud time for members, players, management and their families so be sure to row in if called upon for help. A huge thanks to all our sponsors to date and don’t be shy if you wish to contribute up the cause now, just contact any committee member and you’ll be pointed in the right direction. Well done to Brian Hogan and his management team for bringing the team to Croke Park. It’s a time they’ll never ever forget as a group and one they’ll cherish for years to come. Enjoy it, savour it and relish the opportunity. Please support and encourage the players and help them to achieve their goal. HAPPY CHRISTMAS We wish all in the community a very happy and peaceful Christmas. Support your local businesses and be safe. Nollaig shona daoibh go léir FRESHFORD CHRISTMAS MASS TIMES Saturday Dec 23rd – Mass in Tulla Church at 7.30pm Sunday 24th Dec – Christmas Eve – Mass in Freshford Church at 11 am Vigil mass in Tulla Church at 7.30pm. Christmas day – Mass in Freshford Church at 11am SR JOHANNA Sr.Johanna Kelly who died recently was a member of SHMJ and served in Prague House Freshford over the years and was widely known and respected in the area. A special months mind mass will take place in St.Lachtains will take place in Freshford Church on Sunday 14th January to remember her. BIRTHDAY GIRL Special birthday wishes go out to Ms. Marian Morrissey of Woodview, Freshford who celebrated a very special birthday last week. Marian marked the occasion with a get together with her family and friends last weekend. SOCCER Freshford Town had a number of teams in action in the under age at the weekend. The U 13girls were beaten by Highview in their league game on a 2- 1 scoreline with Lucy Dalton getting the Freshford Town goal. The U13 boys drew 2-2 with Stoneyford in their home league game with Jamie Kavanagh getting the goals for the home side. The U13 boys had a decisive win over Callan Utd in their home game on Saturday winning 6-0 with Charlie Kavanagh and Jack Marnell getting six goals between them. GAA Join the St Lachtains Westlife fundraiser. This will be an unforgettable night of music and memories at Kavanagh’s Bar on the 29th of December! Kavanaghs Bar are thrilled to present a sensational Westlife Tribute Act that will transport you back to the golden era of chart-topping hits and heartwarming melodies starting at 9pm. This special night is a fundraiser for the GAA Club, and your attendance will contribute to the growth and success of our community. So bring your friends, family, and fellow Westlife enthusiasts for a night filled with incredible music, dancing, and the warm fuzzy feeling of supporting the local GAA Club. Let’s come together, celebrate, and make a positive impact on our community. An unbelievable raffle will take place on the night too. The prizes have to be seen to be believed. So don’t miss out on this chance to experience the magic of Westlife and contribute to a cause that matters. See you there for a night of music, memories, and meaningful support!

PEACE COMMISSIONER Local Councillor Mick McCarthy who was appointed a Peace Commissioner some time ago received his Certificate recently. Mick is following in the footsteps of his grandfather Jerry McCarthy who was a Peace commissioner for many years right up to the time of his death at the age of 105, just two weeks before his 106th birthday. The Appointment was made by Minister for Justice Helen McEntee and on a recent visit to Leinster House Cllr McCarthy was presented wih his Certificate by the Tanaiste and Minister for Foreign Affairs Micheal Martin. SQUASH Congratulations to young Nathan Walsh a member of Freshford Squash club, on winning the Munster Junior Invitational a section recently. Well done Nathan and keep up the good work. Also congrats to local man Pat Morrissey on getting to the final in the over 40 Connacht senior masters in Galway recently. VDP COLLECTION The annual St Vincent de Paul Christmas collection took place recently. Demands are at an all-time high for the Society and especially at this time of year and the Society thank all those who contributed so generously. Donors can also make a donation in the blue SVP envelopes provided to each household recently by An Post. These envelopes can be left in the Parish Collection box in the Church porch or in collection bucket in Tulla . FOROIGE Foroige want to start a youth club in the Freshford area and they need adult volunteer leaders. A youth club has huge positive benefits to young people in the community and volunteering offers great rewards to the adults involved. For more information please contact Aidan Gleeson on 086 0674485 or Aidan.gleeson@foroige.ie COMMUNITY ALERT Freshford/Threecastles Text Alert membership renewal is now due. It cost €10 per phone number- new members are most welcome. Contact any of the following committee members-John Bergin,Jacinta Power, Anna Morrissey, Mick Cormack, Shem O’Donnell The group wish to thank everyone who has joined for their continued support and they remind people to be vigilant during these dark evenings towards their property and neighbours. Keep an eye out for anything suspicious and report same to Kilkenny Station, tel 056 – 775000 In recent weeks it has been noted by some local people that items have been removed from some graves up in the local cemetery much to the distraught of the families involved. You are asked to be vigilant and. If you see or notice anyone acting suspicious or doing any such act please report same immediately to the Gardai. IONAD LACHTAINS St. Lachtains Church Museum and Arts centre is open every Saturday and Sunday from 11.30am to 4.30pm. BRIDGE Freshford Bridge Club continues each Monday 7.30pm in Tulla Hall, Threecastles. New members are very welcome. For further information please contact Olive on 087 9257610. LOOP’S BIRTHDAY The Loop Café celebrated its first birthday recently and is now open every day from Monday to Saturday from 9.30am to 4pm. The Loop Café is a wonderful addition to the village full of character and history and your continued support would be greatly appreciated. Why not go along and meet a friend or try some of their lovely food and support a local community café. They are also looking for volunteers to help out so if you can give little bit of your time please do so. PARISH NEWS Mass is held in the Parish Church each Wednesday morning at 9.30am and each Sunday morning at 11am.wiith Mass in Tulla church on Saturday evenings at 7.30pm. Notices The parish newsletter is available on their website every week and also on the website you are free to pay your dues and make donations or any other contributions and you can find out more about it on the website or feel free to contact in the Parish Office. Please note community notices for the parish newsletter should be left in or emailed to the Parish Office by 11am on Thursdays. Parish office hours are Tuesday, Thursday and Friday from 9am to 1pm. Mass Cards Special printed parish cards are available at the Parish Office or from Annette at Tulla Church signed by Monsignor Kennedy. You can contact the Parish office on 056 8832843 or by email – freshfordd@ossory.ie. Contact Mongr Kieron Kennedy on that number or on 087 25235 21 HELP FOR ALL Are you struggling with anxiety or depression or finding life difficult or feeling isolated at this time GROW is there to help you. Their Mental Health support Groups are free and confidential and open to all no referral or booking is needed. For more information on same you can contact Mary on 087 284342 If you can’t cope and need support text HELLO to 50808 SAMARITAN - Whatever . you’re going through a Samaritan will face it with you

– available 24 hours a day 365 days a year – Freephone 1161Alone is available for older people who need support and you can call them on 0818 222024 (8am to 8pm) AMBER KILKENNY WOMENS REFUGE – is available for confidential support relating to domestic violence - call them on 1850 424244 (24/7) or on 056 7771404 or email into@amberwomensrefuge.ie. JAMES STEPHENS GAA AND CAMOGIE CLUB CHRISTMAS WISHES Chairman, Aodán O Ruairc would like to send best wishes to his fellow officers, club members, their families, friends and supporters for a happy and peaceful Christmas and hopefully a successful year in 2024 for all club teams STEPHEN’S DAY RUN No doubt, after the Christmas Day over indulgences folk will be only too glad to join the line-up for the annual 5K and 10K fun run/ trot /walk which takes place on St. Stephen’s Day morning. This year’s event will be run in memory of the late passionate club member, Allen Larkin and will have Cois Nore as its charity partner. For the serious runners there will be a prize of a Fit Bit for the first Lady and gent to cross the finishing line in the 10K race. The entry fee for adults will be €10, and €5 for a child /student and €25 for a family entry. Entries will be taken in the clubrooms from 10.30am in readiness for the start at 11am. On completion of the race exhausted participants will be welcome to avail of a refreshing cuppa tea / coffee and tasty goodies to help restore lost energy. All are welcome to join the fun event. RED AND GREEN SHOP Supervisor Breda Manogue advises that the club shop has received, in recent days, a stock of fashionable camogie crew neck jackets across the sizes. Also in store is a grey half zip jacket along with a large range of other club leisure and sportswear suitable as Christmas pressies for James Stephens hurlers, camogie players and supporters. FITZGIBBON CUP The 107th staging of the famous third level college’s hurling competition, the Fitzgibbon Cup, will commence on 17th January with the finals being hosted by MTU Kerry from 13th to 18th February. For members interested in following the fortunes of club players, Cian Kenny will line out with SETU Carlow, Sam McEvoy is a panellist with Maynooth University and Eoin Guilfoyle will be wearing the colours of UCD. We wish all our players the best of luck. BONUS BALL The winners of the December Bonus Ball draw when their number, 25 emerged from the drum at Saturday night’s National Lotto draw were Niall Tyrrell and Luke Scanlon. With Christmas within sight no doubt the lucky winners will be delighted to receive a cheque for €500 each in the next few days. The next draw will take place on 29th January. Meanwhile our thanks to all who continue to support this vital fundraiser for the club. ALL-IRELAND CLUB Congratulations to our city neighbours, Dicksboro and O’Loughlin Gaels on their groundbreaking victories at the weekend. On Sunday evening the Dicksboro camogie team carved out, at the first attempt, an exciting All-Ireland senior club camogie title victory over back to back champions Sarsfields (Galway) with an impressive late second half performance in Croke Park. Earlier in the day, in Pairc Tailteann, Navan, O’Loughlin Gaels fought off a determined bid by the Ulster champions Ruairi Og, Antrim, with a late long range point to claim a place in the All-Ireland club senior final against Galway club, St. Thomas’ on a date to be announced in January. LOTTO Last week’s numbers were 6 : 15 : 24 : 27. There was no winner. The Jackpot for the lead into Christmas week on Tuesday night 19th December will be €10,600 and you can play on Clubforce before 6pm on Tue. Last week’s €100 consolation winners were Liam Morrisson and Dave Dalton. The € 50 winners were Harry Grace, Des McGrath, Speedy, Michael Doyle, Richie Drennan and Michelle Power. GOWRAN GOWRAN PARISH Family Faith Candle in Gowran and Dungarvan Church. Have you purchased your family faith Candle? Price €5. Your family name will be labelled on your purchased candle. The candles will be lit for the Christmas and New Year and placed on one of the side Altars and on the High Altar as a symbol of passing on the faith and celebrating Christmas. You will be able to collect your candle to bring home to your house after the feast of the Epiphany (6th Jan). To have your family candle labelled by us purchase now. Labels will be available for self labelling on Christmas Eve. MOLLYS TEAROOM Molly’s Tearoom will close on Saturday, 23rd December at 4pm and will reopen on Wednesday 3rd January at 10am. They would like to wish all our customers a Merry Christmas and a prosperous New Year. GOWRAN PARK An Ideal Christmas Gift, membership to Gowran Park Racing Club which includes access to all 18 race meetings, private

members lounge, reciprocal races days at other tracks. €100 for adults, OAP’s €75 Couples €150 to purchase or find out more details just visit www.gowranpark.ie or call 0567726126 GOWRAN AC Gowran AC are inviting everyone to join them on a festive family jog next Saturday, 23rd December to finish off a fantastic year for the club. Meeting at the green in Gowran between 3-3.15pm, they aim to walk, jog, jingle all the way to the new track, then back to the green for refreshments. Christmas jumpers, Santa hats and festive dress up on the day. CLEERE’S PUB LIVE MUSIC Celtic Storm are playing live on Saturday 23rd and Big John Karaoke on Stephens Day. GRAIGUENAMANAGH GRAIGUENAMANAGH NEWS To submit news items, club events, announcements for those Notes,you can do so by emailing them to graignotes@ outlook.com. Deadline is Saturday 6pm. LOTTO GAA AND SOCCER Numbers drawn on the 7/12/ 2023 were 7,12, 23, 24. There was no winner. The following won €30 each Colleen Kavanagh, Shauna Barcoe, Lynn Dohethy, Dean Doherty , Dean Whelan, Ann O’Brien. And four vouchers value €50 Mark Bolger, (Super Value), Gina Randle, (Day Break), Ellie Purcell. (Barrons), Julie Brown (Daisy Chain), Tickets can be had from any Committee Member. SPLIT THE POT Graig Camogie and Juvenile G A A Clubs Split the pot Winners First prize Joanne Doyle --Rooney €389, 2nd Prize Agnes O’Neill, €50, 3rd Prize George Fitzgerald €25 . GRAIG TIDY TOWN DRAW The winners for Draw on December 14th were First Prize €520 Teresa Conran, Second Prize €50 Jason Meadows ,Third Prize €25 Ellie May & Nellie Ann., Draw takes place at 4pm on Thursdays CLINIC Peter Cleere will have his Clinic on Saturday morning from 9 am at his Office in Main St Graiguenamanagh. RAMBLING HOUSE The Monthly Rambling House Session is on the second Friday of the month in Newtown Hall, where you can enjoy music and song from local artists and also many from the surrounding district’s also join in. The next Session is on Friday January 12th at an earlier time of 7.30pm. LIGHTS SWITCHED ON The swiching on of the street lights in Graiguenamanagh took place on Thursday December 14th, and also the Christmas Tree, so it brightens up the Town for Christmas. MASS TIMES FOR CHRISTMAS IN DUISKE ABBEY Mass times for Duiske Abbey Graiguenasmanagh for Saturday 23rd 7.00 pm and in Skeoughvosteen Church 5.15pm. Christmas Eve Sunday 24th 7 .00pm Duiske Abbey ,and 5.15pm in Skeaghvosteen Church. Christmas Day, Monday 25th 8.00.am Duiske Abbey, 9.30am Skeoughvosteen Church. 11.00am Duiske Abbey. St.Stephen’s Day , Tuesday 11.00am Duiske Abbey. GORESBRIDGE AND PAULSTOWN CHRISTMAS MARKET There was a great turnout for the Christmas Market in Ionad Dara, Goresbridge on Saturday 16th December. Some 20 local artists, crafters and businesses offered products and gift options. BARROW RANGERS CAMOGIE CLUB A Fundraiser in aid of the club, “Christmas Jumper Night” will be held in Blake’s Pub, Paulstown from 8pm on Friday 22nd December. Live music from 8pm. Doors open at 7pm. €5 entry. Raffle and door prize. CHRISTMAS CHURCH SERVICES Christmas Eve Sunday 24th December: Mass at Paulstown at 18.00 and at Goresbridge at 20.00. Christmas Day Monday 25th December: Mass at Paulstown at 11.30 and at Goresbridge at 10.00. Christmas Eve (Church of Ireland): Communion at Shankill Church, Paulstown at 19.30 and at 21.00 in Grange Sylvae (Goresbridge) at 21.00 (including carols) BRIDGE UNITED A Christmas Party Night will be held on Saturday 30th December. Music in Maher’s from 9pm. Tickets are €5 each. If you can’t make it you can put your name on the back and you will be entered into the raffle with lots of great prizes. CHOIR Have you a talent for singing for playing a musical instrument? New adult and children members welcome to the Paulstown Church Choir. Contact the Parochial Office (059 9775180). VOLUNTEERS Would you like to volunteer with Foróige to support young people in Paulstown For more information contact Aidan Gleeson (aidan.gleeson@foroige.ie) CUP-LA FOCAL Would you like to brush up or practice your Irish over a cup of coffee? CUPLA FOCAL… All welcome! Every Friday

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The Kilkenny Observer Friday 22 December 2023

Community & GAA Notes Shauna Barcoe one of the main organisers of the market in Ionad Dara

chatting in Irish over a cuppa. 11am in the Goodly Barrow Museum and Café, Goresbridge on Friday 22nd December and weekly every Friday at 11am in January. Few words or many it doesn’t matter. Contact Ann on 0857529485 for further information. BENNETTSBRIDGE CHRISTMAS IN CHURCH Weekday Masses Wednesday, Thursday and Friday Bennettsbridge 10.30 am Saturday Tullaherin 8.00pm Christmas Eve (Sunday) Bennettsbridge 10.30am 6.00pm. Tullaherine 8.00pm. Christmas Day Bennettsbridge 10.30am CHOIR FOR CHRISTMAS The Parish choir will sing at masses on Christmas Eve and Christmas Day. All welcome! CRIB The crib is now centre stage in the church and looks very well. Thanks to everyone who helped, particularly in the collection of the foliage. PLAYGROUND NEWS Under the Community Recognition Fund, Bennettsbridge playground was awarded funding for equipment upgrade. Installed in recent weeks there is now a new inclusive roundabout, inclusive play panels and bicycle parking stands. Repairs to current pieces have also been made. Thanks to all for your co-operation during these works. Also thanks to all who help to maintain the playground, including, Kilkenny County Council, Bennettsbridge Tidy Towns and Kevin Davey for general maintenance and painting of the benches when needed throughout the year. GATHERING GROUP Anne Marie Mahon created a number of stunning centre pieces for the Christmas table on Wednesday last at the gathering group. Anne-Marie has been coming annually to pass on some valuable tips on flower arranging for Christmas. The pieces were all raffled at the end of the session. Thanks went to Anne-Marie for her support over the years. Trish Shiel was thanked for her work in co-ordinating activities for the group during the year. It is much appreciated. On Wednesday evening the Christmas Dinner was enjoyed in the Hoban Hotel and a Lucky Dip provided some surprises for the ladies. Christmas activities will conclude with coffee morning in Crafted Café. LOTTO Results for 11th December No winner of Jackpot. Numbers, 8, 13, 21, 22. Jackpot now €4,900.00. Consolation Prizes, Pat O’Neill, Ballyreddin, Therese, C/o Crafted, Sadbh O’Mahony, B.B, The Dooley’s, C/o Lucy Dooley, Judy Farrell, Danesfort. MENS SHED The Men’s Shed continues this week and there will be a festive feel to activities for Christmas. A vote of sympathy was passed to John Kilroy, on the death recently of his brother, Thomas Kilroy, renowned poet and author. SYMPATHY Sympathy is extended to John Kilroy and family on the death of John’s brother, Thomas Kilroy, novelist and poet. Tom would be known locally for his book, The Big Chapel, which was set in Callan. CARDS 28th November. First Prize, Colum Tobin/John Shortall ( 13 games ), Second Prize Johno/Marie Reid, Michael Kenneally/ Neddie Walsh, Edmomd Power/Pat Power (10 games ) Table Prize Ger O’Neill/ Jack Kavanagh 5th December. John Drennan/Michael Twomey, Marie/ Johno Reid ( 11 games ) Table Prize Frank O’Neill/Michael Phelan

Results 12th December. First Prize JohnPower/Edmond Power and Michael Kenneally/Lar Gibbons (11 games). Second Prize Toddy Skehan/Marty Hanlon ( 10 games) Table Prize Declan Twomey/Tommy Drennan GAA NEWS HAPPY CHRISTMAS Bennettsbridge GAA would like to wish a very happy and peaceful Christmas to all our members, parishioners and friends. Many thanks also to all who helped the club in any way over the past year. CLUB SHOP New additions of a training top, shorts and tee shirts have been added to the Bennettsbridge O’Neill’s club shop. To access the full range of club gear simply go to the O’Neill’s website and enter Bennettsbridge in the search box. SPLIT THE POT The latest draw was held on December 21st with extra prizes on offer for Christmas. Please see the clubs Facebook page for details of how to enter on line. Envelopes are available in the usual spots around the village. Thanks for the continued support. JOHNSTOWN MASS TIMES FOR CHRISTMAS Saturday 23rd Urlingford 6.30pm, Johnstown 8pm, Sunday 24th Galmoy 10.15am. Christmas Eve Graine 6pm. Crosspatrick 7.30pm, Galmoy 9pm. Christmas Day Johnstown 9.30am, Urlingford 11am. CHRISTMAS OFFERINGS

Christmas Offerings are now due. Blue donation envelopes in aid of the Vincent de Paul for Johnstown /Crosspatrick are available in the porch of both churches. All money collected will be used locally. HAPPY VALLEY TRACTOR RUN The Happy Valley Tractor Run will be held on Sunday December 31st in aid of Cois Nore Cancer Support Centre. Registration 1.30pm, entry €20, with the run departing from Norton Engineering E41D780 at 3pm. A monster raffle and auction will be held on the day. SPA UNITED AFC. Weekend results U15 boys league division 1A Spa 0 Bridge Utd 4, U13 girls league division 1 Stoneyford 0 Spa 2, U13 boys league division 1 Evergreen 2 Spa 0, U13 boys league division 2 Spa 0 Evergreen 0. Also in action were the U12 boys who played a friendly against Stoneyford and the U11 boys against Evergreen, while the U9 boys took on Thomastown at home. Both the U11 girls squads were in action at home against Evergreen and Freebooters. SPA DEVELOPMENT/FENIANS LOTTO The winning numbers 1,6,16,27 four match threes Michael Neary, Martin Murphy, Anne Power c/o Sharkeys and Pauric and Eabha Ryan. YULEFEST CANDLE OF LIGHT CEREMONY At this year’s Candle of Light Ceremony, Johnstown Town Team gave special recognition to all health care assistants in our community in recognition of the great work they do, and also to families who care for their loved ones on a daily basis. A representation from the group had the honour of switching on the lights. The HSE was represented by Tara Hunt and Nicola Barron. Also remembered were the parishioners who died during the year and their families and a red ribbon for each person was put on the Memorial Tree. Of course, the night would’nt be the same without a visit from Santa and he accepted a generous donation for Temple Street Hospital. This event could not have happened without the help of a large number of people, so a special thanks to Town Team, Spa Development, Michael, Ned, Caroline, Gail, Peg , Nora, Peter, Tom, Keith, Brendan, Anthony, John, Sean, Andy, Tom, Dan, Brian, St. Mary’s Hall Committee., Jason, Ray, Mattie, Breda,Kilkenny Co.Co and of course Santa. CHRISTMAS GREETINGS... Christmas Greetings to all the readers of the Johnstown Notes and a Happy and Healthy New Year to all both near and far away. URLINGFORD TRACTOR AND TRUCK RUN The Happy Valley Tractor and Truck Run will be held on Sunday December 31st, in aid of Cois Nore Cancer Support Centre, Kilkenny. Registration will be held at 1.30pm (entry €20) with the run departing from Norton Engineering E41 D780 at 3pm. A monster auction and raffle will be held on the day. Your support would be greatly appreciated. EMERALDS URLINGFORD AND GRAINE LOTTO Decemeber 11th prize fund was €15,900. Jackpot: €13,900. Numbers drawn: 1, 6, 7, 19, bonus no 28. No winner and three match three winners: Hyacinth Roche, Bridget Webster cc, Bridget Webster. Five lucky dips of €20 each: B. Ahern,

Derek Lyng (left) Kilkenny GAA manager and Dr. Bill Cuddihy promoting the Happy Valley Tractor and Truck Run in aid of Cois Nore Cancer Support Centre, Kilkenny. The event takes place on December 31

Paul and Shane Moloney, Statia Broderick, Caroline Moriarty, The Tuesday Club. Promoters prize: Powers. SET DANCING In Graine Hall every Tuesday at 8.30pm. Live music, sets called by Paddy Martin. All are welcome. Contact Phil Fogarty 086 8638782; Mary Webster 087 7936113. URLINGFORD ARMS SPLIT THE POT This week’s winner of Split the Pot is Aoife Garrett who will receive €671. Congrats Aoife on behalf of Urlingford Arms Darts Club. Tickets €2 on sale in participating businesses in town. Thanks to everyone for their continued support. On Christmas Eve the draw will take place at the earlier time of 4pm. All the clubs that have benefited thoughout the year have come together and are putting up €1,000 for the Christmas draw. Along with the main draw there will be four more draws of €250 each which will give every entrant five chances of winning a minimum of €250. So enter next week for one in 5 chance of winning at least €250. Revolut 085 1075586 for Urlingford Arms Darts Club. Be in it to win it! GRAINE CARDS Graine progressive 25 card game every Wednesday night at 8.15pm in Graine hall. All are welcome. URLINGFORD / GRAINE DEFIBRILLATOR GROUP In case of emergency, call: 085 2726396. URLINGFORD NEWS Anyone wishing to submit news items, club events, announcements etc can do so by emailing urlingfordnotes@ gmail.com. If you have any photos you wish to include, please forward them to the email address. GORTNAHOE GLENGOOLE

Christmas Centrepiece created by Anne Marie Mahon

EUCHARISTIC ADORATION Glengoole Wednesday 10am to 2pm, Gortnahoe Thursday 10am to 1pm CHRISTMAS MASS TIMES Mass times for the Christmas period are as follow, Christmas Eve 24th Glengoole at 6pm and Gortnahoe at 8pm, Christmas Day Gortnahoe at 10.30am. GORTNAHOE COMMUNITY HALL CHRISTMAS DRAW The Hall committee would like to thank everyone who supported the Christmas Draw last Sunday in aid of the Community Hall, Gortnahoe. The support of each household in the Parish for the purchase of tickets for the Christmas Draw exceeded all expectations. We also appreciated the donations from the local businesses and local households who gave items to make up the hampers and prizes for the Christmas Raffle and to Margaret Barnaville for the Christmas cake. A sincere thanks to everyone who helped in any way to make the draw a success. A Donation was presented to the local St Vincent de Paul after the Draw on Sunday. Results of the Christmas Draw: 1st Prize - Kevin Slattery, Sallybog. 2nd Prize - Denis Large, Urard. 3rd Prize - Caroline Cahill, Gortnahoe .4th Prize - Henry Cooke, Bawnlea. 5th Prize- Martin Campion, Gortnahoe. 6th Prize- Mary White, Ballysloe. 7th Prize - Henry Cooke, Bawnlea. 8th Prize - Billy Costello, c/o Joan Costello, Lisduff. 9th Prize - Susan Corbett, Gortnahoe. 10th PrizeMary Phelan, Inchorourke. 11th Prize- Iris Cooke, Bawnlea. 12th Prize - Chloe Guilband, c/o Christine Barnaville, Urard. 13th Prize - Siobhan Norton, Coole. 14th Prize - Chris

We welcome all GAA Club and Community notes for publication in The Kilkenny Observer email to sales@kilkennyobserver.ie


The Kilkenny Observer Friday 22 December 2023

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Community & GAA Notes Pembroke, Graine . 15th Prize - Liz Mullally, Grange . 16th Prize - Emma Kelly, Grange . 17th Prize - Breda Hickey, Urard . 18th Prize - Aidan Moloney, Boulick. 19th Prize - Cathal O’Meara, Graigue. 20th Prize - Marian Fogarty, Graigue. 21st Prize - Michael Campion, Graigue. 22nd Prize - Pat Rochford, Fennor. 23rd Prize - Thomas & Michael O’Mahony, Grange. 24th Prize - Jimmy Meighan, Foilacamin . 25th Prize - Breda Hickey, Urard . 26th Prize - Kim Roberts, Gortnahoe . 27th Prize - Katrina Rochford, Fennor . 28th Prize - Seamus Dunne Boulick . 29th Prize - Lilly Stokes, Urlingford . 30th Prize - David Nolan, Graigue. 31st Prize - Emily O’Shea, Kilkenny TUESDAY BRIDGE Bridge is being played each Tuesday night in Gortnahoe Hall at 7.30pm. If you would like to join or find out more information please contact this number 089 4349106 GORTNAHOE BINGO Bingo continues this Saturday evening 23rd at the earlier time of 4.00pm with doors opening from 3.00pm and will continue each Saturday evening at the same time. Over €2,660 in prize money on offer including a special €500 game. There is hampers and other prizes on the split the pot. SPLIT THE POT Congratulations to last weekend’s winner Geraldine Byrne, The Commons, who won €196 in the Split the Pot draw. Envelopes are available at the usual outlets. Split the Pot for the month of December will be in support of The Gortnahoe Christmas lights. The draw takes place each Sunday at 12pm in Gortnahoe Hall. Your support would be appreciated ELDERCARE SERVICE Eldercare services through MFRC Glengoole will include the following: meals on wheels deliveries every Tuesday and Thursday, social group every Wednesday 1-3pm,includes soup, dinner & entertainment, laundry service, senior alert scheme for Gortnahoe Glengoole area, dementia cafe 1st Tuesday of each month 11.30-1pm, social group every Tuesday at 11am in the Old School House, The Commons. For further information on any of the above please contact Alice Teehan 052-9157992 SYMPATHY NOTICE Deepest sympathy to the Bartley family, Graigue on the death of their aunt Nellie Maher, nee Bartley in London. Also to the Lawlor family, Urard on the death of their sister Geraldine Dunne, Monakeeba, Thurles. To the McCormack family, Boulick on the death of their brother John Joe McCormack, Urlingford. May they all rest in peace. BALLYRAGGET BALLYOUSKILL NEW YEAR It’s all systems go for New Years Eve 2023, with plans well advanced. Trucks will gather in Cillin Hill, Kilkenny, Registration from 1.30 p.m. with departure scheduled for 4.30 p.m. The route is Castlecomer, Newtown Cross, Abbeyleix, Durrow and finishing in Ballyragget. Tractors gather in Hollands Yard, Ballyragget at 1.30 p.m. and depart simultaneously at 4.30 p.m. This year there will be just one route Conahy, Castlecomer, 7 Cross Roads, Ballymartin, Ballyouskill, and again finishing in Ballyragget. Refreshments including hot food will be served at both Registration points. To date the event has been fortunate with fine weather which facilitates the darkest of countryside places being lit up and the convoys are visible for miles and miles. What better way to end the year and start 2024 than by “Lighting up the Night” because the motto of the North Kilkenny Truck and Tractor Run is “Where there is light there is hope.” Cabaret to conclude proceedings in the Cearnog, Ballyragget. Music from 9 p.m. SENIOR CITIZENS CHRISTMAS PARTY Many thanks to all who supported and attended the annual Christmas party held on 12th December. To those who sold and bought raffle tickets for the beautiful hamper, the proceeds from which, together with those from the Craft Fair, were split jointly between our fund and that of the Christmas Tree/Christmas Lights committee. To those who participated in and supported that Craft Fair and also The Wednesday Morning Club for their cake and craft fair. To the committees of the weekly bingo and progressive 25 cards, both of whom gave us donations. To M and A Coaches who very kindly sponsored the bus to and from Durrow.

Naomh Brid celebrates 25 years with the Holland family

To the management and staff of The Credit Union for their cooperation in taking the names and attendee contributions. To the management and staff of Supervalu for a beautiful hamper together with logistical help prior to and on the day of the party. One of the most touching contributions came from our local Scout Group. The children, together with their adult leaders, donated a large amount of non- perishable goods, from which we made up three hampers for spot prizes at the party. To Seosamh and his team at The Castle Arms Hotel, for a warm welcome and great service. A total of 120 dinners were served to a very appreciative crowd, comprising those from Ballyragget and Lisdowney parishes. As was the case last year, we were delighted to welcome a small group from Ballinakill parish also. Each group pays its own way, while sharing the cost of the band, beverages and the many raffle prizes. The fundraising in advance of the party meant that, in addition to supplementing each attendee to the tune of €13, we were in a position to distribute some gifts within our parish, to people who may have attended our party previously and were unable to do so this year. We also sent messages of condolence and goodwill to a number of people. We hope we reached all appropriately. If there is anyone we missed, please accept our apologies and be assured of our prayers. We have lit candles for all your intentions. A note of our Income and Expenditure is posted in the church porches and in the Credit Union CHRISTMAS MASS TIMES Christmas Eve Ballyouskill 6.30 Ballyragget 9pm Christmas morning Ballyragget 10.30. Fr. Eamon would like to wish you all a very happy and joyous Christmas and a prosperous new year and many thanks for all your help and kindness in 2023. NAOMH BRID CAMOGIE CELLEBRATE 25 YEARS On Sunday morning there was a bench unveiled in honour of the clubs 25 years and in memory of one of its founding members Marie Holland. The bench was blessed by Fr O Gorman and Mary Jacob paid tribute to the founders and all who helped in the club over the years as it has grown from strength to strength. CONAHY CHRISTMAS MASS TIMES The following are the mass times for Conahy and Jenkinstown Church for the Christmas period: Saturday, December 23rd – 8.00 p.m. in Jenkinstown Church; Sunday, December 24th – 11.30 a.m. in Conahy Church, 6.00 p.m. in Conahy Church (Children’s Mass), 8.00 p.m. in Jenkinstown Church; Monday, December 25th – 9.30 a.m. in Jenkinstown Church, 11.00 in Conahy Church. DEVELOPMENT FUNDRAISER Community members are asked to continue to support the Conahy Shamrocks GAA Club’s Development fundraiser draw. Tickets for the draw will be €25 each, or three for €65, or five for €100, with the winner with the winner receiving a new Hyundai Tucson car or €35,000 in cash. Tickets are available from promoters locally, and a website that will allow the purchase of tickets for the draw is available on www.winahyundaituscon.ie. The draw is also actively being promoted on social media platforms. All support would be greatly appreciated for what will be a development to benefit both young and old in the community. CLUB LOTTO The numbers drawn in the Conahy Shamrocks GAA Club Lotto were 6, 14 and 27. Congratulations to Kieran and Kathryn Cuddihy who matched all three numbers and won the €2,000 jackpot. The promoters’ prize winners were Margaret Buggy, Seamus Óg Brennan and John McGrath. This week’s jackpot now returns to €1,000 for this week, along with a special Christmas draw of 10 winners of €75 each. Please continue to support the GAA Lotto. KILMANAGH ANNUAL RINGS TOURNAMENT The Annual John Dermody Memorial Ring Tournament was held in Ryan’s Bar, Kilmanagh on Friday, 9th December where a total of 37 players competed. Players representing The Pound, Ballycallan and Ryan’s Bar, Kilmanagh all

attended. The list of players who took part on the night were as follows: Jason Dermody, Tom McGrath, Dave O’Neill, Bob Murphy, Niall Millea, Sean Ryan, Ger Ronan, Niall Butler, Johnny Ronan, James Power, Finn Lanigan, Adrian Ronan, Mark Kavanagh, Adrian Burke, Sean Millea, Alan O’Shea, James Ryall, Tommy Dermody, Aiden Brett, Francis Maher, Vinny Dunne, Justin Dermody, Mick Cashin, Tommy Ronan, Dermot Ryall, Cathal Dermody, Tom Dunphy, Michael Dermody, James Burke, Brendan Hayes, Eddie Brennan, Dick Lanigan, Tommy Manogue, John Flamson, Brian Doheny, Michael Teehan and Billy Ryan. The 1st semi final pairing was made up of Bob Murphy, Niall Millea and Ger Ronan who were defeated by Brian Doheny, Michael Teehan and Billy Ryan. The 2nd semi final saw James Burke, Brendan Hayes and Eddie Brennan overcome Mick Cashin, Tommy Ronan and Dermot Ryall. The final was a thrilling encounter which saw Brian Doheny, Michael Teehan and Billy Ryan triumph over James Burke, Brendan Hayes and Eddie Brennan. The Highest Score competition saw Brian Doheny take the honours here with a fantastic score of 63 after defeating Niall Millea in a throw off. Highest Checkout went to Aiden Brett who superbly finished a tight game with 13 and 1. The Dermody Family would like to thank all those who competed and attended this special night, the 19th year of this tournament. A massive thanks to all who arranged teams to travel on the night, without these people the night would not have been a big success. They would also like to thank the Ryan family for their hospitality on the night and Vaughan’s Takeaway who supplied the food. A big thank you to all the board markers on the night and to Francis Maher who produced the magnificent trophies for the winners and the runners up. The night ended with the Shield being presented to the Captain of the winners’ team, Brian Doheny. MOUNT CARMEL DRAW - DECEMBER Results of the Mount Carmel December draw were as follows: €200 Bridget Comerford, Ballycallan; €100 Denis O Leary, Minauns; €30 Bernie O Neill, Dairyhill; €30 Pierce and Maria Landy, Windgap; €30 Avely and Caith Barry, C/O E Maher; €30 Ann Coffey, Collins Park; €30 Pauline Culleton, Windgap; €30 Trish O Brien, Callan; €30 Eamonn Wallace, Ballyhall; €30 Matt Doran, Kilmoganny; €30 Joe and Eve Murphy, Lisdowney; €30 Elaine Burke, Poulacapple. Promoters’ prizes went to: €15 Frank McKenna; €15 Nancy Power; €15 Mona Lyons. Results of the Residents Christmas Draw were: €20 Margaret Murray; €20 Damian and Dan Bradshaw; €20 Michael and Bernadette O Neill. YOUR COMMUNITY NEEDS YOU You can make a difference. Foróige want to start a youth club in your area and we need adult volunteer leaders and young people members for that club. A youth club has huge positive benefits to young people in the community, and volunteering offers great rewards to the adults involved. For more information, please contact Aidan Gleeson 0860674485; Aidan.gleeson@foroige.ie PARISH CALENDAR The Christmas Parish Calendar with useful information and contact numbers is available now in the churches. LOTTO CHRISTMAS DRAW Graigue Ballycallan GAA, St. Brigid’s Camogie Club and Ballycallan Parish will hold their Lotto Christmas Draw on Friday 22nd December in The Pound at 10pm. Door prizes and extra prizes on the night. CHARITY SOCCER MATCH River Rangers AFC will hold their Annual Charity Soccer Match on St Stephen’s Day (Tuesday, 26th) at 11:00am at the Fair Green (Freebooters), Kilkenny, R95 TWY6. Always a great morning to meet up with family and friends while also raising money for a local charity. FUNDRAISER APPEAL Coláiste Abhainn Rí, Callan, is proud to announce our participation in the Kenya Immersion Programme 2024. During the Easter holidays, our teachers and students will spend a week working with school children in Kenya. To support this cause, we will be collecting donations after mass on the weekend of December 23rd (Sat 6.30pm) and 24th. (Sun 9am and 10:15am). The funds raised will directly benefit the Kenyan school. As a token of our appreciation, holly bunches will be distributed to mass goers. Thank you for your generous support – Emma Marnell and Molly Conroy MOUNT CARMEL DRAW Results of the November Mount Carmel draw were : €200 Marie Gorey, Burnchurch; €100 Pat Comerford, UK; €30 Elizabeth Grace, Coolalong; €30 Trish Finnegan Dunnamaggin; €30 to the following - Kevin Moore, Greenhills; Danny O Shea, Kiltalaghan; Mary Butler, Great Oak; John Paul Phelan; Sally Brett, Mount Carmel; Bernadette Herity, Caherleske; Philip Comerford, Kilbride and Heidi Power, Green St. Promoters’ prizes went to Tom Maher, Veronica Robinson and Tom O’Shea. KILMANAGH NOTES Anyone wishing to submit news items, events, announcements etc. can do so by email only to elanigan18@gmail. com. If you have any photos that you would like included, please send as an attachment. MILL FAMILY RESOURCE CENTRE Christmas Closing Hours: The Centre will be closing on

Wednesday, December 20 at 1pm and reopening at 9am on January 8, 2024. Counselling Services: Our low cost counselling services, includes one-to-one, adult, teens and children’s play therapy. Counselling Provided: Bereavement, stress, anxiety and depression, drug & substance and gambling addictions. Play therapy is now also available. Age 5 years and upwards. Please contact Sue for more information or to make an appointment. Senior Alert: If you need to apply for a personal alarm, please contact Sue or Josephine. Defibrillator: Please note that there is a defibrillator located in the Mill Family Resource Centre if and when it may be required. Appeal for Clothes Donations: Any clothes donations would be greatly appreciated in aid of our counselling/ play therapy services. Donations can be left into the Centre, please call before dropping off. Jobs – Training Board: We have a Jobs Board here at the Centre, feel free to call in and take a look, we also offer help and support with CV’s and cover letters if required. Art Classes and Computer Classes for 2024: We will have art and computer classes at the Centre commencing in January 2024. Dates to follow. Contact number for the Centre 056 8838466. HUGGINSTOWN NEWMARKET STONEYFORD MASS TIMES Christmas Saturday 23th. December. In Stoneyford Church at 6.30p.m. In Hugginstown Church at 8.00p.m. Sunday 24th. December, In Stoneyford Church at 5.30p.m. In Hugginstown Church at 7.00p.m. Monday 25th. December: In Stoneyford Church at 10.00a.m: In Hugginstown Church at 11.00a.m. Many of the children will be taking an active part on Sunday 24th.They will be involved with the Choirs, Readings, Prayers, Gifts, Servers etc. All children are invited to bring a little gift for other children who are in need. We ask parents to come with their children and to join in the singing of the Christmas Carols and to celebrate as family. Aghaviller Parish:Hugginstown: Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday and Friday at 9.30a.m. Vigil - Saturday 23rd. at 8.00p.m. Stoneyford: Wednesday 20th. at 7.00p.m. Vigil - Saturday 23rd. at 6.30p.m. Friday 22nd. Visitation with Holy Communion will take place at the usual times on Friday. Please let us know if you would like to receive Holy Communion in your home for Christmas or at any other time. PRAY FOR Ellen McKean nee Aylward, Cabinteely and late of Boolyglass. Mary and Richard Burke, Croan. Mass in Hugginstown Church on Saturday 23rd. December at 8.00p.m. ROTA Rota for next week-end: 23rd. December 2023 (Fourth Sunday of Advent). Readers, Stoneyford: Saturday 6.30p.m. Sheila Lennon. Hugginstown: Saturday 8.00p.m. Deirdre Rohan. Eucharistic Ministers: Stoneyford: Saturday 6.30p.m. Bernie Grace. Hugginstown: Saturday 8.00p.m. Mary Murphy. SAFEGUARDING CONTACTS Diocesan Designated Liaison Person: Ms. Ailish Higgins Tel: 087 100 0232. Aghaviller Parish Representatives are: Deirdre Rohan and Catherina Roche. CHRISTMAS OFFERINGS Envelopes for your Christmas Offerings 2023 may be collected in the Church Porch, and your contributions may be handed in during the coming weeks: or you may wish to donate directly – Use IBAN: IE19 AIBK 9330 9000 0561 20 (BIC: AIBKIE2D). Many thanks for all your support and contributions during the past year. Roman Catholic Diocese and Parishes of Ossory – Registered Charity No. 20015831 LOTTO Aghaviller Parish and Carrickshock G. A. A. Draw: Monday 11th. December 2023 Numbers: 10; 11; 02; 21. One Winner First 3 Numbers Drawn. No Jackpot Winner: €500.00. Winner: Harry Butler, c/o Padraig Crowley. €25.00 Seller of Winning Ticket: Padraig Crowley. 3 x €15.00 (Sellers): Eilis Rohan; Jimmy Sheehan; John Power. THE CHAPTER HOUSE BOOKSHOP The Chapter House Bookshop at St. Mary’s Cathedral, will be open 5 Days a week (Monday to Friday) until Christmas. The Shop has a great selection of Nativity Cribs, Christmas Cards, Calendars and Diaries for 2024, also a wide selection of Bibles, Liturgical and spiritual Books. The Bookshop also has a wide selection of Mass Cards and Religious Gifts. SOUTH KILKENNY HISTORICAL SOCIETY Lá an Dreoilín (Wren Day) event will be held on Tuesday, December 26th. at Mullinavat Parish Hall and Church Car Park. Starting time 11.00a.m. All welcome. THE KILKENNY OBSERVER The Management and hard working Staff at the The Kilkenny Observer would like to wish all our readers a Very Happy and Healthy Holiday, a Joyous Christmas and a Prosperous New Year. We will be back on January 5th 2024 with your favourite Newspaper.

We welcome all GAA Club and Community notes for publication in The Kilkenny Observer email to sales@kilkennyobserver.ie


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The Kilkenny Observer Friday 22 December 2023

Sporting review of the year Eoin Everard

SPORTIN REVIEW THE YEA

Eoin Murphy

2023

Thomas O'Connor

Lucy Coogan

Gavan Holohan

Mia Griffin


The Kilkenny Observer Friday 22 December 2023

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Sporting review of the year

NG OF AR

Dicksboro Camogie

Hannah Kehoe and Maebh Richardson

Maria Godden

Kilkenny Sport Focus By Michael O’Leary

Mark Power

It was a busy year for Kilkenny sporting teams and competitors at Local, National and International with a host of Individuals competing for Ireland across a variety of Sports. The GAA review of the year will get plenty of coverage elsewhere across various platforms, but in summary Kilkenny Teams began the year with All-Ireland wins for Ballyhale Shamrocks, St. Kierans College on St. Patricks Day along with double All-Ireland glory for Loreto Kilkenny who won Senior and Jumior All-Ireland titles. As we moved from Spring to Summer, attention turned to the Inter-County season where the highlight for new Kilkenny Senior Manager Derek Lyng was Cillian Buckley's last gasp dramatic injury-time goal against Henry Shefflin's Galway to win an absorbing Leinster Final. Kilkenny defeated Clare by 3 points in a closely fought Semi-Final where Eoin Murphy pulled off a most miracoulous save that proved most decisive, but a strong powerful 2nd half performance in The AllIreland Final saw Limerick retain the All-Ireland to win 4-in-a-row. Meanwhile, The Kilkenny Footballers suffered heartbreak when a brace of late points saw New York snatch the All-Ireland WP Mullins Junior

Final, while Kilkenny Senior Camogie girls under new manager Peter "Chap" Cleere will be looking to bounce back in 2024 from a disappointing 2023 where they failed to reach an All-Ireland for The first time since 2012. From August onwards attention turned to The Club Championships as O'Loughlin Gaels, Thomastown and Tullogher-Rosbercon won The Senior, Intermediate and Junior Championships respectively,and now all three teams are in pursuit of All-Ireland glory. Dicksboro have become the first Club in Kilkenny since three-in-a-row winning St. Lachtains Freshford (2004-2006) to have not only reached but have won an All-Ireland Senior Camogie Club Final, having won County and Leinster titles, and also winning their All-Ireland Semi-Final against Loughgiel Shamrocks. Elsewhere, and across the pond Two Kilkenny Soccer players who had very good years were Gavan Holohan with Grimbsy Town and also Tullogher native Thomas O'Connor with Wrexham. Gavan scored two penalities as League Two outfit Grimbsy Town shocked Premier League Relegated outfit Southampton 2-1 to qualify for a 1st FA Cup Quarter-Final since 1939, while Thomas O'Connor played a key role in helping Wrexham get promoted from Non-League Football to return to The Football League as they compete in League Two. He also helped The Welsh Club reach The last 32 of The FA Cup as they lost out to Sheffield United following a replay after having scored in the drawn match. Thomas and Gavan have clashed against one another in a League Two game in mid-September, with The Tullogher native enjoying bragging rights as Wrexham ran out 3-0 winners against Grimbsy Town. Closer to home, Kilkenny Rugby Club reached The Provincial Towns Cup Final but lost out to a very strong Tullow outfit. One of the highlights of the year came on St. Patricks Day when The Willie Mullins trained Galopin Des Champs won The Cheltenham Gold Cup. The Champion Trainer also trained Energumene to win a 2nd consecutive Queen Mother Champion, but unfortunately their will be no three-in-row next March as he has been ruled out for the season. Meanwhile, Willie's nephew Danny Mullins celebrated a milestone win in late November in Tramore as he rode the 500th victory of his career on Irish soil in which their was a feature piece in last weeks Kilkenny Observer. Maebh Richardson and Hannah Kehoe from The Kilkenny City Harriers Club competed for Ireland recently at The European Cross Country Championships in Brussels, Belgium, while The National Championships in Gowran in November was the first time since 1984 that The National Seniors were held in County Kilkenny when Kilmacow hosted the event 39 years ago. It was a memorable Nationals for Kilkenny City Harriers, as there were historic Gold Medals for both The Junior Ladies and Senior Mens who were both winning The Team events for the very first time in the National Senior Cross Country. The Junior Ladies led by Maebh and Hannah won Team Gold, while they also have a trip to Portugal to look forward to in February as the Kilkenny City Harriers reward for winning Team Gold is a place in The European Club Cross Country Championships. The Senior Mens Team were also winning Team Gold in The National Seniors for the very first time, as very strong performances in particular from Peter Lynch, Eoin Everard, Cathal O'Reilly and long serving Brian Maher led The Harriers to The Gold Medal following a countback.

That was the first time since 1999 that a Club outside Dublin won The Senior Mens Team Gold Medal. Eoin Everard had a year to remember and over the past 12 months he won Gold Medals in both The European and World Masters Championships, and also won The County Senior Cross Championships in Tullogher, while Brian Maher is still going strong to this day judging by his Third place finish in The County Senior Cross Country Championships. Meanwhile, Kilkenny City Harriers celebrated 70 years in exsistence with a Gala night in Langton. In Boxing, it was a most successful year for Marble City Head Coach Garry Kehoe who enjoyed European and World Championship glory as Coach with The Ireland Team. In August, at The European Schoolboy/Schoolgirl Championships in Maribor, Slovenia, he helped deliver Team Ireland's best ever finish in the overall medals table, finishing as the third best team with; three gold, one silver and seven bronze medals, while most recently he was Coach with The Ireland Team that returned home from the World Junior Championships in Yerevan, Armenia, with two World Champions and a World bronze medalist. Glenmore native Mia Griffin has been a regular on The World Tour throughout 2023, and in October she booked her place to next years Olympics in Paris by finishing 3rd in a road race in China. Mia is almost certain to concentrate on races in The Velodrome in Paris as it will clash with the road events. She managed to make it home in September for The Ras Na Mban in Kilkenny, where she secured stage victories in both Callan and Tramore in glorious Summer conditions. Kilkenny Golfer Mark Power is now concentrating on his professional career following a highly successful amateur career, where his final appearance as an amateur was in The Walker Cup where despite the disappointment of losing to The US, he performed superbly winning three of his four matches. One of the highlights of the year was the success of The Irish Showjumpers at The European Championships in Gorla Minore in Italy in July, and that was highlighted by the wonderful success at where their was plenty of Gold Medals won by Kilkenny competitors. Seamus Hughes Kennedy won both Individual nad Team Gold in The Young Riders Competition aboard ESI Rocky, while The Brennans from Gowran, Brothers Eoin and Timmy along with their cousin James were part of The Ireland Team that won Gold in The Junior competition. Along with the rest of the successful Irish Squad, they were Paraded in front of a packed attendance at the recent Dublin Horse Show in The RDS just before The start of The Puissance. Maria Godden from Callan is a brilliant young talent who recently competed at The European Shortcourse Swimming Championships in Bucharest, Romania and in February (early 2024) she will be the first from Kilkenny Swimming Club to compete at a World Championships as she will represent Ireland in Doha in Qatar. Lucy Coogan is another brilliant young talent who is on a Sports Scholarship stateside, and during the summer she was part of The Ireland Team that reached The Quarter-Final of The European Championships where they defeated host nation Romania. So many of The Sporting competitors from across the county were busy competing around the World throughout the year, and most if not all are taking a well earned break to enjoy The Festive season to recharge the batteries before getting prepared for 2024. NOLLAIG SHONA AGAIBH GO LEIR!


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The Kilkenny Observer Friday 22 December 2023

Camogie - Review

Sport By Aoife Lanigan Dicksboro 0-18 Sarsfields (Galway) 1-11 A masterclass of shooting by Aoife Prendergast and a brilliant all-round team display that included some monumental contributions by Kirsty Maher, Jane Cass, Katie Byrne, Amy Clifford, Asha McHardy, Orla Hanrick and substitute Lucinda Gahan were some of the reasons Dicksboro secured a first AIB All Ireland Senior Club Camogie Title at Croke Park last Sunday evening and Kilkenny’s first Senior Club All Ireland win since St Lachtains (Freshford) won three in a row in 2004, 2005 & 2006 In the process, they ended Sarsfields three in a row dream. Dicksboro settled well, despite this being their first appearance at this level Orlaith McGrath opened the scoring with a point from play for Sarsfields. But from the resulting puckout, Aoife Prendergast scored a great point from play to level matters. Then Prendergast converted a free before Rachel Murray equalised again. By the 15th minute, it was level 0-4 a piece with Prendergast (f) and Orla Hanrick adding points for the Boro and Caoimhe Kelly (f) and Siobhan McGrath (f) adding the points for Sarsfields Aoife Prendergast (f) and Aobha O’Gorman pushed the Boro ahead by two points before Caoimhe Kelly added a point for Sarsfields One of the standout moments of the match, was when the Boro’s Katie Byrne reacted quickest to a breaking ball out of a ruck and ran from her own 21m line to the opposition 21m line and laid off a handpass to Jenny Clifford who popped over a super point. Rachel Dowling added another point for the Boro after Aoife Prendergast laid off a neat pass to her. This put the Boro 0-8 to 0-5 ahead after 23 minutes Siobhan McGrath tagged a point on for Sarsfields. In the 25th minute, Sarsfields got in for a goal after the McGrath sisters combined, Orlaith and Siobhan for the latter to get the goal, to put them ahead by a point but the Boro didn’t panic and they finished out the first half scoring with points from Asha McHardy and Orla Hanrick to leave the interval score 0-10 to 1-6 in favour of the Kilkenny side On the resumption of play, Siobhan McGrath equalised for Sarsfields. Prendergast replied after a wonderful display of power and pace from McHardy drew the defensive cover The Galway side struck the next three scores. Siobhan McGrath with a good point followed by two more excellent efforts by Shannon Corcoran and Sarah Spellman The latter point arrived in the 43rd

Champions of Ireland! All pics courtesy of Inpho

Dicksboro dethrone holders to claim historic title

minute and it would be Sarsfields last score until Klara Donohoe drove over in the fourth minute of injury time The key for Dicksboro was that they hung in through the whirlwind that threatened to overcome them and

then, gradually, clawed their way to parity before re-asserting their dominance Lucinda Gahan was introduced for the Boro in the 44th minute and what a difference she made Prendergast stopped the rot from a free in the 48th minute. This was the

start of a run of seven straight points that ultimately secured the Bill and Agnes O’Carroll Cup Ciara O’Shea hit the leveller after a lovely handpass from Lucinda Gahan and then it was Aoife Prendergast and Amy Clifford doing the damage, as Dicksboro began

to come out of more rucks with the sliotar, pin Sarsfields back and create more situations that ended with players in space Prendergast added two points from frees and Amy Clifford added another point for the Boro, to put them five points ahead


The Kilkenny Observer Friday 22 December 2023

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Camogie - Review

Klara Donohoe pointed for Sarsfields in the 63rd minute. Heading towards the final whistle, Sarsfields were awarded a 20m free, Centre Back Maria Cooney came forward to take it and Kirsty Maher had to dive full length to deny her. That was the game’s last act though and for Dicksboro the celebrations could begin Scorers – Dicksboro – Aoife Prendergast 0-9 (7f), Orla Hanrick, Amy Clifford 0-2 each, Aobha O’Gorman, Jenny Clifford, Rachel Dowling, Asha McHardy, Ciara O’Shea 0-1 each Scorers - Sarsfields – Siobhan McGrath 1-4 (2f ), Caoimhe Kelly 0-2 (2f ), Orlaith McGrath, Rachel Murray, Shannon Corcoran, Sarah Spelman, Kiera Donohoe 0-1 each

Dicksboro – Kirsty Maher, Jane Cass, Tara Clifford, Katie Byrne, Niamh Phelan, Caoimhe Dowling, Ciara Phelan, Ciara O’Shea, Aobha O’Gorman, Asha McHardy, Amy Clifford, Rachel Dowling, Aoife Prendergast, Orla Hanrick, Jenny Clifford (Capt) Subs – Lucinda Gahan for Rachel Dowling, Rose Kelly for Orla Hanrick, Niamh O’Donoghue for Ciara O’Shea, Tara McGrath for Amy Clifford, Danielle Kenny, Bronagh Doheny, Caoimhe Carroll, Angela Carroll, Aisling Browne, Sarah O’Gorman, Orlaith Moore, Emer Phelan, Becky Peters, Sinead Carroll, Eva Healy, Issey Carroll, Isabel Roberts, Rachel Egan, Isabelle Fahy, Isabelle Egan, Kate O’Neill, Libby Carroll Sarsfields – Laura Glynn, Reitseal Kelly, Laura Ward (Capt), Kate Gallagher, Tara Kenny, Maria Cooney, Joanne Daly, Clodagh McGrath, Sarah Spellman, Klara Donohoe, Orlaith McGrath, Rachel Murray, Shannon Corcoran, Siobhan McGrath, Caoimhe Kelly Subs – Cora Kenny for Caoimhe Kelly, Ciara McGrath, Cliona Cahalan, Aoibhe Deeley, Ciara Kyne, Aisling Dillon, Rachel Murphy, Ciara Ward, Elysia Cox, Jasmine Scully, Melissa McDonnell, Bronagh Deeley, Emily Dillon, Erica Leslie, Sheena Warde, Laoise McGrath, Niamh McGrath.


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The Kilkenny Observer Friday 22 December 2023

kilkennyobserver.ie

Hurling - Review

Sport BY NIALL SHERRY SPORTS EDITOR SPORTSEDITOR@KILKENNYOBSERVER.IE

AIB All-Ireland Senior Club Hurling Championship Semi-Final O’Loughlin Gaels 1-17 Ruairí Óg Cushendall 1-16 Croke Park, Referee: Michael Kennedy

Fogarty fires O’Loughlin’s to final showdown!

All-Ireland club finalists O’Loughlin Gaels! They went to the well yet again and delivered following a pulsating encounter at Pairc Tailteann to crush the dreams of Ruairí Óg’s Cushendall. In truth, this game could have gone either way, Brian Hogan’s men created multiple goal chances but converted just one, while the Ulster champions notched several uncharacteristic wides and dropped a few other efforts short during a second half that they took a 3-point lead into. With two minutes of additional time remaining, young Loughs wing-back, David Fogarty struck over a stunning longrange effort from tight to the sideline to nudge his side in front and the Kilkenny and Leinster champions held on to secure their place in the show piece decider at Croker next month where they will face-off against St Thomas’s who got the better of Ballygunner. Brian Delargy’s Jordan Molloy charges started Attemps to the encounter prevent Ryan Mc superbly Cambridge from and showed driving forward unbelievable hunger and desire as they stunned the St Johns Park outfit from the throw-in. Niall McCormack surged forward and was fouled by Huw Lawlor which Match winner David Fogarty gets in a Timely presented Neil McManus with an tackle on Joseph Mc Loughlin early opportunity to settle his sides nerves and the former county man popped the ball over for his first score break out of defence and rising star Paddy Deegan and struck over a of the day inside two minutes. Ronan Joseph McLaughlin sprinted clear of monstrous score from way out the McAteer then pointed from play the trailing defenders before striking field before O’Loughlin’s skipper, before midfield powerhouse Ryan a fierce shot into the ground and Mark Bergin converted a 21-yard free McCambridge collected possession past the helpless Stephen Murphy to get the scoreboard moving for the from the restart and punished the in the Loughs goal. Five minutes Kilkenny side. The next couple of Noresiders with another quickfire gone in Navan, Cushendall were minutes illustrated the men from the score. in dreamland, leading the match North’s hunger and determination as A blistering start by the glens men favourites 1-3 to no score. they rattled into every challenge and was about to get even better. The Ruairí Óg’s centre-back Eoghan swarmed around their opponents hunting maroon clad men turnedCampbell then channeled his inner sensing blood. Step forward Eoghan over Mikey Butler as attempted to

Bergin leads side to narrow win over ‘Dall

Campbell who rifled over another lovely score which was added to by an accurate placed ball from well inside how own half by talisman McManus. Conor Heary then produced some lovely work before off-loading to his captain, who duly split the posts from play to cut the Antrim sides lead to 7 points. O’Loughlin’s then fashioned a goal chance of their own

after strong play from Luke Hogan saw Sean Bolger pulled down by ‘Dall full-back, Liam Gillan who saw yellow for his rugby-style foul. Mark Bergin converted the resulting free and halfway through the opening period in Navan, the veteran forward was still his sides only scorer. Some sloppy play from the Loughs saw the lively Ed McQuillan register a point before Paddy Deegan popped


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Hurling - Review Luke Hogan Heading for Goal chased by Paddy Burke

before rifling over another booming score from distance, much to the delight of the Antrim Gaels in attendance. Conor Heary, who again was covering every blade of grass in Pairc Tailteann cut in from the left before striking a shot that Ruairí Óg’s keeper Conor McAlister deflected over the bar. Mark Bergin then pointed from a placed ball following a foul on midfielder Cian Loy and the gap was now cut to four points. Then came the crucial score for Brian Hogan’s outfit. Another great delivery into Luke Hogan saw the young attacker take a great catch before shaking off the attentions of the ‘Dall defence. Paddy Butler’s replacement struck his shot hard and low which netminder McAlister initially stopped, only for the alert Sean Bolger to follow-up and poke to the net. Game on. There was still time for two more scores in an exhilarating first half, both placed ball efforts from Neil McManus that saw the 12-time Ulster Champions go into the break 3 points to the good, having played with the aid of a strong blustering wind. Having failed to get to the pitch of the game in the opening quarter, Brian Hogan’s team started the second half with more vigor. Three scores in the opening minutes, two from Mark Bergin, the second of which came from a lovely team move and a sweet Eoin O’Shea point saw the Noresiders level matters as the Loughs supporters rallied behind Mark Bergin Determined to stop Liam Gillan from clearing

a nice pass to Conor Heary who composed himself to take a nice point. The hardworking Sean Bolger then struck a lovely effort from out on the right side of the pitch to reduce the deficit to five points. ‘Dall’s main man at the back, Paddy Burke then powered out of his defensive position

their team in Navan. Neil McManus then struck a brace of points himself, including a quality effort from play to push the ‘Dall two ahead. Mark Bergin then benefited from some battling work by his teammates and split the posts, but the opposition captain popped over two placed ball efforts to keep the Antrim side two clear. Owen Wall then roamed way out the field to collect possession before slipping a pass inside to Paddy Deegan who fired over his one and only score of the game from just inside his own half. Then came another major chance for O’Loughlin’s. Sean Bolger was causing chaos close to goal and managed to strike an effort along the ground across the ‘Dall goal, but somehow Owen Wall failed to apply the finishing touch as the sliotar bobbled past. Neil McManus then fired over another free after Ryan McCambridge was fouled by Conor Heary. O’Loughlin’s then sent on Conor Kelly in place of Sean Bolger who had put in a great shift for over 40 –odd minutes. Ryan McCambridge then left a bit on Conor Heary which gave Mark Bergin the chance to notch another score to leave the smallest of gaps between the teams. Kilkenny panelist Heary then displayed some nifty stick work and skill to burst clear before offloading to David Fogarty who struck the first of his vital 2-point tally to deadlock matters with about 12 minutes remaining. Some great pressure on advancing ‘Dall keeper Conor McAlister by Owen Wall, saw the keeper dispossessed and the ball worked to the brilliant Bergin who rifled over to edge his side ahead for the first time in the game. Cushendall needed a reaction to falling behind, but they hit a series of bad wides that were punished by a lovely point from Jack Nolan after nice play from Conor Kelly. Nolan was immediately called ashore and replaced by Jamie Ryan, while Paddy Butler came in for Eoin O’Shea. Neil McManus then surprised everyone by going short from a free, but Joseph McLaughlin made no mistake in splitting the posts for his first point of the game with two minutes remaining, the Loughs just 1 point ahead. Five minutes of additional time were signaled from the sideline. Cushendall needed

something special, and it came from that man Neil McManus. Paddy Burke collected possession deep inside his own half and despite being put under pressure from Luke Hogan, the defender scanned for an option before passing to McManus. The Ruairí Óg’s captain collected the pass before striking an effort from just inside his own half. The sliotar appeared to be in the air for an eternity, but his teammates and supporters never doubted him as the umpire raised a white flag. All square in Pairc Tailteann, extra time looking likely. Hogan’s men didn’t want more minutes. Following a little bit of a shemozzle, Paddy Deegan toe poked the ball towards Owen Wall who popped a short pass to David Fogarty. Tight to the right sideline, Fogarty accepted the pass and only had one thing on his mind – a match winning score. Fogarty struck right on halfway and the sliotar sailed between the Cushendall posts. Croker bound again for the Tommy Moore decider against St Thomas’s of Galway. Final Score in Pairc Tailteann, O’Loughlin Gaels 1-17, Ruairí Óg Cushendall 1-16. O’Loughlin Gaels scorers: Mark Bergin 0-9 (0-5f), Sean Bolger 1-1, David Fogarty 0-2, Conor Heary 0-2, Eoin O’Shea 0-1, Paddy Deegan 0-1, Jack Nolan 0-1. Cushendall scorers: Neil McManus 0-9 (0-7f), Joseph McLaughlin 1-1, Eoghan Campbell 0-2, Ronan McAteer 0-1, Ryan McCambridge 0-1, Ed McQuillan 0-1, Paddy Burke 0-1. O’LOUGHLIN GAELS: Stephen Murphy; Mikey Butler, Huw Lawlor, Tony Forristal; David Fogarty, Paddy Deegan, Jordan Molloy; Jack Nolan, Cian Loy; Conor Heary, Mark Bergin, Eoin O’Shea; Owen Wall, Luke Hogan, Sean Bolger. Subs: Conor Kelly for Bolger 44, Jamie Ryan for Nolan 55, Paddy Butler for O’Shea 57. CUSHENDALL: Conor McAlister; Liam Gillan, Paddy Burke, Martin Burke; Scott Walsh, Eoghan Campbell, Ruairi McCollam; Francis McCurry, Ryan McCambridge; Ed McQuillan, Niall McCormack, Ronan McAteer; Fergus McCambridge, Neil McManus, Joseph McLaughlin. Subs: Sean McAfee for McAteer 23, Alex Delargy for McCormack h/t, Aidan McNaughton for Gillan h/t, Stephen Walsh for McCollam 48f/t blood, Christy McNaughton for McCurry 59. Referee: Michael Kennedy (Tipperary)


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The Kilkenny Observer Friday 22 December 2023

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News Memoriams / Miracle Prayers

JOHANNA (HANNAH) BYRNE 6TH ANNIVERSARY

JAMES BARRY 2ND ANNIVERSARY

EILY PURCELL 2ND ANNIVERSARY

In loving memory of my dear grandmother Johanna (Hannah) Byrne late of 23 Parnell Street, Kilkenny who gained her angle wings Christmas Day 2017.

In loving memory of James, Kilmoganny, Co. Kilkenny whose anniversary occurs at this time.

In loving memory of Eily Purcell late of 29 Butts Green, Kilkenny who died on 23rd December 2021.

Although I cannot see you I feel your presence near I will hold you close in memory Till I drop my very last tear. So sleep now with the angels And let your golden heart rest Although our hearts are broken We know GOD took the best. So dance beyond those golden gates And join your loving mum I’ll see you when I’m sleeping And pray for you to come.

If tears could build a stairway And memories a lane I’d walk right up to heaven And bring you home again

It broke our hearts to lose you You did not go alone For part of us went with you The day God called you home

Forever missed by Mam and Dad We will always treasure The life you shared with us Rest in eternal piece James You will live on forever in our hearts Love Catherine, Michael Barry and Gavin

Sadly missed by your sisters Nancy, Mag, and Mary brothers-in-law Ber and Larry Nieces and Nephews

The Miracle Prayer

Dear heart of Jesus, in the past I have asked many favours. This time I ask you this special one (mention favour). Take it dear heart of Jesus and place it within your heart where your father sees it. Then in his merciful eyes it will become your own favour not mine. Amen. Say this prayer three times for three days and your favour will be granted. Never been known to fail. Must promise publication of prayer. T.B.

And although this pain is painful And I really don’t want to let you go I’ll wait for death to take me, Nan So we can together one day glow. Until that day, I’ll close my eyes And see your smiling face I’ll lock you up inside my heart Until we again embrace. So rest now, my beautiful Nan I’ll never forget how much you have done So until my hand meets yours again Sleep now in the sun.

REMEMBERING AT CHRISTMAS R.I.P RICHARD RYAN JOSEPHINE RYAN DIED 30TH APRIL 1995 DIED 3RD JULY 2014

Love you always Nan Your Grandson Joseph XX

The Miracle Prayer

GERALDINE RYAN DIED 3RD MARCH 2014

PAUL RYAN DIED 20TH JUNE 1999

Greenfields, Freshford Road, Kilkenny Always loved and much missed Anne, Fran, Phil, Richard, Martin and grandchildren.

Dear heart of Jesus, in the past I have asked many favours. This time I ask you this special one (mention favour). Take it dear heart of Jesus and place it within your heart where your father sees it. Then in his merciful eyes it will become your own favour not mine. Amen. Say this prayer three times for three days and your favour will be granted. Never been known to fail. Must promise publication of prayer. J.M.


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Memoriams / Miracle Prayers

The Miracle Prayer

The Miracle Prayer

The Miracle Prayer

St. Anthony Prayer

Dear heart of Jesus, in the past I have asked many favours. This time I ask you this special one (mention favour). Take it dear heart of Jesus and place it within your heart where your father sees it. Then in his merciful eyes it will become your own favour not mine. Amen. Say this prayer three times for three days and your favour will be granted. Never been known to fail. Must promise publication of prayer. P.M.

Dear heart of Jesus, in the past I have asked many favours. This time I ask you this special one (mention favour). Take it dear heart of Jesus and place it within your heart where your father sees it. Then in his merciful eyes it will become your own favour not mine. Amen. Say this prayer three times for three days and your favour will be granted. Never been known to fail. Must promise publication of prayer. M.M.

Dear heart of Jesus, in the past I have asked many favours. This time I ask you this special one (mention favour). Take it dear heart of Jesus and place it within your heart where your father sees it. Then in his merciful eyes it will become your own favour not mine. Amen. Say this prayer three times for three days and your favour will be granted. Never been known to fail. Must promise publication of prayer. M.B.

O Holy St. Anthony gentlest of Saints, your love for God and charity for His creatures, made you worthy, when on earth, to possess miraculous powers. Encouraged by this thought, I implore you to obtain for me (request). O gentle and loving St. Anthony, whose heart was ever full of human sympathy, whisper my petition into the ears of the sweet Infant Jesus, who loved to be folded in your arms. The gratitude of my heart will ever be yours. Amen M.M.

The Miracle Prayer

The Miracle Prayer

The Miracle Prayer

The Miracle Prayer

Dear heart of Jesus, in the past I have asked many favours. This time I ask you this special one (mention favour). Take it dear heart of Jesus and place it within your heart where your father sees it. Then in his merciful eyes it will become your own favour not mine. Amen. Say this prayer three times for three days and your favour will be granted. Never been known to fail. Must promise publication of prayer. P.C.

Dear heart of Jesus, in the past I have asked many favours. This time I ask you this special one (mention favour). Take it dear heart of Jesus and place it within your heart where your father sees it. Then in his merciful eyes it will become your own favour not mine. Amen. Say this prayer three times for three days and your favour will be granted. Never been known to fail. Must promise publication of prayer. M.R.

Dear heart of Jesus, in the past I have asked many favours. This time I ask you this special one (mention favour). Take it dear heart of Jesus and place it within your heart where your father sees it. Then in his merciful eyes it will become your own favour not mine. Amen. Say this prayer three times for three days and your favour will be granted. Never been known to fail. Must promise publication of prayer. M.M.

Dear heart of Jesus, in the past I have asked many favours. This time I ask you this special one (mention favour). Take it dear heart of Jesus and place it within your heart where your father sees it. Then in his merciful eyes it will become your own favour not mine. Amen. Say this prayer three times for three days and your favour will be granted. Never been known to fail. Must promise publication of prayer. S.M.


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The Kilkenny Observer Friday 22 December 2023

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