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Day 14 |
Reverberation
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Emigration
– leaving and coming back
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Irish
emigration was the topic of our workshop that Marc Ullrich (Germany),
Fernando Reyero Noya, Eva Eiroa Rosado (both Spain) and Ulrika Hoonk
(Sweden) had signed up for. On Sunday we had our first chance to
talk to some people from Achill Island at our reception party. They
openly told us their stories. Some had been born in Ireland and
had emigrated but came back for different reasons. We wanted to
know more about their interesting stories about their departures,
the departures of their relatives, and their return and invited
them to our workshop.
So on Monday morning we started our work by finding out what our
expectations were and what we wanted to achieve. Thinking of our
future guests we wanted to know why they had emigrated. Why are
people moving? What about national identity and people’s roots?
Do people lose their original identity? Where do you belong as an
emigrant? Are you still Irish when you have lived in another country?
So we had many questions to which we wanted to find answers during
our workshop.
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On Tuesday
we had our first Irish guest at our workshop, Mark Chaddock, Poet
and Artist from Achill Island. He has self-published four books
of poetry. He offered to read some of his poetry to us in order
to give us a glimpse of his perception of belonging, identity
and emigration. Mark grew up in England because his parents had
decided to go to England to make their living there. In England,
Mark lived in a fast-growing industrial town. Actually Mark is
three quarters Irish as his mother is from Achill with a long
family tradition and there is Irish blood in his father’s
family, too.
He was getting increasingly tired of the number of faceless people
he saw every day. At the same time, he realised that his work
in the field of Nursing Management had led him away from the things
that he had wanted to do when he entered his professional life.
These were factors that made him think of his origins again…
and this is reflected in this poem and the sense of “wild
sweet freedom” associated with his Irish home – and
reaching freedom is what he considers one of the greatest achievements
in his life which he has found again on Achill Island.
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During
our Wednesday session we had the chance to meet Mary Mc Namara and
Kathleen English from Achill Tourism. We learned that people emigrated
because there was no work on the island. Mary’s father went
to Scotland for potato picking. Mary’s family moved over when
she was seven years old. She returned because the Irish economic
climate was much better. It was not their decision to go and so
they kept thinking of Ireland. The move from Ireland to England
was a difficult one because they moved to a very industrial area.
She missed the freedom and the sea and the island. Often the fathers
went and the families stayed behind as Kathleen’s father did.
The Irish workers were not always welcome. In the windows of some
companies or vacant flats, there were posters saying “No Irish
need apply.”
On
Thursday, we had the opportunity to explore the island with two
Irish partners, Mark Chaddock, who had joined us again, and Mara
Bernstein. Mara told us that she was from Ohio and that she had
come over in order to participate in the Summer Field School offered
on Achill. Her main study subject is Anthropology – and she
came back after this field school in order to conduct research on
the impact of tourism on the Achill community and potential fields
of future development. She told us that it is not always easy for
her to combine the roles of a researcher, who systematically interviews
people from the community in order to gather the material for her
research, and a newcomer who wants to make new friends within the
community. It helped a lot that she had been on Achill before and
that she came back because of her love for the island.
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Afterwards,
Mark and Mara took our students on a tour of the island –
showing them places of special interest and telling them about
them. The main activity during our Friday session was the preparation
of the final presentations for the farewell celebration. After
a week of research, interviews and exploring, it finally was time
to present our results to our guests and friends from Achill Island,
fellow students and lecturers. The light was dimmed and soft Irish
music fulfilled the room with mystery. Pictures from beautiful
Achill Island passed in the background when Mark’s poems
were read to the audience.
Touched and
impressed by the poems and all the wonderful people we have met
during the week we hope to see you again one day on Achill Island.
We hope that we were able to communicate some of our enthusiasm
to those who attended the celebration. We enjoyed our time with
our partners from Achill immensely – and we could sense
some of the “wild sweet freedom” which brought so
many people back to Achill (and hopefully us, too!).
By Nicole
Slupetzky, Andreas Faulstich, Marc Ullrich
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Belonging
Now that I have
made my
marks and symbols…
my truths
my myths
my stories
on both inner and outer landscapes…
Now I hear
the words beneath the silence…
and the wind has carved memories in me;
now I have buried folk…
“blow-in” no longer has meaning…
by Mark Chaddock
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Borrowed
Identity
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What
would your life have been like if you were born on Achill Island,
Ireland?
This was the leading question of the workshop for our participants.
As our workshop required a very intercultural group of students,
Antje & Theo (the workshop leaders) started during the preparatory
online-phase to preselect the students. Five students were interested
and formed our dream team: Ingrida from Lithuania, Frederick from
the Philippines, Jesus from Spain, Michael from France and Matthias
from Germany.
On our trainride from Dublin to Westport our first real task of
the workshop started: The “borrowed identity” questionnaire.
The students sat together in intercultural teams of two and interviewed
each other. Every student was asked to fill in answers to several
questions on identity and to make up an own Irish identity.
On Saturday the workshop members had their first real meeting and
were introduced to the general idea of the workshop and the concept
of borrowed identity. Our man on Achill, Karsten, managed to get
us in contact with Mary, a real Irish mother from the Island, an
open hearted and very friendly woman, working at Achill Tourism.
The workshop consisted above all of a role play that should be turned
into a film later:
Mary plays the role of Mary and stays nearly the same as in real
life. She is playing an Irish mother. Ingrida pretends to be her
daughter and Jesus her son. The other students Frederick, Michael
and Matthias pretend to be friends from abroad, visiting the family
at their home. Through conversations the students shall get an insight
into real Irish life.
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On
Sunday our scenario becomes really concrete as we meet Mary at the
welcome reception. Mary accepts Ingrida and Jesus as her “children”
at the very first moment. Surrounded by an intercultural catering,
our participants introduced themselves and got to know each other
and Mary better. Mary invites the students to her home for the next
day, so that everything is perfect to make the role play as authentic
and realistic as possible.
Since Mary leaves to Spain on Tuesday, Monday is our most important
day and the role play takes place. During the morning we prepared
everything for the meeting in the afternoon. During the morning
meeting we got two new members for our workshop: Dot and Laurence.
The students made a first test run for the role play with Dot as
Mary. Dot did her job as a mother very well. Could it become much
better in the afternoon? Nobody could imagine that.
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At 13.30 p.m.
we drove to Mary´s home and showed her the movie “Achill
2004” from last year, so that she could get an impression
of the whole project and get used to the idea of being filmed
herself. Afterwards we introduced our plannings for the next two
hours:
The “new and old” children of Mary are coming home
from school. Patrick (formerly known as Jesus from Spain) and
Megan (formerly known as Ingrida from Lituania) sit down in the
living room with Mary and start chatting. Suddenly the bell rings
and three friends from abroad are warmly welcomed by Mary and
her children.
The friends have a lot of questions about the Irish culture. They
talk about life on Achill, about Guinness, Mary’s husband,
the Irish language, and so on.
The filming of the role play worked out very good. Mary enjoyed
our “intercultural” cake and she made a real Irish
cup of tea for all of us. It was a very very exciting and memorable
moment. And everything is on tape!
Everybody of the group did a really great job and now all are
waiting for the final version of the documentation movie. We are
looking forward to watching it and last but not least: A big group
applause to Mary, we already miss you and we are looking forward
to seeing you soon!
By Arnold Schenk and Antje Laacks
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