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Irish Independent
04-05-2025
- Politics
- Irish Independent
‘It's a total disgrace' – crunch meeting in rural Cork town over poor state of historic courthouse
Kanturk's historical courthouse is a building with over 200 years of history and the bridewell contains rare graffiti that was etched on the walls by Republicans who were incarcerated there during the Revolutionary Period. But the bridewell has been protected by a temporary tarpaulin covering after the roof became badly damaged, in what the Vice-Chairman of the Kanturk Courthouse Restoration Committee Dan Dennehy has described as a 'total disgrace.' 'Over three years with a temporary tarpaulin covering, which is a total disgrace. 'It is probably only adding to the deterioration of the graffiti,' Mr Dennehy told The Corkman. Minister of State at the Department of Housing, Local Government and Heritage and Fianna Fáil TD for Cork South West Christopher O'Sullivan said there is so much 'passion and dedication' within the Kanturk community to see the courthouse returned to its former glory. 'I visited the courthouse with Deputy Michael Moynihan, the [Kanturk Courthouse Restoration] Committee who have been working for a couple of years to make a case for the state to renovate it and what I can say is there is so much passion and dedication with the community. 'I can see Michael's passion for the project shines through and he has so much knowledge and interest, which shone through on the day,' Mr O'Sullivan said. Locals who formed the Kanturk Courthouse Restoration Committee have advocated for the building to be urgently restored so that its artefacts are not further damaged by dampness caused by the bridewell's damaged roof. Fianna Fáil TD for Cork North West Michael Moynihan said protecting the building is 'crucially important.' 'There's a lot of drawings on the courthouse building itself in terms of the battleships from the first World War that were drawn there by the people who were incarcerated during the War of Independence and the Civil War. 'We have evidence of people who are long since gone that have played a visible part in the War of independence who have since been forgotten,' Mr Moynihan said. Minister O'Sullivan, Deputy Moynihan, members of the Kanturk Courthouse Restoration Committee and representatives from the Irish Court Services held a 'constructive meeting' about the restoration of the building. 'I was representing the Department of Housing, Local Government and Heritage, and from the Heritage point of view to explain that there are types of funds available for groups, for state bodies and local authorities to apply for funding for the protection and renovation of these incredible landmarks. 'The Court Service has a very important role to play because they are the owners of the building. 'We certainly identified a path forward that we are exploring at the moment, and that path would have to involve the court service and eventually the local authority,' Mr O'Sullivan added. Mr Moynihan told The Corkman that further engagement with the Court Service is 'important.' 'There were routes to funding discussed by Minister O'Sullivan and the Court Services. 'We have to further engage with them because it is crucially, crucially important that we protect this structure,' he said. Mr O'Sullivan continued to say: 'I would urge the Court Services, along with the OPW and the local authority to bang heads together and for them to avail of the funding mechanisms available. 'It certainly is as my state admission as Minister to where opportunities arise to protect, renovate and to increase access to these very important monuments, that is what we want to do. 'In the case of Kanturk where you have a really passionate community and you have local representatives who are very passionate, that is the basis to doing something very special,' he concluded.


Irish Times
29-04-2025
- General
- Irish Times
Climate anxiety is like parenthood: you get used to living with constant worry
When I became a mother for the first time, amid my joy and delight, I was overwhelmed with grief for the world. The news was unbearable, there was simply too much suffering, too much violence and destruction. A friend put it like this: when you become a mother, your heart is outside yourself. You want to make the world perfect for this perfect human being, but you can't. No one can. So we develop coping mechanisms by living within what psychologist Renée Lertzman calls a 'window of tolerance'. People are deeply concerned and afraid of the future, and of the terrors that climate breakdown will bring. But we feel helpless to change any of it, and worry that our own actions would be insignificant. We're consumed by the present, and climate change feels like a future problem. We're also afraid of change itself, since we perceive change as a loss of a way of life built around expectations, comforts and convenience. Letting go of the idea of progress, which has bewitched our civilisation for thousands of years, seems impossible and foolish. Lertzman is convinced that the reason why communication campaigns that use denunciation and finger-wagging fail to galvanise the public is because people are already numb. The messaging is too far outside the zone of tolerance to land. Perhaps my zone of tolerance is too broad, but I've been grieving since the mid 1980s when it looked like the world would be incinerated by nuclear war. Then along came the destruction of the rainforests, global warming and forever chemicals. Catastrophising about such things added a burden of depression and ecological despair to all the usual life tasks. At times it has been crippling, sometimes immobilising, but over the years I have learned to befriend these feelings and moods. I now accept that they are normal and appropriate responses to the ongoing devastation around us. [ Meet Romulus and Remus, first of their kind for 10,000 years. Sort of Opens in new window ] When the climate crisis descends upon a particular place, instead of remaining an abstract, remote possibility, we can predict with certainty that human beings will respond courageously and cooperatively. A large body of research into people's responses to disasters since the outbreak of first World War demonstrates what we should already intuitively know that crisis inspires altruism, optimism and often a new sense of shared purpose as people work together to salvage and rebuild, as well as seek consolation in community. And during times of crisis and upheaval, just like during the recent Storm Éowyn , it is social capital or the networks of human relationships that really matter. In the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina thousands of people took to tiny boats to rescue those who were trapped in New Orleans, saving hundreds of lives. After 9/11, more than a million people evacuated from lower Manhattan safely and calmly on foot in one afternoon, and armies of random strangers volunteered to help feed and resupply rescue workers, proving that anarchy and social disorder is not inevitable in the aftermath of a disaster. READ MORE However, those suffering from psychological distress or mental health conditions will take no comfort from knowing that in a crisis, people will step up to help. Climate anxiety can incite despair and hopelessness which, for those with existing mental health problems, can lead to depression, substance abuse and suicidal ideation. When extreme weather events strike as they are in many parts of the world, mental health impacts include financial and relationship stress, increased risks of violence against women and girls, and displacement of entire communities. Services are woefully inadequate for roughly 40 per cent of the Irish population that already experience mental health issues, and these services are often not tailored to the specific requirements or gender sensitivities of those who need them. For young people, rates of depression and anxiety fuelled by financial, housing and climate change worries are skyrocketing. A 2023 survey by the mental health charity Aware found that three-in-five of those surveyed report feeling anxious or depressed and Ireland has one of the highest rates in Europe of mental health disorders. Research into the mental health impacts of climate breakdown finds that the psychological impact from any disaster exceeds physical injury by 40-1. In the case of flooding, the effects continue well after the event itself, peaking about six months later. And it will be no surprise to anyone that those most at risk of long-term mental effects are already marginalised based on their age, status, gender, culture, employment status and education. We will need our health infrastructure to be resourced adequately to cope with it. However, there is no mention of mental health impacts in the newly published climate action plan , climate-induced anxiety and depression also don't feature in the government's mental health strategy . Our brains and our hearts can join dots that the Government seemingly can't. Sadhbh Ó' Neill is an environmental and climate activist and researcher


Irish Times
25-04-2025
- General
- Irish Times
Frightfully unfashionable: Frank McNally on the century-long decline of adverbs
That Casimir Markievicz exhibition (Diary, April 23rd) reminded me in passing how dependent the upper classes of these islands used to be on what grammarians call 'degree adverbs'. Witness a letter, included in the show, in which Eva Gore-Booth congratulates her sister Constance on becoming engaged to the Polish count. 'I can't help being frightfully amused when I think of the bomb bursting,' she writes (the bomb-burst being the reaction when others find out). 'Still, I do hope you'll be awfully happy.' Those two adverbs alone convey the accent of the writer and also hint at a certain attitude to life found only in big houses, preferably Georgian, in the decades before and after 1900. READ MORE But it wasn't confined to adverbs. Adjectives ending in -ly were just as important, especially if they were 'ghastly' or 'beastly'. Here's a paragraph from Molly Keane's Good Behaviour, set in another big house a few years later, that has a bit of both: 'They were sending Richard to South Africa on a safari. It might help him a bit. 'He's taken this whole ghastly business terribly hard, poor boy,' Wobbly wrote.' The 'Wobbly' there sounds like an adjective too, which is a bit confusing. But no. The narrator tells us Wobbly is 'an old friend of Papa'. This way of speaking survived the first World War, unlike many big houses themselves. Or at least 'beastly' and 'ghastly' were still going strong in the mid-20th century novels of Enid Blyton, of which I read too many as a child. But 'awfully' and 'frightfully' were dying out by then, except in books and films evoking the earlier period. Modern literature had started to take a dim view of adverbs in general, a trend that has continued since. In a study of 1,500 books a few years ago, aimed at finding out what gains writers' critical acclaim, data journalist Ben Blatt concluded that a low adverb count was one of the keys. Books with fewer than 50 per 10,000 words had a strong chance of being considered 'great', he found. Although failing this test did not preclude wealth and fame. JK Rowling, for one, is famous for using adverbs of the -ly kind. Her favourites include 'coolly', 'calmly', 'ponderously' and 'snarkily'. But as the adverb-hating Stephen King summed up, snarkily: 'Ms Rowling seems to have never met one she didn't like.' Her overall adverb count, according to Blatt, is 140 per 10,000 words. Ernest Hemingway played a big part in making adverbs and adjectives unfashionable. And yet he used some odd ones himself on occasion, boldly going where no writer had gone before. Here, from For Whom the Bell Tolls, is a typical Hemingway passage, full of short, hard words, sometimes repeated for effect in long, flat sentences, and devoid of all -ly adverbs, with one notorious exception: 'Then there was the smell of heather crushed and the roughness of the bent stalks under her head and the sun bright on her closed eyes and all his life he would remember the curve of her throat with her head pushed back into the heather roots and her lips that moved smally and by themselves and the fluttering of the lashes on the eyes tight closed against the sun and against everything, and for her everything was red, orange, gold-red from the sun on the closed eyes.' Yes, her lips moved 'smally'. (And 'by themselves', whatever that means). There is an adverb nobody else in literature can have used before or since. Not even Donald 'Bigly' Trump would write it, if only because he has no time for diminutives. [ Bigly, Javanka, witch-hunt, sad! The Trump era in 32 words and phrases Opens in new window ] The -ly ending has fallen out of fashion in modern cuisine too. For mysterious reasons, upmarket restaurants will no longer serve 'slowly roasted pork', for example, if they can serve 'slow-roasted pork' instead (although the shorter version probably costs more). But an adverb that is still used a lot, and shouldn't be, gained renewed currency from events in Rome this week. Breaking the news, at least one British tabloid (along with many Twitter users) announced that Pope Francis had 'sadly died'. And yes, I know that grammar and syntax are not the most important things on such an occasion. I also know what each writer meant: that he or she was sad at the news. But the sentence implies that it was the pope who was upset at his own passing, as well he might be, and that in other circumstances he would have died happily. (Mind you, if anyone can die happily, one of the world's foremost believers in the afterlife has a better chance than most of us.) At least the writers here did use the verb 'die', which is often avoided now on social media. The euphemisms 'passed on' or just 'passed' tend to be preferred these days. When the dreaded d-word is used, as it was here, the effect needs to be softened with an adverb, placed however badly.
Yahoo
29-03-2025
- General
- Yahoo
Five to brave a night sleeping outside to raise funds for homeless veterans
FIVE members of The Hart of Martin committee are challenging themselves to a sleep out to raise funds to help homeless veterans. Led by Paul Robinson, 76, the team will sleep outside the front of the Hart of Martin with no tents, and just sleeping bags. The challenge comes as part of 'The Great Tommy Sleep Out', organised by the Royal British Leigion, encouraging people to 'sleep beneath the stars' to fundraise for veterans across the UK. Data shared by the government in January showed that one in 400 veterans were homeless, rough sleeping or living in a refuge for domestic abuse in 2022 alone. READ MORE: The team will sleep out from 9pm to 9am and you can donate here. Paul Robinson (chairman), Janet Richards, Graham Elford, Barry Collier (Image: Hart of Martin) The Great Tommy Sleep Out website says: 'The challenge doesn't replicate rough sleeping, but it does give you an idea of the situation far too many of the nation's heroes find themselves in'. Paul said: 'My father fought in the first World War when he was 16, and he was a sergeant by the time he was 17. 'It's quite important - I think the fact our lads who have fought in Afghanistan end up on the street - it's just not right to me.'