Monday, February 28, 2022

The Russian Army has to be stopped

It is highly unlikely that the Russians will allow street battles in any Ukrainian towns and cities. Does that mean they may now be in some sort of dilemma?

The Russians learned much from the battle of Stalingrad, which was waged between August 1942 and February 1943.

The Germans first bombed the city almost to a point of annihilation. In so doing they left the city in a perfect state for Red Army snipers and also made it almost impossible for German tanks to negotiate the streets of the city of Stalingrad.

The Russians will not let that happen in Kharkiv or Kyiv or indeed any Ukrainian urban area.

There is indeed something ironic how President Putin has taken so much from Hitler’s playbook.

Over 100,000 people demonstrated in Berlin yesterday to express their disapproval of the Russian invasion of Ukraine. People all over the world came out in force to say No to Putin.

Today People Before Profit held a demonstration outside the Russian embassy on Dublin’s Orwell Road against the invasion.

It is incomprehensible what is happening. And as Independent TD Cathal Berry said today, the Russian Army has to be stopped.

Putin’s bizarre speech wrecks his once pragmatic image

An interesting piece in The Guardian.

https://www.theguardian.com/world/2022/feb/25/its-not-rational-putins-bizarre-speech-wrecks-his-once-pragmatic-image

Sunday, February 27, 2022

While Putin lies Germany sends weapons to Ukraine

Germany has reversed a historic policy of never sending weapons to conflict zones, saying the Russian invasion of Ukraine was an epochal moment that is imperilling the entire post-World War II order across Europe. 

Germany will send 1,000 anti-tank weapons and 500 Stinger missiles to Ukraine, German Chancellor Olaf Scholz said that this marks a reversal in Berlin's restrictive arms export policy.

Yesterday German Foreign Minister Annalena Baerbock expressed great anger in how the Russian president had lied to her, the German people and the entire world.

Ukrainian President Voldymyr Zelenskyy when offered safe exit from Ukraine replied: Its not a ride I want, its weapons.

Every day Zelenskyy proves himself to be quite an amazing man, a great, courageous and charismatic leader.

President Putin has told the Russian people that the leadership in Ukraine is made up of Neo Nazis and drug addicts.

It’s doubtful that Voldymyr Zelenskyy is a drug addict. The man’s first language is Russian and actually he is a Jew.

President Putin has a penchant for telling barefaced lies.

What is the Russian Orthodox Church saying about  President Putin?

Zelenskyy is an example to the world. When elected president the world smirked at this comedian being elected. The world must right now hold this man in the highest of esteem.


Saturday, February 26, 2022

We need to feel wanted and respected

The Thinking Anew column in The Irish Times today.

Michael Commane
There is a comforting and underlying theme running through tomorrow’s liturgy.

The opening antiphon introduces us to the idea that the Lord is our protector, who saves and frees us, indeed, even delights us.

The author of the book of Ecclesiasticus talks about how an orchard is judged by the quality of its fruit. St Luke in the Gospel advises us to be sparing in our criticism of one another and uses that often quoted text: “Take the plank out of your own eye first, and then you will see clearly enough to take out the splinter that is in your brother’s eye.” (Luke 6: 42).

And Luke too paints the picture of how the good tree  produces good fruit.

Reading across all that literature one gets a strong impression how important our own personal nurturing is for our development, how vital it is to feel at home and indeed good in the environment in which we find ourselves.

It is such a cherished and wonderful gift to be able to be ourselves, to be open and honest with another person. Where and when it happens we can easily take it for granted but that is never to take away from the extraordinary privilege it is to be completely open with another person. It is something that happens in all sorts of relationships. It is probably at its most fundamental and strongest in the relationship between child and parents. There are no ifs and buts, it is total commitment, total loyalty, total openness. And when it doesn’t work it can lead to turmoil and disaster.

But at some level or other we all expect to be nourished and nurtured, in other words most of us want to be accepted and respected by other people.
 
And that means in our homes, our places of work, our societies. When people feel alienated and outcast they can be ever so easily driven to paths of destruction and violence.

Just scratch the surface of anyone who behaves badly or in a manner that is unhealthy for them and society, you will quickly find a story of alienation, someone who feels unwanted and never respected. It never pays to hurt other people. As sure as day follows night, that hurt will cause a ripple effect somehow or someway in a time and a place that may never make sense or cause suspicion to the casual onlooker.

St Luke admonishes the hypocrite. Admittedly, hypocrites stretch the patience of the best of people. From my experience in the classroom young people have a refined sense of spotting hypocrites and then despising what they do. But again, the oxygen that gives life to the hypocrite is a place where she or he feels they have to behave in such a way so as to deceive or fool someone. 

And that behaviour is anathema to an open and loving environment. It’s important to add, most of us find it far easier to see the hypocrite in the other person than in spotting our own hypocrisy.

At present, under the initiative of Pope Francis, the Catholic Church is in the process of talking and discussing about how it can further the Word of God in the world, in the place where it is right now. It’s being called a synod and unlike previous synods, it is hoped that Catholics of all rank and stature can have their say, that their voice will be heard.

Pope Francis’ personality is written all over it, the pope, who on the evening of his election, finished his address to the people in St Peter’s Square with those two simple words 'Buona sera’. Those two words touched the hearts of millions of people that night. It heralded a break from a formalism that seems at times to strangle the church.

It sounded so far removed from doctrine, and canon law, from prince bishops, their titles and palaces. It spoke directly to people of good will, who want to feel at home and loved in their church.

There is nothing highhanded or authoritarian about those two simple words and yet they convey such a sense of warmth and indeed respect. Anytime anyone ever greets me with such an expression, calling me by my name, I feel respected and accepted too. I listen to them.

At present Christian churches are in the strangest of places. There are myriad problems. But isn’t it staring us in the face that we will get nowhere unless we feel at home and wanted in our church and for that to happen, leadership needs the wit, God’s grace and the simple common sense to guide and nurture people in such a way that we will feel wanted and respected. Nothing less is going to work.

All the palaver, all the words, all the structures, all the committees will head towards a dead-end unless there is genuine respect and honest concern for the other person.

Isn’t that what tomorrow’s liturgy is all about?

Friday, February 25, 2022

A day we'll remember where we were, what we were doing

In the years to come we will all remember what we were doing on Thursday, February 24, 2022.

Yesterday morning President Vladimir Putin in his address threatened any nation who supports Ukraine. He threatened us with such a disastrous consequence, the likes of which we have never seen. Does that mean nuclear war?

Last evening on German television station ZDF, German economics minister Robert Habeck gave an impassioned  analysis of the Russian invasion of Ukraine. He looked and sounded worried but spoke with great honesty and clarity. Earlier in the day he had visited the Ukrainian embassy in Berlin and spoke of the worry he saw etched on the embassy staff. He saw tears in the eyes of one man.

Interesting to compare the words, the language, the gestures of an democratically elected politician with the behaviour of Vladimir Putin.

Robert Habeck is vice chancellor and a member of the Green Party.

Just over a week ago Vladimir Putin told the world that Russia had no intentions of invading Ukraine.

The world has too many liars. 

There’s much to learn from history. On this day, February 25, 1922 Tiblisi, the capital of Georgia fell to the invading Russian army and was declared the Georgian Soviet Socialist Republic.

Last evening US General Petraeus said that Vladimir Putin has not only assaulted Ukraine but he has also assaulted democracy.



Thursday, February 24, 2022

An Irishman’s Diary in The Irish Times yesterday

An eye-catching topic in The Irish Times yesterday.

An Irishman’s Diary

Elizabeth Hurley: her surname is still interchangeable in places with Commane (from camán). But that seems to have been the result of a phenomenon called “pseudo-translation” because the suspected Irish originals of Hurley had nothing to do with hurling. PHOTOGRAPH: BRYAN O’BRIEN
ELIZABETH HURLEY: her surname is still interchangeable in places with Commane (from camán). But that seems to have been the result of a phenomenon called “pseudo-translation” because the suspected Irish originals of Hurley had nothing to do with hurling. PHOTOGRAPH: BRYAN O’BRIEN

It’s a peculiarity of Ireland, or at least it used to be, that not only do most families here have two surnames, quite a few of them have three.

There is the Irish original, of course, and there is the anglicised approximation of that, by which most people now go. But there is also often, or there was, an English translation of the original, having no visible similarity with the other two.

Examples include Black (for the anglicised Duff, from the Irish dubh), Bird (for Heaney or McEneaney, from éan), and Fox (for Shanahan and its variants, from sionnach).There is also Bishop for McAnespie, Judge for Breho/eny, Rabbit for Cunneen, Small for Begg or Beggan, Short for McGirr, and so on.

Hurley is a common but exceptional case. It is still interchangeable in places with Commane (from camán). But that seems to have been the result of a phenomenon called “pseudo-translation” because the suspected Irish originals of Hurley had nothing to do with hurling.

Among the more direct translations, meanwhile, there are some quirky examples. Quirk(e) is one of them. Irish families with that anglicisation could also sometimes go by the name Oat(e)s, the translation of the root word coirce.

Then there is the exotic case recorded once by the register of Cappoquin district, Co Waterford, when a man named Bywater came in to register the death of his brother, one Michael Sruffaun: “On being interrogated as to the difference in the surnames, he said that he was always known by the name Bywater but his brother by the name Sruffaun.” As the registrar added by way of explanation: “Sruffaun is a local form of sruthán, an Irish word for a little stream.”

That’s among the examples cited in a 1909 book on Irish surnames, by Robert E Matheson, then retiring as the country’s registrar-general.

Matheson had encountered many similar confusions in his work: “For instance, in the middle of a marriage certificate, there would appear such a name as Mary Hurley, while the signature would appear as Mary Commane, the latter being the Irish for hurley stick.”

As he explained, this duplication went back to the early centuries of English rule, and attempts to impose standardisation in the Pale at least. One statute of 1366, for example, ordered that subjects adopt English names, “leaving off entirely the manner of naming used by the Irish”.

Another, in 1465, decreed “that every Irishman that dwells betwixt or amongst Englishmen in the county of Dublin, Myeth, Uriell, and Kildare shall take to him an English surname of one town, as Sutton, Chester, Trym, Skryne, Corke, Kinsale; or colour, as white, blacke, browne; or arte or science, as smith, carpenter; or office, as cooke, butler...[etc].

Hence the complicated “fossil history” of Irish surnames, as Matheson called it, although even in his time, the process of anglicised versions being replaced by direct translations continued.

The McRorys of Ulster, for example, were increasingly styling themselves “Rogers”, he wrote, while in the Riverstown district of Sligo, the registrar had noted of one local surname “that they were almost all ‘Brehenys’ some time ago, but are now becoming Judge(s)”.

The history of surnames in Ireland is further complicated by the many English and Scottish ones introduced directly in the various plantations.

An unusual but interesting example is Stoney.

The best known Stoneys of Irish history were a big-house family of engineers who settled in Tipperary, mainly. Their descendents include Alan Turing, the code-cracking genius of the second World War, whose mother was an Ethel Stoney from Borrisokane.

But as one Lieutenant Colonel FS Stoney pointed out in a letter to this newspaper once (in response to Matheson’s book), there were also some indigenous Stoneys, descended from an ancient sept named Maolclochach, which had been anglicised as Mulclohy before going full English.

Colonel Stoney regretted that his family – originally Danish, via Yorkshire – could not claim such noble Irish lineage. On the other hand, he was relieved that they were also thereby exempt from an ancient curse associated with Coney Island in Sligo.

That used to be Inismulclohy, after a local family. And tradition has it that St Patrick once planned to link it with the mainland via a causeway. Unfortunately, this changed when his hostess there, “a woman named Stoney – i.e. Mulclohy, served up a roast cat for his dinner instead of the roast rabbit he ordered.”

The local rabbit population, after which the island is now named, must have multiplied since. The humans were less fruitful. According to the legend, St Patrick prayed that the native Stoneys would never multiply sufficiently for there to be four of them to carry a relative’s coffin. His bridge project was also cancelled.


 

Wednesday, February 23, 2022

Seventy eight years ago it was the Chechens and the Ingush

An interesting if not ironic anniversary.

On this day, February 23, 1944 the former Soviet Union began the forced deportation of the Chechen and Ingush people from the North Caucasus to Central Asia.

In 1944 Josef Stalin was General Secretary of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union.

Tuesday, February 22, 2022

Bishops uneasy with church teaching

This week’s Mediahuis Irish regional newspapers’ column.

Michael Commane
Three German Catholic bishops, Heiner Koch, Reinhard Marx and Georg Bätzing made extremely interesting comments in recent weeks.

Koch is the archbishop of Berlin, Marx the archbishop of Munich and Freising, and Bätzing bishop of Limburg and also president of the German bishops’ conference. 

Bätzing’s predecessor, Franz-Peter Tebartz-van Elst was engulfed in scandal, ranging from flying first class from Germany to India and building himself a palatial home. When the media found out about his expensive travel requirements the diocese employed a top legal firm to bat for him. But in the end it didn’t work and eventually Pope Francis in 2014 accepted the resignation Tebartz-van Elst, who had become known as the bishop of bling.

Marx, no relation to Karl, has been in the news because it was in his diocese that a predecessor of his, Pope Benedict, the then Joseph Ratzinger, has been accused of being economical with the truth when dealing with a number of clerical child sex abuse cases during his time as archbishop of Munich.

The three bishops have expressed their views on Catholic Church teaching on sexuality. On the popular Anne Will television programme some weeks ago Bätzing clearly said that Catholic Church teaching on sexual matters would have to change. All three bishops in the days following that programme said that there would have to be a move towards ordaining women and allowing priests to marry.

For three senior German bishops to speak publicly and clearly about such a taboo subject is a moment in German Catholic history, a moment in church history. Since then more German bishops have spoken of the need for change.

The debate is happening because of the Munich affair and the work of the worldwide synod that is currently taking place under the initiative of Pope Francis.

On the exclusion of women to the priesthood Bätzing said: ‘But I must honestly say that I am also aware that these arguments are becoming less and less convincing and that there are well-developed arguments in theology in favour of opening up the sacramental ministry to women as well.’

In an interview in a national daily newspaper Cardinal Marx said: ‘It would be better for everyone to create the possibility of having both celibate and married priests. 

‘For some priests, it would be better if they were married. Not just for sexual reasons, but because it would be better for their lives and wouldn’t be so lonely.’

Archbishop Koch said that although celibacy is a ‘strong testimony of faith’, it does not have to ‘be the exclusive route to priestly ministry.

These days, listening to the German bishops speak in prophetic words, I’m reminded of people who lived in the former East Germany, who objected to the system but nevertheless went along with what the party apparatchiks said, as they were afraid to speak their minds. They lived troubled lives, never being free to voice their opinions. The Berlin Wall falls and everything changes. All the theories and reasons the people were given no longer made an ounce of sense.

Life is a mystery and the moral of the story surely is never say never. 

Monday, February 21, 2022

28 years after the 28-year-old Berlin Wall

On Saturday the Berlin Wall

had been gone for 10,316 days, also representing the number of days it had divided the city.

It was erected overnight on August 13, 1961. Between then and 1989 the East German authorities spent large sums of money on reinforcing the Wall and developing sophisticated means of making it almost impossible to cross from East to West Berlin.

140 people were killed attempting to cross from East to West Berlin, more were killed between 1961 and 1989 in attempting to cross the inner German border.

The Catholic diocese of Berlin was one of the few organisations that spanned East and West Berlin, with the Bishop of Berlin living in East Berlin. The diocesan cathedral, St Hedwig’s was and is in Bebel Platz, which was situated in East Berlin.


Sunday, February 20, 2022

China, commerce and Taiwan

Volkswagen sell approximately five million cars annually in China, which is more than half its world-wide sales.

China is Ireland’s fifth-largest market for Irish goods, accounting for €10 billion worth of exports in 2020, most of which were agrifood products.

What will happen when China turns up the ante on Taiwan?

Saturday, February 19, 2022

Hospitals pay out massive €2.4bn in malpractice claims

The State has paid out €2.4 billion to settle 6, 289 hospital claims over the last 20 years.

The claims involve patients, service users, employees and members of the public across all the State’s acute hospitals.

In that period the South/South West Hospital Group, which is made up of Cork University Hospital, University Hospital Kerry, University Hospital Waterford and South Tipperary General Hospital, has paid out over €638 million in compensation. 

Sinn Féin TD David Cullinane said: “There seems to be a repeated pattern every year. Yes, mistakes can be made, but you have to learn from mistakes and put measures in place."

Friday, February 18, 2022

Disowning family faith feels like breaking link with ancestors

Interesting article in The Irish Times yesterday. 

Joe Humphreys

A puzzling feature of Irish society is the way in which people who have no time for religion turn to the church for key events – like births, marriages and funerals – while also, in many cases, valuing a Christian education, as though a parent’s duty is to give their child a faith to reject.


A degree of nostalgia may lie behind it. As a lapsed Catholic, I feel that completely disowning the faith of my family is a bit like severing a link with my ancestors.


Being born into a faith has also given me an appreciation of what it’s like to believe in an omnipotent being – something that binds me to the majority of the world’s population. It is only in certain countries, mainly Weird (western, educated, industrialised, rich, and democratic) ones, that children grow up without ever having experienced a relationship with god.


That’s not necessarily an argument for rushing back to the church. Rather, it’s an invitation to reflect on what – if anything – has been jettisoned in our transition to secularism.


That invitation takes better shape against the backdrop of a new book by NUI Galway philosopher Felix Ó Murchadha, kiwho places our current situation in a centuries-old context.


For most of human history, people understood themselves as products or playthings of the gods. We depended on godly “grace” for happiness, and our ultimate goal was heavenly “salvation”.


Something changed about 500 years ago in the Christian world, Ó Murchadha argues, when sceptical thinkers like Montaigne started to question the relationship between God and individual. Under this new outlook, which – according to Ó Murchadha – reached its apotheosis with Immanuel Kant, “the self transforms from a being directed towards salvation in an afterlife to a being seeking to create itself and in doing so achieve its own salvation”.


From this modern perspective: “Happiness is no longer a return to the divine or to the eternal, but is that which is to come in a new world, a world of human making, moulded from an indifferent nature,” Ó Murchadha writes in The Formation of the Modern Self: Reason, Happiness and the Passions from Montaigne to Kant (Bloomsbury).


Crucially, he says, early modern thinkers did their work hand-in-glove with theology. There is a tendency today to depict sceptics like Montaigne as atheists in all but name; however this depends on a “supposition of insincerity in some of the utterances of these philosophers”.


Thinking critically about the possibility of a relationship to a god, or gods, therefore, binds us to a surprisingly rich tradition of philosophy. That said, any worthwhile theoretical exercise must take account of science.


In this regard, Ó Murchadha looks forward as well as back as he considers how the dawn of the Anthropocene – an era in which humans are creating geological change – is giving rise to a new understanding of self.


If humans are now in control of nature to the extent that we can undo creation have we, perversely, made ourselves into gods? And if so who, if anyone, will save us? Never afraid to ask the deep questions, Unthinkable puts Ó Murchadha in the interview seat this week.


You say Montaigne is “the father of

the Modern self”. How so? “Montaigne was a French author of the 16th century, living in a time of uncertainty, crisis and civil war. Within this context, he withdrew from the world, literally in the sense of stepping back from public life, but also metaphorically in stating that he could not speak with any certainty about anything except his own experience.


“In his essays he tests himself. The French word ‘essai’ means ‘test’ – we owe its present literary sense to Montaigne. He tests himself by exploring what is strange to him – writings from the Ancients to his own day, reports from the Americas of exotic peoples, his experience of others.


“What he discovers through this process is a fragmented, continually changing self, which can make no claims beyond its own experience of the world. All of this marks a shift from an understanding of the self in terms of pre-given social and cosmological hierarchies to understanding everything on the basis of the self’s experience.


“What we find here is a sense of self that escapes categories and structures, a kind of anarchic freedom that remains a powerful force in modernity, even when opposed by the counter-tendency to rational order.”


You say there is a tendency to assume early-modern philosophers were insincere when referencing theological sources but is there not a case for saying that many such philosophers would have been atheists had atheism not been a punishable offence?


“My book begins with Montaigne and ends with Kant, both of whom said that they may not write all they think, but would never write anything they did not think. I see no evidence for doubting their sincerity here, nor indeed the sincerity in this respect of Descartes, Pascal, Spinoza, Hume or Rousseau.“We need to be clear, also, that ‘theological’ sources does not necessarily mean ‘theistic’. The very idea, for example, of the self turning within itself to find the truth, is rooted in a theological understanding of the self as finding peace and enlightenment internally, rather than in the world.


“Furthermore, there are many forms of atheism. Spinoza, who begins his ethics with a ‘proof’ of existence of God, could be accused of atheism because his account of God was not that of the creator of nature, but rather of nature itself. In Spinoza too – and Kant – we find some trace of the later atheism of Marx, Nietzsche and Freud, which understands religious belief in terms of an underlying need or desire.


“The attempt to prove the non- existence of God – Dawkins et al – is for the most part a later development. Importantly, with the possible exception of Hume, an account of God remains significant for the thought of the philosophers of this period. What is most contested philosophically in this period is not the existence of God, but the nature of God.”


How is the age of Anthropocene forcing us to reexamine what it means to be human?

“As I understand it, the modern account of the self was formed in response to the crisis of the Medieval world, namely the radical breakdown in the European understanding of God/religion, of the cosmos, of geographical space, of politics, of society, of science. We are living through a time of comparable crises with respect to the environment, democracy, economy, gender and many other domains.


“One of the crucial moves of modernity was that the divine was evacuated from nature and the Medieval distinction of creator and created gave way to the modern distinction of human – as self – and nature. This is no longer tenable.


“In the Anthropocene we have to start not from the projection of the self, but from the expressive totality of the natural world. What I mean by that is that we need to think not just of the human as self, but of all things as being or becoming entities which relate to all others as selves.


“The human self in such a context has to find itself as one kind of self among others within nature. This does not mean reducing the human self to a cog in the machine of nature, but rather to rediscover nature as much more than a machine, as the interacting, interlacing relations of multiple centres of self- expression.


“Just as modernity involved a transformation of the understanding of self, nature and divinity which has led to the Anthropocene, our present crises call for a new understanding not alone of the self, but of nature and divinity too.


“The self which emerges from the present crises needs a humility with respect to nature and a receptivity to a sense for its existence which precedes and envelops it, while remaining free of all dogmatic claims.”


Tuesday, February 15, 2022

The persuasion of a ‘lapsed Protestant’

This week’s Mediahuis Irish regional newspapers’ column.


Michael Commane

I’ve been working as a hospital chaplain for five years and I’m forever saying that what I hear and see every day is certainly the topic for a book. It’s time to start.


The philosophy, theology, the common sense, the stories that I hear from people every day have filled my head with wonder.


I have a list of questions that I don’t ask patients. I never ask a patient what religion they are, nor do I ask them what their occupation is or whether or not they are married. In my job I think it’s important that I don’t put labels on people. It’s a matter of both of us meeting one another as if our stories are beginning at that moment for each of us. The conversation can flow from there and if the story unfolds, well and good.


When it comes to religious classification I was somewhat bemused when someone said to me that they were a ‘lapsed Protestant’. I’d never heard that before and certainly not in a hospital context. Of course I‘ve often heard the term ‘lapsed Catholic’, at least, that was when far fewer people were walking away from the institution.


On a few occasions people have said to me that they are ‘of another persuasion’. When I hear it I feel as if my feet are stuck to the floor. It is said in a sense of kindness and politeness but I keep wondering how really different is our ‘persuasion’.


Only recently before heading to the hospital chapel to celebrate Mass someone used that term to me. I can only presume the person was a Protestant. 


It set me thinking about the Eucharist and what exactly their views and opinions are on the Catholic understanding of the sacrament. Indeed, my mind went off racing and I was asking myself what does the Eucharist mean to Catholics? Ok, that could bring us down a long road of theological discourse.


Then again, what exactly are the distinguishing features that separate Catholics and Protestants? I’ve often been told in order to get a full picture of the Catholic understanding of the Eucharist one would need to be familiar with the metaphysics of Aristotle and his understanding of categories. The theology of grace is another conundrum that divides us. I’m thinking of all these matters that divide us and most of us have not a clue about what we are talking. 


Better said, these issues have no real meaning for the majority of Christians. The ideas and prejudices we have about one another make no sense and are most unhealthy. Mark Twain’s comment: ‘The easy confidence with which I know another man’s religion is folly teaches me to suspect that my own is also’ is worth a moment of thought.


From my five years working as a hospital chaplain I’ve learned the importance of accepting people where they are, listening to them, trying to walk in their shoes, making a genuine effort to appreciate the stories of their lives. And isn’t it only in that context that any sort of genuine conversation can take place?


Come to think of it, we are all of different ‘persuasions’. And I always find it intriguing when people tell me they are ‘lapsed’. I’m never quite sure what it means. Scratch the surface and you will be surprised at the wealth of wonder and faith you might find.


Monday, February 14, 2022

Government’s €20bn plan to stop it all going up in smoke

Govewrnment is set to spend €20 billion making half a million homes warmer, greener and cheaper to manage.

Irish homes are 70 per cent reliant on fossil fuels. Most of ur homes are energy inefficient, with more than 80 per cent with an energy performance rating of C or lower.

Irish homes on average pump out 60 per cent more carbon dioxide than our European neighbours and we use  seven per cent more energy than they.

Residential emissions  account for 11 per cent of our total greenhouse gas emissions and generate approximately seven million tonnes of carbon dioxide on an annul basis.

Sunday, February 13, 2022

On County Wicklow’s Maulin on a wind-swept Saturday

Dubliners are particularly fortunate to have at their

doorstep Dublin Bay and the Dublin and Wicklow mountains.

The weather forecast for yesterday was for some

showers. Not a shower to be seen or felt on our climb to Maulin yesterday. But it was windy. Wind speed was approximately 40 knots at the top of Maulin. As on most mountains, it is an exposed spot and there were moments yesterday where it was difficult to stand.

While it was low cloud for most of the day, just as we got to the top there was partial clearance and The Kish Bank Lighthouse came into view as did the two stacks of the Pigeon House. Dublin Bay is simply a beauty to behold.

Maulin is an easy climb, standing at 570 metres west of the Great Sugar Loaf, north of Djouce and south east of Kippure.

Much weathering has occurred and the direct path down from the mountain was extremely slippery yesterday. It’s steep too.

It’s clear the number of people taking to the hills is growing. The car park at Crone Wood was busy and there is now an electronic gate, which closes in winter at 17.00. Fee for late departure is €50.

Saturday, February 12, 2022

British foreign secretary badly briefed on geography

It is reported that Russian foreign minister Sergei Lavrov asked British foreign secretary Liz Truss on her visit to Moscow on Thursday if she accepted his country’s sovereignty over Rostov and Voronezh.

She is said to have replied that she did not and never would.

Every schoolgirl/boy knows that Rostov and Voronezh are Russian regions.

Later talking to Russian media Ms Truss said: “It seemed to me that minister Lavrov was talking about a part of Ukraine."

Friday, February 11, 2022

A word on jealousy

 “The thermometer of success is merely the jealousy of the malcontents.” 

― Salvador Dali

Thursday, February 10, 2022

Vhi letter that seems to have lost the meanning of words

Voluntary health Insurance (Vhi) has emailed customers to inform them that it is closing its Dublin’s SwiftCare Clinic in Dundrum and opening a new Vhi 360 Health Centre in Carrickmines on February 23.

The final sentence of the letter goes: “Conveniently located just off the M50 at the Hampstead Building, Carrickmines Park, Dublin 18, the Vhi 360 Health Centre will give you access to quality healthcare, right on your doorstep."

No mention how to get there by public transport. Indeed, is there public transport to the centre?

It is an example of advertising/branding gone mad.

 What about people who live close to Dundrum? Is Carrickmines ‘right on your doorstep’?

It’s unfortunate, indeed misleading one words lose their meaning.

Wednesday, February 9, 2022

It’s a fine line between confidence and cockiness

Director General of IATA and former  CEO at Aer Lingus, British Airways and International Airlines Group, Willy Walsh interviewed on RTE Radio 1’s Business programme on Saturday, February 5 told an interesting story about himself.

In his final interview for the job as a cadet pilot with Aer Lingus he was asked by one of the interviewers, a pilot, if he had ever heard of a gyroscope. The 16-year-old Walsh said he had. The pilot then asked him what it was. Walsh told him he did not know what it was. The pilot rebuked him and said that he had just said he knew what it was. Walsh quickly replied that he had said that he had heard of a gyroscope but never said he knew what it was. 

There were five people on the interview board, two pilots, two people from the then Aer Lingus personnel department and a psychologist. He got the job and at that interview. Four voted yes and one voted no.

Later as CEO of Aer Lingus he checked back on his file and saw the remarks of the pilot who had asked him the question. The pilot referred to him as ‘a. cocky little....'

What four people saw as confidence, one saw as cockiness. It’s a fine line between the two.

Tuesday, February 8, 2022

The evil of war and the joy of peace

This week’s Mediahuis Irish regional newspapers’ column. 

Michael Commane
As a result of the column that appeared in this newspaper last week a German woman contacted me and told me the following story.

She came across some old documents belonging to her mother and among them she found some interesting papers. They included the military pass of her first husband, who was in the German army, serving as a paramedic. He was killed three kilometres from Kalusch, which lies in the southwest of Ukraine in July 1944. 

In a Christmas card to his wife in 1943 he wrote: ‘Now is not the right time to say too much. And the last sentence went: ‘Remain as you are and keep loving me, yours Paul.’ Seven months later he was dead. 

The person who contacted me commented in one short sentence that it was with that pain and sadness that she grew up.

I found her words extraordinarily stark and it set me thinking again of the brutality of war. If we can ban the smoking of cigarettes in public places why can’t we ban war?

Her words also made me ever so conscious of what it means to live in peace and how privileged I have been to live in this part of the island, having never experienced war or civil unrest. Personally, I thank the  founding fathers of he European Union for my good fortune.

The same day I received that note from the German woman I found myself chatting with a member of staff in the hospital where I work. We were having a cup of coffee, exchanging pleasantries and when she told me where she lived I asked her might she know a friend of mine. 

To my pleasant surprise it turned out that she grew up on the same road as he did. He is a close friend and I know him the best part of 50 years.

He is a fellow Dominican and a person I greatly admire.

Since our conversation I have been thinking about it and all the pleasant details we were able to share. She told me her mother had been a nurse and so had his, and maybe that’s how both women got to know one another. Who knows? But aren’t they some of the magic moments of our lives when we can link up with other people in friendliness and camaraderie. So often we take such moments and details for granted. 

They are anything but. Think of the world of war.

Paul, who died a young man in Ukraine, most definitely had little time or opportunity to engage in the simplest of conversations, talking about this and that. 

Soldiers are ordered to kill people, with whom in other circumstances they might well be sharing a cup of coffee and discovering that their parents or grandparents knew one another. Maybe the person who killed him shared similar ideas and hobbies as he.

That’s how evil and absurd war is.

When you think of the details and minutiae  we engage in in keeping society ticking over and working for the betterment of all and then how we can on the other hand so easily walk into war. It makes no sense at all.

Wise words from Bertrand Russell: ‘War does not determine who is right - only who is left.’

Monday, February 7, 2022

German bishops say priests should be allowed to marry

This article appeared in The Irish Times of Friday, February 4, 2022.

Leading German Catholic bishops have come out in favour of loosening their church’s celibacy requirement and opening the priesthood to married men.

Bishop Georg Bätzing, head of the German Bishops’ Conference, welcomed calls to reform celibacy rules from two other senior clerics, Cardinal Reinhard Marx of Munich and Berlin archbishop Heiner Koch.

Dr Bätzing said “the celibacy of priests is a biblically-attested form of following Jesus . . . but not the only form, at least not in the Catholic church”.

“The Catholic churches of the East have married priests,” he said. “I can’t see how marriage and the priesthood aren’t a common enrichment for this priestly service and for the common life of spouses.”

His forthright remarks came ahead of a crucial sitting of the synodal reform process in the German church, where 230 delegates are discussing issues including priestly celibacy, sexual teaching and the role of women.

Before this latest session – scheduled to run until tomorrow – Cardinal Marx said it “would be better” if some priests were married and that “things cannot continue as they are”.

One of Germany’s most senior church leaders and an influential adviser to Pope Francis, Cardinal Marx questioned whether celibacy “should be a basic requirement for every priest”.

“I think that things as they are cannot continue like this,” he told the Süddeutsche Zeitung daily. “If some say: ‘without the obligation of celibacy, they will all get married!’, my answer is: so what? If they all marry, it would at least be a sign that things are not currently working.”

Similar remarks from other leading church figures have brought fresh momentum to debates that divide liberal reformers and conservative traditionalists in the Catholic church in Germany – and worldwide.

Leading lay co-organisers and participants in Germany’s synodal process have welcomed the bishops’ remarks, arguing that the decision to live a celibate and chaste life should be a choice, not an obligation, for becoming a priest.

The latest session of the synodal process is taking place in Frankfurt in the shadow of last month’s report from the archdiocese of Munich-Freising, detailing nearly 500 cases of clerical sexual abuse from 1945-2019.

This session’s paper calls for far-reaching overhaul of existing organisational structures that are “shielded from criticism and decoupled from control” and “cause and encourage an abuse of power”.

Germany’s Committee of Catholics (ZdK), the country’s leading lay organisation, said it was optimistic that a majority of bishops would back resolutions for reform “not in a few years . . . but now”.

Ordination of women

Other proposals in the paper call for “regional solutions” to key reform issues, including the ordination of women, and an “open dialogue” on these reforms with Rome

ZdK president Irme Stetter-Karp warned that lay members of the synodal process would suspend their participation unless two-thirds of participating bishops backed the current paper.

She said the synodal committee had yet to sound out Rome, which has the final word on far-reaching church teachings, but that there were other issues that could be dealt with locally, such as the church’s stance on homosexuality.

Last week 125 German priests and church employees came out publicly and demanded an end to discrimination against them in church teaching and church labour law.

Among those who have backed the “Out in Church” campaign is Cardinal Marx. He said last week that, for him, homosexuality poses “no limitation on the possibility of becoming a priest”.

Church rules that homosexual men should not be ordained from 1961 were tightened in 2005 when Pope Benedict clarified that men with “deeply rooted homosexual tendencies” cannot be ordained priests.


Sunday, February 6, 2022

Serious numbers

Numbers and money

Irish authorities seized 4.3 million smuggled cigarettes at Rosslare Harbour this week. 

From March 1 it will cost €1.25 to post a standard letter within Ireland.

As a result of the Joe Rogan/Neil Young controversy Spotify reportedly lost $4 billion in value in one week.

Saturday, February 5, 2022

Africa cries out for Covid-19 vaccines

According to World Health Organisation (WHO) figures approximately eight per cent of Africa’s 1.3 billion population had been vaccinated against Covid-19 by the end of 2021. 

It’s unacceptable, indeed a shame on all of us in the developed world that approximately 92 per cent of people of the African continent have not been vaccinated.

In contrast, more than 60 per cent of the population of many countries in the developed world have been vaccinated against the virus.

In Ireland approximately 90 per cent of the population has been fully vaccinated.

Friday, February 4, 2022

Russia is again trying to take control over Ukraine

On December 1, 1991 over 90 per cent of those who took part in the Ukranian referendum voted to leave the USSR, and that in turn spelt the end of the Cold War superpower.

In 1994 Ukraine agreed to give up nuclear weapons. The deal meant that Ukraine insisted on guarantees of territorial integrity and sovereignty.

Ukraine had the third-largest nuclear arsenal after the the US and Russia.

Russia blamed the US and the EU for provoking and supporting the popular revolt against President Viktor Yanukovich, who fled to Russia. Russia subsequently annexed Crimea and the war in eastern Ukraine began.

Ukraine has caused ‘problems’ for Russia for a long time. Since the mid-19th century, there have been those who called Ukraine, Little Russia.

Thursday, February 3, 2022

 A Word in Edgeways as aired on RTE Radio 1 yesterday, Tuesday, February 2.

Yesterday was the anniversary of the Red Army victory over the German Army at Stalingrad on February 2, 1943. 

Most likely the battle that changed the fate of there war.

https://www.rte.ie/radio/radio1/clips/22057865/

Wednesday, February 2, 2022

Blaming it all on the tsars

It’s the tsars who are the real culprits in all our misfortunes.

Spoken by Dimitri Karakozov on April 4, 1866 on the day he attempted to kill Tsar Alexander II in Petersburg. His attempt failed.

Tuesday, February 1, 2022

War kills, traumatises and is senseless

This week’s Mediahuis Irish regional newspapers’ column.

Michael Commane
The Financial Times Weekend newspaper of January 22/23 carried a number of stories on the Russian Ukraine conflict. It also printed a map of the relevant areas of Ukraine and Russia. So many of the place names are soaked in the blood of World War II.

Kursk is right on the middle of the map. It was there in 1943 that the world’s biggest ever tank battle took place. Also on the map are Lviv, which the Germans overran and slaughtered its inhabitants. There too is Volgograd, the great city on the River Volga, which was called Stalingrad from 1925 to 1961, during which time it was named after Russian dictator Josef Stalin. In 1961 it was named Volgograd. From 1589 to 1925 it had been called Tsaritsyn, presumably named in honour of the tsar.

Last Thursday was International Holocaust Day, remembering the unthinkable evil Germany committed, and this Wednesday is the anniversary of the ending of the battle at Stalingrad in 1943. Many historians recognise the battle at Stalingrad as the turning point in the war.

But the price of that battle, that lasted five months, was horrific, almost two million people were killed or maimed alone at Volgograd/Stalingrad. The violence and brutality of war is simply not acceptable. Think about it, killing or maiming someone, with whom you might in different circumstances be best friends, work colleagues, lovers. Why do we ever let it happen?

I’m following what’s unfolding on the Russian Ukrainian front these days and I’m scared. Yes, history repeats itself but it’s a nonsense to think that it repeats itself in an exact similar format.

We hear of the 100,000 Russian troops that have been moved to the Ukrainian border, some from as far east as Siberia. The talk is of armies, battalions, regiments. But every one of those 100,000 soldiers, plus the Ukrainian soldiers are the children of mothers and fathers. The majority of women and men in both armies are young people, with sisters and brothers, wives/partners, with children at home, waiting for their mothers and fathers to come home safe and sound. And parents waiting for their children to return home.

They are simply cannon fodder and will be used to suit the machinations of those in power. The army leaders and their political masters will be flown around the world in exquisite luxury while the fighting soldiers will experience the cold wet, dirt and grime of war. It’s highly unlikely that the Russian foreign minister Sergei Lavrov or his US counterpart Antony Blinken will be rushed to a field hospital having to have a leg amputated. That’s the reality of war. And all for what?

Only last week a German friend of mine told  me that her mother’s favourite brother died in a battle in one of those cities marked on the Financial Times’ map. ‘His wife, who had a small baby when he disappeared, waited all her life for him to return,’ she told me. There were millions of soldiers on both sides with similar fates and for every one of them many traumatised family members.

War is senseless. It’s sobering to read in books and archives the uncensored letters soldiers in battle write home to their loved ones.

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