Tuesday, August 15, 2023

Our bodies and minds are dodgy pieces of hardware

This week’s Mediahuis/INM Irish regional newspapers’ column.

Michael Commane
Two weeks ago in this column I wrote about my encounter with a pregnant woman begging at the Luas stop at Heuston Station. To my shame I gave the woman nothing. Radio Kerry picked up the story and interviewed me about it. The interview compounded my belief that I had done the wrong thing not giving the woman anything. 

I have no idea about her background, know nothing at all about her. Is she a drug addict? I don’t know. But if she is, then the poor woman suffers from a horrible illness. And I’m intentionally using that word illness. Just think of the damage that any addiction causes, the pain too, and  how it destroys body and mind.


In my seven years working as a hospital chaplain I have come to learn how fragile our bodies are. One moment we think we are indestructible and at the flip of a coin we can be struck down with illness.


Last week there was a story in the national press about how the number of children on a waiting list for key spinal surgery has nearly doubled since 2019. 


I read the story but no sooner had I read it than I forgot about the seriousness of the topic.

 

Three weeks ago I got an infection. The previous day I had been swimming in the sea, cycling, and running about like a goat, carefree and not for a second thinking about health or how my body was working. And then suddenly, I’m feeling out of sorts, lethargic and really all I want to do is go back to bed. Nothing serious at all, nothing that a visit to the GP can’t fix. 


But it set me thinking what must it be like for people who are really sick, people struck down with  serious illness. What must it be like for parents who discover their young child has an illness that is going to be with them for the rest of their lives?


We are all fragile and if we are not currently fragile the day will arrive when we will realise that our bodies and minds too are dodgy pieces of hardware, that is unless we are suddenly knocked down by the proverbial bus. 


I lost a close friend when he was 57. He was found dead sitting at his desk. We could argue until the cows come home if sudden death is a good way to go. In the meantime it’s surely a good idea for all of us to offer a helping hand to the sick and frail.

 

During my few days of illness I was greatly impressed with those who went to the shop for me, dropped me down a litre of milk or a few oranges. I keep saying it’s the little things that always matter.


And on a more global level, you can measure the worth of a society by how it cares for its sick and old, those marginalised and unable to care for themselves. And yes, drug addicts too.

 

I know we do a lot of giving out about our health service but there are many positives about it. It’s healthy to criticise what’s wrong but it’s also important that we appreciate what works.  No harm to quote the wise words of the 18th century French writer and philosopher, Voltaire, ‘Appreciation is a wonderful thing: It makes what is excellent in others belong to us as well.’

Monday, August 14, 2023

Possibilities of a Kennedy making it to the White House

What are the chances of Robert Kennedy Junior becoming the next president of the United States of America?

He is running for the Democratic nomination for president in the 2024 election. He comes from a long line of political giants, including his uncle, former President John F Kennedy and his father, former Attorney General Robert F Kennedy--both of whom were assassinated. 

He is noted for saying many unusual or strange things. But it appears his poll numbers are growing.

https://youtu.be/KaTUepQ_V34

Sunday, August 13, 2023

The Wall that was built as an anti-fascist protection rampart

Construction of the Berlin Wall began on August 13, 1961. Its purpose was to prevent East Germans leaving the country. The German Democratic Republic was haemorrhaging skilled labour since the establishment of the state in October 1949.

The GDR authorities referred to it as the Anti-Fascist Protection Rampart. A similar style language that Vladimir Putin uses today to justify the Russian invasion of Ukraine.

The Berlin Wall came down in 1989 and Germany was reunited in October 1990. There was a hefty discussion as to whether Germany was united or reunited. And then there was great care to fix the date of reunification so that it would not clash with any of Germany’s bad days in history.


Vladimir Putin weaponises and rewrites history

Lara Marlowes opinion piece in The Irish Times yesterday. 


Its a great lesson in history. But if the West can say that D-Day was the turning point in World War II, surely Russia may say Stalingrad was the turning point. Stalingrad was the first significant defeat for the Wehrmacht. But that does not take away from Marlowes fascinating read.


Russian children will receive new history manuals when they return to school next month. It was important to explain why the full-scale invasion of Ukraine was “inevitable”, Vladimir Medinsky, the head of the update project, who served for eight years as Putin’s minister of culture, told Radio France.

Referring to pro-Russian separatists in eastern Ukraine, Medinsky said: “The Kyiv regime unilaterally aggressed parts of its territory who asser- ted their right to independence under international law.”


Younger children will not yet be taught about the Ukraine war, but their manuals have been amended to note that the Soviet invasion of Finland in 1939 was also “inevitable” because Finland “threatened” Russia.


Vladimir Putin demonstrated his obsession with history in an article foreshadowing the full-scale invasion, entitled On the Historical Unity of Russians and Ukrainians and posted on the Kremlin website on July 12th, 2021.


“It is as if he decided to take his country back to the past,” says Laure Mandeville, a journalist at Le Figaro whose book The Russian Reconquest (2008) foresaw Putin’s attempts to reconstruct the Russian empire. “Putin uses history as a weapon,” Mandeville continues. “Permanently rewriting history is a Soviet tradition, for example erasing figures like Trotsky from school manuals, paintings and photographs when they fall out of favour.”


Three periods feature prominently in Putin’s rants about the Ukraine war: the 9th to 13th century Kyivan Rus empire, the 17th and 18th century reigns of Peter I and Catherine II, and the second World War, known to Russians as The Great Patriotic War.

The Kyivan Rus empire is mythologised as the cradle of Russian civilisation. But the name of the enemy capital has become toxic so the label for the medieval dynasty will henceforward be shortened to Rus empire.


Ivan the Terrible, Russia’s first tsar, took the name Russia from the Kyivan Rus, who were Swedish Scandinavians, not Slavs. Ivan was fraudulently portrayed as a descendant of the 10th century ruler Volodymyr.


The chief protagonists in today’s war, Zelenskiy and Putin, are named after St Volodymyr/Vladimir. Both consider him the founder of their nation.


“It would be disastrous for Putin to be deprived of the myth that Russia sprang from the Kyivan Rus empire,” says Mandeville. “Because if Russia did not originate with the Kyivan Rus it means their origins are farther east, in Muscovy, which was a vassal state to the Mongol Golden Horde.”


The territory Putin has seized along the Azov and Black Sea coast of Ukraine was colonised by Empress Catherine II and her lover, Prince Grigory Potemkin, in the late 18th century and called Novorossiya (New Russia). At the outset of the present war in 2014, separatists in Donetsk and Luhansk named their confederation Novorossiya.


When they retreated from Kherson last November, Russian forces disinterred Potemkin’s remains and took them to Crimea for reburial. On July 23rd, Russia fired missiles at the historic centre of Odesa, which was founded by decree of Catherine II in 1794. It was not the first time Russia has attacked vestiges of Russia’s presence in Ukraine. Putin’s message was clear: If I canot have it, no one else can either.


Russia’s victory in the second World War is the most tenacious of Putin’s historical obsessions. On May 9th, 2012, he said that Russia “gave freedom to the peoples of the entire world” by single-handedly defeating Nazi Germany, a version of history which conveniently forgets the 1939-1941 Molotov-Ribbentrop non-aggression pact and billions of dollars’ worth of US weapons supplied to the USSR under the Lend-Lease Act.


The USSR eventually accepted Soviet culpability for the massacre of 22,000 Poles at Katyn in 1940. Putin’s entourage now question that.


Putin’s glorification of Russia’s role is sometimes called a “memocracy”, or rule on the basis of memory.

“It’s about the only thing he has left to hang on to, the founding myth, if you erase the Germano-Soviet pact so as not to stain the Great Patriotic War,” says Mandeville. “Putin constantly says, ‘we are going to repeat our victory. We are confronting Nazis’.”

Putin also exploits memories of the second World War in the hope of sowing division. At a St Petersburg economic forum in June he showed archive footage of wartime massacres of Jews and Poles by Ukrainians.


In yet another grotesque distortion Putin compared the fate of Mariupol, the Ukrainian city on the Azov Sea coast which Russia flattened last year, to that of Leningrad during the German siege. Inaugurating a new tramway line in Mariupol from afar, Putin said Mariupol showed “what these people are capable of, then and now”. 


There was not the slightest indication from Putin that Russian forces destroyed Mariupol.

Saturday, August 12, 2023

Imprisoned critics of Putin have courage of convictions

The Thinking Anew column in The Irish Times today.

Michael Commane

The name Alexei Navalny must be at this stage a familiar name around the world. Last Friday week he was given a 19- year jail sentence in a Russian penal colony. He is already serving an 11½ year sentence for charges he claims are bogus.

If he serves out all his sentences, he will be 74 before he will be released. His story, at least looking at it from this vantage point,  is simply extraordinary.


Navalny is one of the most charismatic and inspirational and thus dangerous opponents to Vladimir Putin and he has for many years protested against the Putin government. He has claimed it is a corrupt regime that is sucking the lifeblood out of Russia. 


In August 2020 he was flown to Berlin for treatment in the world-famous Charité Hospital having been poisoned in Siberia. He returned home to Russia the following year. On arrival in Moscow he was immediately arrested and has been in prison since.


It is a similar story with another Russian dissident. Vladimir Kara-Murza is serving a 25-year sentence for criticising the current Russian government and Russian army. He too spent much time living abroad and voluntarily returned home to Russia.


His wife  Evgenia Kara-Murza and their children live in the USA.  She is a strong critic of the Russian government and is constantly demanding freedom for her husband and the restoration of democracy in Russia. I have been following the paths of both Navalny and Kara-Murza. I’ve listened to a podcast of Evgenia and read what Navalny’s followers have to say about how he is being treated.


I can still vividly recall how Navalny was arrested on his arrival back in Moscow in 2022. Earlier this year his wife Yulia made an impassioned plea that her husband be provided with medicines. She continues to live  in Russia.


I have been flabbergasted by the bravery of both men and indeed their families. Both men had the choice of staying away from Russia but freely returned, knowing full well that they would be incarcerated and treated in Stalin-like conditions. 


As I saw both men return to Russia, I found myself asking if they were mad to do such a thing. Why would they do that, knowing what the future held for them? Not in a month of Sundays could I see myself doing something like that. I’m fairly sure I’d run the proverbial million miles to avoid any sort of suffering or torture. Why would you do it?

 

Yes, I know we read about the bravery and courage of famous people in the past. We salute  and honour them. We name streets and buildings after them. That’s easy to do but to place ourselves in their shoes – honestly that  seems impossible to me!


And then somehow the realisation  dawns on me that when someone really has a cause or belief to which they dedicate  their entire lives, then there is no other way for them but be prepared to take the consequences of their actions. Are there occasions when I call that fanaticism? Probably.


In tomorrow’s Gospel (Matthew 14: 22 - 33) when the disciples of Jesus saw him walk on the lake,  they were terrified. What does he say to them? He says: “Courage! It is I.”


I can imagine that Navalny and Kara-Murza and people of such noble behaviour are driven by such instinct. For them there can be no deviating, there can be no effort whatsoever to avoid or dodge the consequences of their actions. They have a job to do for the betterment of their society and nothing will stop them, nothing.

 

As Christians we are called to be brave and courageous. Isn’t that a vocation? We are called to trust in God. I often say those words but when I see what Navalny and Kara-Murza are doing I honestly can’t wonder but how real are my words about placing my trust in the hands of the risen Lord. Or will it be different  when the moment comes to stand up and be brave?  


We never truly  know how we’ll behave until the situation arises. In the meantime it seems wise and sensible to do the little things as well as we can. And do them with courage, as Christ asks us. 

Friday, August 11, 2023

Link between atomic bombing and Dominican Order

On Wednesday this blog remembered the USA unleashing the atomic bomb in Japan in 1945.

A reader contacted this blog with the following story.

An American Dominican, visiting Ireland between 1958 and 1964, gave a lecture to Dominican students in Tallaght.

The American Dominican, whose name is not available, was a member of the US Air Force in 1945 and was a crew member of one of the aircraft involved in the atomic bombing in Japan.

On being discharged from the US Air Force he joined the Dominican Order.



Thursday, August 10, 2023

Woke is the number one meaningless word right now

 An extract from Kathy Sheridan’s column in The Irish Times yesterday.

Though not a politician,  Jack Smith would recognise some of the language in a country where every word and deed is politicised and polarising. 

Woke, as one writer put it, is the number one meaningless word right now, used to signify any acknowledgment of racism or sexism, expressing an opinion while black or female, or “just a new thing that I don’t like”.

But silly and hackneyed as it is, it has the potential to be damaging. Observe how Donald Trump harnesses the word. This week he poured scorn on the US Women’s World Cup team and trolled its striker Megan Rapinoe – a high-profile advocate for racial equality, LGBTQ+ rights and women’s rights in sports – for missing a penalty. “WOKE EQUALS FAILURE. Nice shot Megan, the USA is going to Hell!!! MAGA”.

Wednesday, August 9, 2023

78 years ago the USA dropped atomic bomb on Nagasaki

While the world holds its breath as Russia wages war in Ukraine and has on a number of occasions made threatening comments of the possibility of tactical nuclear warfare, it remembers this day, August 9, 1945.

Seventy eight years ago today a United States B-29 Bockscar bomber, Fat Man dropped an atomic bomb on the Japanese city of Nagasaki.

Thirty five thousand people were killed on the day.

Three days earlier another US bomber called Enola Gay dropped an atomic bomb on Hiroshima, killing between 70,000 and 120,000 people.

The United States is the only country ever to have used the atomic bomb.

USA, China, Russia, France, UK, India, Pakistan, North Korea and Israel are nuclear powers.

Tuesday, August 8, 2023

Is the media a messenger or an influencer?

This week’s Mediahuis/INM Irish regional newspapers’ column

Michael Commane

I’m often surprised as to what makes the news and what doesn’t.


How are decisions made as to what should be on the front page of a newspaper or the lead story on radio or television news? There are stories that are natural front page news. 


The death of Sinéad O’Connor was a natural front page story. Dublin winning the All-Ireland, Ireland being knocked out of the World Cup are of course front page stories. But what about an explosion in Pakistan that kills 54 people, among them 20 children, does that merit front page news? 


The day that happened it was the first item on RTÉ television news, whereas it was way down the news the same evening on Germany’s public service broadcaster, ARD.


Are newspapers, radio and television stations influenced by their owners and those who manage and control them? Do editors have to think like their employers? Is it possible for anyone to be objective?  


Does the media influence its readership/listenership. What actually is news? Is news entertainment?

When Russian tanks rolled into Ukraine on February 24, 2022 journalists from all over the world rushed to the country and gave us minute-to-minute account of what was happening. 


That war is still as intense as it was then but while it is in the news it has lost its sensational impact on us. Indeed, the war in Ukraine really began on February 20, 2014 when Russia annexed Crimea. But on that occasion the West did not come to the help of Ukraine and the story more or less fizzled out. 


It often happens that items on PrimeTime or the Joe Duffy show become national stories and then go on to merit serious news stories. The sexual abuse of children in Blackrock College came to light as a result of two brothers, who were former pupils of the school, speaking about their sexual abuse on an RTÉ Radio 1 documentary in 2022. 


That documentary and the courage of the two men to tell their story led to the Government commissioning a scoping inquiry into schools run by religious orders.


Last week I saw on Twitter, now X, where entertainer Cardi B threw a microphone at an audience member who threw a drink at her as she was performing in Las Vegas. The next day Oliver Callan referred to the incident on his morning RTÉ Radio 1 programme. I doubt RTÉ had an intrepid reporter covering the event. Of course not, they too most likely picked it up on Twitter.


If I read a news story on a subject that I know something about I can be surprised  with some of the detail in the story. Often the coverage is not completely accurate. 


Do we ever change our views on topics because of what we read or hear in the media? 


The million dollar question: is the media the messenger or is it an influencer?


Certainly social media never claims to be solely a messenger. Isn’t it all about being an influencer?


I’d love to know what the newspaper barons think about social media.

Monday, August 7, 2023

Haughey’s part in Ireland’s literary success

Justine McCarthy in her column in The Irish Times on Friday wrote about Charles Haughey’s part in Ireland’s literary success.

She quotes George Bernard Shaw:

“You use a glass mirror to see your face. You use works of art to see your soul."

Saturday, August 5, 2023

Taking cover at the cinema

More rain today.

One big winner for July’s rain were the cinemas.

Cinema spending grew 136 per cent in July, which was the wettest July on record. And that surely must be a difficult record to break.

Friday, August 4, 2023

Far-right hide behind hodgepodge of populism

Colm Tóibín’s historical novel The Magician is an about the life of German writer Thomas Mann. It is a masterclass in writing and more anon.

Close to the end of the book Mann’s wife Katia says about her son Klaus, who is also a writer, a drug addict and a homosexual:

"Nobody needs a German who cannot stop telling the truth."

Something about the sentence that reminds me about the Ireland of today looking at the Ireland of yesterday.

Talking about Germany. I first arrived at Cologne rail station in 1972, a mere 27 years since the unconditional surrender at Karlshorst.

In the years that followed, certainly up to the fall of the Berlin Wall Germany was ashamed to mention its immediate past. It would have been anathema to see or hear about a far-right student movement. There may have been tiny neo Nazis but they were more a force of derision than anything else.

And how it has all changed. The far-right AfD are most likely to be in state parliaments next year. They prance about as if they own Germany. But it is not only in Germany. Across Europe the monster is showing its head again.

The AfD is growing from strength to strength. It’s clever, scratch the surface and the hatred is not too far away.

The name of the party was a hodgepodge for whatever you are having yourself, populist to the core; The Nationalist Socialist German Worker’s Party.

And then there is Donal Trump.

Enough.

Thursday, August 3, 2023

The archbishop, the minister, the pp and the book

 On Monday evening RTÉ One Television screened a programme on Noel Browne and his work as minister for health. His nemeses were the Archbishop of Dublin John Charles McQuaid and the medical profession.

Yesterday The Valley of the Squinting Windows by Brinsley MacNamara featured on the Oliver Callan Show on RTÉ Radio One.

Because of the book MacNamara lost his job as a teacher, sacked by the parish priest and never received a pension.

The footage of the behaviour of those around the archbishop leaves no one in doubt about the times that were in it. Embarrassing.

It’s never ending. It’s not enough to bow our heads in shame.

And what about all those who allowed it happen?

Tuesday, August 1, 2023

Making the wrong call at Heuston Station

This week’s Mediahuis Irish regional newspapers’ column.

Michael Commane

It was Friday morning and I was at the ticket machine at the Luas stop at Heuston Station in Dublin. 


I suppose I spent a minute or two looking at the fare structure and the route the Red Line takes when our eyes met. She was a young woman sitting down on the seat beside the machine. She was poorly dressed and I did notice that her teeth were in bad condition. 


She stood up, came over to me and asked me would I give her some money. I forget how much she asked for, maybe it was her fare into town. She went on to tell me that she was pregnant. She was wearing a shabby white T-shirt and yes, it was evident that she was expecting a baby. 


I told her the truth that I had no change on me. Maybe I should have checked my wallet so as to give her a note. But I didn’t do that. 


When I told her I had no change she immediately accepted what I said and went back to her seat and sat down. 


I was half way between the Luas stop and the entrance to Heuston Station when I went back to her and apologised for not giving her anything and told her how impressed I had been with her graciousness. 


I went on my way and travelled on the 9am Cork service, en route to West Kerry.


The following evening, back again at the Luas stop at Heuston Station, this time waiting for a city-bound Luas, a man, probably in his 30s, early 40s started begging and asking the large crowd waiting for the Luas if they could spare a ‘few bob’. 


He said he was homeless and rhetorically asked us what we would do if we were homeless. It was raining, a miserable evening, which complemented his mood of sadness and maybe even rejection. I won’t say he was threatening but my immediate reaction was not to get involved with him in anyway whatsoever. I think he was using a walking stick. 


From what I could see nobody was giving him any money. Indeed, whatever way he behaved, he created a strange eerie silence among those waiting for the Luas. Then almost without notice he seemed to disappear into the ether. 


He was gone. The tram arrived and the large crowd boarded.


After the savage attack on US tourist, Stephen Termini and the publicity it garnered there is a heightened awareness of crime in our cities.

 

Any time I’m at that Luas stop at Heuston I’m constantly watching my back and make sure to engage with no one whom I would consider to be in anyway dangerous.

 

I’m disappointed with myself that I did not give the pregnant woman a note that I had in my wallet. I could easily have done it and yet I didn’t. On the other hand I have no regrets for not giving anything to the man who was begging on Saturday evening.


I don’t think it was a question of woman versus man, no not at all. There was a gentleness about the woman, whereas the man seemed to be angry, maybe even combative. Isn’t it strange how we read people. I know it’s a cliche but don’t we often advise people not to judge a book by the cover. We all do it, even with books.


It must be hell on earth to have to beg on the street. 


What must it be like for a pregnant woman? I’m fairly sure I made the wrong call on Friday morning.

Remembering the Buttevant rail crash of August 1, 1980

On this day, August 1, 1980 a major rail accident happened at Buttevant rail station in Co Cork.

The Dublin Cork express, travelling at approximately 60 mph was derailed at the station as a result of facing points directing the train into a siding. The points had been disconnected from the signal.

Eighteen people were killed and 70 more injured.

The locomotive driver of the ill-fated train  was Dublin man Bartholomew Walsh, who at the last minute read the situation and tried to stop the train but that was not possible because of the speed he was travelling.

At the time many media outlets attributed blame to low paid workers. The subsequent report exonerated the low paid workers. The crash happened as a result of a number of errors made at management level. 

The train was made up of a mix of old timber and alloy-framed coaches with out of date coupling systems.

That crash and the subsequent one at Cherryville Junction made the State take action and begin a project to update the rail system.

At the public inquiry loco driver Bartholomew Walsh gave an excellent report of what had happened and how he reacted. The driver did everything according to the book.

Buttevant Station closed in 1977. It first opened to passenger traffic in 1849.

The locomotive on the ill-fated 10.00 express Heuston Cork service was 075, which may still be in service on non-passenger work with Irish Rail.

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Scotus puts Potus firmly in his place

Maureen Dowd’s column in The Irish Times yesterday. Having his tariffs struck down as unconstitutional by the supreme court has not sat well...