Category: Community, Family & Sport

Poetry project – ‘Lines from Lockdown’

Working with Writing on the Wall, Liverpool Irish Festival have selected two poems, which we believe hold incredible relevance to the lockdown situation we find ourselves within during 2020. We’ve worked with the Sefton Park Palm House ‘Palm Readers’ group to develop the project you see below.

Quarantine, by Eavan Boland, considers an aspect of Irish history that we will be leading several projects on over the coming years, An Gorta Mór also known as The Great Hunger or The Irish Famine. It reminds us of the politics involved in quarantine and the hardships people suffered, then and now. It makes us think about our gifts, our privilege and our heritage, reaching across the generations with love and a sadness that don’t always make the right decisions. Sadly, Eavan passed away in April 2020 and so the video resulting from the use of this poem will be the Festival’s tribute to her.

Stephen James Smith’s We Must Create reminds us that we must create to stay well, to find connection and to feel. It commits us to thinking of others by considering our connection and heritage, in addition to what we can bring to the world. Stepehn has approved the project and will be involved as we progress towards the Festival.

Both are written by Dubliners in the first quarter of the twenty-first century; both provide many layers of meaning, which we encourage you to explore as deeply as you are able.

The task

We would like to see your ‘covers’ of these poems, in whole or individual stanzas (numbered for easy identification). In the case of Stephen’s poem, We Must Create, we encourage you to write your own stanza to add to the end, so we can share these with Stephen and our Festival audiences. We’ve given you a rough example below. See ***

  • First and foremost, pick your poem -or poems- and decide if you are going to add a stanza to it for We Must Create. When sending your entry, let us know the stanza numbers you have covered for which poem. You are welcome to do all and both, but understand some would prefer to run shorter submissions
  • Run a quick test on your camera, DSLR or phone, to make sure your speech can be heard and the image is as clear as it can be. Try not to sit directly in front of a light, which will either put you in silhouette or bleach you completely!
  • Check you are filming in landscape and recording at the highest resolution your equipment allows
  • Start by addressing the camera with your full name and current location. Be creative – if the whole family are involved, that’s great – just let us know so we can credit you all!
  • Focus on the feelings the poem(s) generates in you
  • Once recorded, please send* your MP4 film to [email protected] via WeTransfer, with your name, age (in the case of minors), location and email, so we can credit you appropriately.

That’s it! We will splice the entries together to create a full performance of the poems and may put individual entries up on our site for you to access later, if they stand out.

Deadline for entries: Extended from Sun 9 Aug 2020 to Sun 13 Sept 2020.
First streaming of complete poem:  Thurs 15 Oct 2020, at the opening of the Liverpool Irish Festival. Anyone submitting their email address will be sent the link.
Download this information as a three page PDF.
General terms and conditions apply. You can see those on this page.

The Poems

Quarantine

Eavan Boland, born Dublin, Ireland 1944-died Dublin, Ireland 2020.

Stanza number Stanza
1 In the worst hour of the worst season
of the worst year of a whole people
a man set out from the workhouse with his wife.
He was walking—they were both walking—north.


2 She was sick with famine fever and could not keep up.
He lifted her and put her on his back.
He walked like that west and west and north.
Until at nightfall under freezing stars they arrived.


3 In the morning they were both found dead.
Of cold. Of hunger. Of the toxins of a whole history.
But her feet were held against his breastbone.
The last heat of his flesh was his last gift to her.


4 Let no love poem ever come to this threshold.
There is no place here for the inexact
praise of the easy graces and sensuality of the body.
There is only time for this merciless inventory:


5 Their death together in the winter of 1847.
Also what they suffered. How they lived.
And what there is between a man and woman.
And in which darkness it can best be proved.


From New Collected Poems by Eavan Boland.
Copyright © 2008 by Eavan Boland.
Reprinted by permission of W.W. Norton.
All rights reserved.

We Must Create

Stephen James Smith, born Dublin, Ireland 1982.

Stanza number Stanza
1 We must create to know who we can be
I say this for you, I say this for me
We must create to know who we can be


2 Early beginnings, heart beat warmth and you
First breath, eyes open a new point of view
Hands touch, ears hear, clocks ticking I am who?
We must create to know who we can be


3 Screaming out from within with a voice here
Notes flowing on air lulling the fear
Melody all around this atmosphere
We must create to know who we can be


4 Hearing truth in onomatopoeia
Boom, boom, belch, zoom, zap, playing with grandpa
While cookie cutting, baking for grandma
We must create to know who we can be


5 From scrawling with crayons to Lego bricks
From knitting needles, soft textile fabrics
To air-guitaring auld Jimi Hendrix
We must create to know who we can be


6 There are creative accountants, CVs
Tinder profiles where you look the bees knees
But best not to force it, it comes with ease
We must create to know who we can be


7 We heard a song sung, it helped ease the pain
We didn’t feel so lonesome as we sang the refrain
We forgot that feeling until we heard it again
We must create to know who we can be


8 From nursery rhymes to white collar crimes
What have you to say in uncertain times?
Have you a chance to change the paradigms?
We must create to know who we can be


9 Do you remember the time you heard an opening allegro
Or when that beat dropped and how it made your head go?
Some things make no sense unless you’re in flow
We must create to know who we can be


10 You may rise then fall, or fall then rise
An arc of a story contains no surprise
But how you tell it, therein the art lies
We must create to know who we can be


11 Artistry gives rise to community
We’re all part of a changing tapestry
There’s art history in identity
We must create to know who we can be


12 If you do it for the money you’ll be called a fraud
If you think you’re great company and you might be God
Delusions of grandeur aren’t that odd
We must create to know who we can be


13 There’s all sorts of forms, disciplines, levels
To challenge yourself in the intervals
Where you’ll find rivals and reasons for approvals
We must create to know who we can be


14 If it’s saved you from yourself
And now there’s no other way
It doesn’t matter how it moved you, welcome to the ballet
You’ve just found the peak of Parnassus, fair play!


15 We must create to know who we can be
I say this for you, I say this for me
We must create to know who we can be
We must create to know who we can be.


From Here Now by Stephen James Smith.
Copyright © 2019 by Stephen James Smith.
Reprinted by permission of Pace Print and the poet.
All rights reserved.*** To get you going, we’ve given you a little
starter for 10…

Commit to the process; trust in your speech
Engage in the idea, tweak gingerly
Film it and send it; await now to see
We must create to know who we can be.

General terms and conditions

  1. This is a community art project intended to provide a positive and creative activity during Covid-19 social restrictions. We have approached Stephen James Smith for use of his poem, which he has given freely. We have approached Eavan Boland’s publishers for use of the poem, but have not had official confirmation that we are free to use this work. having double checked permissions for the use of poetry we believe that the motivation and respect for the work suggests we are able to use it, respectfully and with safety. In the event that it is not permitted, we will remove the poem from this page and cease the project work around this poem.
  2. Criminality will be reported. Indecent submissions will be reported and rejected.
  3. All submissions must come with a named credit to be selected. This is for safeguarding and due credit if work is selected for press purposes
  4. The Liverpool Irish Festival will assume you have the right to use any imagery, likeness or art work sent to us in support of the poetry project. Please ensure you have these rights
  5. We will only accept and display respectful work and the Liverpool Irish Festival has final say in determining what this means. Our intention is to limit work to that which can be reasonably shared with all ages, without causing upset or alarm or triggering safeguarding or decency concerns. Content which flouts decency regulations will be reported
  6. The Liverpool Irish Festival reserves the right to use these entires online (web and social media); in our printed publications and our promotional materials. We will not sell your work or share your contact details without direct liaison (e.g., if a national publisher wanted an interview with you, we would contact you to permit contact).
Sefton Park Palm House logo
Sefton Park Palm House logo

Lockdown Lights – we need your stories

Liverpool Irish Festival is proud to announce that the Irish Government’s Emigrant Support Programme has confirmed support of our new project: Lockdown Lights from its Covid-19 emergency Response Fund. This involves you! We need your stories, 2D artworks and archive materials to help us build up a picture of our community.

The idea is to crowd-source submissions for our ‘Lockdown Lights’ project, which will categorise the stories under the following chapter headings:

  1. City heroes – your stories
  2. Irish impacts on the city – have you got images or tales of buildings, statues, places or times that affect the community that we can help people understand? Yes? Send them in!
  3. Lockdown responses – has someone in your community helped on the frontline of lockdown and do you want to honour them? Have you got images or tales of heroism; community engagement stories; artistic responses? Get them over to us!
  4. In memoriam – is there someone you would like to see remembered within and by the Liverpool Irish community? They could be from any time, but we will compile their images and stories in to an In Memoriam chapter where you can see them remembered
  5. Stars of the Future – do you know a dancer, teacher, doctor, artist or musician who you would like to hedge your bets on now? Do you want to see them celebrated? Then tell us about them.

The Festival will sort your entries in to online chapters and provide credits for each of the works. We will use our networks (including CARA, Irish Community Care and the Liverpool Irish Centre) and social media channels to gather stories for Lockdown Lights. We hope to celebrate you, your families, the work you have done and the life we have created in Liverpool. We want to leave a legacy from lockdown that helps us to understand our Liverpool Irish family better, remember those we have lost and celebrate those we think are going to be the bright sparks of our future.

So, if you are feeling a bit low (or are stuck for something to do) in lockdown think of a loved one or a funny experience you had at the Irish Centre and send it to us. Perhaps you are undertaking your family tree in lockdown and have found something interesting? Let us know. We want to share!

Key areas of interest for the Festival include: incredible In:Visible Women, dual heritage lives, stories about exchange, creativepursuits and accomplishments.

Submissions can be made via post or email and can include (but are not limited to)

  • photos or scans (by email only)
  • post cards and/or 2D artworks (non-returnable unless you can collect) – physical or graphics based
  • your poems and stories (handwritten or typed)
  • children’s art work (non-returnable unless you can collect)
  • MP3s and MP4s (MP4s preferably in landscape and good quality).

We encourage you to include something visual if you can – a passport photo or a signature; something to accompany a written piece. People love images and your story will gain more interest if people have an image to draw them in.

If emailing your submission please send it to [email protected] with the subject ‘Lockdown Lights‘ and if it is a large document, please use WeTransfer. If you are posting a submission, please send it: FAO Lockdown Lights. FF9 Northern Lights. 5 Mann Street, Liverpool L8 5AF.

Tips for filming MP4s/recording MP3s

  • Run a quick test on your camera, DSLR or phone, computer to make sure your speech can be heard and/or the image is as clear as it can be. When filming, try not to sit directly in front of a light, which will either put you in silhouette or bleach you completely!
  • Check you are filming in landscape and at the highest resolution your equipment allows
  • Make sure your microphone is picking up your voice and not too much background noise. If you find you are getting a lot of hissing or white noise, you may need to go somewhere less noisy or with more ‘padding’. Cushioned surfaces can help with this
  • Start by addressing the camera/microphone with your full name and current location
  • Focus on the story your are telling and the emotions it generates for you. If it’s sad, that’s ok – be free to share a tear -or a laugh- with us. It makes all the difference. We’re here to listen to you
  • Once recorded, please send your MP3 or MP4 to [email protected] via WeTransfer, with your name, age (in the case of minors), location and email, so we can credit you appropriately.

Deadline for submissions = extended Fri 28 Aug 2020 to Sun 13 Sept
Deadline for all work to be uploaded and shared: extended from Fri 4 Sept 2020 to Thurs 15 Oct 2020 at the Festival launch.

General terms and conditions

  1. This is a community art project intended to provide a positive and creative activity during Covid-19 social restrictions. We are not trained counsellors or mental health service providers. We would ask -for your wellbeing and privacy- to limit stories to those you are comfortable sharing publicly, for yourself and those involved. Criminality will be reported. If you need to share a personal story that does not fit this criteria we recommend contacting CARA on +44 (0) 151 237 3987 to identify the most appropriate service for your needs. Those of you with arts projects relaying deeply personal, long-form stories should contact us with your proposal, as outlined in our creative call, here.
  2. All submissions must come with a named credit to be selected. This is for safeguarding and due credit if work is selected for press purposes
  3. The Liverpool Irish Festival will assume you have the right to use any imagery, likeness or art work sent to us. Please ensure you have these rights
  4. We will only accept and display respectful work and the Liverpool Irish Festival has final say in determining what this means. Our intention is to limit work to that which can be reasonably shared with all ages, without causing upset or alarm or triggering safeguarding or decency concerns. Content which flouts decency regulations will be reported
  5. The Liverpool Irish Festival reserves the right to use these entires online (web and social media); in our printed publications and our promotional materials. We will not sell your work or share your contact details without direct liaison (e.g., if a national publisher wanted an interview with you, we would contact you to permit contact).

Featured image: taken from the Liverpool Irish Festival‘s Its the travelling Life exhibition, 2018, made with the Liverpool Irish Traveller community. The image was taken by Margaret ‘of day-to-day life at home’.

Government of Ireland - Emigrant Support Programme logo
Government of Ireland – Emigrant Support Programme logo

The Commission for Victims and Survivors strategy survey

Since the resitting of Stormont, work has begun moving on areas of Northern Irish politics that may have seemed dormant. Prior to Covid-19, the Festival had begun discussions with the Commission for Victims and Survivors (or CVS), about their work and the Forum they hold, to discuss the legacy of The Troubles and the services that are available for those affected. We were planning events and public discussions; the CVS showed particular interest in our work on dual-heritage Irish lives and the focus we took on In:Visible Women.

The Festival is aware that it is not only people on the island of Ireland that were (or remain) affected by the Troubles. We feel it is important to share details of the Commission’s work and services, but also opportunities that can shape their work. We intend to work with the CVS in coming years, to consider how it identifies with and shapes Irish lives, at home and in diaspora communities, hence our involvement now.

The following is a statement from the Commissioner, Judith Thompson, about the work the CVS is doing, asking for survey contributions –from you- to help shape the strategy of the Commission in future. Please do read the statement.


As the Commissioner for Victims and Survivors, I am looking at how we can better support the many thousands of people who have been impacted by 40 years of the conflict in Northern Ireland. This could be you or someone you know. 1 in 3 people in Northern Ireland have suffered harm as a direct result of the Troubles. The likelihood is, they are a part of your organisation and what you do will already impact them. We all have a part to play – to build a better future.  I would be very grateful if you could take some time to complete this survey and share your thoughts.

You can complete this survey online, here.
You can also download a paper copy, here. If you have friends who are not online, but this would useful to, we encourage you to share.

Accurate, incisive and informed views and experiences from Groups, Individuals, Families and Friends is essential to mapping out how we make that future work for everyone. This survey will provide vital evidence to help us shape the roadmap to the future. I can assure you that what you share will help other people. The results of this survey will influence the advice I will give to government on what is the best way forward in a new Strategy to deliver services and support to victims and survivors today and in the future.

If you have any questions or would like further information on this survey, the Commission’s Research and Policy Officer, Leah McDonnell will be happy to help you.  Leah can be contacted by emailing [email protected] or by telephone on +44 (0) 28 9031 1000.

Your voice coupled with our learning from the past 10 years will provide government the expert knowledge of the road left to travel. Together we are working towards a common goal: a future that offers peace for all. Thank you for your interest and support and I look forward to your response. Yours sincerely,

Judith Thompson
Commissioner

Commission for Victims and Survivors
4th Floor, Equality House
7-9 Shaftesbury Square, Belfast BT2 7DP
(t): 028 9031 1000
(e): [email protected]
(w): www.cvsni.org

Feature image pixabay.com StartupStockPhotos

CARA – a united response to Covid-19

Liverpool Irish Festival, in partnership with Irish community groups in the North West, has launched an important new programme named CARA to support our communities to stay safe, well and connected through Covid-19. Our partners include: Brian Boru Club, Comhaltas Ceoltóirí Éireann, GAA (John Mitchels and Wolfe Tones), Institute of Irish Studies (University of Liverpool), Irish Community Care, Irish Community Care Manchester, Liverpool Irish Centre, Mersey Harps and Shenanigans. CARA is also delighted to announce that it has recently been joined by Conradh Na Gaeilge (Nov 2020).

There are many members of our communities who may need a helping hand or a listening ear to get through the Covid-19 pandemic. Many of us are older or in poor health; many of us live alone far from family and friends. We need your help.

If you would like to get involved as a volunteer (this might mean picking up the phone for a chat or picking up groceries or a prescription) please complete this short form (click link).

If you know someone who is isolated (or likely to need a bit more support during the coming months), please help spread the word to them or fill in this short form and we will take it from there (click link). Alternatively you can call 0151 237 3987 for further information

We thank you for your support. Please promote CARA – as widely as possible in our communities – to ensure we let people know that there is help available during this challenging time.

Watch a short video about the programme here.

October article:

In October, we included an article about CARA in our Fetsival Newspaper. You can see the #LIF2020LongRead here.

10 June 2020 update:

“CARA volunteers are now delivering shopping for 30 people and providing regular ‘catch up and craic’ calls to another 30 people. The digital inclusion programme is developing well.  Mary whose cataract operation was postponed due to Covid 19, so couldn’t see the TV is absolutely delighted to have a large text Kindle supplied by CARA with a whole range of cultural programmes to enjoy; James recently diagnosed with cancer is connecting with family back home through Facetime and Zoom; Josephine has been talked through the use of Facebook and is delighted with being able to connect with family and friends; simple solutions that are making all the difference. We have also been able to provide activity packs (cultural material, daily diaries, cards and postage to write to family) for people in prison who are on ‘double’ lockdown.

[Week commencing 8 June] we will publish the first edition of CARA Newsletter which promises to be an excellent read! Thanks to everyone for your contributions to date. Apologies we are unable to include every article in the first edition, they will feature in next edition (early July). And keep the information coming……..including stories, poems, pictures, remembrances etc”.

30 April 2020 update:

So far, CARA have recruited 60+ volunteers and supported 10 people with regular shopping and other practical tasks; an amazing achievement in a very short period of time. Next week, the service is set to connect people using our telephone befriending service, where volunteers will have regular chats to people who have very little social contact, providing a listening ear, craic and a focus for the day.  Please promote CARA widely; we want as many people who are isolated in our communities to hear about the project and connect with our volunteers.

We are very aware of the power of technology and the key role it plays in connecting people, even more so during Covid-19, and are acutely aware that many of our people have no access to IT or the internet. For many, this renders fantastic online programmes, activities and connections inaccessible. We are looking at ways to address this, including a monthly printed and posted CARA newsletter and exploring how we can get people more digitally included.

We were extremely pleased to see CARA featured in The Irish Post. You can read the article here.

#GlobalGreening 2020

Tourism Ireland’s #GlobalGreening has taken place for 10 years. 2020 is its eleventh celebration and marks LIF‘s third year of consecutive involvement. We work with city partners to organise it and thank each of them for their support.

What’s LIF got to do with it?

We are the key driver of the event in Liverpool. The Festival engages with the idea as it allows Liverpool to celebrate Irish influence on Liverpool. With 50% of Liverpool’s population having Irish genealogy, this is an important acknowledgement. As an arts and culture organisation, linking with a visual, international programme -that crosses faith, politics, geography and economy- allows us to help tell a fascinating story.

By partnering with a mixture of civic and independent buildings, we use this visual happening to consider the scale and impact of the Irish diaspora and particularly their influence and personality within our city.

Meaning today

That a visual spectacle can take place -and be shared globally- without a need for mass congregation is resonant and important. That a celebration can take place that holds positive messages of inclusion can be shared -during times of difficulty- helps to counter the media stories of toilet roll fights and COVID-19.

As the globe turns and night descends across the time zones, green lights pop-up in celebration of their Irish diaspora populations. This year, the message is poignant as borders close, functions halt and celebrations are cut short. This international project, reminds us that the legacy of migration can be positive. It defies many of the negative media representations of mass movement. Each individual pinprick of light on the land mirrors a star in the night sky and suggests that there is a unity for people, however ever far flung they may feel.

Short film
Liverpool thanks

We’re excited that Liverpool has taken such a positive role in supporting the project and pleased to share all on the images on 17 March, St Patrick’s Day. Specifically we would like to thank:

  • FACT
  • Liver Building
  • Liverpool Central Library
  • Liverpool City Council and all at  Liverpool Town Hall
  • Liverpool Naval Club
  • MerseyTravel
  • Sefton Park Palm House
  • The Institute of Irish Studies and the School of Engineering at University of Liverpool
  • Wirral Council.

Thank you. Beannachtaí na Féile Pádraig oraibh go léir/ Greetings to you for a happy St Patricks day .

Mr and Mrs Kwok Fong (c) The Sound Agents

Liverpool Family Ties: The Irish Connection -see the film

A new documentary style short film featuring Liverpool’s Irish dual-heritage women was shown at Bluecoat to celebrate St Brigid’s Day (1 Feb 2020, click here for event link). Bridging 2019’s Festival theme of “unique stories, creatively told” and 2020’s theme “exchange”, the documentary asks interviewees to consider their heritage, Irish migration and lived-experience of Liverpool. We can now show you that film.

Commissioned by the Irish Embassy to deliver an event as part of their national programme of St Brigid’s Day events (see online brochure here), the Festival has worked with grassroots documentarists, historians and artists The Sound Agents to create the film. Interviewing community members, they have unearthed fascinating stories about Liverpool, how families came to live here and what they have experienced as a result of their combined -and sometimes conflicting- dual-heritage.

The Sound Agents comprise of John J. Campbell and Moira Kenny; known recording seldom heard stories of everyday life, including The Liverpool Chinatown Oral History, the Chinese Labour Corps, social housing and the domestic effects of World War I on Liverpool.

Using Irish Embassy funding, the Liverpool Irish Festival commissioned The Sound Agents to document dual-heritage stories from women living in Liverpool, identified at the Festival’s dual-heritage day, held at Tate Liverpool (14 Oct 2019). Liverpool Live’s interview, recorded then, is available here: facebook.com/watch/?v=780575865694692 The Sound Agents are currently funded by the National Lottery Heritage Fund to make a pilot documentary film Then Along Came Lennon: A First Hand Account of Art School Bands.

The Festival developed the day to involve and learn about Black and Irish, Chinese and Irish and Irish diaspora experiences of Liverpool. It was formed by inviting group leaders to participate and invite their networks. Doing so revealed stories of empowerment, race and identity divisions and tales of family, domestic life and celebrations. The documentary collects some of the stories, serving as a stepping stone to future work with these communities. If you are interested in speaking to the Festival about this, please email [email protected] who continue to work on this subject and are open to additional individuals and groups becoming involved.

Liverpool Family Ties: The Irish Connection continues the Festival’s commitment to work about In:Visible Women, with St Brigid’s Day presenting an opportunity to celebrate and empower women. Respected as Ireland’s ‘second saint’ for compassion towards the young, sailors, watermen, scholars and travellers, St Brigid is a ‘taliswoman’ for modern concerns, making her a relevant role model now.

Tickets to Liverpool Family Ties: An Irish Connection are free, but registration is necessary.
Click here to book yours: liverpoolirishfestival.com/events/family-ties/

For more about The Sound Agents: thesoundagents.com/

The image used to promote this event is of Mr Kwok Fong and Mrs Elizabeth Fong (nee Gannon), provided by a family member during the filming of the documentary. It features their first-born grandchild, Roma.

Click here to download press release, complete with editor’s notes.

Three Christmas presents in white paper, tied with spruce decorations.

Nollaig Shona

Nollaig Shona agus Athbhliain faoi Mhaise Duit!
A Merry Christmas to you and Happy New Year!

We sincerely hope that 2020 brings you a few steps closer to achieving your dreams!

Beannachtaí na féile!/Seasons greetings!

May your hearth be warm;
your table full
and your heart filled with joy
this Yuletide and New Year!

Info: The Liverpool Irish Festival office will be closed from midday on Fri 20 Dec 2019-Mon 13 Jan 2020 with no one responding to email or office calls. If you are looking for somewhere to spend time over the holiday season, we recommend you visit the Liverpool Irish Centre. If you require welfare support, we’d advise contacting Irish Community Care. Links to both are provided.

Looking ahead: Be sure to plan ahead and get your ticket for our St Brigid’s Day (1 Feb 2020) event: Liverpoool Family Ties: The Irish Connection. We’ll look forward to seeing you there!

If you are not already signed up to receive our enewsletters, please use the sign up link here (or above) to subscribe. For a special peak at our Christmas enewsletter, click here.

“What I love about the Liverpool Irish Festival”…

October approaches quickly every year, but here at HQ (in early September), we are looking forward to delivering all of our incredible events.

Out of the blue, we were reminded -by local filmmaker John Ramsden- of the great work he did for us, collecting audience memories on why people love the Liverpool Irish Festival and we though we ought to share this with you all (you might be in it!).

If you have an event that you would like to document, John is an all out star. You can reach him using any of the following methods:

@JohnRamsden
+44(0)7896 992 975
Not only can he film and document your event, but he can also use film you have taken and edit it in to something usable, credited/subtitled and professional.
We want to thank John for his work on this, which he has donated to the Festival in support of its work. We are hugely grateful and love the end result – thanks, John!

Fly The Flag

Fly The Flag is a global project running 24-30 June 2019 to mark the 70th anniversary of the signing of the Universal Declaration on Human Rights.

Why and how are we involved?

Liverpool Irish Festival is flying the flag in the hope of celebrating universal human rights and positively connecting with Irish diaspora audiences, globally, as well as sister communities across the world. At a time when Ireland’s Diaspora Policy is under review, Ireland’s connections with Europe are being strained by borders and Anglo-Irish status is being looked at more closely, understanding our role within the Universal Declaration on Human Rights, our relationship with peace and our contributions to global networks has never been more important.

Ai Weiwei is an internationally renowned artist, but also an individual who is recognised as contentious by sections of China’s community and systems of government. Viewed as an anti-traditional individualist, Ai Weiwei’s experiences, contemporary work and activism have led him, historically, in to both arrest and exile. This juxtaposed position of being loved and feared places him in an unusual position to speak about rights and violations, humanity and expression.

This particular work –Fly the Flag– is understood explicitly to be about uniting people through universal rights and equity and for this reason the Liverpool Irish Festival will #FlyTheFlag. It will fly on our home page for the week marking the Declaration’s 70th year. We hope you will use our page to access more information about the Universal Declaration on Human Rights and that you will learn, share and value its messages, rolling out its word and work ever further to ensure all communities globally are treated with universal rights.

 

Official information about Fly the Flag
24-30 June 2019

To mark the 70th anniversary of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, artist Ai Weiwei has created a brand new flag to celebrate universal human rights. In a far-reaching and unique collaboration, arts organisations and human rights charities have come together to Fly The Flag. The flag was commissioned in response to the real and present dangers of a world changing at break-neck speed, and a community that has forgotten why human rights are so important, to offer hope and to educate generations to come about the absolute importance of universal human rights.

In June 2019, the flag will be flown for 7 days marking the 70 years across the UK and also around the world from Mexico to Iceland, Germany, Denmark, Greece and the USA. Organisations across the UK are programming events and activities to take place during Fly The Flag week. To find out more visit FlyTheFlag.org.uk

Fly The Flag is co-produced by Fuel (lead Producer), Amnesty International, Donmar Warehouse, Human Rights Watch, Liberty, National Theatre, Sadler’s Wells and Tate Art Galleries.

#FlyTheFlag70

About the Universal Declaration on Human Rights

Read the full Universal Declaration of Human Rights here.

More needed than ever before, but under severe threat.

As the world changes at break-neck pace, the need for our hard-won, anchored system of legal protections for human rights is more vital than ever, yet that system is under severe threat at home and abroad. We are living through turbulent times. Political instability, economic inequality, social change and technological revolution create new challenges and uncertainties.

The Universal Declaration of Human Rights, 70 years old this week, offers people a beacon of hope in these uncertain times. The Declaration was created by women and men who witnessed first-hand the horror and inhumanity of the Second World War and were determined that it should never be repeated. And today, through the UK Human Rights Act, this powerful idea protects the rights of everyone in this country.

Human rights are more than just a catchphrase. They inspire and empower. Inspire a vision of a world free from abuse and cruelty. Empower by protecting us from state abuse and curbing the reach of society’s most powerful, so that a minimum standard of safety and dignity is guaranteed to every human being.

In these difficult and unsettling times, universal human rights have never been more important.

A view up through a tall ship's rigging

Dublin, Bordeaux and Liverpool joined by song

The Liverpool Irish Festival has commissioned a song – from artist Rory Moore of Strength N.I.A – as a gift to our Three Festivals Tall Ships Regatta city partners; Dublin and Bordeaux. Listen to the Three Festivals Theme Radio Edit and Extended Feature below using the playlist below.

Click for the Three Festivals Theme press release or read the full story below.

Click here to see our events listing for the Three Festivals Tall Ships Regatta.


Time and tide

Back in 2016, Strength N.I.A contacted the Liverpool Irish Festival to see if they could play as part of the LIF2016 line-up. As the Director of the festival, I began 13 weeks before the festival and can claim that things were hectic. The lead singer – Rory – was funny, tenacious and eager, but between us we couldn’t get the plans in place to find the fees for travel, venues, tech and the like.

We stayed in touch.

In 2017 we spoke again in the hope of making something work. Using the thinnest of budgets and the fattest desires we did it, but Storm Brian also swept the city and despite two excellent performances Strength N.I.A’s (seen by many online, too) we knew we wanted to achive more.

How then – and why – should we have persisted? Because that’s what art does. That’s what friendship does. It persists in the face of adversity and all experiences count! We all know – once you’ve met and established there is a spark to do more, you have to find the fuel and breathe the oxygen in to the thing to make the fire burn.

Knowing creative brilliance was not lacking – but translating great gigs in Ireland to other countries is hard – we started thinking about different ways to work collaboratively across the Irish Sea. So when the City Council approached the Liverpool Irish Festival to commission work for the Three Festivals Tall Ships Regatta a creative outlet arose…

LIF: “Do you fancy writing a song that Liverpool can gift to Dublin and to Bordeaux? It needs to come from a slightly outside perspective so Liverpool can appear in it, too, without being ego driven or self-deprecating. It needs to draw these three locations together and has to be radio friendly!”

Rory: “I’ll have a think”.

That ‘think’ has led to Strength N.I.A’s front man, Rory Moore, creating the attached song – a gift to our friends in Dublin and Bordeaux with love from Liverpool. It looks at some shared histories, cultural metaphors and country identities. It uses language and voices from each location and shares some of our social ideals around equality, brotherhood (tolerance) and liberty. In it we find electronic cadences that have played in each location; phrases that can be interchanged from our national characters and references to individuals that can be from no other place but their home.

Rory says:

“From the get go I wanted this piece to be fun, informative and playful. I knew I was going to be tackling some subjects that were politically charged and could lead me into sensitive and dark parts of history, so I didn’t want to come across as self-righteous! Music – after all – is a celebration and that was key to the foundation of this piece. My friend said I should write a Eurotrash anthem when I was in France earlier in the year; [then Liverpool Irish Festival called me] in the airport on my way back from France! I knew the time was right to indulge this fancy! The brief was interesting: somehow I had to tie Bordeaux, Dublin and Liverpool together in a 3 min song that could involve ships, wine, immigration, the ice age and the Moon. Brilliant I thought!”.

There’s so much that the guys have put in to this. There are poems and voices, historical facts and samples, shanties and individual voices. There are reference points throughout it which make it unique, flavourful and funny.


Song of the sea

Things you should look out for:

  • Letitia Elizabeth Landon’s poem, Liverpool, which was issued in Fisher’s Drawing Room Scrapbook in 1833
  • References to Olympe de Gouges – a French Revolutionary who scribed the Declaration of the Rights of Woman and the Female Citizen in response the its male counterpart, adopted by the National Assembly two years previous! Executed for her ‘crime’, her legacy is an ongoing contribution to social issues still playing out today
  • The Scouser in the piece is a true Scouser, ‘Tommy’, who lives in Derry. The word ‘Scouse’ comes from the Northern European dish ‘Lobscouse’. As Rory reports: “it was a stew commonly eaten by sailors, which became popular in seaports and docks such as Liverpool; God only knows what was in it! There were riots in England around the 18th century, because labourers demanded to be fed bread and cheese (seen as inherently English) by the land owners [and they] refused to eat potatoes and porridge [seeing} them as inferior foods (unlike the Irish and Scottish)!”
  • Commissioned shanty singing and violin playing
  • Electronic dance music has specific reference points in each of the cities, but in Liverpool it is an obvious reference to Cream
  • Ireland, Great Britain and continental Europe we all joined up until the Ice Age passed and the Middle Stone Age. Depending on varying research It is estimated that we parted by the waves between 6,500 and 6,100BC.

So how did Rory do it? The story is almost as interesting as the song! Rory says:

“I began listening to old sea shanties and sailors songs to get a feel for the high seas. I then began reading about the origins of Liverpool as a sea port. I knew this would be interesting, but I was horrified at what I discovered. Liverpool had a major contribution to the enslavement of 11 million people from the Africas. The poem part in the song – by Letitia Elizabeth Landon – is strangely ironic. As beautiful as the poem is, most of the great ships were on their way to entrap and destroy people’s lives in Africa. Another ironic factor is that most of the Liverpool council members of that time where involved in slavery and owned slaves in the West Indies, America and South America.

“When I began reading about Bordeaux I was astonished to discover that there had been a Celtic settlement around 300 BC called the Liturgies Vivisci who traded in wine which they produced themselves, but more interesting still, I thought was a chapter in French history about a lady called Olympe De Goude, whom was sacrificed for her feminist stance during the French Revolution, which – ironically – was supposed to put the people in control of their own lives! There are historic struggles from the dawn of civilisation, but – one thing is for sure – they have mostly been concerned with male status and not women, so I re[dressed] a bit of history in the song and added her into the mix!

“I used a working-class, Dublin man’s voice in reference to immigration and tied the whole thing together through my research of the last Ice Age, when Ireland, England and continental Europe were one. Because there were so many parts to the brief I merged [them] like a collage, always bringing it back to unity and solidarity; I hope it comes across that way anyway.

“I then recruited a bunch of fellow Irish men (who more or less live as pirates in Derry!) and asked them to attend a studio session where we all had a good laugh and sing along to the track.

“I sampled some violins to give it the Irish feel and built the club sounds around the violin samples.

“I hope I have fulfilled my commission brief and look forward to hearing it on the radio and to attending the Three ships festival in Liverpool or Dublin. Look out for us at future festivals and in the words of [Robespierre’s famous motto] “LIBERTE, EGALITE, FRATERNITE!”.

As outlined above, the song – now called The Three Festivals Theme has been through different iterations, reminding the Liverpool Irish Festival of the various straplines Liverpool have used over the last decade to describe ourselves. These remnants cling to the internet, like barnacles on a ship’s hull, and give layers of meaning to this year’s ‘Liverpool2018’ platform; ‘European Capital of Culture’, ‘The World in One City’ , ‘One Magnificent City’… each moniker striving to show our inclusion, diversity and pride. Perhaps ‘Liverpool2018’ does just that. Simply. This year we don’t need to qualify Liverpool – we’re understood now. It’s where we are and the time we’re in.

A parting wave – slán; adieu!

The Three Festivals Tall Ships Regatta – a unifying race between three countries – is a key event because it ties us to our neighbours – through time and tide. It helps to place-make each location by showing the world where we are on its map. Rory’s Theme helps provide a fun gateway to this position for non-sailing landlubbers as well as masters of the sea. We hope you all enjoy it, from within or from outside, this is a fun nod to our mutual and differing histories, with lots to explore.

The Three Festivals Theme has benefitted from funding from the Liverpool Irish Festival via its support from

  • Liverpool City Council
  • Arts Council England
  • The Irish Government’s Department for Foreign Affairs

Liverpool City Council logo - supporters of the Liverpool Irish Festival through their cultural investment programme

Liverpool 2018 logo denotes activities that sit beneath the Liverpool City Council's 2018 cultural programme.

 

 

 

 

 

Department of Foreign Affairs and Investment (Government of Ireland) logo - the DFA support us through their Emigrant Support Programme

 

 


liverpoolirishfestival.com facebook/LivIrishFest | Twitter @LivIrishFest | #madfortrad | #madfornew | #invisiblewomen | #LivIrishFest

strengthnia.com | facebook/strengthnia | Twitter @strengthnia | #irishbands


Rory Moore is songwriter with Strength N.I.A. Described as ‘werewolf pop’, the band describe their sound as “woolly and deliberate”. They write tracks using bass, organ, words and beats. From Derry, the band have recently released celebrated album Northern Ireland Yes and featured on Steve Lamacq’s and Gideon Coe’s BBC Radio 6 shows and Frank Skinner’s Absolute Radio music show.

The Three Festivals Tall Ships Regatta too place in Liverpool 25-28 May 2018. The Liverpool Irish Festival featured heavily, with two days of programming on the La Malouine and in the National Museum of Liverpool‘s Martin Luther King Jnr Building in Albert Dock.

Strength N.I.A
Strength N.I.A (c) Conor McFeely