The National Famine Way and Canadian Wake

National Famine Way Walk leaving Strokestown

It was wonderful to be back in ‘Strokestown Park House’-Ireland’s National Famine Museum on Sunday evening to take part in the Canadian Wake the night before The National Famine Way Walk 2024, which this year was led off by Caroilin Callery and Ireland’s Ambassador to Canada, Eamon McKee.  

The Wake, like in times past, is a gathering to say goodbye to the emigrants and wish them well on their journey with music, story and song and remembrance of times past for most would never see their home or families again.  We were gathered to send the group of walkers off on their long journey to Dublin which passes through many villages and towns along the Royal Canal.

The National Famine Way has been spearheaded by the remarkable Caroilin Callery of Strokestown Park House and is a walk along the Royal Canal from Strokestown to Dublin’s City Quay that remembers and commemorates the 1,490 tenants of Major Denis Mahon who in May 1947 at the height of the famine were evicted and offered paid passage on ships to Quebec in Canada.

The tenants included many widows and young children, accompanied by the Bailiff on their long walk from Strokestown along the Royal Canal to Dublin’s quays. Many of the children had no shoes, so shoes had to be made for them.  Shoes have now become an emblem of the National Famine Way with pairs of Bronze Children’s Shoe statues placed in different location along the trail.

Arriving in Dublin the Strokestown tenants took steamships to Liverpool, which overrun with starving Irish, had become a place of terrible disease and sickness.  There the tenants waited until their ships were ready to sail.  The ships were overcrowded and lacked adequate food rations for the long Atlantic sea journey and the large number of passengers.  Many did not survive the terrible conditions on the crossing and by the time they reached Canada a large number of the passengers had fallen ill with typhus and had been buried at sea or had to be quarantined on Grosse Isle where they died.   Those that survived worked hard to make new lives in Quebec and all across Canada and North America.

I was very honoured when Caroilin asked a few years ago to write a story for the walk, which people could read or listen to and use on the app.  I wrote about Daniel Tighe, a twelve year old boy who set of with high hopes with his mother, two brothers and two sisters and Uncle William Kelly as they walked all the way to Dublin , sailing first to Liverpool and then on to Canada. Daniel’s hopes would be dashed for by the time they arrived in Quebec for he and his sister Catherine were the only family members to survive the terrible journey on the Naomi. It is called Shoe Story.

However the National Famine Way is now extending as the trail will follow and be marked and recognised in both Liverpool and different parts of Canada. Eamonn McKee, our Irish ambassador in Canada, has played a big part in this exciting new initiative ‘The Global Irish Famine Way’ which will follow the trail of Irish emigrants to Canada and Liverpool and in time America and Australia.  Bronze shoes have already arrived in Canada and some will also be located in Liverpool.

So now I have continued Daniel’s Story Taking him across the Atlantic to a new home in Canada and read from it for the first time at The Wake on Sunday. It was real honour for me on the night to meet some of Daniel Tighe’s ancestors his young Irish relations.  I found it is so poignant to hear them read out the names of all the family groups that left Strokestown and how many children were in their family as they set off for a new life so long ago…

The sun was shining as the National Famine Way walkers group set off from the Gates of Strokestown Park House on Monday 20th May and they will arrive at Dublin’s Epic Museum on Saturday 25th of May.      

Marita with Irish Ambassador to Canada Eamonn McKee Singer Grainne Hunt

           International Women’s Day 2024!

Miss Harrison, Rachel Galvin, Joan Freeman, Eva Dowling, Marita Conlon McKenna, Fiona Murray and Mount Anville school principal Liz Caffrey.

What  a fun way to celebrate International Women’s Day in the company of huge crowd of wonderful young women, the  4th, 5th and 6th year students in Mount Anville Secondary School, Goatstown, Dublin. It was a huge privilege to be invited to take part in a panel discussion with a multi-talented group of inspirational women.

It was great to meet the incredible Joan Freeman, a former Senator, who founded Pieta House which does so much to help prevent suicide by providing counselling and other services for all those in need of help and support. It now has twelve centres in Ireland. Also on the panel was Fiona Murray, who helps to run the Special Olympics which brings joy to so many people who take part in its training and programmes all over the world. She is so dedicated to helping these special athletes take part and achieve their goals in the sports they love.

 Eva Dowling is a Green party Councillor for Stillorgan and spoke about her own journey and how important it is for young woman to get involved in politics if we ever hope to achieve  a better  balance of female TD’s in the Dail. She was an inspiration to us all. Then there was Rachel Galvin aka Rachel Galvo, a social influencer who spoke of her life in theatre from her early days in school to joining the musical Drama Society in College to, getting accepted to a London Theatre College, and her quest to develop a satisfying and rewarding career. Funny and witty, we all loved her exuberance and honesty about the ups and downs of trying to achieve her ambitions with plans for her very own stage show in Dublin in the autumn.  

Thank you so much to Kate Fallon and all the sixth years and Ms Harrison for inviting me to take part in such a brilliant celebration of International Women’s Day.

                 World Book Day 2024!

Talking to classes in Scoil Mhuire in Newbridge, Co Kildare

Happy World Book Day to everyone!

I hope you all have a brilliant and fun time as there are lots of events in schools, bookshops and libraries all over Ireland with book quizzes, fancy dress, design a book cover or book mark or character competitions and book swaps.

There is no better time to pick up a book! To help you along there are 15 special mini World Book Day Books that you can purchase with your special Euro 1.50 or £1 tokens or you can put them towards another book you want to buy in the bookshop…. If so maybe you can try to buy an Irish Children’s book. 

The Discover Irish Childrens Books campaign continues and I was delighted to see Safe Harbour feature in the latest bestselling list from around different parts of the country. I think the lovely new cover has definitely helped.

For us writers it is a busy time and in the last few day I have talked to the First Year boys in Oatlands Senior School in Stillorgan, in Dublin , the 4 and 5th classes in the  Gael Scoil in Greystones in Co Wicklow  and the 4, 5th and some of the 6th classes in Scoil Mhuire in Newbridge. I love meeting all my amazing readers and cannot believe the range of my different books that you are reading. It makes me so happy that I am a writer.

After talking in Greystones I went to lunch down at the seafront and bumped in to the wonderful English author Frank Cottrell Boyce who had been visiting a school in Delgany. We both love meeting our readers and talking about books! 

Marita with teacher Tracey O Mahoney and Cliona Galvin Principal of Scoil Mhuire.

Andy Warhol Exhibition at Dublin’s Hugh Lane Gallery

As 2024 starts it is great to be working on a new book and planning lots of lovely projects.  I’ve also made a vow to try and take in more art, theatre and film in the year ahead.

I managed to finally get to the big Andy Warhol Exhibition ‘Three Times Out’ in Dublin’s Hugh Lane Gallery.  It is well worth a visit as it is made up of 250 works by this iconic artist. 72 0f these have been loaned by The Jordan Schnitzer Family Foundation. From this collection Schnitzer has facilitated more than 180 exhibitions in 120 museums across America which bring in kids and seniors and under privileged visitors to see the work.  He gets joy from sharing the works and it is part of his philanthropic activities. The foundation has up to eight or nine exhibitions travelling globally around the world at one time. 

From Warhol’s Campbell’s soup tin screen prints which were inspired by his family eating the soup almost every day as they were poor, to his striking images of Marilyn Monroe and Chairman Mao Zedong and Jackie Kennedy. His work is insightful and he had a huge realisation of the power of colour, print and simple strong imagery and media. Seeing his wallpaper of Mao and his electric chair images you are aware of his incredible instinct as an artist about history and history makers.

The exhibition only runs for another few days so get your skates on as it closes on 27th January. 

Irish Book Awards and The Booker Prize 2023

Trish Hennessy and Sarah Webb winners at the An Post Irish Book Awards 2023

What great excitement to hear that Sarah Webb and Lucinda Jacobs scooped the award for Childrens Book of the Year with ‘I am the Wind: Irish Poems for Children Everywhere’ at this year Irish Book awards . It is well deserved as they have put together a brilliant collection of poems which is beautifully illustrated by Ashwin Chacko, that will appeal to everyone. It is also nominated for the overall ‘An Post Book of the Year Award’ too which will be announced on 6th December 2023.

Trish Hennessy’s children’s bookshop ‘Halfway Up The Stairs’ in Greystones won the Irish Bookshop of the Year award. It is one of my favourite places and a paradise for kids and young readers and parents trying to find the perfect book. Trish and her amazing team are and totally dedicated to bringing good books and young readers together.

The news that author Paul Lynch won the Booker Prize in London last night for ‘Prophet Song’ is just fantastic for Irish writing.  His thought provoking novel set in an Ireland under tyranny is an engrossing read.  I met Paul years ago at Listowel Writer’s festival when his novel ‘Grace’ won the Kerry Fiction Award in 2018 and it is great to see him go on to win this huge international book award.