An litir dhearg
Stay up to date! Receive a newsletter from us to keep up with the campaigns.
Legendary Irish language pioneer Gearóid Ó Cairealláin (67) passed away today in the Royal Victoria Hospital after a short illness.
A serial founder of breakthrough Irish language projects, he once led the national Irish language body Conradh na Gaeilge.
However, it was in his native West Belfast that he lit a fire under the Irish language movement — winning the district the title of Ireland’s ‘Gaeilge capital’.
Among the unprecedented initiatives he led for the Irish language were:
He was a believer and a dreamer, seeing possibilities for the Irish language despite official hostility and stiff odds. He paid a price for walking the walk - when he refused to accept a road traffic summons in English and demanded an Irish language version he was thrown into Crumlin Road Jail for a week.
In July 2006, he suffered a stroke which almost put an end to his Gaeilge gallop. However, defying medical predictions of his demise, he emerged fighting fit and rarin’ to go - even if paralysed from the waist down. After enduring a gruelling physio regime, he continued to lead and inspire from his Cultúrlann base. His Wheelchair Monologues — in Irish and English — toured theatre venues across Ireland. And, on the anniversary of his stroke, he married his grá-gheal Bríd Ó Gallchóir.
His passing leaves a massive crater in the Irish language community he championed. But Gearóid lived long enough to see his aisling of a thriving Irish language community realised. In fact, there is no more powerful ambassador for this new era for Irish than Gearóid’s (and his first wife Aoife Ní Riáin’s) son Naoise, formidable frontman of Kneecap.
Déanann Grúpa Meán Bhéal Feirste comhbhrón lena bhean Bríd, lena chlann Mac Ainle, Cairbre agus Naoise, lena máthair agus lena chlann uile. Leaba i measc na naomh go raibh aige.
Stay up to date! Receive a newsletter from us to keep up with the campaigns.