Please allow ads as they help fund our trusted local news content.
Kindly add us to your ad blocker whitelist.
If you want further access to Ireland's best local journalism, consider contributing and/or subscribing to our free daily Newsletter .
Support our mission and join our community now.
Subscribe Today!
To continue reading this article, you can subscribe for as little as €0.50 per week which will also give you access to all of our premium content and archived articles!
Alternatively, you can pay €0.50 per article, capped at €1 per day.
Thank you for supporting Ireland's best local journalism!
Edwin McGreal on how GAA and small festivals help smaller communities retain their sense of identity
Finding pride of place
Playing and watching GAA over the years teaches you several things. Wearing white boots while playing in most pitches in Mayo is asking for trouble. Finding Garrymore is almost as hard as winning down there and the world will be coming to an end if you play in Bangor and no wind is present and no car horns can be heard after a hometown score. But another thing that I have found very striking over the years is the passion you see in rural clubs. Passion, pride in the area are some of the first things that strike you about some of the many rural clubs in Mayo. Kiltane, Garrymore, Hollymount, Knockmore, Tourmakeady to name just five. With the exception of Knockmore all those just named exist on a sparse population but their pride in their own parish, their community can make them very competitive against town teams with vastly greater numbers. It is a long-held view in GAA circles that there is a typical ‘town’ team. Characteristics ascribed to them include a lack of passion and desire, in-fighting when things start to go wrong and, a most loathsome adjective for any GAA team, being ‘soft’. It is, of course, nowhere near as simple as that. Rural areas tend to provide a greater sense of community. Detached from a large urban area, the bind becomes tighter and the need to work together all the more paramount. Community councils, group water schemes, fundraising drives, the local school and, of course, the eponymous village GAA club help to bring large elements of the community together. There’s much less of a need for that in towns and their surroundings. My own Breaffy has fallen into this category in recent years with the huge swell of population in the area. Where once, as a child, I knew practically everyone who lived within a two mile radius of the home house, now I could walk past my next door neighbour in the street and be none the wiser. Living in the shadow of the town of Castlebar, it would be easy for the local identity to be subsumed but the weekend just past was a fine example of how a community can work together to help to create exactly that - a sense of community. The Breaffy Blast Festival was run this year for the first time and from the Belle of Breaffy on the Friday night to the superb Barn Dance on Saturday and on into the 10K Road Race, Family Fun Day and Camogie Reunion on the Sunday, the village came out in force as a community. It is not as necessary, it might be argued, to have a sense of community in Breaffy as in other places because of our proximity to Castlebar but pride of place is vital no matter where you are from, be it on the shores of the Atlantic or in a Dublin tower block. Those behind the Breaffy festival are to be commended.
ADVERTISEMENT - CONTINUE READING BELOW
ADVERTISEMENT - CONTINUE READING BELOW
ADVERTISEMENT - CONTINUE READING BELOW
ADVERTISEMENT - CONTINUE READING BELOW
ADVERTISEMENT - CONTINUE READING BELOW
ADVERTISEMENT - CONTINUE READING BELOW
ADVERTISEMENT - CONTINUE READING BELOW
ADVERTISEMENT - CONTINUE READING BELOW
ADVERTISEMENT - CONTINUE READING BELOW
ADVERTISEMENT - CONTINUE READING BELOW
ADVERTISEMENT - CONTINUE READING BELOW
4
To continue reading this article, please subscribe and support local journalism!
Subscribing will allow you access to all of our premium content and archived articles.
Subscribe
To continue reading this article for FREE, please kindly register and/or log in.
Registration is absolutely 100% FREE and will help us personalise your experience on our sites. You can also sign up to our carefully curated newsletter(s) to keep up to date with your latest local news!
This one-woman show stars Brídín Ní Mhaoldomhnaigh, an actress, writer and presenter who has several screen credits including her role as Katy Daly on Ros na Rún, and the award-winning TV drama Crá
Breaffy Rounders will play Glynn Barntown (Wexford) in the Senior Ladies Final and Erne Eagles (Cavan) in the Senior Men's All-Ireland Final in the GAA National Games Development Centre, Abbotstown
Subscribe or register today to discover more from DonegalLive.ie
Buy a paper
Buy the e-paper of the Donegal Democrat, Donegal People's Press, Donegal Post and Inish Times here for instant access to Donegal's premier news titles.
Keep up with the latest news from Donegal with our daily newsletter featuring the most important stories of the day delivered to your inbox every evening at 5pm.