Monday, March 18, 2019

St. Patrick's Day, the luck of the Irish, and customs that change meaning over time


St. Patrick's Day, the luck of the Irish, and customs that change meaning over time



Saint Patrick's Day parade in the Irish Channel neighborhood of New Orleans
Photo by Me 

First I'd like to start of this post with a disclaimer, please take what I write with a grain of salt! I will never deliberately give you false information but I don't know everything. As a matter of fact, a lot of what I will be writing is personal observations and bits of stories I have heard about the people and places I have visited and all of this as an outsider. I'll try and list references and quotes with proper academic rigor but I've been out of school for almost a year and I am quite lazy! So if I say something you know to be false, ignorant, or stupid please feel free to (kindly) let me know and I will remedy my egregious error.

END Disclaimer rant


As an anthropology major and generally curious person, I often wonder about cultural traditions and customs – where they come from, why do we celebrate them, and more interestingly, how and why they change over time. I think the later is particularly relevant in our increasingly global and interconnected world. Ideas and behaviors become viral overnight and whole cultures are commodified and sold in the ever expanding tourist industry.

In honor of Saint Patrick's Day I thought I'd reflect on the holiday and its meaning in different contexts, with different people, in different places over time. In order to understand the holiday and what it represents we need to talk about one of my favorite catholic saints, St. Patrick.



As with all the early saints, much of his history is shrouded in myth and mystery. Born in the late 4th century (390 AD) in roman controlled Britain (likely in Wales) to a catholic family whose father was likely a priest, St. Patrick was kidnapped by a raiding Irish tribe as a child. Sold into slavery, he prayed every day to god to be released from his bondage. Some six years later he managed to escape on a ship bound for Wales. When he got home he realized that even though he despised his captors, it would become his life's mission to convert the Irish Celts to Christianity.

Many stories abound in Ireland of St. Patrick's successes and miracles in converting the Irish. Some are quite fantastical and full of whimsy, others seem reasonably believable. He is known for blessing more sacred wells and founding more churches than any single person, saint or no, is capable of. In fact, St. Patrick likely wasn't the only, and not even the first, catholic missionary to Ireland. Part of the reason for his popularity today has to with medieval Irish monastic politics. Back then monasteries where powerful governmental and economic entities with their validity, in part, resting on the sanctity of the monasteries founding saint. A powerful monastery, Armagh I believe, claimed St. Patrick as their own and venerated him above all others. The hagiographers (monks who write the histories of saints) were politically motivated to attribute more miracles and blessings to Saint Patrick.

Now, a lot of us in the US don't know much about Saint Patrick or why he is the patron saint of Ireland or what a patron saint even is. Many of us are familiar with the story where St. Patrick casts the serpents out of Ireland and that is why there are no longer any snakes on the island. Some believe that the serpents are supposed to represent the pagan Irish. This interpretation particularly upsets Neo-pagans/Wiccans/ (and for a lack of a better name) Neo-Celtics.

I have never actually read or heard of that particular story but I don't doubt its existence or that the serpents were supposed to be pagan peoples. Some of the Neo-pagan faith believe that this story is representative of all the evil colonizing behaviors of Christianity and vilify St. Patrick as the as the destroyer of ancient ways. While that certainly is one interpretation of it I feel it is a little harsh and oversimplified version of the history of the Irish Celtic conversion to Christianity.

Celtic Christianity as it is sometimes referred to, or Irish Catholicism, was somewhat unique in the early catholic church and was both revered and later vilified by the papacy in Rome (but that's another story for another time) What is more important for our discussion is how St. Patrick was known to be somewhat pragmatic in his approach to evangelizing. For example, natural wellsprings were sacred to the Celts, and rather then destroying them or naming them evil, he merely blessed them and they became christian symbols of blessing and healing. Many of these ancient wells still exist in Ireland and are used in much the same way as they have for thousands of years.

Another well known story of Saint Patrick was his use of the clover to preach the gospel. He said the shamrock was like the Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit, separate parts of the one whole. That is why Ireland forever after has been associated with green and the shamrock.

To be fair, many of the old Celtic traditions died with Saint Patrick. The druids in particular were rendered powerless. Christianity brought with it writing and with writing there was less need for spoken traditions and the bards who sung them. Celtic chieftains traded their traditions for the wealth and governmental control that Christianity brought them. Many once sacred Celtic sites became sacred catholic sites. Still, the relative peaceful transition shouldn't be understated or Celtic Christianity's unique and more nature-focused traditions.


(A statue of Saint Patrick at a church next to The Hill of Tara. A famous site that was sacred to the Celtic Irish, a good example of the Christian take over of sacred sites)
Photo by Aaron Shenewolf

I think I'll leave off here. And continue this discussion with another post on St. Patrick and Catholicism as a whole representing the nation of Ireland (and later Irish- American St. Paddy's day celebration). I know this is a bit of a long post and may be boring for those who aren't interested in history or Ireland in particular. I promise most posts won't be as long ( I couldn't keep this up!) Other posts will be of little tidbits, or pictures, or whimsical moments, or travel tips. With that, let me know what ya think! Feel free to post questions or comments and I promise to follow up.

Stay Fabulous y'all

- Your Lone Wolf Traveler

Nearly forgot!

References...


- Catholic Ireland website https://www.catholicireland.net/saintoftheday/st-patrick-390-461-patron-of-ireland/

- Memory various books and documentaries I've watched on the history of Ireland >.<  I'll look those up later and post them to next weeks blog I promise! 


Thursday, March 7, 2019

A Journey of 1,000 miles begins with a single step...



Sunrise at Lake Mead, NV
(photo by moi. Will always try and give proper photo cred)




Though I've been on the road for awhile now I haven't taken the time to document and interpret my experience. This is to process my journey as much as to share it. I often ask myself why I am living a travelers lifestyle, if its worth it  being a Peter Pan with no friends and no ties to the lands and the people I meet along the way.

So, for what its worth, I'm going to try and post every day - a happy moment, a picture, some travel advice or blunder -in the hopes that someone will find it interesting or useful. And, in the end really, for me to remember this epic trip I've undertaken.

I've thoughts on linking this to other travel bloggers and people I find fascinating and worthy of a moment or two of your surfing time. Gods am I nervous to have my writing, and really, my life public. Treat me kindly guys (gals, and in betweeners) leave some words of encouragement or let me know if you have any questions.

Stay fabulous y'all

- The Lonewolf Traveler