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Fast girls on water

rowing_01Zoe Mannion and Aifric Keogh of Coláiste Iognáid won the silver medal in the women’s junior pair on Sunday, August 2, finishing second to Britain, who won the event overall. The Ireland pair, rowing as Coláiste Iognáid, won the silver at the Coupe de la Jeunesse at Vichy in France over the August Bank Holiday weekend. The Coupe is a 12-nation European Championship for junior athletes. In addition, the Jes pair had won the junior title at the National Championships three weeks beforehand. In total, Ireland brought home two medals, a silver and a bronze, from the French competition, the bronze medal coming in the junior men’s quadruple scull. See Irish Times article here and RTE report here.

Added Tuesday 11 August 2009 :: Category: General ::

Fast girls on land

crescent_relay_01Crescent Comprehensive College’s  junior girls 4 x 100 meters relay team  were in devastating form at the All Ireland schools Athletics meet in Tullamore. They lifted the  gold medal for the girls  4 x 100 meters junior relay. The team (pictured here)  powered home in emphatic style, achieving a personal best time. Lilly O’Hara speaking on behalf of the relay team said “We’re all absolutely delighted. The victory is the result of a lot of hard work and constant training , We sacrificed a lot and it has been worth it to be All Ireland Champions. Hopefully this relay team will stay together and go on to win more All Ireland gold medals.”

Added Tuesday 11 August 2009 :: Category: General ::

Short Notices

  • browne_01Two thousand of Fr Frank Browne’s photographs formed the basis of a highly recommended TV programme shown on RTE on 10 August: “Day before yesterday: Birth of a Nation”. Take a bow, Eddie O’Donnell SJ, as the custodian and tireless editor of this treasury of pictures. The programme can be viewed on the RTE website until August 31.
  • H2O News report on a 60-minute movie in Italian to mark next year’s fourth centennial anniversary of the death of Matteo Ricci SJ. The movie was sponsored by the Society of Jesus and the Italian diocese of Macerata, the birthplace of the pioneering Jesuit missionary.
Added Tuesday 11 August 2009 :: Category: General ::

Early Irish brothers

dcollins_02Joe Ward SJ of Manresa has been visiting the Province archives on an interesting quest: the links between pre-Suppression Irish Jesuit brothers and South America. Starting with the dates of brothers’ deaths, he found that only three out of some 30 died in Ireland, the first of these being the martyred Dominic Collins (pictured here – Brother Dominic seems to have been the first Irish Jesuit brother). The others died in Europe or South America. Very few if any joined the Irish Mission in Ireland. Joe suspects that some of them, like Dominic Collins, entered religious life after a career as soldiers. The quest continues.

Added Tuesday 11 August 2009 :: Category: General ::

JESUITICA: Saint Jean de Brébeuf SJ

lacrosse_01Lacrosse began life as a sport to instil manly virtues and preparedness for war in the youth of Native American tribes. St Jean de Brébeuf SJ observed the game being played by Iroquois tribesmen, and (so the story goes) he called it lacrosse as he thought the stick they used resembled a bishop’s crozier. There was, however, nothing episcopal – or indeed sportsmanlike – in what the Iroquois did to St Jean when they captured him in a Huron community, where he was a most successful missionary. They scalped him, carried out a mock baptism on him with boiling water, and mutilated him. He is now the patron saint of Canada.

Added Tuesday 11 August 2009 :: Category: General ::

John moves on

johnw_01The Jesuit Communication Centre has lost a highly valued colleague and friend in John White, who left this week to work for the Discovery Programme, a public institution for advanced research in Irish archaeology. John’s great talents as a graphic designer were evident in all the work he did over the last three years on many Jesuit websites and on many hardcopy publications – brochures, posters, book covers, branding elements, and so on. To see samples of his artwork, look through his website. And to see how the child (aged 9) was father to the man, have a look at John’s action-packed drawings of the Star Wars saga, executed all the way back in 1977-1982 in a galaxy far, far, far, far away… John’s work for the Irish Jesuits was greatly appreciated, and we wish him the best in his next ventures.

Added Tuesday 11 August 2009 :: Category: General ::

Faith and Justice in Tehran

riordan_01Patrick Riordan, the Irish Jesuit who teaches philosophy in Heythrop College,  London, and is superior of Copleston House there, has other strings to his bow. Media reports of the show trials from Tehran have highlighted the fate of Mr Mohammad Ali Abtahi, former vice-president of Iran under President Mohammad Khatami (1997-2005). Patrick, as a member of the Church of England delegation, met Mr Abtahi on three occasions  at triangular meetings (Anglicans, German Evangelicals and Muslims) in London, Berlin and Tehran, and presented a paper in Tehran. Mr Abtahi in his role as President of the Institute for Interreligious Dialogue in Tehran led the Iranian delegation to these meetings and in turn hosted the meeting in Tehran in January 2006.

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Added Tuesday 11 August 2009 :: Category: General ::