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James Mc Dyer was born in a small town land called Kilraine in Glenties Co. Donegal on the 14th of September 1910. He was the youngest child of seven. Father McDyer's most indelible impression of his childhood and adolescence was the 'convoy. This was the gathering of neighbours in the homes of those who were about to emigrate in order to wish them a last farewell on their trip.
Convoys were a constant feature of life in West Donegal during the second half of the nineteenth, and the first part of the twentieth century. His recall of the pathos and poignancy of the heartbreak of emigration remained with him all his life and inspired him to do all he could to put a stop to it.
In
1952 a community centre was built in Glen - very little money was available
and the centre was built by voluntary labour. The first sod was turned
on 7 January 1953 and the work was completed 12 weeks later. His next
work was the installation of electricity - he put the case for electrification
forcefully and pulled what strings he could to have it done quickly. 69%
of the Parish agreed to accept and the ESB commenced installation.
The
Folk Village Museum was built in three months. The day after Mr Childers,
Minister for Transport and Tourism, opened it officially in 1967, he received
formal planning permission to build it! At the opening of the Folk Village,
it consisted of four houses representing the cottage types of the area
during the previous three hundred years complete with furnishings and
artifacts donated by the local community.
These
artifacts would have been in common use by the people of Glencolmcille
even to that time. Since that initial opening, a school, shebeen, craft
shop and other items have been added. The Folk Village has thrived and
grown over the years.
"Action!
Action against injustice, inertia, hypocrisy and greed!
It is for this that my whole being has yearned.
In this I am moved by the old mythological leader, Fionn Mac Cumhall,
who instructed his harpist to play not the music of things that are said,
but the music of things that are done."
Fr. James Mc Dyer of Glencolmcille. An Autobiography(1982)
Father
McDyer was educated at St. Eunans College, Letterkenny, and entered Maynooth
in 1930. In 1937 he was ordained and went to Wandsworth, London, as a
curate where he worked with Irish emigrants.
The war years were spent in England, in London and the South East. His descriptions of the conditions in London during the Blitz are harrowing in the extreme. Fr McDyer returned to Ireland in 1947 to Tory Island where he spent the following four and a half years.
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| Siopa
Ealaín |
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Teach | Athar Mhic Daidhir | Léarscáil |
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Bheadh muid an-bhuíoch dá ndéanfadh lucht eagraithe turas, grúpaí scoile agus busanna socrú linn roimh ré le cinntiú gur féidir linn freastal orthu. We would be very grateful if tour operators, school groups or coaches would book well in advance to avoid disappointment. Tapestry workshops, traditional music nights and Irish culture events will be available during the summer. Please e-mail or ring us on 074-9730017 / 9730334 for details. The folk village is open from Easter Saturday until the end of September. Contact: Folk Village. |
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