We Haven't Talked A Lot About Being Lucky This Year. But So Many Of Us Are. Wednesday, March 17 has a lot to do with luck #ShareYourIrish

On Wednesday, as they have every March 17 for nearly two centuries, New York City’s Irish residents will turn out for a public celebration of their ancestral heritage. Since 1762, they’ve been telling the world how proud and happy they are to be Irish.

For my brother, Chris, a perfect St. Patrick’s Day is marching in the parade with Marist College, his alma mater, and then gathering with family and friends afterward. Except, this time, his celebrations – like many around the world – won’t be in person.

With the COVID-19 pandemic still a threat, the New York City Saint Patrick’s Day Parade will be virtual this year. Many other cities have postponed their own observances. On the parade website for heavily Irish South Boston, a count-down clock is already tracking the days, hours, minutes and seconds until next Saint Patrick’s Day.

An enduring new-world appeal

Ireland’s patron saint has long been an international superstar. For instance, even before the Vatican recognized Patrick’s feast day,  an Irish soldier-priest was leading a procession in his honor in St. Augustin, Florida on March 17, 1600, colonial records show.

St. Patrick’s appeal today makes sense, given that some 32 million Americans – nearly 10 percent of the country’s population – can trace their trees back to Ireland.  It seems only fair to say that the bonds between Ireland and America are strong.

The day’s importance to our family

Our ancestors immigrated many generations ago. Still, my surname, McCann – derived from the Gaelic for wolf cub, by the way – puts me squarely in the community of the Irish diaspora.

Niall O’Dowd, a friend of mine and founder of Irish America magazine, Irish Voice and IrishCentral.com, recently informed me that while growing up in Ireland, St. Patrick’s Day was a quiet, sedate, religious holiday that was capped off with a meal of bacon or ham. Niall wondered why so many people in Ireland celebrated the holiday in the United States.  Niall concluded the U.S. taught Ireland how to celebrate St. Patrick’s Day and make it a party. Now everyone is celebrating it in Ireland too!

One of my favorite meals is the corned beef and cabbage my wife always makes on St. Patrick’s Day. It’s such a family tradition, and so strongly linked in our minds to Ireland, that it was a surprise to learn it’s actually an American innovation. In Ireland, people more generally center the holiday meal on bacon or ham.

As we’ve grown older, we have embraced our heritage even more, and it’s now firmly in the lives of my children and grandkids. I love the parades, which make room for people of all traditions to enjoy. Near my beach house on Long Island, there’s always been a really great one, usually held on the weekend before St. Patrick’s Day, so that has given me a chance to gather all of our six grandchildren together, along with friends and relatives from afar, to prolong the holiday celebration. We look forward to the days when we can return to such in-person gatherings.

Let the St. Patrick’s Day celebration begin

Since we can’t safely go to a party or family gathering for the holiday this year, let alone join a parade, we can keep and even strengthen our community ties online. That’s why I will be joining a panel discussion in a virtual St. Patrick’s Day celebration in partnership with IrishCentral streaming on Facebook Live on Tuesday, March 16 at 2 p.m. EDT.

The panel will be hosted by Kate Hickey, editorial director at Irish Studio who will be joining us from Ireland alongside some others joining us from Ireland including Anna McGowan, interim St. Patrick’s Festival Director and Ciaran Cannon, Minister of State and former Minister for the Diaspora. Joining us from the U.S. will be myself and the aforementioned Niall O’Dowd. We will be discussing the global phenomenon that is this holiday and its vibrant traditions. This is a chance to celebrate the love and connection to Irish heritage and culture. Please join us in this conversation about what makes this day so important to all of us, including those of us who, sadly, don’t have a drop of Irish blood by RSVPing here.

We would love you to join our sweepstakes to share how you will be celebrating the holiday – whether it’s wearing of-the green or bringing the parade into your own backyard, #ShareYourIrish for a chance to win gifts from our family of brands. Share your favorite traditions here. Also, you can share a photo of your celebrations on social media, tagging both @1800flowers and @IrishCentral with #ShareYourIrish. Or share a story.

Community Spotlight:

Neil O’Keefe: last summer marked the 100th anniversary of my family coming to America. For International Women's Day, we remembered the pioneering women of our family, including three named O'Sullivan who were the first to leave Ireland in 1920. They were the leaders of our early family, which was best described as a matriarchy. While the 2020 family reunion was put on hold (temporarily), we're planning an even bigger celebration this summer.



Patrick Brennan

Greyfield Strategies

3 年

Great piece. Niall is the best!

Kevin Haniffy

Leader/Marketer/Relationship Manager/Equity linked products.

3 年

Slàinte Mhaith, Jim! It will be a great day!

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