Last week Gertie Healy was laid to rest in St. Michael’s
Cemetery. She had been absent from her
usual place at 12 o’clock Sunday mass for a number of weeks but it was only
following her passing that I learned she had been seriously ill. Her final farewell in the church where she
attended mass for so many years was marked by what may have been a unique
contribution by her brother Joe and her sister Carmel.
Carmel, who is married to Brendan Kehoe formerly of Offaly Street,
played the organ accompaniment for her brother Joe singing at Gertie’s funeral
mass. It was a wonderful example of
filial love and personalised a service which on too many occasions in the past
has been marked by inappropriate and overwrought eulogies of doubtful accuracy.
Joe May’s singing was a pleasure to hear. His is a voice of character which was shown
at its best with his interpretation of ‘The
Prayer’, a song made famous by Celine Dion and Andrea Bocelli. I understand it was at Gertie’s request that ‘The Prayer’ was sung and its moving
words added to the reverence of the occasion:-
‘I pray you’ll be our eyes, and watch us
where we go
And teach us to be wise, in times when we don’t know
Let this be our prayer, when we lose our way
Lead us to the place, guide us with your grace
To a place, where we’ll be safe.’
As members of the local community we walked behind the hearse as
Gertie made her final journey to St. Michael’s Cemetery. It’s a journey which has been made thousands
of times over the years, ever since the first Parish Church, now in ruins, was
erected outside the walls of the medieval village of Athy. The new St. Michael’s Cemetery laid out in
fields which once adjoined the Glebe lands and the towns ancient fairgreen is
steadily filling up. Since it was first
opened 50 years ago St. Michael’s new cemetery has received the remains of men
folk and women folk well known to us all.
It shows on its tombstones familiar names which in a few decades will be
lost to later generations. I am often
reminded of the fleeting nature of fame and fortune when, walking through old
St. Michael’s Cemetery, I read without recognition the names etched on the
scattered tombstones. Names once
familiar in this area are no longer represented in the Athy of today. With them has gone the shared memories of a
past community, memories which can never again be recovered.
I mentioned in last week’s article the Forgotten People project
initiated by the Local History Federations and with Gertie Healy’s passing last
week I was reminded yet again of that part of our history which for so long was
neglected and overlooked. Gertie’s
parents, Joe May and Hester Dooley, were part of the mainstream of Irish
republicanism and in the years following the 1916 Rising they risked their
freedom and, if truth be known, their very lives in pursuit of ideals first
championed by the United Irishmen of 1798.
Gertie’s father was imprisoned for several months during the War of
Independence in Ballykinler Camp, Co. Down, while her mother underwent much
privation and difficulties while working as secretary to Piaras Béaslaí and later General Ginger O’Connell.
As a young fellow growing up in Athy in the 1950s I knew nothing of the
part Joe May and Hester Dooley and others from Athy played in that War of
Independence. That omission has been in
part remedied but much yet remains to be uncovered and acknowledged.
Gertie Healy in her last months faced her illness with a courage
which was reminiscent of that displayed by her parents so many decades ago. Gertie’s family cared for her at home during
her last illness and the musical contribution by her brother Joe and sister
Carmel at the funeral mass was a fitting tribute to a wonderful lady whose
adult nursing life was spent amongst the elderly patients of St. Vincent’s
Hospital.
Colm McNulty, formerly of this parish but now living and teaching in
Wellington, New Zealand is the author of a recently published book ‘A Brotherhood so Splendid’. It tells the story of the teachers and former
pupils of Wellington College where Colm now teaches, who enlisted to fight in
the First World War. Copies are
available for sale in the Gem and if you are interested in an interesting and
imaginative mixture of history and dialogue this is a book you should get.
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