A photograph,
copied perhaps from a copy of the original, was passed to me some weeks ago
following the death of Holy Ghost Missionary, Fr. John Gannon. Fr. John died in Mount Carmel Hospital,
Dublin on 23rd June last, just a few weeks short of his 85th
birthday. The photograph in which a
young John Gannon was captured was taken in 1936 when he was a member of the
first hurling team organised by the Christian Brothers in the secondary school
in St. John’s Lane. The young hurlers
were brought together and trained by Brother Peter O’Farrell who transferred to
the local Christian Brothers Monastery two years previously. The team members are, with one exception,
gone to their eternal reward. Their
names however will be familiar to the readers of this column, as will those of
the two lay secondary teachers which the house Annals of the Christian Brothers
record as Liam Ryan and Pat Spillane.
Liam Ryan came to Athy in 1934 and a year later Pat Spillane joined the
staff of the local secondary school.
John Gannon was
born in Shrowland in 1920 but the Gannon family later came to live in a house
in Emily Square where his brothers Paddy and Bill were born. John entered the Holy Ghost Fathers in 1938
and received his first profession the following year. He graduated from University College Dublin
with a BA degree in the penultimate year of the 2nd World War and
two years later in 1946 he was ordained to the priesthood. Just a few years earlier two other ex-pupils
of Athy Christian Brothers School were ordained for the church. Michael Coghlan, who sat his Leaving
Certificate in 1930, was ordained in 1936, while Patrick Deegan was raised to
the priesthood the following year.
Following last weeks article I got a quick reminder from a loyal reader
of the column that I had omitted to refer to Athy man Canon Patrick Deegan,
late Parish Priest of Raphoe, when writing of my visit to the north west county
of Donegal. The omission will be taken
care of in a later article. Does anybody
know anything about Fr. Michael Coghlan or his family background? I have never come across any reference to him
other than that in the Annals of the local Christian Brothers Monastery.
Following his
ordination Fr. John Gannon was sent to the Missions in Kenya where he became
Head Master of a school in Waa which is located in Mombasa, a southern province
of Kenya. He was later appointed
Education Secretary for Mombasa, a position he held for a few years. During that time he opened up a Catholic
Mission in Giriana, Mombasa and in 1952 he accepted the appointment as
Education Secretary for the Archdioceses of Nairobi where Clare man Archbishop
J.J. McCarthy held sway.
While there, Fr.
John Gannon opened up several more Missions in places identified by the strange
names of Lioki, Gatitu, Mangu, Thiogo and Ngarariga. This involved the building of churches and
schools and the putting in place of teachers and religious necessary to keep
the Missions open. His role was that of
a pioneer who moved further and further into the bush, all the time opening up
Missions which he passed on to others before setting off again for new
territories.
The Athy man whose
early language education was limited to English and Irish became fluent in
Kikuyu, which is the language of the largest Kenyan tribe. He wrote catechetical books in Kikuyu, all
the time advancing the cause of the Catholic Church in the darkest regions of
Kenya. After 30 years in Africa he
returned in 1970 to Ireland where at a conference of the Holy Ghost Fathers he
was elected Provincial Counsellor for the Missions and also Superior of Kimmage
Manor in Dublin. In 1982 at the age of
62 years he transferred to Ardbraccan just outside Navan in County Meath where
a former novitiate was transformed into a retreat house and a home for the
marginalised. Renamed “An Tobair”, meaning “the well”, the complex at Ardbraccan
presented a new challenge for the former Kenyan pioneer. In 1998 John Gannon returned to Kimmage as
Mission Procurator, a position which required him to keep all overseas Missions
supplied and stocked with whatever was required for their work. He retired in 1996 and spent the remaining
nine years of his life in Kimmage Manor.
Fr. John Gannon is
survived by his brothers Paddy and Bill who live in Coventry, his sister
Frances who lives in Vancouver and Mary whose home is in the Liverpool
area. He was predeceased by his brother
Dick and his sister Con who was Assistant Superior of the Order of the Poor
Servants of God in Roehampton in England.
The photograph of
the young Athy lads taken 69 years ago is a sombre reminder of the unrelenting
passage of time and of young days spent in happy enjoyment with school friends
in what for many of us was our alma mater at the top of St. John’s Lane.
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ReplyDeleteA great educationist and pioneer
ReplyDeleteIn multiple ways in spreading both the Christian Gospel and Western education. Thanks for your incredible work in Kenya (my birth home) and beyond. Your love and energy in everything you did as a pioneer will endure for evermore. Rest in Eternal Peace Rev Fr Gannon.
Kuria Gìthiora,
Seattle, WA.