NP Rank:
Black immigrants to Ireland struggling to find school places
Opinion
Barry Artiste, Now Public Contributor
A scant 100 years ago the Irish were deemed the Negroes of Europe, relegated to do all the menial jobs mainstream well to do European and North American Society refused to do. Previous to this, for Centuries Black Slaves were "SOLD" for a premium, whereby Irish Slaves were given away as "GIFTS" by wealthy landowners and Astristocracy.
Discrimination of the Irish Catholic Religion played a big part in Irish immigration, where Immigrant Discrimination pretty much followed to Irish to the Americas. These memories were long lasting even to this day by Irish acedemia.
Irish Immigrants feel their children are being excluded in the Irish Catholic school system, most likely based on their non catholic religious beliefs. This has resulted in Immigrants trying to fund and establish their own schools.
In Ending
Refusing or limiting children (based on religion) a chance at education will most likely result in resentment, low skilled careers, and high unemployment in the future for these children, much like the Irish experienced a century ago.
Discrimination and misconceptions of the Irish in the 20th Century fought tooth and nail for their children to better themselves to disprove, resulting in Irish Politicians, Universities and Captains of Industry.
My Final Thought
It certainly comes full circle, when Ireland not recognizing their own past may result in Ireland repeating discrimination they fought so hard against.
DUBLIN, Ireland (AP) - Almost all the children who could not find elementary school places in a Dublin suburb this year were black, the government said Monday, highlighting Ireland's problems integrating its increasingly diverse population.
The children will attend a new, all-black school, a prospect that educators called disheartening.
About 90 children could not find school places in the north Dublin suburb of Balbriggan, a town of more than 10,000 people with two elementary schools. Local educators called a meeting over the weekend for parents struggling to find places and said they were shocked to see only black children.
"That overwhelmed me. I'm not quite sure what to make of it. I just find it extremely concerning," said Gerard Kelly, principal of a school with a mixture of black and white students in the nearby town of Swords.
The parents at Saturday's meeting in a Balbriggan hotel said they had tried to get their children into local schools but were told that all places had to be reserved by February.
Almost all of the children are Irish-born and thus Irish citizens, under a law that existed until 2004.
Some parents questioned why white families who had moved this year into the town had managed to overcome the registration deadlines to get their children into schools.
Some also complained that Ireland's school system was discriminating against them on the basis of religion. About 98 per cent of schools are run by the Roman Catholic Church, and the law permits them to discriminate on the basis of whether a prospective student has a certificate confirming they were baptized into the faith. Some of the African applicants were Muslim, members of evangelical Protestant denominations or of no religious creed.
Education Minister Mary Hanafin said the problems reflected bad planning amid rapid population growth, not racist attitudes at existing schools. She vowed to get the new school, which will take students aged 4-12, integrated with white students as soon as possible.
"I would not like to see a situation developing where it is an all-black school, so it's something to keep an eye on for next year's enrollments," Hanafin said.
Kelly said some parents, both locals and immigrants, "felt forced or coerced to have their child baptised to get a place in their local Catholic school."
More than 25,000 Africans have settled in Ireland since the mid-1990s. Most arrived as asylum seekers, and many took advantage of Ireland's law - unique in Europe - of granting citizenship to parents of any Irish-born child. Voters toughened that law in a 2004 referendum.[/q]




Most RecentMost Recommended Comments (2)
at 07:39 on September 4th, 2007
If it is permissible to apply historical reference to the case of Ireland's social ethnic discrimination, why is it not permissible to recognise historical pro-Europocentric bias in North America in regards to racism here? I personally find it queer that everyone is willing to deconstruct bias when analyzing other nations yet are ideologically hamstrung when it comes to the same considerations in their own countries. This is not a challenge as much as it is an observation by someone who still must endure such apathy.
at 07:44 on September 4th, 2007
I agree wholeheartedly AI. Thanks for your comment, it is appreciated