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The destruction of the Hill of Tara continues, with illegal Irish government collusion. Learn more about this here: http://www.globalartscollective.org/acf/about.htm
Heaney claims motorway near Tara desecrates sacred landscape
POET AND Nobel laureate Séamus Heaney has described the M3 motorway as a ruthless desecration of the sacred landscape around the Hill of Tara, in a BBC documentary to be broadcast today at 11.30am on Radio Ulster, writes Frank McDonald , Environment Editor
In the same programme, Dr Jonathan Foyle, British chief executive of the World Monuments Fund, which placed Tara on its endangered sites list last year, likened the motorway to the destruction by Afghanistan's Taliban regime in 2001 of the Bamiyan Buddhas.
In his interview with BBC reporter Diarmaid Fleming, Prof Heaney said the motorway "literally desecrates an area - I mean the word means to desacralise' and, for centuries, the Tara landscape and the Tara sites have been regarded as part of the sacred ground".
Referring to the 1916 Proclamation having summoned the Irish people "in the name of the dead generations", he said: "If ever there was a place that deserved to be preserved in the name of the dead generations from pre-historic times . . . it was Tara".
Prof Heaney added: "I suppose Tara means something equivalent to me to what Delphi means to the Greeks or maybe Stonehenge to an English person or Nara in Japan . . .It conjures up what they call in Irish dúchas, a sense of belonging a sense of patrimony, a sense of an ideal.
"The traces on Tara are in the grass, in the earth. They aren't spectacular like temple ruins in Greece but they are about origin, they're about beginning, they're about the mythological, spiritual source - something that gives the country its distinctive spirit."
He recalled that WB Yeats, George Moore and Arthur Griffith had written a letter to The Irish Times complaining that the British Israelites, who thought the Ark of the Covenant was buried at Tara, were desecrating a "consecrated landscape" by digging there.
"So, I thought to myself, if a few holes in the ground made by amateur archaeologists was a desecration, what's happening to that whole countryside being ripped up [for the M3] is certainly a much more ruthless piece of work," Prof Heaney said.
According to Dr Foyle, the entire Tara complex "is the equivalent of Stonehenge, Westminster Abbey for its royal associations and Canterbury for its Christian associations all rolled into one" yet it was being destroyed "to shave 20 minutes off a journey time".
Most RecentMost Recommended Comments (3)
at 01:27 on March 2nd, 2008
Thanks, Brian,
I've also posted the more comprehensive BBC article: Heaney hits out over 'tar on Tara'
at 10:44 on March 2nd, 2008
You don't give up on this story- I'm really glad.
at 01:14 on March 3rd, 2008
Hi Jordan,
I think I first joined NowPublic so I could get the word about what was happening to the Hill of Tara.
To me, it symbolizes what is happening everywhere - since the beginning of the enclosure of the commons. But it has reached the point where the 'quality' of human life (and health) is threatened - leading to what we conveniently call "climate change" – the crossing over into total habitat destruction.
I won't go on ...but I will :)
Thank you very much for your kind support!
And, if you have time, check out the website: http://www.globalartscollective.org/
This project is 'under development' :)
Cheers!
Maireid