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  • 17
    Mar
    2013
    3:46pm, EDT

    Irish PM to Sandy-hit community: 'Keep your spirit up'

    Michael Nagle / Getty Images

    NEW YORK, NY - MARCH 17: Irish Prime Minister Enda Kenny (C) flanked by Rev. Nicholas DiMarzio (L), Bishop of Brooklyn, and Monsignor Michael J. Curran (right), pastor of St. Thomas More Catholic Church, high-fives an altar girl as he arrives at the church for Saint Patrick's Day Mass on March 17, 2013 in Breezy Point.

    By Miranda Leitsinger, Staff Writer, NBC News

    BREEZY POINT, N.Y. — Irish Prime Minister Enda Kenny on Sunday encouraged people in this coastal enclave hard hit by Hurricane Sandy and with strong ties to Ireland to "keep your courage up, keep your spirit up" as they rebuild and said his compatriots were behind them as they soldiered on.

    Follow @mimileitsinger

    Breezy Point's Catholic Club Pipes & Drums welcomed Kenny, as did hundreds of community members, many who wore kelly green or shamrocks for St. Patrick's Day. Kenny joined Mass at St. Thomas More Catholic Church, where the altar was decorated with Irish and American flags flanking an iconic statue of the Virgin Mary saved from the storm rubble, and orange, white and green ribbons were pinned to the pews.

    "I'd like to think that in the times ahead ... this community will be restored to a stronger position than it's ever been. It may not be the same physically, but the heart of that community, the strength of that community, will be retained for the future," he said after Mass in a local gym-community center that was restored by Irish athletes and paid for with Irish government funds.


    "Keep your courage up, keep your spirit up. You will never be beaten if you do that," he added, at times mentioning the challenges Ireland had overcome, such as the mid-1800s famine, and the Irish concept of meitheal, or the community coming together to rebuild, to encourage the residents to push on.

     

    Hurricane Sandy rampaged through Breezy Point on Oct. 29, unleashing floodwaters that devastated some 75 percent of the community's 2,800 homes and helping to trigger a fire that claimed 126 houses in one of the oldest parts of the neighborhood.

    Some 20,000 residential buildings in New York City were damaged by the storm or their utilities were disrupted by it.

    The hurling and football players raised money in Ireland then arrived in Breezy Point, N.Y., to repair the community center and basketball court, which was later christened with bagpipes. NBC's Stephanie Gosk reports.

    Nearly five months later, people are struggling to return to Breezy Point, which was founded by Irish immigrants more than a century ago and is nicknamed the "Irish Riviera." The community is one of the most Irish neighborhoods in America, with more than half of the residents claiming Gaelic heritage, according to the U.S. Census Bureau.

    Ireland gave $320,000 to community projects in the areas most affected by Hurricane Sandy, including $50,000 to rebuild the gym-community center in Breezy Point.

    Volunteer groups, some from Ireland and others Irish-American, have pitched in to help, such as those who rebuilt the gym and the Catholic Club across the street. The entrance to the gym reads, in Gaelic, "A thousand welcomes."

    "In Ireland, everybody knows about Breezy. ... Breezy has just become iconic," said the Consul General of Ireland, Noel Kilkenny. "It just captured the imagination ... Breezy became a piece of Ireland in New York."

    Homes here are in various stages of recovery: some have been reoccupied, while others are being rebuilt. Yet many others have been completely demolished, leaving behind only sand or some bits of foundation. Many of these homeowners have to await official approval of their rebuilding plans before they can begin construction.

    The toll of the rebuilding process — especially the length and the cost -- is adding up for folks, some who are awaiting insurance payments or other financing options to get back home.

    So Kenny's visit -- part of a week-long trip to the United States -- was a welcome boost for the residents, many who can trace their roots to Ireland. 

    "I think it really helped the morale of the entire community," said Marty Ingram, fire chief of the Point Breeze Volunteer Fire Department. "The timing was perfect because, you know, I think it's protracted and we're feeling the long-term effect of ... the impact."

    After Hurricane Sandy devastated the Breezy Point community in Queens, the neighborhood bagpipe band lost nearly everything. But they've found a way to recover – just in time for the big parade. NBC's Stephanie Gosk reports.

    As tears rolled down her face, Denise Sturm, 66, said: "I think it's very touching and it's good to know that people in Ireland have come to help us and we need help, we need that."

    She should be able to return home within two months, but others won't: "The sad thing is so many of the people (whose) houses were totally destroyed, the disappointment has come now where whatever the red tape is they're not able to get permits to rebuild."

    Sturm's friend, Evelyn Finn, said the visit "strengthens us." Her home, which once belonged to her grandmother, was flooded and may need to be raised several feet according to preliminary federal flood guidelines released in late January. She gets no federal aid since it was a second residence.

    "It makes it's real," Finn, 65, who attended Mass with her daughter and four grandchildren, said of Kenny's visit. "It makes it like it's doable. My god, if the prime minister of Ireland took enough time to come and see us ... it must be coming back."

    Slideshow: St. Patrick's Day

    Peter Muhly / AFP - Getty Images

    See images from the festivities from New York to Moscow.

    Launch slideshow

    Related:

    FEMA leaves many Sandy victims languishing

    Superstorm Sandy: Residents consider future as demolitions begin in Breezy Point

    Sandy-struck Breezy Point facing 'greatest historical challenge'

    Sandy victims on the move, but temporary housing 'will never be ... home'

    Full coverage of Sandy's aftermath from NBC News

    18 comments

    Nice story upbeat Breezy Point could do with more stories like this. Amazed me how people in those parts have survived the winter its f*cking cold enough with a roof over your head.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: new, ireland, prime, minister, kenny, york, queens, sandy, rockaway, breezy, enda, breezy-point, superstorm
  • 13
    Mar
    2013
    5:50am, EDT

    Irish flag flies again at pub after ban sparks outrage

    Cathal Mcnaughton / Reuters, file

    Ireland's national flag flies above a statue in Dublin. It's flying in Florida, too, after a city council had a change of heart about letting an Irish pub display the colors.

    By Jane Sutton, Reuters

    The Irish flag is flying again at an Irish pub in Florida, where city officials suspended a ban on flying non-U.S. flags just in time for St. Patrick's Day celebrations on March 17.

    The Atlantic Beach City Commission voted unanimously Monday night to suspend enforcement of the flag ordinance until a new version can be drafted and approved, acting mayor Maria Marks said.

    "We were able to hang the Irish flag back up today," said Aine Culhane, one of four sisters who own Culhane's Irish Pub, south of Jacksonville. "The support has been tremendous."

    The sisters said they had flown the green, white and orange Irish flag alongside the American flag in front of their pub for eight years and were shocked when code enforcement officers gave them a citation on Feb. 20. It said they had 24 hours to "cease display of flags other than American flag."

    The obscure ordinance was passed in the 1990s as part of a previous administration's attempt to clean up an unsightly commercial area, according to Marks. The language was ambiguous, however, and the ordinance banned flags but carved out an exemption for the U.S. flag.

    "There was never any intent to have any kind of prejudicial feeling against the Irish or anybody," she added.

    The ordinance was little noticed until a Greek restaurant was cited for flying a Greek flag that partially blocked a sidewalk. The restaurateur complained that he had been singled out, and the Culhanes were told their Irish flag had to come down as well, the acting mayor said.

    News reports about the incident reached all the way to Ireland, prompting a flurry of letters and emails, many of them accusing the city of bigotry.

    "Some of it was really, really nasty," Marks noted.

    City officials have proposed amending the ordinance to allow the flying of national flags, but the revision process requires a couple of readings and cannot be finished until April or May, she said. In the meantime, enforcement has been suspended.

    "Everyone can fly their flag as long as it's not interfering with a right of way or creating a safety hazard," she said.

    Related:

    Ireland in uproar over call for 'drink-driving permits'

    Flag fury ignites violence in Northern Ireland

    Copyright 2013 Thomson Reuters. Click for restrictions.

    110 comments

    We had a problem with Mexicans flying their flag OVER the American flag where I used to live. As long as they fly the Red, White, and Blue to code I don't see a problem.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: ireland, florida, ban, featured, irish-pub, atlantic-beach, irish-flag

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