Thousands Are Sailing is a song by Irish band The Pogues, released in their
1988 album If I Should Fall From Grace
With God.
The song deals
with the massive migration from Ireland to the USA caused by the Irish potato
famine in the 1840s.
REFUGEES
FROM FEAR OF PRIESTS WITH EMPTY PLATES
The causes
that lead people to abandon their countries are multiple and varied. Most
people are forced to leave their homeland and families behind due to the
hazards of political persecution or armed conflicts. Sometimes, when your life
is at stake, fleeing is the only way to survive. When you belong to a catholic
culture, and you see people starve all around, even priests having to endure
the shortage of food, then you know it’s time to seek for refuge elsewhere,
otherwise, you are bound to perish.
The great
Irish famine was the consequence of a potato blight that infected the crops and
deprived the Irish poor of their staple food, the potato, thus causing massive
starvation in a long period of Irish history, at a time when the whole island
was still under British rule.
During this
period, about one million people died and over a million more emigrated.
If you want to
know more about the Irish Great Famine, you ought to see this documentary:
ON
A COFFIN SHIP I CAME HERE
In the lyrics
video you can see a ship covered with skeletons. This ship is a bronze
sculpture,
part of the Famine National Monument in Murrisk, County
Mayo.
The term coffin ship has two meanings; one refers
to the overloaded ships that carried Irish immigrants away, often sick and always hungry. The mortality rate during the voyage was
between 20% and 50 %.
Hence they are
sailing:
To a land of opportunity
That some of them will never see
The other
meaning of coffin ship defines a
vessel that is more valuable to its owner sunk than afloat and is, therefore,
overinsured to provide a considerable benefit in case it sinks.
At the time of
the Famine, some Irish coffin ships were both: they carried immigrants and were
likely to sink, so that they were overinsured.
An example of
this was the Hannah, a ship carrying
Irish immigrants to Canada that sunk in 1849.
49 passengers died in the shipwreck, not the captain and the two
officers, who took the only lifeboat and abandoned the sinking ship.
If we compare
this historical shipwreck with the Titanic’s, either for implying a much
smaller death toll or for transporting
only Irish farmers fleeing the Famine, made this story much less worth making a
major motion picture.
The Dunbrody is the replica of a coffin ship
found in New Ross, Wexford County; a tourist attraction that you should visit.
The Dunbrody - Irish Famine Ship
REFUGEES
FROM GUILT AND WEEPING EFFIGIES
It’s quite
unlikely that the effigies mentioned in the song are the same as the ones
located on the Dublin quays, as these were not presented to the public until
1997 and the song was released in 1988.
The guilt may
refer to the feeling produced by the need to leave family and friends behind:
the weeping effigies saying goodbye on the quay.
DUBLIN, the
spectacular and expressive IRISH FAMINE MEMORIAL, IRELAND
In the song we
can find references to famous Irish immigrants or famous descendants of Irish
immigrants who represent the spirit of Ireland migration.
And "the blackbird" broke the silence
As you whistled it so sweet
And in Brendan Behan’s footsteps
I danced up and down the street
BRENDAN BEHAN
(1923-1964) was one of the greatest writers of all times, Irish Republican, heavy
drinker, author of many witty remarks, such as: “If it was raining soup, the
Irish would go out with forks.”
You can also
visit his sculpture in Dublin, it’s located next to the prison where he spent
some years, sitting on a bench and whistling to a blackbird, all of them in
bronze.
Here, you can listen to his views on various issues:
Tipped our hats to Mister Cohen
Dear old Times Square's favourite bard
“Mister Cohen”
is GEORGE M. COHAN (1878-1942). He was an American entertainer and composer,
born to Irish catholic parents, considered the creator of Broadway American
anthem due to his prolific career as songwriter.
You can know
more about his work here:
AUDIO AND
VIDEO:
Then we raised a glass to JFK
And a dozen more besides
JFK or JOHN
FITGERALD KENNEDY (1917-1963), was the first catholic president of the USA; all
of his grandparents were children of Irish immigrants.
THE
ISLAND IT IS SILENT NOW,
BUT
THE GHOSTS STILL HAUNT THE WAVES
Even though
Ireland is an island, surrounded by a raging sea - perhaps populated by the
ghosts of the drowned in the shipwrecks of coffin ships - some interpretations
of the song identify the island of the song as Ellis Island.
Ellis Island
was the gateway to the USA for immigrants from all over the world from 1892
until 1954. Here, the newcomers were “inspected” and “processed”. Quoting Wikipedia; “Today, over 100 million Americans — about one-third to 40% of the
population of the United States — can trace their ancestry to immigrants who
arrived in America at Ellis Island before dispersing to points all over the
country”
In this
documentary, you can listen to testimonies of how immigrants’ health and
capacities were tested.
Immigration Through Ellis Island Documentary
Next to Ellis
island is Liberty Island, where the newcomers could enjoy the view of the
symbol of the USA, the Statue of Liberty. Inside the statue, you can read Emma
Lazarus sonnet, The New Colossus, but
you can also read it and listen to it here.
The New Colossus – Emma Lazarus
Not like the brazen giant of Greek fame,
With conquering limbs astride from land to land;
Here at our sea-washed, sunset gates shall stand
A mighty woman with a torch, whose flame
Is the imprisoned lightning, and her name
Mother of Exiles. From her beacon-hand
Glows world-wide welcome; her mild eyes command
The air-bridged harbor that twin cities frame.
"Keep, ancient lands, your storied pomp!"
cries she
With silent lips. "Give me your tired, your poor,
Your huddled masses yearning to breathe free,
The wretched refuse of your teeming shore.
Send these, the homeless, tempest-tossed to me,
I lift my lamp beside the golden door!
If you want to
know more about the writing of this poem and its current controversy you should
watch this video:
"Give Me
Your Tired, Your Poor": Trump Admin Attacks Emma Lazarus's Iconic Poem on
Statue of Liberty
POSTCARDS WE'RE MAILING OF SKY-BLUE SKIES AND OCEANS FROM ROOMS THE
DAYLIGHT NEVER SEES
If you have enough knowledge of the Irish
idiosyncrasy, you certainly will know that they adore singing their joys and
sorrows away, so, from 1860 on, songs like this could be heard:
No Irish Need Apply Song
DEBATE
- Recently, there has been much public debate on the media related to the arrival of immigrants in Europe and the USA.
- People seem to have opposing stands on immigration. Some feel that all of them are entitled to seek asylum and governments of any country are ethically obliged to admit them.
- Others oppose strongly to this idea providing arguments such as they are enjoying financial and medical help without having paid taxes beforehand; or that they usually cause an increase in unemployment by reducing the native’s opportunities to find a job.
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