Brian O'Cathain wrote:
How interesting! I've just come back from a few weeks in Spain. Along the way I met an English woman who wanted to talk about the "potato famine" (an expression that infuriates me). When I told her that the loss of the potato crop was not the sole reason for the starvation she gave me a withering look (Brits are good at that). So I asked her what I ask everyone with this view - what happened to the cows and sheep, the hens and eggs, the butter and milk, the cabbages and other veg, she was shocked to learn that they were taken at gunpoint by the British yoemanry (many of them Irish) to feed mill workers in the north of England who also suffered a famine at the same time. Now if they put that into their comedy it might educate some English people in the real reasons behind such widespread starvation.
Exactly so, the wheat and barley did not fail - ? - sold for profit and exported while the locals died of starvation. Some kindly landowners allowed the locals to scrounge for droppings or tailings that contained insufficient nutrition - and died more slowly of starvation. But I didn't know this until a few years ago, there are whole lumps of one sided history taught in our Australian schools.
As someone else said, and I do love Downton Abbey - set through the time of all kinds of trouble everywhere - and with an Irish co-star, but not even a real mention of Irish issues over the breakfast table and the reading of the newspapers.
Le meas
JulieA
