I read the following article and thought it would make an interesting discussion
http://anghaeltacht.net/ctg/altveritas.htmI had been brought up thinking Irish declined mainly due to British rule and the famine (tipping point where English becomes the majority language). But that doesn't account for why Irish was lost so quickly, and then never reintroduced following independence. It appears the inconvenient truth is the apathy of the general Irish public towards Irish, he vast majority favour it and dont want it to die but the vast majority dont want to relearn it, English is still the language and yes the government have made mistakes but the reason it hasnt become the language of Ireland again is the peoples apathy.
In addition to what has been discussed in the article I provided a link too we must also discuss why the people are apathetic. It has been suggested to me that the Irish never saw Irish as central to the culture, and that todays apathy is deep rooted and has always been there, hence why we gave it up so quickly. We do know that Irish was celebrated by bards and the old Gaelic kings, but the ordinary people never got a say, so all we know is the people in high powers story. It has been suggested that the ordinary people were distant from that section of society and didnt have access to literature so therefore Irish was less attached to culture for them. It has also been put forward that with the death of the old Gaelic system, and with English already making inroads into Ireland that the people felt let down by the Gaelic system, and adopted the English system as it was along with the rulers language, the language of the economy, education etc. perhaps the people didnt feel any connection or loss with the language. And that that connection has never been there en masse and that the mindset today is just a continuation of that; the high kings (ie politicians) putting emphasis on Irish while the population remains indifferent.
The above argument certainly explains how we lost Irish so quickly, and how the people today generally feel indifferent towards it. Perhaps Irish was just a tool of communication and never a big part of the cultural identity. was the gaelic revival of the late 1800's and the official state revival policy up until the 1960 just a way of building a stronger Irish identity in the face of nationhood?
I began learning Irish a few years ago for mainly cultural reasons, but if it never was a big part of irish identity were my feelings misguided? My family lost Irish with my great grandparents, although they lived into the 1970s they never gave it to my grandparents generation, and it wasn a big deal to them, was this the case all over Ireland?
My reasons for learning Irish were mainly cultural, but if my ancestors never saw it as a big part of their culture why should I? Personally I think there are many reasons to learn Irish, i just wanted to explore the general apathy.
ps a great quote from an Aran Islander interviewed in 1926 by Coimisiún na Gaeltachta "It is only them with plenty English who are bothered about Irish" - that sums it up for me!