djwebb2021 wrote:
The actual Gaeltacht around Doolin finally ended about the year 2000, in that there were some native speakers in the 1990s. But that Gaeltacht area was officially unrecognised from about 1953. I'm not sure it is right to start deleting areas in the Gaeltacht from the official list, when there are some native speakers. E.g South Kerry or An Rínn may be weaker areas, or Category C areas, but as there are some native speakers there, shouldn't they remain on the Gaeltacht list? Removing them from the list just leads to a rapid decline....
It's way beyond my paygrade to start determining what should or shouldn't be a Gaeltacht.
What I will say is that I don't think the Clare Gaeltacht was ever accepted as representing some notional form of "Clare Irish". As I understand it, it existed as a result of the ferry connections between the Aran islands and Doolin bringing speakers of Connemara Irish to Clare. By all means, correct me if I'm wrong on that, but I believe that is the rationale for it being considered a neo-Gaeltacht rather than being listed alongside the other traditional Munster Gaeltachtaí.
In any case, whether or not there was a Gaeltacht there is irrelevant. If it is now defunct, it can have no bearing on the likelihood of hearing a particular dialect of Irish in Clare beyond what I have already suggested might creep into the school system. Even by the unqualified estimates of
Coiste Forbartha na Gaeltachta Chontae an Chláir, there were only about 170 native daily speakers remaining over a decade ago, a number which has more likely dropped than risen. Even if it had doubled, though, I doubt that 340 speakers in West Clare would significantly influence overall likelihood of hearing their particular variety out in the streets more than events like
Féile na hInse and
An Fhéile Scoldrámaíochta which draw speakers from all over the country to Clare.