Revolutionary Routes: Ireland & the Black Atlantic

Afro

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Found this whole exhibit kinda fascinating.



From 2022, EPIC is proud to present this exhibition exploring journeys that demonstrate significant themes and moments in the intertwining histories of the African and Irish diasporas.

We feature stories of departure, arrival and return, tracing histories from the Age of Revolutions (1790s) to the present day, encapsulating Irish diaspora histories of abolition, racism, anti-racism and solidarity.

Discover stories of the ‘Wild Geese’ Families in the Haitian Revolution, of Edward and Catherine Despard, an interracial couple active in 18th century Irish revolutionary movements and of Ira Aldridge, the most famous Black actor of the early 19th century who spent six years in Ireland in the 1830s, touring across the country. Learn about Frederick Douglass’s encounters with the Irish in America upon his return from Ireland, of the Fisk Jubilee Singers, a choir of formerly enslaved people who toured Ireland in the 1870s and of Lady Kathleen Simon, the Dublin born anti-slavery activist of the early 20th century.
You will also learn about Michael Harmel, the son of Irish Jewish migrants in South Africa who was a comrade of Nelson Mandela and of Mayo born Mary Mooney, who toured the US, Russia and Europe alongside African American women to demand the release of their sons from death row.
These stories, featuring 22 countries and 11 Irish locations allow us to trace inward migration and multiculturalism within Ireland in addition to highlighting the diversity of the diaspora.



Can the history of the Irish abroad help us understand the diversity of modern Ireland and its diaspora? How do we tell the Irish emigration story with an acknowledgement of Irish complicity in the racist ideologies that have shaped the modern world? Can histories of solidarity between the Irish and African diasporas shape anti-racist struggles today? Through stories of arrival, departure and return Revolutionary Routes: Ireland and the Black Atlantic explores these questions.
Revolutionary Routes traces Irish and African diaspora movement and movements across the Black Atlantic and the centuries, beginning with the Haitian Revolution. The Black Atlantic, a concept developed by scholar Paul Gilroy, represents the networks of African people and culture that have crossed the Atlantic since the origins of transatlantic slavery. As an island in the Atlantic, Ireland and its people have been shaped by these networks.
Beginning with the Haitian Revolution and tracing its waves over territories and centuries, the exhibition suggests how finding new origin stories for histories of the Irish abroad can transform our understandings of the diaspora.

The research for this exhibition was carried out by Dr Maurice J Casey, the Department of Foreign Affairs Historian in Residence at EPIC in collaboration with the African American Irish Diaspora Network (AAIDN) and in consultation with a working group of AAIDN board members: Dennis Brownlee, Christine Kinealy, Lenwood Sloan and Don Mullan.
 

Jcotton1

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Got a cousin with the last name Glasco. This is fax. He's researched it and made contact and will be taking his family over to see his other newly found relatives.
 
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