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Top broadsheet newspaper, The Independent
[London] carried a feature article on the Aisling Return to Ireland Project
in 1999.
Father Dougal, the dolphins,
and a mission from the streets of London
by Ian Burrell.
Photography by Tom Craig.

EAMONN SPENDS each night on a patch of grass
under a tree in a north London cemetery. AIthough he sleeps among the
dead, he still has a life of sorts. He spends his disability allowance
- collected from a nearby benefit office in Cricklewood on a daily intake
of 15 tins of super-strength lager
He passes each day slumped in doorways, nursing cans of the brew
which is rotting his stomach lining, or walking for miles across London,
begging change to buy more alcohol. Last week, after 23 years of doorways
and dereliction, Eamon had the experience of a lifetime. Cold but exhilarated,
he went paddling with a school of dolphins in the foaming waiers of the
Atlantic Ocean. He and two dozen other homeless Irish Londoners were revelling
in the beauty of Clew Bay - white sands against a backdrop of the green
mountains of County Mayo - some gasping and laughing as they threw themselves
into the icy surf. They had been transported to Ireland through
the efforts of the Aisling project. a collaboration between the London
Irish Centre, Bridge Housing Association, and the actor comedian Ardal
0'Hanlon, best known for his role as the dim-witted Dougal in the award-winning
Father Ted televsion series. The project - named after the Irish for "dream"
or "vision" - is based on the premise that by temporarily transporting
these men and women to the clean air and familiar surroundings of their
childhoods, the desperate routine of their London lives can be broken.
The awesome beauty of their surroundings made this an extraordinary
reunion with a country which many had not seen since their teens, when
they left with dreams of making their fortunes in England. Eamon left
County Tipperary at the age of 17, and during his 23 years in England
and Wales has lived in 60 different towns as he moved in search of work.
Gradually alcoholism took over leaving him less preoccupied with finding
employment than alcohol. But during his week in the Irish countryside,
the haze began to lift and Eamon, in the words of those around him, "came
back to life". Support staff on the trip were astonished to see him sitting
in a tea-room with a cup of tea and a sandwich. Deprived of the superstrength
tins - canned drinks containing more than 5 per cent alcohol are banned
in Ireland- he also found himself sipping Guinness in a country bar in
the village of Louisburgh. "This is the first time I have been in
a pub for two years," he said. John Glynn, an alcohol outreach worker
who accompanied the trip, said: "Some of these people have been so stripped
of their life skills that they cannot even boil a kettle. Within a few
days we have seen them lighting a fire, making the tea and addressing
their hygiene. It is the change of environment that has allowed them to
do that."
Mr O'Hanlon, who hosted a benefit comedy show to fund the trip,
met the homeless group last week as they arrived in Ireland.
"I think this trip gives them a tiny bit of hope," he said. "It
would be very valuable if in just a few cases they could re-establish
lines of communication with their families from whom they have been estranged
for many years.
"Whilst I'm proud of a healthy economy and how we are thriving
culturally both within and outside Ireland, the true measure of a society
is how it looks after its vulnerable.".
Most of the Aisling returnees are long-term residents of Arlington
House, Britain's largest hostel for homeless men, based in London's Camden
Town. The building was immortalised by George Orwell in Down and Out in
Paris and London, his 1932 depiction of destitution. In recent times,
alcoholism has taken a terrible toll among Arlington House residents.
In the past two years, there have been 30 deaths in the building, 26 of
them alcohol-related. All these men were super-strength lager drinkers
and their average age was 59.

The Irish residents in Arlington House
have spent an average of 30 years in England, two-thirds of them have
drink problems and 40 per cent suffer from long-term illnesses. Nearly
90 per cent have no pension from any past employment. Many of those who
joined the week-long return to Ireland have bronchial problems and physical
ailments from years of sleeping on the streets. Most look 20 years older
than they really are. Like Eamon, they mostly spend their days sitting
on public benches, sipping from the tins that are condemning them to an
early grave. After years of digging holes, laying pipes and cleaning houses
they are no longer fit or able to find work, and have so little to show
for themselves that they prefer homeless anonymity to the shame of going
back to their families.
When Alan Macdonald left County Roscommon as a 16 year old, he
could not have imagined the toll that the next 35 years would take on
his health. A tall man who made his living from laying cables, he is grey
and frail at 51 and walks with a stick. Throughout his week's visit to
Ireland, he lovingly cradles pint glasses of "porter" [Guinness] - which
he will surely abandon for high-strength cans as soon as he returns to
London - and recounts stories of Grace O'Malley the 16th century Irish
pirate queen from whom he claims direct descendancy
Not all of the returnees have drink problems. Some have been scarred
in other ways. Peter 56, fled to Britain as a 16-year-old after a traumatic
childhood in a religious orphanage in Dublin. A nervous, softly spoken
man who has lived in Arlington House for 30 years, he has never touched
alcohol or tobacco but drinks endless cups of tea. But as he wanders around
the grounds of the Benedictine Kylemore Abbey, on the shore of Lough Pollacappul
in the Connemara national park, he is transformed
"The mountains, the lough, the fresh trout - what more could you
ask?" he said. "I've got nobody to come back to in Ireland because I've
got no family. But I am seeing a part of the country that I have never
seen before."
Others were even more reinvigorated. Hannah, one of the few women
on the trip, was recovering from a nervous breakdown and remained quiet
for most of the week. But on the final evening, she took the microphone
in Louisburgh's Bunowen pub and reduced members of the audience to tears
with her rendition of a traditional County Mayo song.
Attempts are made to reunite people with their families although
some returnees regard the prospect with great trepidation. Each morning,
Billy was given the opportunity to meet his sister for the first time
in 27 years but was repeatedly gripped by a panic which saw him scuttle
to the pub at the last moment to lose himself in alcohol. Another returnee
visited his long-lost brother on his farm. The pair shook hands and stood
looking at each other for a couple of minutes before the brother said;
"Well, I suppose this isn't getting the cows milked" and walked off.
Others are overwhelmed by the receptions they get. Mary, 71, back
in Ireland for the first time since the 1960s, was "tripping over" old
friends in the holy town of Knock; though she admitted to hardly recognising
the place "where I was born and reared". It is too soon to see what long-term
effects, if any, the Irish trip will have on the visitors. But the project
leader Alex McDonnell, believes closer family ties could be established
if only the project was able to establish a permanent base in Ireland
for people wishing to make a return visit. He believes it is incumbent
on the Irish government, which is now enjoying a booming economy, to help
people who sent home millions of pounds in earnings when the country was
in need.
"It's estimated that in postal orders alone there was something
like £6m coming back into the Irish economy in the Fifties and most of
the money came back in cash," he said. "These are the people who would
now like a little bit back and it's not a lot to ask."
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