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Erica O'Reilly's avatar

I'm sitting here, on a Sunday morning in Ottawa, Canada, having just read your piece wanting so say so much; while at the same time feeling a sense overwhelm and unsure of where to start. So, instead, I wish to offer a heartfelt míle buíochas. As an Irish-Canadian woman who has been feeling the 'calling home' from within my bones for sometime now, your piece offers glimmers of validation for what my body and spirit have known (and been feeling) for quite some time now.

I have also saved your piece to circle back to. As an artist and sacred storyteller, the spirit of the next story that swirls around me is called 'De thír mo mháithreacha / Of the Land of My Mothers'; inspired through diasporic grief and cultural belonging, this story tells the tale of one Irish-Canadian woman's search for belonging. Upon returning to the lands of her ancestors, and held within the wild the embrace of Éire [Ireland], she re-members that the magic and wisdom of the Irish matriarchs is alive and well within her (where ever her feet may call home).

I feel blessed that I will be in County Kerry next year for a residency to explore the heart and bones of this piece upon the land herself. For I know connecting with the earth and the language of Ireland is (and will be) particularly poignant for me personally - especially when tending to the threads of diasporic grief that rest within me.

So, from across the sea, on an overcast Sunday morning, go raibh maith agat.

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Erin O'Regan White's avatar

I am an Irish-descended American three generations removed from our family's diaspora and yet, the bone-deep longing you describe is a haunting and ever-present feature that I've felt from childhood. Upon arrival the first time I visited Ireland, I was brought to my knees outside the Cork airport by a surprising and intense sadness. The last time I left Ireland, I was the woman on the plane hiding her tears from the stranger in the next seat. I was bewildered by the overwhelm of loss I felt for leaving a place my family hadn't lived in for a century.

I deeply love my community and home in Montana, but I am not indigenous to this place. There are unspeakable crimes to make reparations for as a settler here. This line so adeptly identifies the un-ease: "There is a grief, a very particular grief, inherent to being neither of the land you were raised in (the land your family settled in) but also not being fully accepted by the place your bones call home." The phantom limb of diaspora grief is always there and always untouchable.

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