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UNIFIL Irish soldiers celebrate last Saint Patrick's Day in Lebanon

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  • UNIFIL Irish soldiers celebrate last Saint Patrick's Day in Lebanon

    The Daily Star, Lebanon
    March 19 2004


    Unifil Irish soldiers celebrate their last Saint Patrick's Day in
    Lebanon
    Sprigs of shamrock had been flown in from Ireland

    By Paul Cochrane
    Special to The Daily Star

    Saint Patrick's Day is an event celebrated with a great deal of
    gusto wherever the Irish, descendants or citizens, congregate. In New
    York the river is dyed green, and in Dublin it is the biggest social
    event in between New Year and Easter.
    In Beirut, dozens of Irish came together at the palatial Daouk
    residence in Ain al-Mreisseh, the home of Ireland's Consul General
    Khaled Daouk, to celebrate the patron saint of Ireland.
    Although St. Patrick was born in Wales, the saint first arrived in
    Ireland as a slave, where he turned to religion and began his mission
    in life to convert Ireland to Christianity. Among the myths
    surrounding Patrick's life, one is that he could raise people from
    the dead, and the more widely known is that he drove all the snakes
    from the Emerald Isle.
    With the death of St. Patrick on March 17, 461 AD, the event has been
    commemorated as a Catholic holiday ever since.
    Amid numerous Lebanese socialites at the event, the Irish were
    conspicuous by the green shamrocks attached to their suit lapels. The
    shamrock, which along with the harp are Ireland's national symbols,
    is a small three leafed plant
    that is significant in that St. Patrick used the shamrock to explain
    the Christian trinity of the Father, the Son and the Holy Spirit.
    The shamrocks on display were the real McCoy, with over a 100 sprigs
    having been flown in from Ireland with the fiancˇ of an Irish UN
    Interim Force in Lebanon (Unifil) officer. There were seven Irish
    officers, currently based in the South, at the event. Commandant
    Timmy Daly said, "It is fantastic to be here as a guest, especially
    as it is the last St. Patrick's Day for Irish soldiers in Lebanon."
    The Irish contingent has been with Unifil in Southern Lebanon for the
    past 26 years, but has been gradually phased out since the Israeli
    withdrawal in 2000.
    "When the Irish Army was here in force, I used to go down to Naqoura
    every year as there was a big parade by the soldiers, a bagpipe band,
    musicians from Ireland and a great banquet," said Sister Mary
    Delourdes, a teacher at Sagesse school. With fewer Irish in Lebanon,
    St. Patrick's Day has become a much smaller event.
    Although whiskey and black stout beer are the traditional drinks of
    Ireland, the black stuff was very much absent from the function, and
    it was rather surprising to be served up Scotch rather than some of
    Ireland's best malts.
    The event was celebrated with a buffet, a cake with the Irish
    tricolors and an Armenian pianist tickling the ivories in the
    background.
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