St. Patrick's Day: Why He Slaughtered The Druids and Why Irish People Act Like Drunken Monkeys On This Holiday
St. Patrick's Day: Why He Slaughtered The Druids and Why Irish People Act Like Drunken Monkeys On This Holiday
St. Patrick's Day: Why He Slaughtered The Druids and Why Irish People Act Like Drunken Monkeys On This Holiday
St. Patrick was born around 450 AD on the Scottish border. His father was a
Christian Roman soldier and his mother was a native British woman. Only two of
his letters survive telling details about his life. When he was fourteen to sixteen
years old, he was taken into captivity in Ireland by the Irish raiders in Britain; he
tended cattle for more than six years. In this time of captivity, he drew closer to
God before finally escaping on a trading ship. He returned years later to spread
Catholicism throughout Ireland while destroying the Druids who resisted Roman
and British rule in Ireland. Because he believed so strongly in the Catholic
Church, he thought that anyone who was not Christian had to become one in order
to be “saved”. Those who resisted were slaughtered in the Christian holy wars of
Gaul.
The Irish people at that time were happy and doing quite well. However, St.
Patrick was insistent that the Pagan Celts convert to Christianity. He noticed that
the Druids were the most powerful people of the Celts, so he figured that if he
could convert them, then the rest of the people would follow. When the Druids
refused to be bribed by the Romans, this angered the rulers of the Catholic Church.
St. Patrick declared that he would drive all of the snakes out of Ireland. “Snakes”
was a metaphor for the Druids.
Since the Druids did not write their teachings down, all we know about them is
was handed down to us by the Romans. It was often said that the Celts were
heathens who could not read or write, but they did know how to read and write in
Greek. While they didn’t write down the secret teachings of the Druids, they were
expected to memorize the knowledge. Julius Caesar had this to say about the
Druids:
The Druids usually hold aloof from war, and do not pay war-taxes
with the rest; they are excused from military service and exempt
from all liabilities. Tempted by these great rewards, many young
men assemble of their own motion to receive their training; many
are sent by parents and relatives. Report says that in the schools of
the Druids they learn by heart a great number of verses, and
therefore some persons remain twenty years in training. And they
do not think it proper to commit these utterances to writing,
although in almost all other matters, and in their private and
public accounts, they make use of Greek letters. I believe that they
have adopted the practice for two reasons – that they do not wish
the rule to become common property, nor those who learn the rule
to rely on writing and so neglect the cultivation of the memory;
and, in fact, it does usually happen that the assistance of writing
tends to relax the diligence of the student and the action of the
memory. The cardinal doctrine which they seek to teach is that
souls do not die, but after death pass from one to another; and this
belief, as the fear of death is thereby cast aside, they hold to be the
greatest incentive to valour. (Caesar The Gallic War VI.13-14)
We do know that Druidism was a science and not a religion. It was the study of
the relationships between opposites: summer and winter, men and women,
consciousness and unconsciousness, force and matter. Some of the main tenets:
1.) Every action has a consequence that must be observed
and you must be prepared to compensate for your actions
if required.
2.) All life is sacred and all are responsible for seeing that
this standard is upheld.
3.) You do still live in society and are bound by its rules.
4.) Work with high standards.
5.) Make an honest living.
6.) Be a good host as well as a good guest.
7.) Take care of yourself. (Health was held in high esteem
amongst the Celts, so much that a person could be fined
for being grossly overweight due to lack of care.)
8.) Serve your community.
9.) Maintain a healthy balance of the spiritual and mundane.
(Nihtscad writes: ‘Ethical and self respecting Druids did
nothing without being properly schooled or aware of the
consequences ahead of time. They knew when it was
appropriate to visit the Otherworld and immerse
themselves in the spiritual as well as when it was
appropriate to be fully in this world.’)
10.) Uphold the Truth, starting with yourself.
11.) Be sure in your convictions, particularly when judging or
accusing someone, but also when debating. Ask yourself:
are you really sure? Do you really know that this the
case?
One part of the Druid class were the “Bards”, whose job it was to remember all of
the history of the people. The Celts did not rely on a written language because
they memorized the songs and poetry of the Bards. The Irish believed that history
was very important, for if you didn’t remember what had happened in the past, you
couldn’t safely plan for the future.
Druid priests were the keepers of the knowledge of Earth and Spirits. It was their
responsibility to learn the spirit world in order to keep people in harmony with
nature. Priests performed marriages, baptisms, and acted as psychiatrists and
doctors.
The Romans considered the Celts to be good fighters. In 300 BC, Alexander the
Great considered it prudent to treat the Celts as equals. In the fourth century,
Ammianus Marcellinus, a Byzantine writer, wrote of the Celts:
Nearly all the Gaels are of a lofty stature, fair and of ruddy complexion:
terrible from the sternness of their eyes, and of great pride and insolence. A
whole troop of foreigners would not be able to withstand a single Gaul if he
called his wife to his assistance, which is usually very strong and with blue
eyes.
Ancient Celtic women could be warriors. Legend says that Scathach, a female
warrior from Isle of Skye in Scotland, trained a great Irish hero, Cuchilainn.
Boudicca, a red-haired queen of the British Iceni tribe, led a revolt against the
Romans following her husband’s death.
During large battles, the Celts had a strategy to terrify their opponents: they blew
war horns, they roared, they rumbled chariots, they banged their swords on their
shields, and then they attacked the enemy. These tactics did not work against the
well-trained Romans who were trained to resist the attacks of their enemies. The
Celts became disheartened by their inability to break the Romans quickly. The
main reason why the Celts lost the war was due to the fact that they were not
united. Clans attacked farms and stole cattle and other goods during the battles.
This caused many Celts to view their own clans as enemies and kept them from
uniting as a people. They did not understand how important it was to fight together
as an army against the Romans.
St. Patrick destroyed the influence of the Druids by destroying the sacred sites of
the people and building churches and monasteries where the Druids used to live
and teach. Instead of hearing the teachings and advice of the Druids, the people
began to hear the teachings of Rome. Because the Druids were the only ones who
were taught to remember the history, with the Druids dead and their influence
broken, the history was forgotten.
By killing off the teachers and the wise ones, Catholicism could be spread. For
this mass conversion of a culture to Christianity, and for the killing of thousands of
innocent people, Patrick was made a Saint by his church.
The great influx of Irish immigrants following the Great Hunger settled
predominantly in the industrial cities of the Northeast. The men often engaged in
backbreaking jobs, while their families lived in crowded tenements and their
children worked in sweatshops or even in mines.
Irish immigrants often took mining jobs since they met discrimination in most
other lines of work. In addition to enduring poor working conditions, coal miners
lived in homes owned by the mining companies and were even compelled to buy
groceries at company-owned stores.
In 1848, several New York Irish Aid societies decided to unite their parades to
form one New York City St. Patrick's Day Parade. Today, that parade is the world
's oldest civilian parade and the largest in the United States, with over 150,000
participants. When Irish Americans in the country's cities took to the streets on St.
Patrick's Day to celebrate their heritage, newspapers portrayed them in cartoons as
drunk, violent monkeys.
The Irish soon began to realize that their great numbers endowed them with a
political power that had yet to be exploited. They started to organize, and their
voting block, known as the "green machine," became an important swing vote for
political hopefuls. Suddenly, annual St. Patrick's Day parades became a show of
strength for Irish Americans, as well as a must-attend event for a slew of political
candidates. In 1948, President Truman attended New York City 's St. Patrick's Day
parade, a proud moment for the many Irish whose ancestors had to fight
stereotypes and racial prejudice to find acceptance in America.
The labor movement grew from Irish leaders such as the Mollie Maguires, Terence
Vincent Powderly, and Mary Harris "Mother" Jones.