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School in the Land of Saints & Scholars
IrishShopShare
Our cultural Irish gifts are often summed up in the phrase ‘the land of saints and scholars’. Ireland is known for its literary heritage and its religious art such as the Book of Kells. Today, Irish children like youngsters throughout the western world, have mixed feelings as they head back to school. They’re excited to see school friends and discover what the year will bring. They’re proud of moving up a grade. And they are also reluctant to give up sleeping late and playing all day for homework!
Today, approximately 90% of the Republic of Ireland’s primary schools are run by the Catholic church. That is changing as secular education becomes more popular. We might think of Catholic schools as old and established in Ireland, but that is a short-sighted view. During the Penal Laws, Catholic education was actually illegal. This was the era that gave us the penal rosary, a one-decade string of beads easy to conceal from the authorities. Now these are popular religious Irish gifts, but once they were a tool of devotion and defiance. Between 1695 and 1782, the law specifically forbid using buildings to teach Catholic children.
The Irish are known for our determination, and those oppressive decades demanded it. Instead of sending their children off to a warm, dry school building in the morning, rural Irish parents sent their children out in the evening, after a hard day’s work on the farm, to secret schools. These were known as hedgerow schools because they were often literally held in a hedgerow, with the teacher and the pupils sheltered from sight by the dense shrubbery. There in the damp, they learned to read and write. They studied math, Catholic catechism and even Latin. They spoke Irish freely, which the British also tried to prevent.