Faith, Morality and Being Irish: A Caring Tradition in Africa

Front Cover
University Press of America, 2007 - History - 154 pages
In the minds of many, the nineteenth-century Irish famine seemed to create an environment that later produced an avoidance of marriage, drunkenness, violence, and mental illness. If ever predominant in Irish cultural behavior, those moments have passed. As a result, Professors Philip L. Kilbride and Noel J. J. Farley outline the positive contributions the contemporary Irish make to the world around them, particularly Africa. From this, generosity emerges as a major Irish cultural virtue. The authors trace it from the Celtic period, showing how it became a central concern of Roman Catholics from the nineteenth-century to today. Professors Kilbride and Farley use ethnographic techniques and narrative perspective to focus on the life of an Irish entrepreneur and philanthropist who has lived in Africa since 1970. They also illuminate the missionary work in Kenya of an Irish Jesuit and others of Irish heritage there. These accounts, coupled with other narratives and historical evidence, detail the prevalence and practice of Irish generosity to further document what they conclude is an Irish caring tradition. This volume will be of interest to a wide audience including anthropologists, economists, historians, philosophers, political scientists, sociologists, theologians, and Irish and African studies programs. It is accessible to undergraduate and graduate students as a supplemental reading within the varieties of fields aforementioned. Book jacket.
 

Contents

Methods and Perspectives Moral Social Science
1
Cultural and Economic Context of Philanthropy The Irish Case
18
Irish Ethnicity An Irish Entrepreneur and Philanthropist
28
An Irish African Entrepreneur Glenns Home Base
41
The Entrepreneur in Africa An Economic Interpretation
59
An Irish Catholic Formation of Philanthropic Service
70
Kielty the Man An Irish Cosmopolitan
88
Catholic Missions in Kenya An Irish Presence
99
The Caring Tradition An Irish Mission Priest
109
Are the Irish Really Generous? An Appraisal
127
Bibliography
141
Index
149
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