Bray People

A hand written letter can mean so much

- Fr Michael Commane

AN Post is advising children to post their letters early to Santa this year. It’s been busy in the workshop, all the elves are working hard, helping Santa packing toys and gifts. Provided Santa receives the letter in good time he promises to reply just before Christmas. The Irish postal service works closely with Santa. It’s a great idea that Santa has agreed to use the postal service to send replies to all the children in Ireland.

When last did you receive a personal hand-written letter? Or when was the last time you sat down with a pen, ballpoint or pencil to write a letter to a friend? Have you noticed that most letters we get these days from charities asking us to donate money to their organisati­on are typed in a handwritin­g font? No doubt the idea is to make the correspond­ence look personal.

RTE’s Ryan Tubridy has been talking about the art of letter writing over the last few weeks. Indeed, last Wednesday he read out a letter a woman wrote to her sister. She was 50 years late writing it. She was apologisin­g to her sister for something she had done to her on Christmas Day 50 years ago.

It certainly caught my attention. It set me thinking of the power of a letter. And it might even be true to say that a handwritte­n letter carries far more authentici­ty than a printed one. There’s a personal touch about a handwritte­n letter. It has that quality of being original, being real, unique too.

Is it at all possible to type a love letter? It sounds almost unimaginab­le. Love letters of their nature surely have to be written in longhand. When we go through boxes of old family letters we stop and wonder at the person behind the hand that wrote the letter. Finding old letters is akin to finding a treasure trove.

The day after I started writing this column I received a handwritte­n letter from someone I met in September. I read it a number of times. The letter was so friendly and kind that I actually read it to a friend of mine. Yes, we answer text messages and emails but there’s a difference.

Even with all our technology, our signature is still a vital component to all important documents and cards. Our electronic passports, driving licences, every piece of electronic data we carry around with us has our unique signature on it. And of course our signature is handwritte­n. Signing the register at a wedding ceremony always gets a special place of importance. Our signature puts the seal of approval on a document.

In an age when we are becoming ever so conscious of protecting our environmen­t and keeping in touch with who and what we are I’m wondering might handwritin­g be on the verge of a renaissanc­e.

A friend of mine, who is clued into design and fashion, pointed out to me the number of shop signs and other public signage that is currently being done in handwritin­g form. It is much nicer to write to Santa than send him an SMS or an email.

The German writer Johann Wolfgang von Goethe says: ‘Letters are among the most significan­t memorial a person can leave behind them.’

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