The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Along with key business relations, there are Irish connection­s in the state’s population, culture and politics.

- By Darragh O’brien Darragh O’brien, member of parliament, is Ireland’s minister for housing, local government and heritage.

I am delighted to represent the government of Ireland at St. Patrick’s Day celebratio­ns in Georgia this year. The Peach State is more Irish than most people realize: almost 1 million Georgians claim Irish or ScotsIrish ancestry.

Savannah’s St. Patrick’s parade is said to be the world’s second-largest, while Atlanta’s parade is the longest-running event in the history of the city. I am here to pay tribute to that heritage, to connect with our million-strong diaspora in the state and to express our appreciati­on for the fact that Georgia has been a place where Irish people could thrive.

Our ties here are deep and longstandi­ng. Best of all, they are renewing at pace.

Fifteen years ago, aside from San Francisco, there was no Irish diplomatic presence in the U.S. south of Washington, D.C. When we opened our consulate in Atlanta in 2010, it was the first new Irish consulate in the U.S. since the 1930s. Since then, we have added offices in L.A., Austin and Miami. That is because we recognize that so much of America’s future and promise is in the South.

Irish people and businesses are flocking here, as they are from all over the world. At a conservati­ve estimate, Irish companies employ around 7,000 Georgians. Ireland is one of the top 10 sources of foreign direct investment into the state. CRH, the largest Irish employer in the U.S., has its headquarte­rs in Atlanta. Our financial services companies have made their home in Atlanta’s “Transactio­n Alley.”

During my visit here, I will participat­e in announceme­nts by two Irish fintech companies, Keeper Solutions and Swoop, of new partnershi­ps with Georgia-based companies.

In the other direction, Atlanta giants such as CocaCola and UPS have been enormously valued partners and we are proud that their operations in Ireland have contribute­d to their continued global success.

Irish investors can see that Georgia offers a rare combinatio­n of business-friendly environmen­t, quality of life, a highly educated workforce and authentic hospitalit­y. Those ingredient­s are familiar to us in Ireland because they have been the secret to our own transforma­tion in the

space of a few short decades from one of the poorest countries in Europe to one of the most highly developed nations in the world.

Underpinni­ng our trade relations are deep networks of family, community and people-to-people ties. Emory University’s Rose Library contains one of the preeminent collection­s of Irish literary papers in the world, not least the papers of Nobel Prize-winning poet Séamus Heaney.

It has also been important to us as a government to tell the story of the diversity of Ireland’s diaspora in the United States. We have supported the establishm­ent of a new organizati­on called the African American Irish Diaspora Network (AAIDN), with which we have been working

to create space for important conversati­ons about overlappin­g Black and Irish identities. AAIDN estimates that 38% of African Americans have some Irish heritage.

In our work in Atlanta, we have also placed a spotlight on the civil rights parallels, imperfect though they are, between Ireland and the United States, going right back to Frederick Douglass’ 1845 visit to Ireland and his inspiring encounter with Ireland’s “Liberator,” Daniel O’connell.

Northern Ireland’s civil rights movement was profoundly influenced by Atlanta leaders like the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. and John Lewis, down to singing the same hymns (”We Shall Overcome”) and to emulating the example of the Selma to Montgomery marches.

Ireland has become one of the most diverse countries in Europe. Where once it was a country of emigration, 17% of people living in Ireland today were not born there. And that is without taking account of the approximat­ely 75,000 Ukrainians we have welcomed to our homes and communitie­s since Russia’s illegal and immoral invasion of Ukraine.

This year, we mark a particular­ly special St. Patrick’s Day. Ireland is celebratin­g three major anniversar­ies that go to the heart of our identity as a country.

We mark the centenary of Ireland’s joining of the League of Nations, when we took our place among the nations of the world; the 50th anniversar­y of our accession to the then-european Economic Community; and the 25th anniversar­y of the Good Friday Agreement, which brought to an end decades of political violence in Northern Ireland. All along the path of our developmen­t as an independen­t, peaceful and prosperous nation, our U.S. friends and partners have stood by us and provided support when we needed it.

I think especially at this time of that great son of Georgia, President Jimmy Carter, who in 1977 became the first U.S. president to issue a statement on Northern Ireland, in the face of strong objections and marked a decisive shift in the United States’ approach to Ireland.

As we approach 25 years since the signing of the transforma­tional Good Friday agreement in April 1998, we recall the momentous role of the U.S. in helping to bring about peace and salute President Carter’s leadership.

 ?? STEVE SCHAEFER/STEVE.SCHAEFER@AJC.COM ?? Kathy Workman waves as the Atlanta St. Patrick’s parade heads down Peachtree Street last weekend. Almost 1 million Georgians claim Irish or Scots-irish ancestry.
STEVE SCHAEFER/STEVE.SCHAEFER@AJC.COM Kathy Workman waves as the Atlanta St. Patrick’s parade heads down Peachtree Street last weekend. Almost 1 million Georgians claim Irish or Scots-irish ancestry.
 ?? ?? Darragh O’brien
Darragh O’brien

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