In honor of St. Patrick’s Day, albeit a little late, I am
excited to have discovered a book titled, “How the Irish Saved Civilization” by
Thomas Cahill. My Mom, a Latin teacher,
recommended it to me on Sunday (the actual St. Patrick’s Day) while I was
describing my Spring Break project: start a blog to chronicle my investigation
into the History of Religion, all Religions, and connect it to our present day
world. What better place to start, than
with Christianity, the religion I was raised with, and St. Patrick on his Saint
Day celebration!
I wasn’t exactly surprised to find that the story of St.
Patrick, as outlined in this book, has no substantial relationship to the
revelry I was reading about on Facebook.
Ironically, we celebrate a very quiet man, who brought peace and piety
to a Nation, by riotously engaging in raucous acts. While the Celtic ancestors of the Irish were
known for this type of behavior, Patrick was credited with softening it. In fact, he wasn’t even Irish, but rather a
Roman citizen kidnapped from his community in England. The 15 year old Patrick was sold to an Irish
feudal Lord, Miliucc, in 401 AD. At this
moment in history, according to Cahill, Ireland, “was an illiterate,
aristocratic, seminomadic, Iron Age warrior culture, its wealth based on animal
husbandry and slavery.” Patrick was thus forced by his brutish captors to
work as a shepherd in the damp and chilly hills of Antrim, where he suffered daily
from exposure and intense hunger pangs.
The life that Patrick entered as a slave was, doubtlessly, a
scary and lonely existence. Roman soldiers of the time were recordedly horrified
by the Irish Celts’ custom of rushing naked and screaming into battle. Patrick came from civilization, where he
attended school and spoke Latin. Now he
roamed the rural Irish landscape alone and rare encounters with others, with
whom he could not communicate, must have been terrifying. With no one else to turn to, he survived his
six years of slavery by praying to God.
Finally, in a dream, God told him that a ship waited for him. Patrick woke up and walked 200 miles to the
seaside, where he miraculously boarded a ship for England, without
scrutiny.
After a short reunion with his parents, who begged him never
to leave home again, he heard the voice of God for a second time in a
dream. This time, it called him back to
Ireland, to evangelize the very people who had enslaved him. He thus set off to be ordained in a Monastery
off the Mediterranean coast of France and returned to Ireland, where he served
as history’s first Catholic missionary, aside from the Apostles. The greatest miracle is that Patrick’s call
to evangelize Ireland came at the exact moment of the largest Germanic invasion
of the Roman Empire (407 AD), the one
that would, ultimately, lead to its fall.
And most remarkably, Patrick’s
legacy is a love of learning and bookmaking that allowed the Irish monastic
scribes to preserve the Classical texts of Continental Europe. Eventually the heirs to this legacy, for
example the Irish monk Columbanus, would found new Monasteries in the countries
that would become France, Switzerland, Germany, and Italy, replacing the ones
that were plundered and destroyed by the Barbarians. As the Germanic tribes tore through the Roman
civilization, instilling the New World Order of the Middle Ages, libraries
burned and history was stamped out.
Paradoxically, the remoteness that kept Ireland from being civilized by
the Romans, allowed it to preserve that same civilization by creating a safe
haven from the Barbarians as well.
Patrick’s years of solitary prayer transformed him into a
visionary able to see past man’s base nature to our capacity for goodness. Men have been conquering and enslaving one
another since the beginning of time. In
the fourth century B.C., the Celts swept into Ireland and wrested it from a
tribe of skilled craftsmen, the Tuatha de Danaan. Though these people were taller than the
Celts, they are the people who originated the myth of the Irish little people
or leprachauns. Cahill attributes this
to, “Irish guilt over their exploitation of more artful aboriginies.” Similarly, the Romans, in turn conquer the
Celts and Gauls of continental Europe in 52 BC and depict them as inferior in their
sculptures and artwork. Again, roughly 400
years later, in the story of Patrick, his terrifying enslavers are the ones who
become the literate, book-making saviours of the ancient Greek and Latin texts
that would haveotherwise been lost
forever in the Barbarian takeover of the Roman Empire. Yet today, we Americans stereotype the Irish
as a bunch of rowdy drunks.
My sweet and energetic four year old son, Henry, has been
fascinated this week by his teachers’ tales of Leprauchans. After the Preschoolers go home for the day,
these leprechauns have been invading the classroom and leaving little messes
and tiny green footprints as proof of their culpability.
Henry spent Monday night constructing a trap to catch the tiny culprits
with the help of his engineer Dad.
Tuesday morning, as I washed out my coffee cup, Henry showed me how he
had put all of his shiniest lego pieces and Playmobil Pirate treasure inside of
it, explaining that these would surely entice the leprachauns into the
trap. “And you know what I will do when
I catch a Leprachaun Mommy?” he asks. Before
I can inquire, he blurts, “He will have to make jewelry for you and Daddy!” “But Henry,” I feign distress, “that would
make the Leprachaun a slave!” Not
troubled in the least, he quickly replies, “Well, he’ll have to make jewelry
for my friends’Mommies and Daddies, too.”
It is typical for mankind to want to bend others to do their will. This
is made easier if we can perceive some inferiority in the other. But we should aspire to overcome prejudice and
work together. That is when the miracles
will happen.
I loved that book when I read it almost 20 years ago (#I AM SO OLD!!!) But I think I would get a whole pile of new insight out of it if I read it again!
ReplyDeleteI will only make one note sort of defending the barbarians... the stamping out of classical Roman Culture wasnt all their fault. Many Christian missionaries also contributed to the destruction of texts because they were trying to destroy all evidence of the pagan gods- Roman ones as well as Norse. One reason that those monks in Ireland were SOOO important was that they could see the connection between Christianity and all those pre-christian amazing philosophers like Plato, and realized the value in preserving it all, instead of just destroying, and promoting ignorance (and keeping the uneducated down).
I love the Leprechaun anecdote! Henry,running a little Leprechaun sweatshop :)
ReplyDeleteIt is only biology that we feel compelled to enslave those weaker than us... it is how the human race got where it is. I suppose teaching middle skool made me ever more aware of pecking order. Thus again my oversimplified central thread of religion; IMO, true spirituality is the sisyphean task of overcoming our biology, in order to be altruistic.