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Local SVdP to help over 500 families this Christmas

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BY MICHELLE CREAN

Kind-hearted St Vincent de Paul volunteers are this week working flat out every day preparing over 500 food hampers in time for Christmas - to those in need in South Kerry - including 300 in the Killarney area alone.

Food, fuel, toys and clothes are high on the priority list for most, and those affected include all ages from families to older people, as well as single people living alone.

According to the newly released data from the Central Statistics Office (CSO) this week, nearly 16 percent of households in Ireland were at risk of poverty in 2017.

This week, Bridget O’Shea, SVdP President of the Killarney area which includes two conferences in Killarney town, Firies, Rathmore, Boherbue, Millstreet, Kenmare and Castletownbere, said the charity is inundated with calls for help - especially at this time of the year.

Over the last few weeks Bridget and her team of dedicated volunteers have been putting together food hampers mainly made up of non-perishable items, wrapping toys for babies and young children, gathering together new items of clothing also for the children, organising vouchers for those aged 10 to teens, and donating food vouchers to families which will allow them buy fresh food days before Christmas.

“All the conferences have been working flat out,” Bridget told the Killarney Advertiser.

“They are inundated with calls for food, fuel and toys. Heating is a huge issue and calls for fuel are way up.”

She added that there’s a poverty out there that people aren’t seeing.

“Our thing is to put food on the table. There is an absolute increase in calls this time of year from struggling families, single and older people living alone feeling lonely and isolated, and those of different nationalities.

“There’s a lot of middle class people that are too proud to ask but that’s changing a little bit.”

She said that the charity has received huge support from local businesses, schools and individual people over the last few weeks.

“We want to thank all our fundraisers. We had a lot of companies in town who donated boxes of food, hotels did giving trees and schools donated toys. We wouldn’t be able to manage without the generosity of the benefactors.”

 

[caption id="attachment_24166" align="aligncenter" width="5184"] Volunteers with St Vincent de Paul are this week busy putting together and delivering food hampers to over 500 families and individuals in the Killarney/South Kerry areas in time for Christmas Day. Pictured were: Bridget O'Shea (President of SVdP Killarney Area), Patricia Lyne ((Secretary of the Killarney Area), Breda Dwyer (President of St Bridget's Conference), Dymphna Horgan (SVdP Member) and Mary Healy (Treasurer).[/caption]

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Arbutus Hotel’s 100th anniversary honoured at IHF Conference

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The centenary of the historic Arbutus Hotel took centre stage this week at the Irish Hotels Federation (IHF) Annual Conference.

Held at the Gleneagle Arena, the gathering of over 300 hoteliers from across the country provided a platform to celebrate the 100-year legacy of the Buckley family and their landmark establishment.


The story of the Arbutus began with Tim Buckley, who spent 14 years in New York working as a night porter and hackney cab driver to save the funds needed to buy the property he had admired as a young man.

After returning from America, Tim and his wife Julia Daly purchased what was then Russell’s Hotel in 1925, officially renaming and launching it as the Arbutus Hotel in 1926.

Julia Daly played a significant role in the hotel’s early success, having attended the Ramsgrange Cookery School in Wexford to ensure the food and hospitality standards were world-class from the outset.


Today, the hotel remains under the care of the Buckley family, with three generations having steered it through a century of Killarney’s tourism history, passing from Tim to his son Pat in the 1960s, and now run by Tim’s grandson, Seán Buckley.


Garrett Power, Chairman of the Kerry IHF, presented a bouquet of flowers to Roisin Buckley, Seán’s daughter and first cousin of international star Jessie Buckley, to mark the occasion. The presentation honoured both the hotel’s centenary and the family’s wider contribution to the town.

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Over €2K raised at Killarney premiere of Hind Rajab film

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Killarney for Palestine welcomed over 120 people to The Brehon on Sunday evening for the Kerry premiere of the Oscar-nominated film, The Voice of Hind Rajab.

The event served as a fundraiser and an important experience for the local community, highlighting the story of the five-year-old child killed in Gaza.
The evening raised over €2,000 in donations. These funds will be sent via mutual aid directly to five families in Gaza and to The Hind Rajab Foundation.
The film’s director, Kaouther Ben Hania, recently made headlines at the Berlin International Film Festival by declining the “Most Valuable Film” award at the “Cinema for Peace” gathering. Addressing the audience, she explained her decision to leave the trophy behind as a reminder of the lack of accountability for the deaths of Hind Rajab, her family, and the paramedics sent to save her.
“Peace requires justice and accountability, not glossy slogans,” Ben Hania stated, adding she would only accept such awards when peace is rooted in moral and legal obligations.
Killarney for Palestine holds regular updates on their social media pages and invites the public to join their monthly vigil at the Killarney Courthouse, held at 12 p.m. on the last Sunday of every month.

Over €2K raised at Killarney premiere of Hind Rajab film


Killarney for Palestine welcomed over 120 people to The Brehon on Sunday evening for the Kerry premiere of the Oscar-nominated film, The Voice of Hind Rajab.

The event served as a fundraiser and an important experience for the local community, highlighting the story of the five-year-old child killed in Gaza.
The evening raised over €2,000 in donations. These funds will be sent via mutual aid directly to five families in Gaza and to The Hind Rajab Foundation.
The film’s director, Kaouther Ben Hania, recently made headlines at the Berlin International Film Festival by declining the “Most Valuable Film” award at the “Cinema for Peace” gathering. Addressing the audience, she explained her decision to leave the trophy behind as a reminder of the lack of accountability for the deaths of Hind Rajab, her family, and the paramedics sent to save her.
“Peace requires justice and accountability, not glossy slogans,” Ben Hania stated, adding she would only accept such awards when peace is rooted in moral and legal obligations.
Killarney for Palestine holds regular updates on their social media pages and invites the public to join their monthly vigil at the Killarney Courthouse, held at 12 p.m. on the last Sunday of every month.

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