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Helen highlights the importance of hospice care

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Fulfilling her husband's dying wish led to a young widow's drive to highlight the importance of a hospice which cared for him in his final days.

Kerry Hospice Foundation staff made sure Derry (Jeremiah) O'Leary (44) got to see his favourite horse-racing festival with friends in the comfort of his own home, just weeks before he passed away.

Derry was so impressed with the care and treatment given to him that he asked his heartbroken wife Helen Mannix O’Leary to hold a fundraiser for the centre after his death.

The hugely popular resident of Muckross Road - and native of Inch, Kilcummin - lost his three year battle with lung cancer on April 11, 2020 - COVID-19 restrictions depriving many friends and relatives the chance to say their goodbyes at his funeral.

So Helen staged a coffee morning as a way to say thank you to the hospice for helping her husband keep his independence right up to the end.

She will be doing so again on Thursday, September 22 - and is also asking others to register to host a coffee morning as part of the Bewley’s Big Coffee Morning Social for Hospice at www.hospicecoffeemorning.ie or by calling 0818 995 996.

The nationwide event, which has raised over €41.5 million since its inception, celebrates its 30th anniversary this year.

"We were engaged for 10 years and married for just seven when he died. He was sick for three years, but he put up a great fight," Helen said.

"He was a huge sports fan and a Liverpool supporter but he absolutely adored horse-racing. He went to the Cheltenham Festival each year and to many of the local meetings, where everyone knew him.

"Indeed, it was at the Galway Races that he proposed to me. Due to his illness, he couldn't go to Cheltenham in 2020 and ahead of it, on February 26, he got really sick and was taken to the hospice.

"He made the nursing team promise to have him back home in time to watch the racing on his own TV with friends and relatives."

Horse-racing kept him going through his illness but the hospice ensured his independence until the very end, with everything he needed to pass away at home, she explained.

Together for Hospice, The National Hospice Movement represents 26 hospice and specialist palliative home care providers supporting patients and their families nationwide.

Funds raised locally stay local and go back into each local hospice service, helping to pay for medical and general staff, palliative care beds, home care visits, specialist equipment and new hospice builds.

"COVID-19 restrictions only allowed immediate family to see him at the end and no-one was allowed to attend his funeral. I found this really hard because he was hugely popular in the parish and beyond,” added Helen.

"We were a young couple who didn't even think of sickness when this happened and all of a sudden, we were relying on people to get us through it and that's what the hospice staff did.

"I had to think about how I was going to continue paying the bills and the mortgage as well as other issues like getting a medical card.

"These are basic things that I never thought I'd have to know about and I didn't know the first place to begin looking for answers.

"The hospice staff were incredible. They had a dedicated person to guide me through every step. No question was silly to them and they just knew what to do to make things a little better at every turn.

Derry knew he wouldn't get to hold a fundraiser to say thank you for everything the hospice did and so he made me promise to hold one for them.

“A coffee morning felt like the right thing to do and it gave people who couldn't get to the funeral a chance to get together and remember him with laughter because he was such a character.

"No-one thinks about hospice care until it's needed but unfortunately our story could be anyone else's tomorrow."

Register to host a coffee morning on Thursday, September 22, or on a date that suits you, at: www.hospicecoffeemorning.ie or call-save 0818 995 996. Hosts are provided with a free Coffee Morning Pack containing Bewley’s coffee, posters and invitations.

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Dr Crokes’ festive community initiatives

Dr Crokes GAA Club, a recent Gold Award winner in the GAA Healthy Club Honours 2025-2027, has announced a detailed programme of community initiatives for the Christmas season. The club […]

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Dr Crokes GAA Club, a recent Gold Award winner in the GAA Healthy Club Honours 2025-2027, has announced a detailed programme of community initiatives for the Christmas season.

The club continues to host Kathleen’s Gentle Mobility Exercises, a popular Age Action initiative led by retired PE teacher Kathleen Fitzgerald. The hour-long sessions, which cater to 40 adults every Tuesday, include music and social time with coffee and cake. While the winter programme concludes this week with a Christmas party, the spring sessions are scheduled to begin early in 2026.
Members of the Healthy Club committee are also carrying out visitations to all families in the community who were bereaved during 2025. During these visits, members deliver special Christmas cards and greetings designed by the club’s Juvenile Academy players.
The club is also maintaining its connection with the Crokes Diaspora by sending bespoke Christmas greeting cards to members living or working abroad who cannot return home for the holidays. This initiative allows local members to supply greetings to the Healthy Club to ensure personal links with home are re-established.
The schedule of events concludes with the Lap of Light Celebration on Saturday, December 27. Families who suffered a bereavement in 2025 are invited to assemble at Dr Crokes’ Park at 4:30 pm for a candlelight reflection with live music. This will be followed by laps of the grounds under the theme of “Darkness into Light,” with participants encouraged to wear high-visibility clothing and club colours while using torches or mobile phones for illumination. The evening will finish with refreshments and music in the clubhouse

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Rare BBC footage screened at Hugh O’Flaherty centenary exhibition

Visitors to the Hugh O’Flaherty Memorial Society Ordination Centenary Exhibition at Killarney Library are being given a unique opportunity to view rare historic footage linked to the Killarney priest’s life […]

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Visitors to the Hugh O’Flaherty Memorial Society Ordination Centenary Exhibition at Killarney Library are being given a unique opportunity to view rare historic footage linked to the Killarney priest’s life and legacy.

The exhibition was officially opened on Tuesday by the Mayor of Killarney, Cllr Martin Grady. Following the opening, attendees viewed the first public screening of a recreated 27 minute video featuring sound and images from the 1963 BBC programme This Is Your Life. The programme centres on Lt Col Sam Derry and includes a guest appearance by Monsignor Hugh O’Flaherty.
The recreated video was produced by students of Kerry College Broadcast Production Skills under the guidance of their lecturer Brian Nolan. Exhibition organiser Jerry O’Grady said the society was grateful to the students for their work in bringing the historic material to a wider audience.
Also screened was a short three minute video showing the liberation of Rome on June 4, 1944, including footage of Monsignor O’Flaherty meeting US General Mark Clark. The footage was provided by The Footage Farm.
The month long exhibition runs at Killarney Library during normal opening hours and marks the centenary of Monsignor O’Flaherty’s ordination in December 1925.

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