
Irish for a Day
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Every year, people from all walks of life and nationality drop everything, put on a shiny green paper hat and get soused on green beer in celebration of St. Patrick’s Day.
The reason why St. Patrick’s Day is celebrated in the United States is clear: back in the 1800s, especially during the Potato Famine and Europe’s “Little Ice Age,” Irish immigration to America reached a peak. Particularly on the East Coast, you couldn’t step on a toe that wasn’t part of an Irishman’s foot. The influence of Irish culture spread along with the people all over the country.
However, many Europeans with specific cultural habits spread across this country, yet few of their traditions gained the popularity of St. Patrick’s Day here in America. Why do you think that is?
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Because St. Patrick’s Day gives everyone an excuse to get drunk.
After all, if you’re “being Irish” for a day, you can’t do that sober… right?
Being neither Catholic nor Irish—and not being a heavy drinker since my early 20s—I hadn’t celebrated St. Patrick’s Day along with my eager-to-be-inebriated friends for decades… until I got married, that is. This is not to suggest that my wife is Irish (many of you already know that she is a Filipina) or even Catholic (and as a Filipina, that’s a given). However, the holiday happens to fall on her birthday, and for me that is an excellent reason to celebrate… though I don’t do so like most of my friends.
But the question remains: Is alcohol a necessary aspect of St. Patrick’s Day? After all, it is something of a Catholic holiday, celebrating a miracle presented by a saint. Getting uproariously drunk on a Catholic holiday hardly seems appropriate. Yet it is also a distinctively Irish holiday. Who cares if St. Patrick himself was Irish; he was in Ireland, damn it, and that’s close enough. And when we think of the Irish, what comes to mind?
So is getting drunk the appropriate way to celebrate St. Patrick’s Day? Here’s my opinion: if you are a devout Catholic, maybe it’s best to spend the day in quiet—and sober—reflection. If you are Irish, go ahead and blow away as many brain cells as you want. If you are neither Irish nor Catholic… Why are you celebrating this day at all?