Biafran Colt of arm

Biafran Colt of arm
Biafra is my Right

Sunday, 28 January 2018

Thinking of Biafra In Inner-City Dublin


  Thinking of Biafra In Inner-City Dublin

              The Times We Lived In – Published: July 

25th 1968. 

                                  Thinking of Biafra in inner-city Dublin

The Times We Lived In – Published: July 25th 1968.

Photograph by Dermot O’Shea

In the late 1960s Irish people were much moved by the suffering caused by war in the breakaway Nigerian state of Biafra. So when a famine appeal was launched, there was an extraordinary outpouring of generosity.
“Workers all over the country,” this news story from the summer of 1968 reported, “are offering their overtime earnings and their first week’s salary increases.”
It added that the Joint Biafra Famine Appeal, launched by the Catholic and Anglican Bishops of Owerri, had increased in just one week from £28,820 to £46,758.
The people in the picture were running a daily jumble sale at the corner of Luke Street and Townsend Street in Dublin which, on its first day of operation, had raised eight pounds, fifteen shillings and four pence.

The organiser, Mrs Theresa Byrne of Luke Street, told The Irish Times: “We felt so sorry for the poor children that we set up this secondhand sale of clothes, books and anything else the neighbours have donated.”
The donators, the reporter noted, were also the customers. As for the stall itself, it’s the most down-to-earth enterprise you’ll ever see: a table has been placed on the footpath, and the goods for sale are either placed on it or hung over the railings behind.
The customers are enthusiastic, but orderly. The young women at the front are having a good look at what’s on offer, scrutinising the merchandise with expert eyes. If the style of the girl closest to the camera is anything to go by, these ladies aren’t going to wear just any old thing.

The boys, it must be said, don’t look overly impressed. Neither does the dog.
It was, however, an impressive initiative by this tiny local community whose members didn’t have a huge amount – either of clothes or of cash – to spare. Something to think about in a world where it often seems that tiny local actions don’t make a ha’-pence worth of difference.

These and other ‘Irish Times’ images can be purchased from: irishtimes.com/photosales. A book, The Times We Lived In, with more than 100 photographs and commentary by Arminta Wallace, published by Irish Times Books, is available from irishtimes.com and from bookshops, priced at €19.99.


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