Cathal Ó Searcaigh


Cathal Ó Searcaigh, is a modern Irish language poet. His work has been widely translated, anthologised and studied. "His confident internationalism", according to Theo Dorgan, has channelled "new modes, new possibilities, into the writing of Irish language poetry in our time".
From 1975 onwards he has produced poetry, plays, and travelogues. His early poetry deals with place, tongue and tradition, with his late work showing a broader scope. His work includes homoerotic love poems. Jody Allen Randolph remarks "his breaking down of stereotypes and new deployment of gendered themes opened a new space in which to consider alternate sexualities within a contemporary Irish context."
The critic John McDonagh argues that "Ó Searcaigh occupies many of the spaces that stand in opposition to the traditionally dominant markers of Irish identity". In his anthology McDonagh goes on to say "Ó Searcaigh's homoerotic poems are explicit, relishing in a sensuality that for many years rarely found explicit expression in Irish literature."

Upbringing

Cathal Ó Searcaigh was born and reared on a small hill-farm at the foot of An tEaragal in the Donegal Gaeltacht. He was educated locally at Caiseal na gCorr National School and then at Gairmscoil Ghort a' Choirce. He describes his childhood in a remote Irish-speaking community in his memoir Light on Distant Hills.
The first poems that engaged his attention were those of Rabbie Burns, read to him by his father. Tom Walsh, his English teacher at the Gairmscoil in Gortahork, encouraged him to write.

Personal life

In the early 1970s he worked as a barman in London. Later he attended the NIHE in Limerick where he did European Studies for two years and followed that with one year at Maynooth University where he did Celtic Studies.
During the years 1978-81 he worked in Dublin with RTÉ television presenting Aisling Gheal, an arts and music programme directed by musician Tony MacMahon. From the early 1980s has earned his living as a full-time writer and poet.
In the spring of 1995 he was elected a member of Aosdána.
His work has been translated into numerous languages – French, German, Italian, Breton, Catalan, Polish, Danish, Serbo-Croat, Romanian, Slovene, Russian, Swedish, Japanese, and Nepali.

Travels & controversy

Nepal

He visited Nepal for the first time in 1996. His Seal i Neipeal has been described as a vivid, insightful account of that country, its people and their culture. It is generally regarded as one of the major prose works written in Irish in the first decade of the 21st century.
Since the mid 1990s he has sponsored the education of many young people in Nepal.

Fairytale of Kathmandu

In February 2007 a film documentary queried his relationships with some of the young men he helped, focusing on power imbalance and financial accountability. At the time it caused a controversy. In February 2009 Ó Searcaigh was interviewed in English by Dermod Moore for Hot Press.

Other literary activities

Cathal Ó Searcaigh has donated his archives, an extensive library of books and a valuable art collection to the Irish State. The Donegal Library Service administers this donation at present. His house in Mín a' Leá at the foot of Mount Errigal is often the venue for literary and musical evenings hosted by the poet himself.
Along with poet and literary critic Chris Agee he edits Irish Pages, a literary journal.
"Creativity for me arises out of my deep attachment to this place, out of a reverential affection for its people", he says in his memoir Light on Distant Hills. "My poems are devotional in the sense that they are prayerful celebrations of place, tongue and tradition. My work has become known because of its connectedness with this place. I have become a collector of its oral traditions, an archivist of its memories and its myths, a guardian of its Gaelic. This is, I suppose, a political act, acknowledging the local, recording and registering what is past or passing."
Colm Tóibín wrote in the Times Literary Supplement: "There is a section of landscape in Donegal in the north of Ireland near Falcarragh, overlooking Tory Island, which has been utterly transformed by the poetry of Cathal Ó Searcaigh."

Awards and honours

Poetry

Cathal has also collaborated with Altan, Brian Kennedy, Diana Cannon and many other well-known musicians.

Collaborations: Art

Ó Searcaigh's work has been much anthologised. He is one of the few Irish language poets to be included in all the major anthologies of modern poetry from Ireland. The following is only a sample selection.