Físeán/Video: Páirc na Gaeltachta – Lonnaíochtaí Lán Ghaeilge Anois!

Físeán/Video: Páirc na Gaeltachta – Lonnaíochtaí Lán Ghaeilge Anois!

Translation of the video text below:

We are in a small estate in Whitehall, Dublin. This was the site of Ireland’s first attempt to establish all-Irish housing with the founding of Páirc na Gaeltachta in the late 1920s.

A group called An Ghaedhealtacht launched the project, with Seán Ó Cuill as a key figure. Writing in the Irish-language paper Fáinne an Lae in 1924, he stated the group’s aim: to build a small Irish-speaking town. Linguistic rules would apply, and the goal was to construct 100 houses for Irish speakers.

By 1926, Dublin City Commissioners granted 15 acres for the scheme on condition of rent payment. An initial 10 houses were planned. The project was officially launched in 1928, with Risteard Ó Maolchatha of the conservative Cumann na nGaedheal party laying the foundation stone on St. Patrick’s Day. He envisioned:

“80 houses, a church, two schools, a playing field, a hall, a theatre, and a cinema.”

By 1929, families had moved in, but hope quickly turned to despair due to a lack of state support. The housing association requested roads, but when the City Council built them, they forced the group to relinquish their lease.

Land beside the estate was allocated not to them but to another housing body, Cumann Tithíochta an Státseirbhísigh. English-speaking housing surrounded them, absorbing the Irish speakers.

What does this all reveal? It shows that even in the 1920s, the Irish state was not serious about all-Irish housing or decolonization at the community level. The Department of Finance opposed the language, and real investment never materialised. Irish was used as a conservative symbol by the state, not as a revolutionary tool to reshape daily life and culture.

This pattern has continued: the Gaeltacht, Gaelscoileanna, and community organizations have suffered from chronic underinvestment by Dublin governments. The Irish-speaking community must act from the grassroots up—embracing civil disobedience and the militant spirit of the Gaeltacht Civil Rights Movement.

Polite political lobbying has failed. We need new all-Irish towns in the Gaeltacht and Irish-speaking estates and apartment blocks in our cities.

All-Irish Housing NOW!