Business and Personal web pages from Ireland Search result

Unwind your mind

Unwind your mind

carnamaddy, Dunfanaghy ,
The Unwind Your Mind blog is a common sense approach of tackling youth mental health. We want to bring the focus back to mental wellness and away from mental illness. So instead of talking about the things that make you feel bad, we focus on what makes you feel good. To do this we encourage people to do something every day that helps them unwind their mind. Think of it as your 5-a-day for your mental health!
Cork Folklore Project

Cork Folklore Project

St Finbarr's College, Redemption Road, Farranferris, Cork ,
The Cork Folklore Project was founded as a non-profit community research archive in partnership with the Department of Folklore and Ethnology at University College Cork, Northside Community Enterprises and FÁS. Serving as a community employment scheme, more than eighty people have worked on the project, acquiring training in computers, oral history interviewing, research, photography, video and sound recording, desktop publishing, archival methods and more.
Mayo.ie

Mayo.ie

Cedar House, Moneen, Castlebar ,
Mayo.ie - the home of all things County Mayo!
Durrow Development Forum

Durrow Development Forum

Durrow Development Forum is a voluntary community organisation in Durrow, Co. Laois whose mission is to enhance the social, physical and environmental aspects of the village.
Tel: 578736327
SVP - Vincent's Charity Shops Dublin Region

SVP - Vincent's Charity Shops Dublin Region

SVP House, 91/92 Sean MacDermott Street, Dublin ,
The Society of St. Vincent de Paul (SVP) is a direct service non-profit organisation whose work primarily involves person-to-person contact with people who have a variety of needs. In addition to direct assistance, we try to promote self-sufficiency, enabling people to help themselves. Any assistance offered by the Society is given in a non-judgemental spirit of compassion, based on the need of the individual or family. We do much more than just address financial hardship; we visit the sick, the poor, the lonely and the imprisoned to form a unique network of social concern. Our members give through working for social justice and the creation of a more just and caring nation.
Tel: 01 8550022
Pro Life Campaign Kildare

Pro Life Campaign Kildare

Pro Life Campaign Kildare is a pro-life group affiliated to the Pro Life Campaign Ireland www.prolifecampaign.ie.
Swords Celtic

Swords Celtic

Swords Celtic Football Club was founded in 1962 by George McGrane, Jim Rogers, Oliver Dignam and Wally Galvin and shortly afterwards Frankie Monaghan got involved. The club’s early successes included a number of league titles and the Subsidiary Cup in 1973. Since 1972, when Frankie started the first Swords Celtic schoolboy team, schoolboy football has become progressively stronger in the club. In the late 1980’s, the club began a phased programme of development to bring us where we are today. Today we can boast having teams from the age of 6 years of age right up to senior level, with teams at every age group possible. Our latest transition into the DDSL leagues will surely improve the club going forward and our aim for our 50th anniversary must surely be to deliver success at the highest level possibly both in the Schoolboy section and at senior level.We currently have 6 senior teams with our first team competing in major sunday just outside the intermediate leagues. Whatever the future holds for the club, there’s no doubt George, Jim, Oliver, Wally and Frankie could ever have anticipated the growth and success their venture into the world of Soccer would yield. Many thanks to all many volunteers who over the years have given up their time to bring Swords Celtic to where we are today.
Tel: 879792026
Workers' Party Youth

Workers' Party Youth

48 North Great George's Street, Dublin ,
The creation of The Workers' Party came after many years of arduous and costly struggle. At the jubilant Ard Fheis, held in Liberty Hall, Dublin in 1982, when the decision was ratified formally, delegate after delegate spoke of the efforts and sacrifices which had gone into producing Ireland's first major revolutionary democratic, secular, socialist party. It is not possible to tell that entire story in a few pages. The decades from 1962 include one of the most horrible and evil chapters in the history of modern Ireland; a chapter which unfortunately has not yet concluded. The history of the Party is woven into the fabric of those years. It played a major role in shaping the Northern Ireland Civil Rights Association in the 1960s. Subsequently it opposed the growing sectarian, murderous terrorism which has polarised Northern Ireland as never before. At the same time it set about the task of bringing alive the consciousness of the working class in the Republic through housing action committees, trade union activity, anti-ground rent campaigns, fishing rights and against the private ownership of rivers, defence of public enterprises, tax marches and many other localised campaigns. During the period 1962 - 1969, the Republican Movement as it was then known, was being altered from a militaristic organisation, solely concerned with securing "national unity“, into a revolutionary political organisation with an embryonic socialist agenda. From the French Revolution to the present is a mere two centuries. But they have contained some of the most turbulent years the world is ever liable to witness. Insulated Ireland Unfortunately there are those who see Ireland as somehow insulated from the intellectual, political and physical turmoil which dominates world life. This is particularly true for elements who have interpreted "republicanism" as a unique and specific, Irish phenomenon, identical to nationalism and congruent with the perceived political aspirations of the country's Roman Catholic majority. Republicanism, as The Workers' Party understands it, cannot be separated from the fundamental principles of the French Revolution - for Liberty, Equality and Fraternity. Opposition to the concept of a secular society is part and parcel of both states in Ireland. Equally there is significant hostility to the idea of socialism. Much of this derives from the country's "religious value systems", a scanty knowledge of socialist philosophy and a conservative dread of the future. (Naturally events in Eastern Europe have added to the problems facing Irish socialists). A statement by the late former leader of the Irish Labour In the course then of the late sixties, Republican activity was directed to social problems which had the purpose of developing a new type of membership but which sought also to heighten class consciousness. At the same time internal education stressed the socialist dimension of the Republican tradition - from Tone to Frank Ryan. The product of the major events from August 1969 was to provide a fertile recruiting ground for the Provisionals. At the same time a variety of loyalist terrorist organisations were spawned in response to the growing violence. The outcome would be twenty five years of terrorism with the goal of a democratic, secular, socialist republic buried in the pervasive murderous sectarianism which has at this time left Northern Ireland polarised as never before and the majority of citizens in the Republic apparently alienated from any concept of "national unity". The Ard Fheis of 1977, however, decided overwhelmingly that Sinn Féin would be retained and The Workers' Party attached as a suffix. A new era had begun. The next five years saw, what at the time looked like, the completion of the pre-stage of Party building. Although the Party had won seats in Local Government elections North and South during the previous decade, the major breakthrough into parliamentary politics had still to happen. Paradoxically, as the Party progressed in the Republic, in Northern Ireland it suffered both by its refusal to support the Provisional hunger strike and by its endorsement of the Chilver's Report on Education proposing the creation of a single teacher training college in place of the existing denominational structures. The third period identified stretches then from the Ard Fheis of 1982 until the betrayal of the Party and its programme in 1992 by the group subsequently to become the Democratic Left, now absorbed into the Irish Labour Party. The events surrounding the efforts to liquidate The Workers' Party have been well documented in the publication "Patterns of Betrayal : The Flight from Socialism", available from Party offices, and require no further elaboration here. It is important though to state that the damage done to the Party far surpassed any of the murderous assaults of the mid-seventies. This was true not only for Party structures and morale but also in terms of the many thousands of voters who had placed their hopes in an honest, serious, democratic, secular, socialist party and saw those hopes dashed by the gross opportunism and individualism of those who betrayed the Party. From the early seventies the Party had campaigned strongly in support of a wide range of international struggles. At the same time the party was prominent in opposing terrorism and sectarianism in Northern Ireland, in defence of natural resources and the state sector in the Republic, in trade union activity, in the development of nationwide tax protests. In fact it had become the cutting edge of radical thinking and activity, particularly in the Republic. As a result there was a steady rise in electoral support for the Party, with new seats won in the 1985 Dublin local government elections, culminating in the elections of 1989 which saw seven members in the Dáil and a first ever European Parliament seat in Dublin. This increase was also reflected in Northern Ireland where the Party polled just short of 6% of the vote in the Belfast Local Government elections of the same year. It must be recognised that the present political condition is hostile to the democratic politics of a socialist party. This is compounded by the fairly widely held view that politics is not seen by a growing number of people as a vital, central, and critical component of everyday life. In addition many citizens are cynical as to the In particular there is the clear shift to the centre-left / right which has had the consequence of both seeking to remove ideology from politics and at the same time blurring any difference between parties in the eyes of the electorate. The recent anti-war, anti-World Bank, and anti-globalisation mobilisations may herald the beginning of a new resistance to capitalism's ideological and political hegemony. Socialists and their parties will find themselves increasingly being disparaged and dismissed as "old hat" - "not in touch with the times" - "clinging to outworn dogmas". In fact every possible verbal trick in the book will be played in order to persuade socialists that there is nothing to do but go along with the prevailing tide. The problem for the Party is to gear and develop ourselves to take advantage of this situation in a period of ongoing vicious sectarianism and fundamentalism in Northern Ireland and the media-led, ideologically denuded politics of the Republic. There are no easy answers. No instant solutions. Indeed we will need to shun any such suggestions; at the same time we cannot rely solely on our correct theoretical perspectives. The challenge is to reconstruct, recognising that it will take time, foresight, planning and meaningful political activity.
South Tipperary Volunteer Centre

South Tipperary Volunteer Centre

Unit 2C Carrigeen Business Park, Cahir ,
Our primary function is to match individuals and groups interested in volunteering with appropriate volunteering opportunities. To do this, we offer advice and support to both volunteers and volunteer-involving organisations through a range of services that include information provision, consultation, training and Garda Vetting. The South Tipperary Volunteer Centres provides an invaluable link between individuals wishing to undertake voluntary activity and organisations seeking to involve volunteers. We believe passionately in the value of volunteering and the benefits of volunteering for all: the individual, the volunteer-involving organisation and the wider society. In addition to placing volunteers, we stimulate and encourage volunteering by promoting volunteering at a local level in South Tipperay. We work towards breaking down the barriers to volunteering and target specific groups of people who are under- or unrepresented in volunteering. We develop volunteering opportunities through consultation with local voluntary and community organisations and recognise the potential of volunteering. We encourage groups and organisations to think creatively about volunteering and to develop imaginative, non-traditional opportunities for potential volunteers. In addition, the South TIpperary Volunteer Centres offers tailored and bespoke volunteer management training to interested groups and organisations.
Dundalk Tourist Office

Dundalk Tourist Office

Market Square, Dundalk ,
Market Square: This European style piazza is the jewel in Dundalk’s crown. Unwind in the heart of the town with a frothy cappuccino - catch a front row seat alongside the Tain Warriors and experience Dundalk life go by as the majestic fountain dances to the beat of the town with a dazzling range of displays!
Castledermot Responders Group

Castledermot Responders Group

The Castledermot Responders Group is made of ordinary community members trained, as a minimum in basic life support and the use of an Automated External Defibrillator (AED), who attend potentially life threatening emergencies with the local area. We are members of the public who volunteer to help our community by responding to medical emergencies while the ambulance is traveling to the scene. If you wanted to become a Community First Responder you would be trained in a wide range of emergency skills, and use specialised equipment such as automatic external defibrillators, aspirin and oxygen therapy. You would then be able to provide an early intervention in situations such as a heart attack or cardiac arrest before the National Ambulance Service crew arrives. This improves patient survival and recovery. Our primary role is to deliver emergency and urgent care response for the local community. We know that every second counts in an emergency: e.g. cardiac arrest, stroke and heart attack. Having considered international evidence it’s clear that equipping communities with equipment and basic life-saving skills will save lives. Our groups objective is to be on the scene of a suspected Heart Attack or Cardiac Arrest providing emergency care while the Ambulance Service is still on the way. While on scene our members will be; * Giving oxygen therapy. * Clearing and controlling the airway of an unconscious patient. * Providing resuscitation and defibrillation. * Making them feel more comfortable and at ease. * Taking basic observations. * Reassuring worried relatives and taking charge of the situation. * Using local knowledge to ensure that the Ambulance can find the location quickly.
Kilkenny Town of Food

Kilkenny Town of Food

Kilkenny Town of Food is an initiative to make Thomastown Ireland's newest and best destination for the promotion of local food businesses, community food initiatives and food education.
Tel: 873350500