Irish Examiner view: Reaching outward is in the Irish nature

Patrick OâDonovan, Karin Keller-Sutter, and Maeve Sikora at the St Gall exhibition at the National Museum. Picture: Julien Behal
One of the great tragedies of politics is where leaders only concern themselves with the internal, rather than seeing their nation as part of a greater network.
No nation exists in isolation. We are all connected by our humanity and the bonds of that humanity. Unfortunately, it would seem this has been forgotten, or possibly purposefully neglected. Our failure to condemn injustice is a stain on our humanity. It destructively erodes those bonds that make us human, bonds which are more obvious when we look at how culture, literature, and heritage can actually bring people together more than push them apart. When we no longer see the humanity in another face, child, or even those who shun others, we lose something of ourselves.
Ireland, as an island, stands geographically at the periphery of Europe. We have often been modest in number, and often quite poor, yet for more than 1,500 years our heritage, culture, and customs stretch across the world in a far-reaching network.
Our ways have been captured in our literature, our drive for self-improvement, and our resistance of injustices in the world. Heritage and what it means to belong are essential to us as people. After all, our sense of belonging has often been met with rejection in times where we cast that metaphorical net into the world, trying desperately to find a new home.
We might now consider it âsoft powerâ, though to be fair, our first soft power ambassadors, the early Christian monks, didnât see themselves as representing a state. Indeed, some of them were travelling abroad as a sort of pilgrimage, ending up halfway across the continent in what seems to us like the most random of places.
We see this in the new exhibition at the National Museum, focusing on the connections between Ireland and the Swiss city of St Gall, which (perhaps bizarrely) was founded in the 600s by an Irish missionary. It sounds like the beginnings of the meme whereby, wherever you go on Earth, youâll find somebody in a GAA jersey.
As well as artefacts, the exhibition will feature a range of manuscripts penned by Irish monks or monks under their tutelage, many of which are on loan from St Gall.
As we noted in our report on the opening of the exhibition: âThe manuscripts trace the journeys of Irish monks who travelled across Europe in search of exile, refuge, and learning â bringing with them Irelandâs unique artistic and scholarly traditions.â
So while the drive by extremists to gaze within might be appealing in a dangerous and chaotic world, we should always remember that we as a species have always gained more by gazing without.
Fans of Metallica who were lucky enough to get tickets for their two concerts in the Aviva Stadium in June 2026 â and the tickets, which were for both shows, ranged from over âŹ100 for standing to well over âŹ3,000 to be in the middle of the stage â immediately found that hotel rooms for the dates in question were already reaching astronomical prices.

Weâve been here before, with Taylor Swift, and indeed any major star or group to make it to these shores for a stadium event. Not that itâs the musiciansâ or promotersâ fault â as it is, Ireland is an expensive place for them to perform, and a band that might easily perform four huge concerts in Britain might only be able to do one here.
None of which really offers much solace to the fans going to Dublin, or the tourists who would otherwise go there but find hotel prices to be hotter than the summer sun.
We are going beyond simple supply and demand, and dancing through exploitation territory. And itâs a dance we do on an annual basis without anybody in Government really doing anything of substance.
And while, yes, we live in a country filled with small businesses that are the backbone of the economy and, yes, all companies need to turn a profit in order to survive, the darker side is that we need to ask how many homeless families or refugees might be turned out of their accommodation just to turn a quick buck.
America, despite the string of court defeats for the Trump administration and its leaderâs chaotic approach to everything, is still staunchly extremist. Whether the midterm elections change anything remains to be seen, and thereâs a lot of chaos to come between now and then.
Closer to home, Portugalâs far-right party Chega scored so many gains in the recent elections that it is now the biggest opposition party. Founded only six years ago, it has touted stronger immigration controls and targeted the countryâs Roma population while also advocating chemical castration for paedophiles. While the centrist Democratic Alliance still took the most seats, Chega, like many populist parties, capitalised on younger voters as well as a general air of dissatisfaction.
While it can be argued that populists are better at finding problems than solutions, weâve seen in the US that, once in government, they can set everything ablaze. And fires like that take a long time to extinguish, if ever.