It came from watching the news and programs on all the people coming home for Christmas, I myself having my daughter +Holly Reed , 1st year uni student at The Arts University , Bournemouth, come home last week. Anyhow it got me thinking on the people who have left for work abroad and are not able to join the thousands making the trip home. I asked them a few questions about their new lives and read on below to see for your self how life's faring for them.
Diaries from Donegal
Down Under
By Jacqui Reed
Christmas is two days
away, but many Irish families will not be celebrating together this year.
According to European
Commission statistics, every six minutes somebody leaves Ireland to
start a life in another country. The commission’s statistics show that in the
12 months to April this year 90,000 people emigrated - about 250 every day of
the year. Of those, 15,400 ended up in Australia .
In the lead-up to the
holiday season, people from Donegal who live Down Under have shared with the
Donegal Democrat some of their experiences since leaving Donegal. In written
exchanges via Facebook, Donegal men and women spoke of what it means to be away
at this time of year, and how they have found life in Australia and New Zealand .
Pearse Mc Laughlin
from Carndonagh lives in Sydney :
“I left Ireland in 2005 to come to Australia on a
working holiday visa. It was either go travelling or buy a house. So glad I
didn't do the latter,” he said. Pearse came out with four other lads but the
others went home after a year.
“I managed to get
sponsored by a bank and have been working there since,” he said. “The quality
of life out here is amazing. You have good weather all year round and I love
being outdoors, so it suits me.”
Still, he said he was
home in Carndonagh at the end of July, “and it was brilliant, too”.
He said the one
downside about Sydney
are the house prices. “They’re unreal,” he said. “Can’t get a foot in the door
at all.”
Pearse misses the
Donegal scenery, playing golf in Ballyliffin and his family, though he gets to
see family through Skype.
He married an
Australian woman and said she is too accustomed to city life -- “no way she
would move to Donegal,” he said.
“I think back about
how easy it was growing up in Carn, nothing to worry about,” Pearse said. “Here
it's all about what private school your kid goes to. I have a good wee circle
of Irish friends but also Asian mates from work and Aussies I hang around with
from the local golf club.
“All in all it's hard
to beat Australia , but if Ireland had
same climate I reckon I'd go back in a flash,” he said.
Ross Hannigan from Newtowncunningham lives in Melbourne , Victoria :
Ross started
university in 1988 and “pretty much stayed in Belright up until I left Ireland .” His then-fiancé
graduated as an architect and could not find work, so she decided to go to Australia to
gain experience.
“Naively we both
thought that things would be better in a year and as I had a safe job as a
civil engineer we decided that I wouldn’t emigrate,” Ross said. “Things didn’t
improve on the job front at home and after visiting Australia for a month I decided to
make the move out myself in February 2011.
“Leaving my parents at
the airport was the hardest thing I have thing I have ever had to do but as I
had been here on holiday I had an idea of what to expect,” he said. “My fiancé
had also done all the groundwork of setting up a circle of friends, as she had
moved out on her own and had to start from scratch.”
Ross feels grateful toAustralia
for the opportunities the country has offered him and for the welcome people
there gave him. He said his engineering career has developed a great deal
through the experience he gained there.
Ross feels grateful to
“I think a lot of
people at home, especially my friends, were under the impression that people
would be lining up to offer you jobs as soon as you stepped off the plane, but
the reality has been very different for a lot of people I have met here,” he
said. “I was fortunate enough to be offered a job a month after I arrived, but
that was still a long month and Australia
is an expensive place to live.”
Because of that, he
said, if an Irish person hears of an Irish friend of a friend who is looking
for work they always try to help them out.
“The thing I miss most
about home and the hardest thing to deal with are being so far away from my
family,” he said. Ross tends to Skype weekly on Sundays, “but you still find
yourself missing out on a lot of the news that is happening”.
When close relatives
passed away this year, “it was particularly hard then,” he said. “You feel
quite useless being so far away from home while the rest of your family are
grieving.”
He and his fiancé have
built up a substantial group of friends in Australia , most of them Irish.
“We are at an age now
where our friends are starting families and it is especially important then to
have a good support base around you, when you are so far from home,” he said.
“I would like to return home all right, but seeing as my wife and I are both
employed in the construction trade I think that may be a while off yet. In
saying that, I am happy enough in Australia for the foreseeable
future, too.”
Chloe Mc Gettigan from
Kilmacrennan lives in Cairns ,
Queensland :
Chloe left on New
Year’s Eve 2012 and first went to stay with a family she had met in Ireland .
“Their father was born
in my area and they are good friends of the family,” she said. “They introduced
me to a lot of their friends who were majority Australian and one of them
helped me get a full time job in Brisbane
city.”
Chloe loves it in Australia , “not
only the weather but just the all-around feel of constantly being on holiday
even when you have to get up for work most days. It's just such a beautiful
place.”
At first, when she
lived in Brisbane
she lived in a house of Donegal people and they introduced her to quite a few
Irish people. She now lives in a hostel in Cairns , where she works, and said, “I only
ever meet Irish who are passing through to see the reef, really.”
Chloe admitted to
having days of being homesick but said she has no plans to return until at
least 2014.
“The way I see it, the
way things are back home right now with a lot of people jobless and the economy
at such a low, even on my days of being bored I'd rather be bored in Australia
than bored at home, if that makes sense,” she said.
Pat O’Donnell from
Kincasslagh lives in Brisbane ,
Queensland :
Pat went to Australia for work after working in Belgium for two
years.
“I miss everything
about home, sometimes even the cold rain,” he said. “I don’t think there are
too many days I don’t think of home.”
Still, he said, he has
always been up for seeing new places
“I am having the best
time,” he said, saying he has seen and done much.
“But it’s not all
greener on the other side,” he said. “I got lucky. I had friends to get me at
the airport when I landed I got work right away.” He is working on the gas
fields.
“But it’s all hit or
miss,” he said. “So many people coming over and not finding work -- it can be
like hell for them.”
Lisa Drum from Raphoe lives in Wagga Wagga , New
South Wales :
It’s been almost six
years since Lisa left her Raphoe hometown.
“It was a little bit
different for me as I am married to Australian and we were coming here to a
place that my husband knew and where we have family,” she said. “All that aside
- I still felt isolated as it was so far from home.
“I thought: What am I
doing?” she said. But she thought she would try it out.
“Australia is a
great country and we are living in Regional Australia, a large country town of
just over 60,000 people. It's a great place to bring up a family with the
weather being on our side allowing lots of sports and outdoor living.”
She said living in Australia is
different than being on holiday there.
“I think for anyone
who comes on a working visa - know that sooner or later they will go home,” she
said.
The main things Lisa
misses about home are her mother and her family and “all my great friends”. She
misses the beautiful countryside and “just the familiar faces when I go into my
local shop or pub.
“I suppose I miss all
that is Irish,” she said, adding that she hopes to get back in 2014 for a
visit.
“But I cannot see us
moving back in the foreseeable future,” Lisa said.
She is a receptionist
for a hotel group called Quest Apartments, where she has worked part-time for
five years. The cost of living is high and she works so that she can return to
Donegal on holidays every couple of years. She and her husband have two sons,
Ethan, 7, who was born in Donegal, and Riley, almost 4.
“It is a good place
for to raise a family and even though I know that, home is where the heart is,”
she said.
Stuart Stevenson from
Killygordon lives in Perth , western Australia :
Stuart and his now-fiancée Lesley Ann Goudie
left Donegal in July 2010. Lesley Ann had just graduated from university and
wanted to experience what another country had to offer and Stuart had his own
construction business and thought it was a good chance to travel, “as things
were slowing down, work-wise”.
They decided on Perth as Stuart had a friend here and the
work was plentiful. “I started working with an earth-moving company within the
first week,” he said. Sam Graham, the owner of the company, is originally from
St Johnston. It took Lesley Ann a bit longer but they are now both in permanent
jobs, Stuart in construction and Lesley Ann working for a recruitment company.
“Probably the first thing we noticed when we
arrived (and still!) was the cost of everything -- rent, food, alcohol,
cinema,” he said. Rent is about 300-350 euro per week for a basic two or three-bedroom
house, a pint of beer can cost as much as 8 euro, spirits are 7 euro and cinema
tickets are 15 euro.
“Although these costs are high, salaries are
higher as well which balances it out a bit,” he said.
“Australia
is great, it’s not Ireland
but I have been happy to call it home for this past three years,” Stuart said.
He said there is a great Irish community, with a large percentage from Donegal.
“It’s the weather that makes it,” he said. “It
has been 30 days since we have had rain. It’s a different way of life with
everything outdoors and being able to plan ahead for barbecues, beach and
sports without having to worry about the weather.”
He misses his family and friends from home.
“Also the Sunday roast and calling into family and friends for a cup of tea at
any hour of the day or night. Also my family’s home baking, football banter,
Chinese food, but I have to say I don’t miss the rain at all.”
“It it is good if you put in the effort,”
Stuart said. “You have to put in the hours for it to work, it’s not a holiday.
I wish there were more hours spent on the beach rather than at work. As long as
you have realistic expectations, it’s not a matter of coming to Perth on a Monday and
going to the mines on Tuesday, it doesn’t work like that, but I would still
encourage anyone to give it a go.
“There is nothing to lose, there is a big
world out there with so much to do and see and it’s great to see so many young
people taking the opportunity to experience this,” he said.
Stuart said their plan is to return to Donegal
within the next two years. “We are getting married in 2015 and it’s Donegal
where our future is, back with our family and friends,” he said.
Aine McLean from
Ballybofey lives in Brisbane ,
Queensland :
Aine left Ballybofey
in September 2008 to do some travelling.
“It was a kind of a
whim,” she recalled. “I booked my flights and left two weeks later. There was
not to much talk of recession at that stage and I had only planned to be away
for a year or less.” After some time in Asia, she landed in Brisbane .
And she was in the
country for just a few hours when she met the man she called the love of her
life, Niall, a carpenter from Galway . “Mine is
a love story,” she said.
Aine enjoys the
lifestyle, “relaxed and easy going. Plenty to do in way of performances,
exhibitions, music festivals, I love all the fresh foods and quirky markets. So
I was happy for my plans to change and settle here with Niall.”
She was also hearing
“shocking recession stories from home and most people were of the opinion to
stay here if you can until things pick up at home”.
Aine admitted to often
feeling very homesick, missing family and friends.
“Missing out on all
the fun watching my little nieces and nephew grow,” she said. “I am however
very lucky to have my wonderful sister Aoife here with me as well as a large
group of close friends, many from Donegal, who are like family so far from
home.”
Aine and her sister
have a great, great grand-uncle who left Donegal for Australia in the 1860s. She and her
sister found his grave; he is buried just 10 minutes from where Aine lives, and
he died 100 years ago last month.
Aine is now a
permanent resident after a long visa process and hopes to take her citizenship
exam after Christmas. She has her own business, Scarlett's Delight, and makes
custom bridal wear, fascinators and gemstone jewellery. She sells her pieces in
select art galleries and has an online shop on Etsy. Aine has also set up a
vintage tea party hire company.
Still, she said, “As
much as we enjoy living here, it will never be home and I do plan to eventually
return.” Her baby girl, Nancy Mae, is a little more than a month old and Aine
would like her to grow up in Ireland
with their family around.
“It’s sad so many of
the thousands of people who have left the Ireland in this new wave of
emigration will never return to live,” she said.
AJ Deschanel
from Carndonagh lives in Sydney :
After studying at University College Dublin,
AJ went to Australia
to be a groomsman in a friend’s wedding in November 2007. He loved the three
weeks he spent there.
After returning to Dublin
he decided over Christmas to move to Australia .
“I convinced my friend to come with me and we
booked our tickets in January to leave in June 2008,” he said. They travelled
for three months in south-east Asia on their
way over. AJ already knew quite a few people in Sydney so he made the city his base, and
never left.
He said rent is very expensive -- he pays $480
a week for a one-bedroom.
“Friends tend to come and go which can be sad,
as they move home or go on somewhere new,” he said. And AJ said being away from
family can be hard, though he added, “most of my friends have ended up over
here anyway”.
It is also expensive to travel back to Ireland and
difficult to get the holiday time off work, “so when you're told you have to
come home for a wedding it can be tough. A week or two can mean the
difference of $1000 to $1500 on a ticket, he said.
Because Australia
is so far from “anywhere, you are a little isolated and though it's cheap to
get to Asia , it's time-expensive, so eats your
holidays up in airports”.
But he said Australia is a stunning country
with a great outdoor lifestyle and a pretty good work/life balance. He is an
account manager for Hilti and did the same job in Dublin .
“Wages are pretty good but as mentioned rent
is crazy as are house prices, unless you live in the middle of nowhere,” he
said.
He said Sydney
is very green, “with parks and trees everywhere, which is great”. He also likes
the city’s multi-cultural nature.
“You meet loads of different nationalities and
make good friends really quickly, as we are all in the same boat,” he said.
“So my expectations, it's definitely
delivered. Pretty happy here,” he said. Next year he can get an Australian
passport, which he sees as an investment.
“I don't think I will live here forever, but
definitely for the next few years,” he said. He misses his parents and misses
seeing his nephews and nieces growing up.
AJ also misses pints, live music in local
pubs, his family, the selection of Irish ice cream, and “football being on at
the correct time”.
He said he has loads of friends from home who
live in Australia
and he goes out with them but tries to meet new people – “What’s the point of
sticking with Irish?” he asked. “I can do that at home.” AJ’s girlfriend is a
Sardinian woman.
He said he will return to Ireland some
day but is not sure whether he will return to Donegal.
“It will always be home, but the jobs just
aren’t available, so if I do go home it will have to be Dublin ,
Galway or somewhere,” AJ said, adding, “I'd
also miss the sun, I think, but I'm sure I'd get used to it again.”
Damien Gallagher from Ballybofey lives in Christchurch , New Zealand :
Damien graduated from Napier
University , Edinburgh , with a degree in quantity
surveying in July 2011. He knew he would have to move abroad to find work
because of his construction-related degree.
Initially he considered Canada and Australia , because he had friends
who had moved there. But when he started to browse the internet looking for
jobs he came across an article about opportunities in Christchurch , New Zealand ,
stemming from the devastating earthquakes in February of that year.
“I did more research into Christchurch and the more I did, the more it
appealed to me,” Damien said. “I convinced my friend it was a good move and we
had flights booked within a week.”
When they first arrived, he recalled, “We were
shocked by the total destruction of the city. We had no idea the extent of the
damage and that there was daily continuing aftershocks.”
They both secured quantity surveying jobs
within two weeks, “and haven't looked back since”.
“New Zealand is very similar to home
in a lot of ways, such as the food, and the people are very friendly,” he said.
“There are definite advantages to living in Christchurch , such as the great weather in
the summer, and ski fields only a 90-minute drive from your back door during
the winter.”
But what he misses most are his family and
friends. “Although we do keep in great contact with Facebook and phone calls,
it can be hard being so far away sometimes and missing out, but I am fortunate
enough to have many good friends from back home with me here in Christchurch .”
He said there is a strong sense of Irish
community in Christchurch and throughout New Zealand .
“It always impresses me how closely Irish
people stick together when away from home, and how willing they are to help one
and other in a foreign country,” he said.
As well as that, he
said, Facebook and Skype make it much easier to stay in touch. The “Irish
Living in Australia ”
Facebook page now has 22,382 subscribers and “Irish living in New Zealand ”
has 6,496 subscribers. “Displaying news from home, laughs about missing Tayto
crisps and Barry’s tea, it’s also used for organising social gathering and just
keeping in touch Down Under,” he said.
“Community ties come
across very strongly in all the stories and it has shown that we in Donegal
look after each other, even when far from home,” Damien said.
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