Parades Bring U.S. Diversity to Main Street
By Edward T. O’Donnell
March 17, 2000
This op-ed ran nationally and appeared in papers such as the Salt Lake
Tribune, Ft. Lauderdale Sun Sentinel, St. Paul (MN) Pioneer Press, Wilmington
(DE) News Journal, and Lexington (KY) Herald-Leader)
Click here
for a PDF version
T’is shocking but true – the St. Patrick’s Day parade
in America isn’t really about being Irish. How can that be, what
with millions turning out in scores of cities and towns across the country
to enjoy the processions of Irish pipe bands, step dancers, and county
societies? The answer is that behind these scenes of Hibernian pride
and pageantry there lies a larger and more profound message of American
inclusion and tolerance.
This message is evident in the parade’s origin and evolution.
The first recorded marches took place in colonial New York City (by regiments
of Irish soldiers in the British Army). But it was in the mid-19th
century that the parade as we know it took form. This coincided with
both the massive influx of Irish immigrants to America due to the Great
Famine and the sharp rise in anti-Irish bigotry by those convinced the
Irish would never make good Americans.
As a result, these early St. Patrick’s Day parades expressed
both the pride of the Irish in their heritage and their demand for acceptance
as full and equal citizens. They highlight the Irish contribution
to America’s evolving ethos of tolerance and inclusion.
A century and a half later, this same spirit motivates
the groups of Irish lesbians and gays who in the 1990s began battling parade
organizers in court and police in the street for the right to participate
in the parade. Why do they bother, some ask -- aren’t there more
pressing issues like AIDS research or hate crimes legislation?
The reason for their activism is clear: members of these
groups see inclusion in the parade as a validation of their larger efforts
to gain the full measure of respect and rights they believe they deserve.
It’s hardly going out on a limb to predict that they’ll soon win that right.
After all, similar groups are now allowed to march in parades in Ireland.
To see the truly pluralist implications of the St. Patrick’s
Day parade, one has only to look at the event calendars in cities and towns
across the country on days other than March 17. Simply put,
the original ethnic celebration in America – and its dual message of pride
and inclusion -- has spawned thousands of ethnic parades. This year
in New York City, the birthplace of the St. Patrick’s Day parade, more
than 40 such events will occur. The largest will take place not on
March 17, but on September 4 -- the annual West Indian Day Parade and Carnival.
Critics and pessimists among us have argued that this
proliferation of ethnic parades, in contrast to the decline in traditional
parades for Veterans Day and Labor Day, indicates a fragmentation of American
society. Yet one only need look at the catastrophic results of ethnic,
racial and religious hatred around the world – in places like Kosovo, Rawanda,
Israel, and of course, Northern Ireland – to appreciate the unprecedented
degree to which Americans have found ways to weave ever more disparate
groups into the national fabric. Surely we have a long way to go
in pursuing this ideal, but it’s important to recognize how far we’ve come.
It’s in this sense that the St. Patrick’s Day parade transcends
the Irish experience in America. From the very beginning it has embodied
the spirit of tolerance and inclusion that has helped propel forward the
nation’s remarkable and ongoing, if imperfect, experiment in multicultural
democracy. Now that’s something worth celebrating.
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