Lifetime Achievement Award Presentation At NLFolk42!

The presentation will take place Saturday, August 4th at 8:30PM, on the TD Main Stage at NLFolk42!

The Newfoundland and Labrador Folk Arts Society is pleased to present the 2018 Lifetime Achievement Award to Aidan O’Hara with our sincere congratulations and heartfelt thanks for his contributions to to the culture of the province.

“Aidan O’Hara is a tremendous ambassador for Newfoundland and promoter of the links between the two big islands.” (Former Irish Prime Minister, John Bruton).

“Aidan O’Hara, the well-known broadcaster, was president of the Irish Newfoundland Association when the Taoiseach (Prime Minister John Bruton) first visited (Newfoundland) in 1976. He introduced him to many of those people involved in researching Irish connections, among them Professor John Mannion…” (Shane Kenny, “A truly remarkable but brief visit” in The Sunday Tribune, 24 March 1996)

County Donegal-born award-winning writer and broadcaster, Aidan O’Hara, has worked as a presenter and producer with RTÉ (Ireland’s National Broadcaster) and the CBC. In the autumn of 1973 he decided to become a student again and with his wife, Joyce, and their four children arrived in Newfoundland where he signed up for two years of study at Memorial University. While studying folklore and cultural geography at MUN, Aidan worked in radio and television with CBC St. John’s and quickly became immersed in life in the provincial capital.

Aidan was fortunate to have as his mentor and friend, Dr John Mannion, Professor of cultural geography at MUN, and he introduced him to the Irish communities on the Cape Shore of Placentia Bay, Point Lance and Branch in St Mary’s Bay. The O’Haras formed firm friendships the people in those communities and over the next five years Aidan recorded many of their songs and stories. Some of these recordings will be featured on the Irish Traditional Music Archive web site following a launch in Branch at the end of July.

Throughout the seventies, Aidan featured ‘The Branch Crowd’ as they became known in his broadcasts, on stage, and in print in St. John’s. Their first big exposure to a wider audience was when they appeared at the first two Folk Arts Council Festivals in 1977 and ’78. Aidan was Vice-President of the St. John’s Folk Arts Council at the time and he was cofounder of the festival and programme director for the first two years.

Through his radio broadcasts on RTÉ radio programmes and film documentaries on the Irish in Newfoundland – especially his prizewinning The Forgotten Irish – people in Ireland became aware of the strength of cultural ties between the two islands. In 1976, the Irish embassy in Ottawa contacted Aidan to say that the Irish government representative at Montréal Olympics was coming to Newfoundland on holiday and would he look after him? With four children, there was no room at Aidan and Joyce’s house, so they got Maura and John Mannion to provide the visitor with accommodation. His name? John Bruton, who later became Ireland’s Prime Minister.

Next day, the O’Haras brought him to Branch where their friends, Mary and Anthony Power, looked after him. John was quickly impressed with the strength of their Irish ways in song and story, and later said, “It was quite an amazing sense of coming home, even though I had never been there before.” As a result of that visit and from what he learned from Professor Mannion about the extent of Irish-Newfoundland ties, when Mr Bruton was Irish Prime Minister, he signed a memorandum of understanding with Premier Brian Tobin in 1996. It resulted in establishing cultural, educational, and business ties between the two islands that continue to this day.

In 1998, Aidan’s book on the Irish of Newfoundland, Na Gaeil i dTalamh an Éisc, won the national Oireachtas Prize and the following year it was nominated for the Irish Times Literature Prize. Aidan has done his bit to help in spreading the word about Newfoundland and for more than thirty years has spoken on its history and culture to groups and communities all over Ireland. Over the forty years since their return to Ireland, the home of Joyce and Aidan O’Hara has been ‘home from home’ for many Newfoundlanders from all walks of life. Their door is always open to their friends and visitors from The Rock.