Plough My Account Sign Out
My Account
    View Cart

    Subtotal: $

    Checkout
    shadow of a palm branch on a white wall

    Editors’ Picks: Thin Places

    The Ireland of Kerri ní Dochartaigh’s Thin Places offers more than a token sense of generic mysticism.

    By Allison Backous Troy

    July 25, 2023
    2 Comments
    2 Comments
    2 Comments
      Submit
    • Christine

      I used to lead a publication called "Thin Space," borne of this idea. Find us @thin.space on Instagram, if you're interested.

    • Andrew Churney

      What shocks me is that a war exists between 2 groups claiming to be "Christian!" If there is anything that does not typify Jesus, it is violence of this sort! How far away from Truth can people drift? Very far indeed! So far, that a culture lives in anti-truth, and doesn't even realize it...

    A “thin place,” according to Kerri ní Dochartaigh, is explicitly Irish. It is a place where the curtain between what is known and unknown loosens, unfolds, and for a moment, disappears. Thin places are liminal, surprising, sacred, just as common in parking lots as in forests, “brimming with something like renewal.” Many know this Celtic understanding as a way of seeing a beautiful, mystical order in the world, and ní Dochartaigh obliges: she follows birds on coastlines, watches moths take flight, and listens as Ireland’s habitats “sing of all that came and left, of all that is still here and all that is yet to come.”

    But for ní Dochartaigh, her native Ireland offers more than a token sense of generic mysticism. Ireland – and in particular, her childhood home of Derry – is a world made alive by violence, and especially the sectarian violence of her childhood that added more scars to Ireland’s psyche and landscape. The conflict between Catholics and Protestants turned ní Dochartaigh’s hometown into a place often made thin by gunshots in the streets. Ní Dochartaigh’s own home was bombed when she was eleven, and the constant suspicion of locals toward her parents (one Catholic, one Protestant) meant that she spent her childhood in flight, her family constantly looking for safety as they fled housing complex after housing complex, teenage boys staring malevolently into their yard.

    But ní Dochartaigh’s book is more than a scrapbook of the violence that punctuated her early years. It is a pilgrimage through her inner and outer landscapes, along the River Foyle, the waterway that gave troubled Ireland its own liminal boundary, whose slippery surface sat nearby wherever she lived. She leaves Ireland as an adult, but what doesn’t leave her is the pain, her body having kept score of the traumas of a broken family in a broken country. “Witnessing violence of the kind we did,” she writes, “so often, so intimately, to such a destructive end – does something to you … you have too much weight around your neck.”

    Readers will need to be aware that much of this book chronicles ní Dochartaigh’s reckoning with suicidal ideation and alcoholism. It is her honest reckoning with what she carries as a child of civil war. She also carries talismans of the natural world: rocks from the Foyle’s banks, bird feathers, pebbles smoothed by water and wind.

    Ní Dochartaigh returns to Ireland to keen, to wail, and to mourn; in doing so, she hears “a call back to the land that made me, that wounded and broke me, the land that turned out to be the only place that held the power for me to heal.” It is this return, and her record of it, that could help us cross our own thresholds, or at least find room to “imagine what lies beyond the here and now.”

    Contributed By AllisonBackousTroy Allison Backous Troy

    Allison Backous Troy is a writer and educator living in Grand Junction, Colorado.

    Learn More
    2 Comments
    You have ${x} free ${w} remaining. This is your last free article this month. We hope you've enjoyed your free articles. This article is reserved for subscribers.

      Already a subscriber? Sign in

    Try 3 months of unlimited access. Start your FREE TRIAL today. Cancel anytime.

    Start free trial now