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Death Of Jerry Younge, Thurles, Co. Tipperary.

It was with a great sadness that we learned of the death, on Friday 29th May 2026 of Mr Jerry Younge, Curraleigh, Borrisoleigh, Thurles, Co. Tipperary.

Pre-deceased by his father Pat; Mr Younge sadly passed away suddenly at his place of ordinary residence.

His passing is most deeply regretted, sadly missed and lovingly remembered by his sorrowing family; loving mother Josie, brothers P.J., John and Tom, sisters-in-law Maria and Nono, uncles, aunts, nephews Paidi, Harry, Josh, Tadgh, Elijah and Lar, niece Grace, cousins, extended relatives, neighbours and a large circle of friends.

Requiescat in Pace.

Funeral Arrangements.

The earthly remains of Mr Younge will repose at Kennedy’s Funeral Home, Castlequarter, Borrisoleigh, Thurles (Eircode E41 VX81) on Wednesday afternoon, June 3rd, from 5:00pm, before being received into the nearby Church of the Sacred Heart, Pallas Street, Borrisoleigh, Thurles at 7:00pm, same evening.
Requiem Mass for Mr Younge will be offered on Thursday morning, June 4th, at 11:00am, followed by interment, immediately afterwards, in St. Brigid’s Cemetery, Upper Main Street, Borrisoleigh, Thurles, Co. Tipperary.

For those persons who would wish to attend Requiem Mass for Mr Younge, but for reasons cannot, same can be viewed streamed live online, HERE.

The extended Younge family wish to express their appreciation for your understanding at this difficult time, and have made arrangements for those persons wishing to send messages of condolence, to use the link shown HERE.

Sport Should Not Be Asked To Carry The Whole Weight Of Politics.

The controversy around Ireland’s scheduled football fixtures against Israel in 2026 is real, serious and understandable. People are entitled to strong political and moral views. They are entitled to protest, to criticise governments, to question sporting bodies, and to demand consistency from international organisations.
But there is still an important principle worth defending: where possible, politics and sport should be kept separate.

That does not mean sport exists in a fantasy world, untouched by history or suffering. It plainly does not. Ireland knows that better than most.

In October 1936, Ireland played Germany at Dalymount Park, at a time when Hitler’s regime was already in power. The German team gave the Nazi salute before the match.
Looking back now, the images are deeply uncomfortable. Yet the match itself has also survived in Irish football memory as a sporting occasion, with Ireland winning 5–2, and the players on the pitch did what players are supposed to do; – they played football.

That example does not excuse the politics of the time. It does not make the symbolism harmless. But it does show the danger of making every football match a referendum on world affairs. Once we insist that teams may only play countries whose governments we approve of, sport becomes impossible to organise fairly. The rule will always be applied unevenly. Some states will be punished, others ignored. Some causes will become fashionable, others forgotten.

The recent Ireland match against Qatar also shows why consistency matters. Qatar has faced years of serious criticism over the treatment of migrant workers, especially around the 2022 World Cup. Amnesty International and Human Rights Watch have reported abuses including exploitation, unpaid wages, unsafe conditions and cases amounting to forced labour, even while acknowledging that some labour reforms have been introduced. Yet Ireland still played Qatar in Dublin in May 2026. That does not mean those concerns were unimportant. It means that, in practice, international football has continued to operate even when the opposing state has a deeply controversial human-rights record. If sport is to become a tool of political exclusion, the rule must be clear, consistent and applied equally; not selectively according to which controversy is most prominent at a given moment.

The players themselves are then placed in an impossible position. They are selected to represent their country in football, not to solve foreign policy. Asking them to carry the burden of international diplomacy is unfair. A footballer may have personal views, moral doubts, or sympathy with victims of conflict. But when a national team is drawn in an official competition, the decision to play should not be dumped on the shoulders of the players alone.

The same applies to supporters. Fans can protest. Fans can refuse to attend. Fans can display conscience. But the existence of protest does not automatically mean the fixture itself should be cancelled. A democratic society should be capable of allowing both: the match and the protest; the sporting contest and the political opinion.

There is also a practical issue. International sport depends on agreed rules. If Ireland refuses to fulfil a fixture, the consequences may not fall on the government whose actions are being criticised. They may fall on Irish players, Irish supporters, the FAI, and Ireland’s future standing in competition. That may satisfy a political demand in the short term, but it may do little to change the conflict itself.

None of this means sport should be morally blind. There are extreme cases where exclusion may be justified, particularly where international sporting bodies agree a clear, consistent and rules-based position. But that decision should be made transparently by the governing bodies responsible for the competition, not improvised country by country, match by match, under public pressure.

The lesson from Dalymount in 1936 is not that politics does not matter. It is that sport often becomes a stage onto which politics intrudes. The challenge is to prevent that stage from being completely consumed by it.
Ireland can condemn injustice. Ireland can speak strongly in international forums. Irish citizens can protest, campaign and argue, but the national team should not automatically become a substitute foreign ministry.

Football cannot fix war. It cannot settle borders. It cannot undo suffering. What it can do, at its best, is preserve a small space where people compete under rules rather than slogans.

That space is worth protecting, not because politics is unimportant, but because sport matters too.

Minister O’Callaghan To Visit Czechia And Poland Ahead Of EU Presidency.

The Minister for Justice, Home Affairs and Migration, Jim O’Callaghan, will this week undertake a series of bilateral engagements with EU Member States ahead of Ireland assuming the Presidency of the Council of the European Union on 1st July.

Minister O’Callaghan will travel to Prague for meetings with his Czech counterparts, Lubomír Metnar, Minister of the Interior, and Jeroným Tejc, Minister for Justice.
He will then travel to Warsaw, where he will meet Waldemar Żurek, Polish Minister of Justice and Prosecutor General, and Marcin Kierwiński, Minister of the Interior and Administration.

Leinster House, Seat of Ireland’s Parliament.

While in Poland, the Minister will visit the EU’s eastern border with Belarus, where he will receive a briefing on the current border security situation.
Discussions during the visit will focus on preparations and priorities for Ireland’s Presidency, as well as areas of mutual interest including migration, organised crime and the rule of law.

Speaking ahead of the meetings, Minister O’Callaghan said: “I look forward to meeting with my Czech and Polish counterparts and building on the already strong relationships Ireland has with both nations. During Ireland’s Presidency of the Council of the European Union, our relationships with other Member States will be crucial to advancing our priorities of competitiveness, values and security.
This visit will also provide an opportunity to hear first-hand how Belarus has instrumentalised migration, unacceptably exploiting human beings for political purposes.”

Minister O’Callaghan will conclude the week in Luxembourg at the Justice and Home Affairs Council on Thursday and Friday, where he will continue bilateral engagements with a range of other Member States.

Death Of Philly Bourke, Castlequarter, Borrisoleigh, Thurles, Co. Tipperary.

It was with a great sadness that we learned of the death, yesterday Saturday 30th May 2026 of Mr Philip (Philly) Bourke, Castlequarter, Borrisoleigh, Thurles, Co. Tipperary and formerly of Clonmore, Co. Tipperary.

Pre-deceased by his parents John and Peg, brother Joe and his wife Veronica; Mr Bourke passed away peacefully, while in the care of staff at the Community Hospital of the Assumption Thurles, surrounded by his loving family.

His passing is most deeply regretted, sadly missed and lovingly remembered by his sorrowing family; loving wife Mary, sons Cathal and Jack, daughter Cliodhna, daughter-in-law Ciara and granddaughter Avril, brothers Johnny, Tommy, Paddy, Seamus and Martin, sisters-in-law, brothers-in-law, nieces, nephews, cousins, extended relatives, neighbours and many friends.

Requiescat in Pace.

Funeral Arrangements.

The earthly remains of Mr Bourke will repose at Kennedy’s funeral home Borrisoleigh, Thurles, (Eircode E41 VX81) on Monday afternoon, June 1st, from 5:00pm until 7:00pm same evening
His remains will be received into the nearby Church of the Sacred Heart, Pallas Street, Borrisoleigh, Thurles, to further repose for Requiem Mass on Tuesday, June 2nd, at 11:00am, followed by interment in St Brigid’s Cemetery, Borrisoleigh, Thurles, Co. Tipperary.

For those persons who would wish to attend Requiem Mass for Mr Bourke, but for reasons cannot, same can be viewed streamed live online, HERE.

The extended Burke family wish to express their appreciation for your understanding at this difficult time, and have made arrangements for those persons wishing to send messages of condolence, to use the link shown HERE.

Note Please: Family flowers only. Donations in lieu,if desired, to the Parkinson’s Ireland (Tipperary Branch) and the Hospital of the Assumption Thurles.

A Song For A Sunday.

No One Knows My Name.

Lyrics: American singer-songwriter and musician Marc Scibilia and American songwriter and record producer Nolan Winfield Sipe.
Vocals: American singer Marc Scibilia.

American singer-songwriter Marc Scibilia.

The song featured hereunder sung by Marc Scibilia, is about the people who don’t chase attention, don’t make headlines, and may never get a standing ovation, but who quietly leave the world better than they found it. It reminds us that a meaningful life isn’t always measured by fame or recognition, but by love, humility, faithfulness, and the small acts of goodness that often go unseen. So as you listen, think of the people in your life whose names may not be known by many, but whose impact will never be forgotten.

No One Knows My Name.

No One Knows My Name.

This world is a circus and people love a clown,
So you better entertain ′em if you wanna win the crowd.
There’s no parade or protests for callouses on hands,
Sunday attendance and doin′ what you can.

Why do the best men rest in unmarked graves?
Why do the good ones never find the front page?
I can’t help but thinkin′ now if that′s the case,
I’ll be lucky when I go if no one knows my name.

My grandfather was simple, he gave more than he took.
No better man than Jesus, and He never wrote a book.
The odds are when I go, it probably won’t leave much,
But honey, I loved you so, and I hope that′s enough.

Why do the best men rest in unmarked graves?
Why do the good ones never find the front page?
I can’t help but thinkin′ now if that′s the case,
I’ll be lucky when I go if no one knows my name.

Why do the best men rest in unmarked graves?
Why do the good ones never find the front page?
I can’t help but thinkin′ now if that′s the case,
I’ll be lucky when I go if no one knows my name.

END.