Please Don’t Call it the Irish Potato Famine

Tubers didn’t cause it, it was a genocide

Andrew Gaertner
Fuck Capitalism

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My Irish great-grandmother, Elizabeth K Morrisey

Where are my people of Irish ancestry in the USA? If you believe the statistics, we are everywhere. Over 31 million people in the United States claim Irish heritage, which is second only to German heritage. I claim both, as do many others in Wisconsin, where we might celebrate St. Patrick’s Day with a green beverage and a bratwurst.

How did so many of our Irish ancestors decide to come here? Ding. Ding. Ding. You guessed it on the first try: the Irish Potato Famine, which is known in Ireland as the “Great Hunger.” The famine lasted from 1845 to 1852, and by the end, nearly one million people had died and another million had emigrated. In 1841 the population of Ireland was about 8 million, and by 1851 it was counted at 6.5 million. After 1852, the downward trend continued due to continued emigration, and by 1900, the population was just 4.5 million people. Today the population of Ireland is just over 5 million.

The Great Hunger is universally recognized as a tragedy of epic proportions. The problem comes when we try to assign blame. “Oh. Those poor Irish people! They depended too much on the potato, and when the blight came, they died or left. What a shame that the potato blight did that!” That was the version of the story that I learned in school…

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Andrew Gaertner
Fuck Capitalism

To live in a world of peace and justice we must imagine it first. For this, we need artists and writers. I write to reach for the edges of what is possible.