Some of the country’s more devout Christians appear to be up in arms over the fact that Munster take on Leinster in a Magners league match (note, Magners League and not Heineken Cup) in Thomond Park this evening. Generally, for local derby style matches of this ilk, the fixtures are billed as Munster V Leinster or Leinster V Munster, they are written about widely in our press and discussed at length by Munster and Leinster supporters. Today’s fixture however has taken on a life of its own. A life that has little to do with rugby and more to do with the fact that the pubs will not just be OPEN!! but they will BE SERVING DRINK! The uproar this has caused in certain Christian circles is very amusing to an Atheist by-stander who thinks of Good Friday as a great day becasue I don’t have to work (although I used to work for Irish and American companies that required me to work on Good Friday) although it can be a slight inconvenience that many shops are closed on this particular day. Good Friday when I was a child was a completely different matter. I hated it with an absolute passion. I hated Holy Thursday, I hated Good Friday, I hated Easter Saturday and Easter Sunday. Only Easter Monday offered some welcome relief from the absolute torture of attending church services involving stations of the cross, washing of feet, solemn remembrance of the crucificition, ressurection of the dead and various other mumbo-jumbo that I never believed in, not from a very early age, but for which I was required to attend church services because my not very devout parents liked to torture us at Easter. No Easter Egg was ever sufficient reward for what was endured on the previous four days of religious solemnity.
The reality of life in Ireland today is that you can’t ram your beliefs down people’s throats any more. Ireland is supposedly a pluralist society now, a tolerant one, one that welcomes all races, colours and creeds. The reality for our immigrants is often different. In such a society, anyone wanting to sell alcohol on Good Friday should be allowed to, and its not as though sales of alcohol haven’t taken place in private clubs throughout the country on Good Friday for years anyway. It’s not as though no one drinks on Good Friday. Anyone who thinks that the pubs being open and being allowed to serve alcohol in Limerick is going to result in public drunkeness and a general decline in our moral standards is obviously an ostrich with their heads in the sand, because how could anyone in Ireland turn a blind eye to what goes on in every supermarket and off licence every Holy Thursday? The alcohol sales shoot through the roof on that day. In our multi-cultural pluralist society, no religion should dictate what gets closed and what stays open on particular day, and the legislation governing pubs on Good Friday should be changed to allow them to open, not that this will ever actually happen, at least not in an era where we have a minister who enacted blasphemy legislation recently.
On the rugby, I have this to say. C’mon Munster.









