Traveller exclusion: revealing an open secret

The Irish Passport
The Irish Passport
Traveller exclusion: revealing an open secret
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This year, a whistleblower revealed a shocking secret. A popular British holiday camp business kept a ‘blacklist’ of Irish surnames, distributed to staff to bar customers from booking. In this episode, Naomi and Tim dig into the incident to explore how a policy meant to exclude Travellers inadvertently swept up a large part of the general Irish population. We hear from a veteran campsite and holiday park worker who tells us the practice of excluding Travellers is rife in the industry across Britain and Ireland. And we speak to Martin Beanz Warde, a comedian, podcaster and host of the Haz Beanz Show about how systemic discrimination works and his own experience of exclusion from venues.

Check out the Haz Beanz Show here: https://thehazbeanshow.com/

Follow us on Facebook and Twitter at @PassportIrish.

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Bonus episodes are published for our supporters over at www.patreon.com/theirishpassport

Ireland and India: Assassins of Empire

The Irish Passport
The Irish Passport
Ireland and India: Assassins of Empire
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Anarchist clubs, public assassinations, and secret rebel meetings in a notorious vegetarian restaurant – all these feature in this fascinating episode on the historical links between Ireland and India at the beginning of the 20th century. UCD’s Conor Mulvagh explains why Ireland and India were so symbolically important to the survival of the British Empire, and why the independence movements in both countries were often deeply intertwined. We hear how Indian law students in Dublin joined rebel militias, forged friendships with leaders of the Easter Rising, and later took inspiration from Irish nationalism to challenge the British Raj. Vikrant Sharma, founder of the international relations website The Global Telescope, tells us about the many parallels between Ireland and India’s history of British rule, and how both should perhaps be considered in a larger framework of colonial strategy and nationalist resistance.

The books mentioned in this episode are:

Conor Mulvagh, Irish Days and Indian Memories: V. V. Giri and Indian Law Students at University College Dublin, 1913-1916. Published in 2016 by the Irish Academic Press.

Shereen F. Ilahi. Imperial Violence and the Path to Independence: India, Ireland and the Crisis of Empire. Published in 2016 by I.B. Tauris and Co.

You can find Vikrant Sharma’s website, The Global Telescope, here: linktr.ee/TheGlobalTelescope

Follow us on Facebook and Twitter at @PassportIrish.

If you enjoyed this episode, do give us a good review in your podcast app and share it with your friends.

Bonus episodes are published for our supporters over at www.patreon.com/theirishpassport