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The traditional Irish wake: Why rumours of its demise have been greatly exaggerated

“The terrible thing about dying over there is that you miss your own wake,” Dave Allen once said. But is the tradition still as popular?

IRISH FUNERALS HAVE always been known for certain things.

Endless cups of tea, for one… maybe a few pints. Stories almost as endless as the tea. Triangular sandwiches. And handshaking… Quite a bit of handshaking.

“In Ireland when somebody dies, we lay ‘em out and watch ‘em for a couple of days,” comedian Dave Allen once said.

Educating his UK audience on the peculiarities of the Irish funeral experience he explained that “if anybody else anywhere in the world dies, that’s the end of it, they’re dead”.

But in Ireland… ”It’s a party. It’s a send-off. The fella is laid out on the table and there’s drinking and dancing and all the food you can eat.”

“The terrible thing about dying over there is that you miss your own wake. It’s the best day of your life. You’ve paid for everything and you can’t join in.”

Society here has been through some monumental changes since Allen (a Dubliner from Firhouse, it should be noted) made those observations about the Irish wake in the 1970s.

But is the tradition still – for want of a better phrase – ‘alive and well’?

shutterstock_92893810 Shutterstock / Kzenon Shutterstock / Kzenon / Kzenon

‘A cyclical thing’

“It comes and goes in and out of fashion,” according to Jonathan Stafford, managing director of the northside-based Staffords Funeral Homes.

“It’s a cyclical thing.”

While there may have been a dip in the popularity of wakes in the capital in recent years, currently around 40 per cent of pre-funeral gatherings in the greater Dublin area are held in the family home, rather than in a funeral home or hospital mortuary, Stafford says.

“It really depends on the circumstances of the family. Some people – particularly if they’re elderly – really don’t want the stress of having the person in the house.”

“Sometimes that goes for families with young children too – they don’t want it because of the memory it would bring: they don’t want to remember mummy or daddy or even granddad in the house.”

One thing that has changed in the last few years is that people are more particular about how they want the funeral to be arranged, says Stafford.

Whereas previously, it was very much a case that there was a ‘standard format’ of a removal and then a service the next day followed by burial or cremation, that’s no longer the case.

“You might have someone say ‘right, we’ll have mum at the house this evening and tomorrow morning and we’ll go straight to the crematorium’.”

“What we’ve noticed in the last five years or so is that people are a lot more aware of what they want to happen. The changes may be small, but they’re certainly to the extent that we’d notice.”

shutterstock_248621563 Shutterstock / Siwabud Veerapaisarn Shutterstock / Siwabud Veerapaisarn / Siwabud Veerapaisarn

‘Personal touches’ 

Karen Dempsey, an inter-faith celebrant, agrees that wakes and funerals have become more personalised over recent years. However, she notes, people are still keen to hang on to some familiar traditions and rituals.

“People have a sense of what they want in their funeral. They have a much stronger sense of what they want for themselves and what they want to be remembered for.”

For those organising a funeral service “they’re feeling more empowered about representing the person who died”.

And while people seem to have a sense that the wake is on the way out, Dempsey believes it’s becoming more and more popular each year.

In her experience, the number of traditional wakes held as part of funeral services in the Dublin area is far in excess of the 40 per cent figure estimated by Stafford.

Says Dempsey: ”I can count on one hand the number of non-wakes I’ve been to.

“Anecdotally speaking, any younger person I know of who has died has had a wake. I can think of two funeral home services.”

shutterstock_83195749 Shutterstock / Patryk Kosmider Shutterstock / Patryk Kosmider / Patryk Kosmider

Rural decline

In the experience of Fr Brendan Hoban – parish priest in the Moygownagh area of Mayo - the rise of the funeral home in rural areas has meant that home viewings are far less frequent than they once were.

“In the last number of years the funeral home has been a major development, although you would have traditional wakes too. You’d have a mixture of both.

“It depends on the area but very often it’s easier for people who want to sympathise to come to a funeral home.”

In very isolated areas, where the local undertaker might not be attached to a funeral home, traditional wakes are more common, Hoban says.

“Most funerals now would come from the funeral home. Sometimes the remains might be brought to the home for a number of hours for people to pay their respects.”

In cases where the traditional wake is being observed, little has changed about the way proceedings are handled.

“The corpse is brought back to the house, people come in and are welcomed. Sandwiches are made, and people pay their respects.”

It’s not uncommon for family members to stay in the room with the remains of their loved one overnight, Hoban says.

shutterstock_113984350 Shutterstock / Kzenon Shutterstock / Kzenon / Kzenon

Familiar rituals

While the rural wake may not have changed, Hoban agrees with Stafford and Dempsey that there have been some notable changes in the way funerals are organised in recent years.

“Absolutely. People often like to make it a much more personal thing – be it a tribute at the end of mass, special readings… People engage with it much more.

“Among older people there might be more of a tendency to say ‘no, you go ahead and do it’. Younger people tend to want to put their own imprint on it.”

And though the format of the Irish funeral may no longer be a fixed thing, Dempsey says that Catholic rituals are still commonly observed around services, even ahead of the non-faith-based ceremonies she helps celebrate.

“I think for the Irish psyche it’s important to keep a sense of the Catholic ritual.

“The rosary is still very strong at the wake, in particular” Dempsey notes.

“There’s something in that in that sense of a mantra. There’s a sense of community and a sense of everybody coming into the room and being together.”

“These rituals hark back to the past. But on a soul level they’re so familiar to us.”

lastrites

Read: Hugh Cooney, who gave this hugely brave Late Late interview, has died

Read: Dublin woman awarded for dedicating herself to help others after sudden death of her husband

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    Mute Tommy C
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    Sep 18th 2019, 8:09 AM

    Oh great!!! Up those rents and property prices fast. The price of living in cool should not be under priced

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    Mute Jonny
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    Sep 18th 2019, 9:43 AM

    A once proud working class area now populated with weirdos with skintight jeans with no socks, eating avocado and drinking soy lattees, what has working class Dublin become.. Sad to see

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    Mute Rochelle
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    Sep 18th 2019, 12:22 PM

    @Jonny: It’s called getting older, Jonny.

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    Mute Lad
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    Sep 18th 2019, 1:13 PM

    @Jonny: I can imagine someone from the 60s describing the 70s or 80s like that ha

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    Mute Stevie Doran
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    Sep 18th 2019, 8:57 PM

    @Jonny: get with the programme grandad

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    Mute Kem Trayle
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    Sep 18th 2019, 9:58 AM

    Jaysus, if they found a cure for cancer the comments section here would be full of people moaning that it’s putting doctors out of business, what about AIDS, that money could have gone towards the homeless etc. etc. etc.

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    Mute Davis Payne
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    Sep 18th 2019, 10:12 AM

    @Kem Trayle: I know that positive nature of our fellow islanders can be a little overwhelming.

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    Mute Thomas
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    Sep 18th 2019, 8:00 AM

    Isnt this where there is a prison housing the lowest of the low?? Lol

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    Mute Liam Carlin
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    Sep 18th 2019, 8:24 AM

    @Thomas: yeah but in fairness they’re not exactly hangin’ out with the locals

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    Mute Thomas
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    Sep 18th 2019, 8:27 AM

    @Liam Carlin: I bet they are on their release days. Every other weekend like!!!

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    Mute LynchTrea
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    Sep 18th 2019, 8:42 AM

    Just here for the positive comments where we graciously recieve a nice accolade, even if a bit subjective

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    Mute Davis Payne
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    Sep 18th 2019, 8:48 AM

    @LynchTrea: that’s what’s so great about being Irish. The almost sickening positivity of the people. Say something nice, we’ll graciously receive the comment and return one. Not look for any possible way to detract from it or cheapen it’s worth.
    That’s what’s so great about being Irish.

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    Mute MrsWoman
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    Sep 18th 2019, 10:21 AM

    Lagos???!

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    Mute Ciarán Mac Cormaic
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    Sep 18th 2019, 1:49 PM

    Surely Birr is cooler. I’ll get my coat!

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    Mute Alan Dignam
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    Sep 18th 2019, 1:52 PM

    @Ciarán Mac Cormaic: I think a lot of them missed that one Ciaran

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    Mute Micheal S. O' Ceilleachair
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    Sep 18th 2019, 8:05 PM

    @Ciarán Mac Cormaic: and Crinkle Crisps an added bonus!!!!

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    Mute Willem Mevius
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    Sep 18th 2019, 11:11 AM

    It is true though that it’s still affordable: even the poorest millionaires can still buy houses there.

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    Mute Peter Brophy
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    Sep 18th 2019, 8:38 AM

    So hell holes are cool?

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    Mute Ronaldo Blanc
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    Sep 18th 2019, 1:16 PM

    There is nothing authentic or original about hipster clones with beards and skinny jeans sitting outside overpriced cafes offering virtue signaling opinions for all to hear. In fact, its very uncool and boring.

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    Mute David Gannon
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    Sep 18th 2019, 8:12 AM

    Who makes up this shite? Seriously

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    Mute Alan Dignam
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    Sep 18th 2019, 8:34 AM

    @David Gannon: Absolutely right David. Did you ever hear such Bollox

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    Mute Michael Kavanagh
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    Sep 18th 2019, 9:53 AM

    @David Gannon:
    Estate Agents.

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    Mute Davis Payne
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    Sep 18th 2019, 10:08 AM

    @David Gannon: Conor McCave. It’s right there at the end of the article.
    Stay positive dude.

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    Mute Stevie Doran
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    Sep 18th 2019, 8:58 PM

    I must be the only one who thinks the area in and around stoneybatter is a kip!

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    Mute Desmond Lyons
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    Sep 18th 2019, 9:16 PM

    @Stevie Doran: no Stevie, you’re not alone there!

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    Mute MitchConnor
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    Sep 18th 2019, 4:40 PM

    I live there , and within a year since the DIT and student accommodation came in the yuppies arrived. All the old style pubs converted for the new kids in town.

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