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'There are definitely stories that would fit onto the big screen': Jim Sheridan reflects on Apollo House

The film director is proud of what the Apollo House occupation achieved.

Glen Sing Song Glen Hansard singing atop Apollo House TV3 TV3

IN DECEMBER, MEMBERS of the Home Sweet Home campaign – a broad coalition of housing activists, artists and trade union members – took over Apollo House in Dublin and repurposed it as accommodation for the homeless.

The campaign garnered huge public support, brought government ministers to the table and has been hugely critical of the situation facing homeless people in Ireland.

A documentary – Inside Apollo House – will air on TV3 this evening, and TheJournal.ie had a chat with film director Jim Sheridan about the initiative, what it meant and what it achieved for homelessness in this country.

“I got involved when I was approached by Dean Scurry and Damien Dempsey,” Sheridan said. “I was the old guy who’d front it up,” he joked.

The director – of films such as My Left Foot and In America – said that while he was aware that there was a homelessness crisis in Ireland, he wasn’t aware of the extent of it or where it came from before he entered Apollo House.

Jim Sheridan Interview Jim Sheridan TV3 TV3

“People needed to be made aware of homelessness,” he said, “but not just homelessness. There’s an awful lot that needs to be done in health, in banking, in the legal profession. We need to build back trust from the ground up in this country.”

The initiative wasn’t just charitable, it was an intervention, according to the director.

Sheridan said that the group wasn’t so much directly taking on the establishment, as just trying to do the right thing.

We’re not oppositional. We were a loving group trying to give people back their dignity, and belief in the institutions that they had lost faith in. You have that power to change things, and that’s what we tried to do.

As for what Sheridan actually got up to while in Apollo House, he focused on documenting all the measures in place to ensure that nobody got hurt in the building.

Once you start a party in your house, you’re responsible for everyone in there.

In terms of what Apollo House has actually achieved now that it’s all over, Sheridan believes that they’ve made a difference in terms of the concessions they received – increase in emergency beds, and a commitment to families being taken away from hotel accomodation – but the real way to fix the homelessness crisis is not through initiatives such as this.

Raising awareness of the problem is crucial, but it is up to government to provide the necessary social housing and policies at the top to make sure that the benefits are felt by everybody.

Apollo 2 TV3 TV3

“It’s definitely changed people’s attitudes,” Sheridan said. “We created a debate, and a debate that needed to happen.”

And from a professional perspective, is the story of Apollo House something that Sheridan feels would translate well into a feature film?

There are definitely stories in there that would fit onto the big screen. There are some amazing stories in there that could be told.

Inside Apollo House airs on TV3 at 10pm tonight.

Read: Everyone was equal, we left our egos at the door: Why I volunteered at Apollo House

Read: ‘This is only the start’ – The occupation has ended, but what’s next for Home Sweet Home?

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    Mute Jim Walsh
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    Sep 18th 2011, 6:44 PM

    When the all Ireland elebrations are long over real unsung Heroes will still putting their lives on the line.

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    Mute Randy savage
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    Sep 18th 2011, 7:26 PM

    well said, the word hero is bandied about all too often for sports stars and musicians. The real heroes are people who put their lives on the line for their fellow man.

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    Mute Frank2521
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    Sep 18th 2011, 7:38 PM

    People of real value to society. I am sure their families and friends are proud to be in their presence.
    Great job.

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    Mute Torpedo
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    Sep 18th 2011, 7:27 PM

    Thank you

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    Mute Philip O Byrne
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    Sep 18th 2011, 8:10 PM

    I learned to sail in Dunmore East many years ago. It is a small fishing Village and yachting centre. It has seen more than its share of tragedy but also many heroic rescues. The presence of the RNLI in the harbour is a re assuring symbol to all who go to sea there.

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    Mute Joan Featherstone
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    Sep 18th 2011, 8:10 PM

    Well done you saints!

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    Mute Paul Sweeney
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    Sep 18th 2011, 10:47 PM

    You guys are heroes. Plain and simple. Thanks for your efforts and your inspirational integrity and desire to contribute to our society.

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    Mute Paul Rowley
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    Sep 18th 2011, 9:06 PM

    Great stuff, often hear that lifeboat out on my scanners. I have a great admiration of the RNLI as I’m in Wexford and we have five busy stations (actually they had a similar jetski shout in Kilmore recently although in ‘summer’ and calmish conditions – they too were found safely) and I’m also a voluntary emergency service member, though land-based, so I know how getting involved soon translates into being totally absorbed! But in a good and satisfying way.

    To borrow a rapanese expression, RESPECT! to all RNLI volunteers, whether crew, support or fundraising, a vital service to seafarers and not-so-seafarers everywhere around our islands.

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    Mute Brendan Foley
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    Sep 19th 2011, 11:35 AM

    This is the real Ireland. The Ireland of communities and service, honesty and bravery. Brilliant to see an article getting covered like this rather than the endless and pointless coverage and opinion of financial crisis, poured over by those who can have no effect on it. These stories like Joefy’s are food for the soul and we need more of them! Well done journal.ie

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