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After the Storm: The GAA, Covid and the Power of People

Availability: In Stock
ISBN: 9781785304668
AuthorLawlor, Damian
Pub Date08/06/2023
BindingPaperback
Pages320
CountryGBR
Dewey796.09415
Publisher: Bonnier Books Ltd
Quick overview But whenever there's a threat, this is when the GAA comes together to look after their own. AFTER THE STORM: How the GAA Found New Hope tells the story of the biggest and most recent threat we have faced, a global pandemic, and how the people of the GAA coped with a situation never seen before.
€11.65

This is the incredible story of how the GAA and its people weathered the coronavirus pandemic, and found the strength to survive.

In the year 2020, our lives, purpose and favourite pastime as Irish people - meeting each other - stopped overnight.

Throughout that dark time, the GAA was at the centre of the country's fight against COVID-19. From the start, thousands of volunteers delivered food and medicine to vulnerable neighbours and friends during lockdown and the association went online, keeping people connected and becoming a beacon of hope.

As the association itself faced financial ruin, members had their own life and death struggles. Niall Murphy, of Antrim GAA, spent sixteen days in a coma, fighting the virus, as camogie player Marianne Walsh spent her cancer recovery amid strict lockdowns, dreaming of playing for her club once again. Hurler Domhnall Nugent battled intense isolation as he recovered from addiction. And when championships were shut down after celebrations threatened the association's reputation, uncertainty hung in the air.

Through it all, GAA people rallied. Their stories, and the story of the GAA itself, needs to be told.

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Product description

This is the incredible story of how the GAA and its people weathered the coronavirus pandemic, and found the strength to survive.

In the year 2020, our lives, purpose and favourite pastime as Irish people - meeting each other - stopped overnight.

Throughout that dark time, the GAA was at the centre of the country's fight against COVID-19. From the start, thousands of volunteers delivered food and medicine to vulnerable neighbours and friends during lockdown and the association went online, keeping people connected and becoming a beacon of hope.

As the association itself faced financial ruin, members had their own life and death struggles. Niall Murphy, of Antrim GAA, spent sixteen days in a coma, fighting the virus, as camogie player Marianne Walsh spent her cancer recovery amid strict lockdowns, dreaming of playing for her club once again. Hurler Domhnall Nugent battled intense isolation as he recovered from addiction. And when championships were shut down after celebrations threatened the association's reputation, uncertainty hung in the air.

Through it all, GAA people rallied. Their stories, and the story of the GAA itself, needs to be told.

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