Manchán Magan was present at the Allingham Festival in 2015… He was a born gentleman. Everyone at the festival remembers his humour and his style. His seminar discussed some of his major interests: travel/travel writing, documentary filmmaking, and world culture.
But today, as the sun sets on his great contribution to the country’s cultural life, the thing that illuminates his legacy is his dedication to his native language. He was so devoted to it. But you would never find him engaged in outdated academic exercises examining Irish, nor even just using Irish. He looked beyond the geographical and political borders of the country and the world. He looked beyond Irish culture, its institutions, and its government, which paid lip service to the native language and fostered a contradictory relationship between aspiration and achievement.
He had the ability to see the absurdity of language and bring it out into the light for discussion.He brought the conversation about the use of Irish to new and unusual places. He had a fresh, international perspective on the Irish people and their language. And if he challenged everyone to follow him into the brave new world he envisioned, he also explored the origins and roots of the written and spoken language that had existed for many years more deeply than ever before.
He asked challenging questions and forced us all to face them, in a humorous, gentle, yet powerful way. His appeal to the ordinary person was far greater than that of any other language activist ever before.
When his death was announced, the President of Ireland, Michael D. Higgins, was among the first to express his sorrow at the untimely passing, and at the same time, the hip-hop trio Kneecap (who were main performers at Glastonbury in 2025, and subsequently appeared in legal courts because of it) followed this with a tribute.
Like all great famous heroes, he is gone too soon, but we at the Allingham Festival believe that his legacy will continue far into the future. We express our deepest condolences to his wife Aisling, his mother Croine, and the extended family.