|
Kevin Cullen, Boston Globe Columnist, May 22, 2008
Three thousand miles is a long way to come for a funeral, but
John O'Shea was already on this side of the pond for something
else, so it was no bother.
O'Shea is an Irishman and a humanitarian, and so was the man he
came to say goodbye to yesterday, the man lying in the casket at
the foot of the altar at St. Agatha's in Milton, the man they called
Tom Flatley.
The Irish are a notoriously sentimental tribe, and you would think
O'Shea would have been thinking about the lush green fields of
the County Mayo, where he and Tom Flatley grew up. Instead, O'Shea
was thinking of a putrid landfill on the outskirts of Nairobi in
Kenya.
For 30 years, O'Shea has run an organization called GOAL. It is
based in Dublin, and it works all over the Third World, helping
the poorest of the poor. Flatley was one of its benefactors. Not
that you would know it, because he did everything quietly. He amassed
millions without drawing attention to himself, and he gave away
millions just as anonymously.
O'Shea has seen some bad things. He wept in Uganda, watching hungry
children, their ribs almost bursting through the skin. In Calcutta,
he met an 11-year-old girl whose face was a Halloween mask ravaged
by cancer. In Ethiopia, he watched helplessly as children drained
by famine took their last breaths on the side of the road.
But nothing prepared him for the dump in Nairobi.
"There are children there, boys of 3 and 4, and they fight
with the rats over scraps of food," John O'Shea was saying. "And
the smell. The smell is . . ." He paused.
"It smells," he said, "like hell must smell."
Flatley was 76 years old, and he was not just an Irishman. He
was a Mayo man. And the injustice of people scrounging for food
and going to sleep with their stomachs howling was written into
his DNA. As a boy, Tom Flatley played in fields where, a century
before, people starved, the corners of their mouths stained by
the grass they ate in one final, futile attempt to live.
"Tom was a culchie," O'Shea said, using the Irish word
for hick. "He understood what it was to be poor more than
he understood what it was to be rich."
When O'Shea told him he was thinking about building something
for the street kids of Nairobi, Flatley said he would pay for it.
They were talking, and O'Shea asked him what he considered his
greatest honor, and Flatley told him it was being grand marshal
of the St. Patrick's Day parade in his small, native village of
Kiltimagh a few years back.
"You're serious?" O'Shea asked.
The look Tom Flatley gave made John O'Shea not repeat the question.
The festivities in Kiltimagh on the 17th of March are considerably
different than what goes on in South Boston or New York. Tom Flatley
stood on the back of a flatbed truck, and old women waved to the
wee boy from Kiltimagh who went off to America and made something
of himself.
O'Shea took Flatley's money and built a home for boys who used
to dine at the Nairobi dump. He asked Flatley to join him next
month to dedicate the place they call the Kiltimagh Centre. But
Flatley was dying of Lou Gehrig's, that terrible disease named
for that wonderful baseball player.
Yesterday, as we dispatched Tom Flatley from this world, John
O'Shea bowed his head, said a prayer, and smiled because he remembered
the last exchange he had with his old friend. It was an e-mail,
because the disease had robbed Flatley of the ability to speak,
and it was a response to O'Shea telling him that 130 boys who used
to eat garbage and live on the street in Nairobi were eating good
food and sleeping in clean beds in a building named after a village
in the west of Ireland.
"Not bad," Tom Flatley wrote back, "for a pair
of culchies."
|