Welcome to DIT’s International Blog! Check here for news updates on all of our international activities and news on when we will be next in your country.


Wednesday, March 21, 2012

Tagore plays coming to Dublin all the way from Goa, India


As you may be aware, the Irish Festival to celebrate the 150th anniversary of Rabindranath Tagore's birth was launched in Dublin on Monday 17th October with the unveiling of a specially commissioned bust of Tagore (sent over from India) in St. Stephen's Green by the Tánaiste Eamon Gilmore and H.E. Shrimati Prennet Kaur, Minister of State for External Affairs of India. This was followed by a series of events (concerts, symposia, etc.) celebrating his work. He was the first Asian to be awarded The Nobel Prize for Literature and was greatly admired by W.B. Yeats who brought him to the attention of the Western literary world and was probably instrumental in having the world premiere of one of Tagore's many plays, The Post Office, staged at the Abbey Theatre in 1913, directed by Lennox Robinson.

The Da Vinci Theatre company's productions of The Post Office and Red Oleanders (two plays by Tagore, both in English) have been selected and travel funded by the Indian Council for Cultural Relations in Delhi to formally close the Dublin Tagore Festival, his birth date being May 7th. The plays will be staged at the Samuel Beckett Theatre, Trinity College Dublin in April 2012, details on the poster below!


I hope to see some of you there,


Sarah


Tuesday, March 20, 2012

A Scholar's Journey

Declan Arthur from Waterford has been awarded the inaugural Ciaran King Graduate Travel Scholarship by the DIT Foundation. The Scholarship scheme was established to honour the memory of the late Ciarán King – engineer, environmentalist and social entrepreneur. It provides the opportunity to a DIT graduate to spend three months working on renewable energy projects in a developing country. Declan will be based in Nairobi and will work on local solar energy projects with international charity, Renewable World......Here's Declan's first blog post as he sets off on his journey.....after reading it I'll be sure to be following his journey and posting the rest of his blog entries for you all to read here........ :)

A Scholar's Journey

Declan Spain

"This Blog will record a personal journey which started over two years ago in a small village in Northern Spain where I was walking the Camino de Santiago de Compostella. It was here that I decided to study for a Masters in Applied Media when I returned to Dublin. After two very rewarding and challenging years I graduated in 2011. My thesis, entitled ‘An Exploration of the use of Social Media in Cause Related Marketing Campaigns in Ireland’ brought me in contact with the DIT Foundation as part of my research. It was in November when I was asked to Re-Tweet their call for applications for the inaugural Ciarán King Travel Scholarship that I decided this could be for me. I was shortlisted, interviewed and awarded the scholarship before I knew what was happening and here I am, the 2012 Ciarán King Scholar"

Let the journey begin.

This scholarship offers me a once in a lifetime chance to work in the developing world with an NGO that in my opinion, is adopting the correct approach to delivering long term sustainable change. Renewable World focuses on alleviating poverty through the provision of renewable energy in areas where energy is either not available or not affordable for everyone. Capacity building within the areas they work means that the local communities are equipped to take control of the projects into the future. It is perhaps an overused adage but it reflects succinctly the ethos of Renewable World ‘Give a man a fish and you feed him for a day. Teach a man to fish and you feed him for a lifetime’

Who am I?

My name is Declan Arthur. I was born in Waterford in the sunny south east of Ireland, two years before President John F Kennedy made his historic visit to Ireland – Google if you must! Alas I never made Woodstock but I can never be criticised for not trying to make up for that ever since.

They say hindsight is 20:20 vision but I can’t help thinking I was destined to take this journey. I grew up in a family, father, mother and brother that were immersed in volunteerism. My father, although employed full time by the State Electricity Board (ESB) seemed to find endless hours to dedicate to a range of charitable work and I was drafted in to support whenever possible. My mother had an array of skills and she put these to good use at home and with several charities also. So, when you needed a help and hand you could call on Team Arthur!

My undergrad in marketing launched me into the commercial world to work in industries as diverse as Engineering, Agri-Food, Telecommunications, and Software and of course the community and voluntary sector. I have been fortunate to have traveled extensively throughout my life both for work and leisure.

As I embark on this wonderful journey I hope to draw on all of my life’s experiences in order to make a real impact in my short time in East Africa.

Feb 12th 2012 – Brighton Bound

The endless weeks of anticipation are over and I’ve been deposited at Dublin airport on a rather balmy Sunday afternoon for early February. Thanks for the lift bro and off I head with enough luggage to put Shackleton to shame. I’ve lost the knack of packing, finely honed in the days that saw me in this airport every Monday morning.

Has the UK changed continents I wonder as we make our approach for landing in a snow covered Gatwick. I’m reunited with my bags and it’s not long before I’m checking in at the Kings Hotel in Brighton. My room looks out on the seafront and reminds me of Tramore in Co. Waterford complete with shops selling rock and fish n chips. The famous Brighton Pier is a stone’s throw so I enjoy a refreshing walk before searching for a dinner venue.

Brighton was eerily quiet for Sunday night and I wondered had the Trioka paid a visit here also. Unashamedly I found myself in Molly Malone’s as it boasted customers and the most Irish music I’d heard since....well since I was last in England.

Early to bed, wondering what lays in store for the week ahead.


Monday, March 5, 2012

CHARITY MOVIE NIGHT organised by DIT Students


CHARITY MOVIE NIGHT:The Movie Classic Ghostbusters will be shown at The Grand Social at 8.30pm on the 6th March in order to raise funds for CARI. CARI, located in Drumcondra are a non-governmental organisation who help child victims of sex abuse.

The event promises to be a great night with:
pleanty of beer promotions,
pizzas provided by our sponsers Arancino (proceeds going to CARI),
a cheesy 80's movie
and of course a great cause!

Admission is only €5....You won't miss €5!!!!!

Hope to see you there.

Tuesday, March 6 at 8:30pm at The Grand Social

Thursday, March 1, 2012

Flash Mob Dance on Grafton Street

Check out the first Indian Flash Mob on Grafton Street in Dublin, brought to you by the UNITAS team

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pUGTnClD7-s

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