I have just returned from the 8th international Child and Youth Care conference hosted by the beautiful city of Montreal. What a conference! There were some 1,600 delegates from around 35 countries – including several from Ireland. Denise Lyons from the Institute of Technology in Blanchardstown and Fergal Fox from the Health Services Executive Dublin/Mid-Leinster region presented their first international workshops in Canada, so congratulations are in order to both. I believe that it means a great deal for the development of our field to get more and more people interested in international travel thus opening out the possibilities of engagement with colleagues from other systems.
Catching up with Friends
I started this visit amidst the snows of Ontario whilst visiting a Child and Youth Care buddy of mine who spent several years in Ireland. Brody
has relocated (for the time being) to Cambridge where he is amassing a
small collection of toys for boys. I got to ride around his
neighbourhood on the borrowed motorcycle of his partner, Sunny, and
relive my youth. Of course, he had the bigger bike for the day!
A Book Launch without Books
Then, on to Miramichi, New Brunswick where I met up with Fergal in the
airport and my pal and Doctoral student, Margaret Sullivan from New
Brunswick Community College, who was our chauffeur for the few days. We
were scheduled to launch our new book Walking between Two lands:
Elsipogtog Migmag and Midlands Travellers on Elsipogtog Reserve on
the Monday morning. Some 150 people from the community and the college
attended a series of celebrations including a very emotional veterans'
day. We got to experience Jingle Dancers, a flag raising ceremony, a
lament for the deceased, a book launch and a meal all in the one day!
Congratulations to Chief Susan Levi-Peters and the community for such a wonderful display of solidarity and for allowing the Irish Tricolour into their flags of honour. It is the first time in my career that I have launched a book without physically having one in my possession as the Customs Officers in Montreal were somewhat reluctant to release the books to us without all the appropriate forms signed off and duty paid but, as is the way in Child and Youth Care, we made do with photocopies and glossy, colour covers. No-one seemed to mind too much and I think the important thing was that we were present in the community on the day. Susan McKenna couldn’t make it but was there in spirit.
After the book launch and meal, we drove back to Miramichi to the college where the Principal, Marie-Paule Theriault, had arranged for a welcome session with specially commissioned cakes, teas, coffees, juices and – yep – that Irish Tricolour again. Fergal and I were feeling very welcome in picture postcard New Brunswick and we want to thank the college staff for turning out to support their colleagues.
More Planes and Trains
Another internal flight on the Tuesday brought us from Moncton, New
Brunswick to Montreal, Quebec and to the 8th Child and Youth Care
conference. There were so many friends from around Canada that it was
difficult to grab coffee with any one person for longer than half and
hour but we did our best to represent Ireland. I co-presented a workshop
with Dr Thom Garfat on working with families and, later, he was awarded
a special recommendation for CYC-Net which now has one million hits a
year. Brian Gannon in South Africa remains in the background but
deserves a special mention.
I was delighted to meet up again with Professor Mark Krueger from the US who is recovering from an illness. Mark is well known to the Irish Child and Youth Care audience and is a guy who manages to “keep it real” despite his lofty position in academia.
The Conference
The opening morning of the conference saw a truly amazing percussion
performance by a youth group which really set the mood and tone for the
next few days. Then, it was all about the workshops, the sessions,
coffee, lunch, dinner, jazz clubs and the old town. And all the time, we
were meeting up with Child and Youth Care students, practitioners,
managers, teachers, instructors, academics, researchers, policy makers,
therapists and government people from a range of Departments. It is so
rarely that we get to celebrate in such a venue with so many like-minded
people.
As I walked around the conference on the last day listening to the conversations of delegates and popping in and out of various impromptu meetings I was reminded of why Child and Youth Care is so real. Albert Einstein, the world renowned scientist, once said “It would be possible to describe everything scientifically, but it would make no sense; it would be without meaning, as if you described a Beethoven symphony as a variation of wave pressure".
Well done to the organisers for a seamless event. Well done to all who participated. And, thank-you to our friends in Canada. It was awesome. You rock!