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Seamie Mac recalls school triumph 14.05.09

TEN years ago last week, the Scoil Mhuire debating team of Dearbhla McLaughlin, Joe Moloney, Carmel Doherty and Sonia Hardy, won the Concern All-Ireland Debating final when they travelled to University College Cork and defeated St Mary’s CBS Tralee.
Their teacher, Seamus McLaughlin (or Seamie Mac to students) called into the Inishowen Independent office last week and recalled the event:

“Liam McGonagle drove a 52-seater bus packed with debate team, coaches, supporters, and school Fr Shane Bradley, on a three day journey to Cork to the All-Ireland Concern Debates final. We would stop in a Galway hostel on the Wednesday night so that the team would not be too knackered from making a journey the whole length on the country in one day.
The motion for the final was “Tomorrow’s children will inherit a better world”. Having won the toss Scoil Mhuire opted to oppose the motion, much to the delight of the Tralee team who admitted that their choice was to propose.
Team captain Dearbhla McLaughlin, Joe Moloney, Carmel Doherty and Sonia Hardy argued that politically, culturally, environmentally, and socio-economically the future wouldn’t be a rosy one for those about to join the human race, especially in the Majority World, also known as the Third World.
The triumphant Scoil Mhuire team lifting their trophy in May 1999.
In hindsight the past decade has changed little to eliminate starvation, malnutrition, environmental destruction, carbon emissions, or human rights abuses, so the team weren’t that far off the mark.
Three of the five judges considered Buncrana’s presentation and overall performance to be worthy of the national championship. That’s how close it was in opposing a team who argued that the new Millennium would change an entrenched global status quo.
Marina Carlin and myself were momentarily shell-shocked before we joined the rest of our jubilant supporters dancing in the aisles of the University’s Great Hall. An adrenaline-packed bus headed back to Eyre Square in Galway for a few hours sleep before the triumphant return to Scoil Mhuire. We picked up a Garda escort at Burnfoot to take us into the schoolyard. Cheering students were doubly delighted to be out of class and congratulating their team.
A jubilant Mr Liam Rainey, in his very first year as Principal, welcomed back his champions from a makeshift stage in the schoolyard. There was a rumour that Ms Bradley even smiled!
I would like to take this opportunity of thanking Ms Carlin and the Team for giving me the highpoint of my teaching career and a wonderful life-long memory. (Inishowen Independent)
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