One suspects the GAA 'higher-archy' will be relieved to get to the other side of this year's league since it's been completely overshadowed by the shameful Allianz partnership.
'Hierarchy' is derived from two Greek words: hieros ('sacred') and archien ('rule' or 'order').
The ruling from the GAA on the issue of a company, that funds genocide, has been anything but sacred. It amounts to a top-down directive that forbids any discussion or input from its members.
Yet the facts remain: Allianz is the largest investor in Israeli war bonds deemed ‘critical for the war effort’.
The UN special rapporteur has identified Allianz as an enabler of the genocide and has publicly expressed support for the Drop Allianz campaign in Ireland.
Even Allianz plc has attempted to distance themselves from their own parent group. So the question arises, if Allianz has the highest ESG standards as claimed, why is the Irish unit trying to reject any connection?
Before taking time to draw breath and reflect, GAA President Jarlath Burns said of protesters making their way into Congress to wave banners and call for debate on the issue:
The use of the term 'our property' does not sit well with those who attended the rally and indeed many GAA members who have organised fundraisers in their clubs to help the victims of Gaza, attended peaceful protests at games and handed out information leaflets explaining the #DropAllianz campaign.
Ten counties voted to end the Allianz alliance. This begs the question: What is the position of the other 22 counties? (24 if you include London and New York). Indeed Drop Allianz banners were spotted recently at the St Patrick’s Day parade in New York.
Why has the Gaelic Players' Association (GPA) not voiced its disapproval and directed their fold to stop promoting Allianz? It is sickening to see young men (role models?) and managers stand in front of the Allianz logo during post-match interviews. Not all the county players are promoting Allianz.
Respect is due to the Tyrone and Dublin squads who took the decision not to have an advertisement for the company that promotes genocide, using their image.
Colm O'Rourke has suggested the GPA has hidden behind the GAA on this issue; he's not wrong. Can the players not think for themselves?
It is our GAA, our Association, our Croke Park, our Congress. It was men like Peter and Pascal Canavan, Eugene McKenna, Brian McGilligan, Colm O'Rourke, Colm McAlarney, Bobby Doyle, David Hickey, Pat Gilroy, Greg Blaney - greats who filled and built Croke Park and years later found themselves standing outside the Hogan Stand on the day of Congress in despair that their Association forbids uncomfortable debate. GAA suits driven by a corporate lust for money where business interests trump humanity.
As Pascal Canavan pointed out, they didn't go looking for this campaign to get rid of Allianz. It was brought to them when the facts were laid bare last year.
Humanity
When did we stop caring about the other? I'm no expert on the Good Book but there is a decency and humanity to the credo, "Truly I tell you, whatever you did for one of the least of these brothers and sisters of mine, you did for me".
In February, Waylon Gary White Dear, a renowned Choctaw academic, artist and author appeared on the Tommy Tiernan Show. It was a fascinating interview.
However on the programme's Facebook page, many viewers were critical that Tommy did not mention a historical link of solidarity between the Chowtaw Nation and the Irish, that was forged during the Famine in 1847, when the native Americans sent a donation to Ireland for hunger relief.
The gift was extraordinary because the Choctaw people had recently been forced off their land, yet they chose to support another group facing starvation and suffering. Or perhaps that is why they sent the gift; they remembered their past.
The Irish too have been generous in reaching out to those most oppressed and in need. In 1985, Live Aid concerts on both sides of the Atlantic, that drew attention to the Ethiopian famine, reached 1.9 billion viewers. Donations flooded in.
We were so proud when it emerged that Ireland raised £7 million, the highest per capita donation in the world at that time.
Was it the Celtic Tiger that engendered a me-féin mindset or perhaps far right propaganda that suggests caring for others, including those in Gaza, is misguided?
I was confronted by a young man last year regarding the local GAA support and fundraising for Palestine. "What about our poor? What about our homeless? We should be helping them".
It is a racist refrain that hides behind altruism.
Biding my time, I met him at Christmas and asked, "Did you contribute to the local Foodbank hamper appeal?".. "Eh!"
".. just you seemed concerned about our poor, I was wondering maybe you volunteered at a homeless shelter over Christmas or helped with a street soup run"... "Whaa..?!".. Indeed.
You find people who care about those in Palestine and other war-torn and beleaguered lands, are most likely to reach out with compassion locally as well.
It is not a huge ask for players to refuse to stand in front of a logo that represents a company supporting mass slaughter or refuse to lift a cup bearing its ribbons.
As for Jarlath Burns, or whoever has the dubious honour of presenting this year's league trophy, spare us the "thank you to the sponsor" - not in our name.






















