Ireland’s national sports — Gaelic football and hurling — won an unlikely new audience when pictures of Chinese Vice President Xi Jinping (習近平), China’s likely next president, kicking a football were beamed to Beijing from Ireland, the only European stop on his current world tour.
Xi, whose trip began in the US last week, arrived in Dublin on Sunday from the west of Ireland, where he toured a dairy farm and the picturesque Cliffs of Moher.
He was scheduled to attend an investment forum with about 300 companies yesterday and Ireland hopes to make the most of his three-day visit to promote exports of anything from information-technology services to dairy products, as well as inward investment.
Photo: Reuters
“He showed some admirable skills for his first time kicking on what is ... a very holy turf for us,” said Alan Milton, a spokesman at the Gaelic Athletic Association (GAA).
The vice president’s fascination with Ireland dates back to his first trip to Dublin in 2003 when he was a provincial party secretary and he was introduced to the two sports by then-Irish president Mary McAleese in Beijing two years ago.
Xi was given a personal demonstration of both at the empty 80,000 seat Croke Park, Ireland’s largest stadium and the scene of a massacre of footballers and fans by British troops during its fight for independence almost a century ago.
Xi showed a keen interest in the players’ size and fitness, as well as the sports’ finances, GAA president Christy Cooney told journalists.
Beijing has followed with interest Ireland’s transformation from a developing farming economy to one that attracted international technology and drug companies, and is now showing first signs of rebounding from an economic crash.
“Ireland and China have much to offer each other in food and agriculture, in high-technology research and in investment. We should make every effort to realize that potential,” Irish Prime Minister Enda Kenny said in a speech welcoming Xi and his delegation to Dublin Castle for the evening, before signing two trade and investment agreements.
Xi began his visit at a high-tech zone near Shannon airport that inspired the building of a similar zone in Shenzhen, the pilot project of former Chinese leader Deng Xiaoping’s (鄧小平) economic reforms.
However, Gaelic games, played exclusively by amateurs, but often attracting larger crowds in Ireland than matches featuring millionaire professional soccer and rugby players, have proved a rather unlikelier export.
Gaelic football is similar to soccer, but is played with both hands and feet. Hurling and its female equivalent, camogie, are played on the same pitch and use a stick often flailed at head height to propel a small, hard ball toward the goal.
Many gifted players affected by Ireland’s economic crisis have been forced to emigrate to find work and Gaelic clubs have flourished in cities from Stockholm to Sydney.
Emigrants have even used tournaments to develop business links and Thailand’s finance minister was a keynote speaker at one recent Asian tournament.
In Beijing, where more Chinese girls than boys have taken to Gaelic sports, Colin Dixon, a finance professional who is also president of the city’s Gaelic association, hopes to have a few new local players next week.
“Although it’s very much an Irish game, we have players both male and female from Britain, China, America, France, Germany, Spain and Mauritius,” he said. “I’m sure when people see Xi in Croke Park they’ll be asking about what this sport is, and we would certainly hope this will increase our presence in the Chinese community.”
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