logo
‘I was asked if I was a terrorist every day': The Mayo woman helping expats make a soft landing in the UK

‘I was asked if I was a terrorist every day': The Mayo woman helping expats make a soft landing in the UK

Irish Times6 hours ago
'God knows what my parents were thinking to move to England at the height of IRA [Troubles]. It was a very difficult time to be Irish,' says Mayo native Eimear Maguire, who moved to England with her parents in 1987.
Her father, George, took early retirement following a 40-year career with the ESB and, at her mother's urging, moved the family from Ballina to England.
Maguire went from attending the 'fairly strict but fairly simple' Convent of Mercy in Ballina to being 'thrust into a comprehensive, 1,200-student school' in West Yorkshire. With a 'weird name and a strange accent' combined with 'all the Irish cultural, political stuff going on behind the scenes', Maguire says, 'I was asked if I was a terrorist every day, asked if we were in the IRA. All of that type of stuff.'
The youngest of eight children, Maguire says she felt very separated from the '2.1-child families' typical of the time. Having eight children was 'unheard of' in England. 'It was a lot. I didn't realise how different I was. Even in six years of school, I never really felt like I belonged there.'
READ MORE
England didn't start to feel like home until she moved to Nottingham in 1994 to become a nurse. By that time, 'things had changed' with the emergence of popular Irish bands in the UK such as the Cranberries, U2 and Aslan making it 'trendy to be Irish'.
With the peace process in Northern Ireland under way and the Republic of Ireland team at the 1994 World Cup led by well-known names from the newly formed Premier League, Maguire says people began to see the Irish 'less as something to worry about, and just as part of the landscape'.
In her early career, Maguire retained her connection to Ireland. After her father's death, her mother returned to her native Roscommon, and Maguire spent most of her holidays in Ireland where she felt a sense of 'true belonging'.
'There is always that sadness with the Irish abroad. You always think, 'I'll go back. One day, I'll go back.' And then, the more and more entrenched you become in your life here in the UK with marriage, jobs or kids, that dream just gets further and further away.
'Eventually you realise that you cannot just think about yourself, and then it just becomes the impossible dream.'
She met her future husband and business partner, James Maguire, while working as a nurse in Nottingham, and they moved to Manchester in 2000 following the birth of their first child.
In 2010, they jointly founded Maguire Family Law, with Eimear looking to fulfil a lifelong dream of training as a lawyer. Initially funded by a loan against the family home, the firm now has four offices and 17 employees. As the firm took off, Maguire never found the time to train in law, instead taking up the role of head of finance and operations.
The business is built around practising family law and its founders had their own intimate experience with the system.
'I was married to James and we set the practice up together, and then our marriage failed. So we got divorced but we continued to work together and to keep the business going. We are still working together, we are still the best of friends.'
Their own experience with divorce, Maguire says, has allowed them to help other families navigate the uncertainty.
'A lot of people call me saying, 'Unfortunately, I'm gonna have to get divorced, and I would really like it to go down like your divorce did. I would like to remain friends. How do you do that?'
'So, in a way, we are the poster people for divorce,' she laughs.
Growing the business in the north of England, Maguire got involved with the Women of Irish Heritage network, recently taking the position as the inaugural chairwoman of the not-for-profit initiative.
She wants to make sure there is a soft landing for Irish women who make the 'brave decision' to move to the UK. 'The Irish, we are known the world over for our warmth,' she said, noting that the same warmth and welcoming culture isn't replicated as much in England.
She says that Irish people who make the move often note the difference between the two cultures. 'I think British people are quite formal, they're quite reserved. They don't really speak their minds all that much.
'I know people have certainly found me to be a bit direct, but I just think I'm quite open in a way they are not used to.'
Even now, after 35 years living in England, Maguire has never applied for British citizenship. 'I felt it a betrayal of my heritage for most of the time I've been here,' she says, noting that feeling was a result of the anti-Irish sentiment she has experienced at times in the UK.
'The lack of acceptance of us here drives [people] more towards rejecting any Britishness and more embracing your own heritage,' she says.
In recent years, however, she feels she is entering her 'belonging era' and points to new laws which will simplify the process for Irish people living in the UK to apply for citizenship. 'I may get my dual nationality after all,' she laughs.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

England storm past USA after lightning delays
England storm past USA after lightning delays

Irish Examiner

time33 minutes ago

  • Irish Examiner

England storm past USA after lightning delays

England shrugged off two lengthy delays caused by lightning in Washington DC to end their summer tour with a comprehensive 40-5 victory over the United States. After beating Argentina 2-0 in South America, the third game of England's tour at Audi Field kicked off an hour late due to an electrical storm in the American capital. Play was then halted near the half-hour mark, with both sets of players spending 40 minutes in the dressing room before the action resumed. England eventually ran out comfortable winners with six tries shared by Curtis Langdon, Luke Northmore, Cadan Murley, Jack van Poortvliet, Harry Randall and Gabriel Oghre. George Ford added four conversions and Charlie Atkinson one in a dominant display in which Harlequins flanker Chandler Cunningham-South was outstanding. The US had never beaten England in seven previous attempts, but began on the front foot and engineered some promising field positions. But the Eagles were reduced to 14 by a deliberate knock-on from outside-half Chris Hilsenbeck and England took instant advantage of their extra numbers with an 11th-minute try. United States and England players leave the field due to a weather alert (Alex Brandon/AP) Ford kicked to the corner and Langdon was the beneficiary of a driving line-out that the fly-half, winning his 102nd cap, converted. England soon worked another opening and new boy Max Ojomoh slipped in fellow centre Northmore for a simple score with Ford again adding the extras. Alex Dombrandt thought he had extended the lead from the back of a maul, but his effort was ruled out for obstruction and the players were then taken off the field after 29 minutes due to further lightning concerns. When they returned, lightning – this time in the metaphorical sense – struck twice for England as full-back Jack Carpenter was denied a debut try by a Murley knock-on. But England's patience was rewarded in the final play of the first half as Murley spotted a gap to race over. England replacement Harry Randall bursts through to score for England (Alex Brandon/AP) Van Poortvliet, showing his sound positional sense, went over straight after the restart for Ford to convert, and England were camped in the Americans' 22 for most of the second period. The hosts held out until Immanuel Feyi-Waboso, making his first appearance after six months out with a shoulder injury and a two-match ban for a high tackle that saw him miss the Argentina games, sliced through. The Exeter wing showed fine awareness to send Randall over, and Ford's final act before making way for Atkinson was to add another two points. England turned heavily to their bench in the final quarter, but there was no easing off and Bristol hooker Oghre celebrated his first cap with a burst to the line that Atkinson added to. The US were finally on the scoreboard in the final seconds as a well-worked ploy at the front of a line-out saw Chris Poidevin put Shilo Klein over for a consolation score.

Andy Lee's burgeoning career as a trainer looks set to make him one of boxing's main characters
Andy Lee's burgeoning career as a trainer looks set to make him one of boxing's main characters

The 42

timean hour ago

  • The 42

Andy Lee's burgeoning career as a trainer looks set to make him one of boxing's main characters

KATIE TAYLOR'S THIRD success over Amanda Serrano at Madison Square Garden accounted for most of the boxing coverage in Ireland last weekend but Off-Broadway in this country's news cycle, Taylor's fellow Irish boxing great furthered his own case for being the best in the world. About 18 kilometres off Broadway, to be more precise. A night after Taylor's triumph, at the Louis Armstrong tennis stadium in Flushing, Queens, Andy Lee added the latest feather to his cap as a trainer, steering Englishman Hamzah Sheeraz to a victory that caught the eye of the boxing world. The 26-year-old Sheeraz appeared to have been on an inexorable ascent at middleweight as recently as February, reeling off 21 straight wins with 17 of them quick, but a highly fortunate draw with world champion Carlos Adames on the Artur Beterbiev-Dimitry Bivol rematch card in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, had made him look distinctly human, bearing some Sheeraz's inefficiencies for the first time on the biggest stage. Sheeraz split with his Los Angeles-based trainer, Ricky Funez, and turned instead to Dublin, where former middleweight champ Andy Lee supervised his jump to super-middleweight and lit the rocket under him once more. Last Saturday in Queens, in his first fight as a 168-pounder, Sheeraz stopped inside five rounds Edgar Berlanga (previously 23-1, 18KOs), the explosive Puerto Rican who had taken Saul 'Canelo' Alvarez the distance only a couple of fights prior. The result on paper would have been enough to catch the eye of any boxing fan who missed the fight, but the finish was a real head-turner. Sheeraz, his nose bloodied in the early exchanges, rediscovered the nasty gear that had been missing against Adames. He dropped Berlanga twice, hard, in the fourth, only for 'The Chosen One' to be saved by the bell. But Sheeraz closed the show almost instantaneously at the start of the fifth, his first three punches of the round dropping Berlanga again and forcing the intervention of referee David Fields. Coach Lee never actively chased the spotlight during his career as a fighter — although more of it would have been nice — but having already proven a highly popular pundit on either side of the Atlantic, the Limerick man looks destined to become one of boxing's main characters as a trainer. Berlanga appeared to acknowledge this on some level at the launch press conference in May, warning Sheeraz across the top table: 'I'mma fuck you up and Andy Lee on the same night, you heard?' 'It's crazy,' Lee told his British middleweight contemporary Darren Barker during a sit-down interview the following day. 'It's funny. I like the attention. Advertisement 'What's he targeting me for?' Lee laughed. 'But I like it. And I like him (Berlanga). I think he's good for the game. We need characters like this.' Barker replied: 'Of all the people to target!' And true enough, virtually none of Lee's 38 opponents ever spoke to him the way Berlanga did before the Sheeraz fight, but then Lee himself was never quite so forthright in assessing rivals' frailties as he is in his role as a coach. Berlanga had also nearly fallen foul of the Irishman's coaching expertise previously, having endured a far tougher night than most expected against the Lee-trained Jason Quigley a couple of years prior. Simply put, the role of a coach is to make an athlete better. Lee brought the maximum out of middleweight world-title challenger Quigley and he has unlocked new gears in all of his charges, most notably Samoan-Kiwi Joseph Parker whom he has guided back from relative obscurity to the top of the queue to challenge undisputed heavyweight champion Oleksandr Usyk. He has also recently reignited the career of British Olympic star Ben Whittaker, who turned to Lee after he hit the skids against Liam Cameron last October. Under Lee's tutelage, Whittaker took an immediate rematch against Cameron and blasted the Sheffield man out of there in the second round, once more looking like the star that British boxing hoped he would become. And while he previously contributed to Tyson Fury's world-title successes over Deontay Wilder — indeed, it may be no coincidence that Fury's best ever performance, in his second bout with the American, came off the back of a full camp with Lee as his co-trainer alongside SugarHill Steward — the Limerick man will get the chance to fledge his first world champion as a solo trainer this autumn. Following his mostly picturesque performance and contentious disqualification defeat for a punch after the bell in March, Paddy Donovan's rematch with Lewis Crocker looks set to take place at Windsor Park in September. Theirs will be the first all-Irish world-title fight in boxing history. Andy Lee and Paddy Donovan. Gary Carr / INPHO Gary Carr / INPHO / INPHO It was 'The Real Deal' Donovan who first lured his fellow Limerick man Lee back into the gym in 2019 and they will greatly fancy their chances of beating 'The Croc' for the vacant IBF welterweight strap, with Donovan having already ostensibly beaten up the Belfast man in his hometown. While far from a foregone conclusion, a world-title success for Donovan would position Lee as the frontrunner for Trainer of the Year, a global award for which he was already nominated by Ring Magazine at the end of a stellar 2024. The generational talents of Oleksandr Usyk could scupper that notion if the Ukrainian faces Lee's heavyweight, Joe Parker, before the end of the year, although Usyk may wait until early 2026 before returning to the ring following his sensational stoppage of Daniel Dubois on Saturday night. But Lee's 2025, and his coaching career to this point, are worthy of recognition in any case: there are few Irish coaches in any sport thriving to the same extent at an elite international level. A former student of the great Emanuel Steward and Adam Booth, Lee is well on his way to becoming one of boxing's most celebrated teachers.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store