Sinéad O'Connor, Troublemaker!
I don't do anything in order to cause trouble. It just so happens that what I do naturally causes trouble. I'm proud to be a troublemaker.
Sinéad O'Connor
The sadness brought on by the untimely death of Sinéad O'Connor is palpable, anyone, such as myself, that was touched by her music, has surely shed a few tears of grief this week. Nowhere was that grief more palpable than in her home country of Ireland. But why have we seen such raw and public emotion from the likes of Taoiseach, Leo Varadkar? Why has the death of a diminutive pop star from the humble Pembroke Road in Dublin caused such deep, national sorrow? Quite simply, Sinéad O'Connor changed Ireland! What follows are extracts from a beautiful article written by the brilliant Una Mullally, a journalist and broadcaster based in Dublin.
Speaking out against the Catholic Church at a time when few people did sparked outrage and hostility and risked her career, but Ireland is now realising the good she did.
She created connection. Seeing how she held herself, spoke, sang and acted, people projected on to her their desires to break free, to live authentic lives, to not care about what people thought, and to kick against the structures that told people - especially women, queer people and anyone who felt marginalised or divorced from straight, square, conservative society - to stay in their place and to do what they were told.
O'Connor was a lighthouse for those who felt adrift in Irish society. She offered a new moral compass beyond the lie of societal piety, one that pointed towards an uncharted direction of authenticity.
She rejected all notion of Catholic shame. While her actions were sometimes unfairly characterised as reckless, she was attempting to both expose and damn this shame. Far before people could converse fluently in therapy and wellness-speak, O'Connor identified the core problem of human strife and Irish self-loathing - childhood trauma. She equated the entire society's psyche to that of an abused child.
So, when O'Connor broke through in 1987 with Mandinka, there's a reason, 36 years later, the lyric that's still roared the loudest is: “I don't know no shame, I feel no pain.” She then embarked upon a career that was rooted in doing the sort of thing that often had severe consequences in Ireland - she rebelled!
O'Connor took that defiance across the Atlantic and it rebounded back to Ireland. Her appearance on Late Show with David Letterman in 1988 was a shock to multiple systems; Irish society, the music industry, the genre of female Irish alternative rock she was honing for herself. Her shaved head appeared to signal not just to punk but to a hidden gesture of humiliation imposed on women institutionalised in Ireland.
Four years later, also on the set of an American television show, her tearing of the photograph of Pope John Paul II instigated a near-global moral panic and remains one of the greatest artistic acts of defiance and exposure in Irish history. She was right, of course. As the media piled on, in the years that followed, the stories of the brutality of child sexual abuse by clergy would define the trajectory of the Irish state.
She spoke about trauma. She talked about the impact of childhood on the adult psyche. She railed against the architecture of misogyny and abuse that she believed permeated the Catholic Church, yet never abandoned her own personal spirituality.
O'Connor embraced her sexuality while also defying the aesthetic markers of femininity, preferring leather and denim jackets, boots, ripped jeans and T-shirts.
She was a punk, a counter-cultural hero, a mainstream success, a political radical, an iconoclast, a protest singer, a pop star, a rock icon, a folk and traditional music vocalist, a reggae aficionado, an emigrant, a mother, a poet, a person honed by society into becoming an activist, a priest, a Muslim, a feminist, an author, a sister, an actor, and to many, including myself, a hero whose source of inspiration was so steadfast that upon her passing, there is a visceral feeling of shock and sadness running through the country.
O'Connor may not have been someone whom everyone, at the time of her ascent, wanted, but she was certainly who we needed.
In the 21st Century crowds, there was a new energy, a joyous appreciation. Her 2021 memoir, “Rememberings”, reclaimed her narrative. She had won, because she had pursued an authentic life beyond the phoniness of the music industry structures, and she wanted everyone to know that.
Kathryn Ferguson's documentary that came the following year, Nothing Compares, (incidentally, streaming on Sky Documentaries from today!), pulled on this narrative, closing with scenes of Irish protest and progress on marriage equality and abortion rights, demonstrating how it was O'Connor's worldview that would ultimately be followed.
O'Connor had been right all along, and everyone knew it. Her resilience was a human manifestation of vindication. As Ireland became a more secular country, she was one of the leading voices for confronting the Catholic Church while maintaining a personal spirituality.
While her music has been ringing out from radio stations almost constantly since her passing, the stories being told are of her acts of solidarity. After her death, Robert Del Naja, lead singer of the band Massive Attack said: "The fire in her eyes made you understand that her activism was a soulful reflex and not a political gesture."
In recent days, people have recalled her attendance at reproductive rights marches in the early 1990s and her kindness towards the Traveller community, refugees, trans rights organisations, and the Dublin Aids Alliance.
She was part of a generation intent on dragging Ireland out of theocratic oppression, and towards a sense of empathy and liberation.
As she emerged, protested, sang, kicked up and never punched down, Irish society played that trick it does on so many - it embraced and rejected her, celebrated and demeaned her, appreciated and gaslit her.
She cared not about reputation, but about being heard. It is remarkable how her natural clarity of thought, something honed from being a deep thinker and reader, wrought confusion. And yet, in the bright light of the 21st Century, everything she was saying in the previous decades cuts through.
Her critics have long been silenced and the guilt that remains is theirs alone to carry.
What’s on this week?
Head & Eyes – LeLutka EvoX Avalon 3.1
Hairbase – Adoness : ShaveMe : lel EVO X : Basic : black
Face Skin – DeeTaleZ Skin *Hanna2* for LELEVOX Velour-SNOW
AO – BodyLanguage SLC Bento AO Mila plus Additional poses
Shape – DeeTaleZ Shape for Lelu EVOX Heads "Nora" - Tweaked!
Sweater – Miu, (Legal Insanity) - Flora sweater (Lara) Petite
Jeans – Miu, (Legal Insanity) - Flora denims (Lara)
Boots – : CULT : Avril - Maitreya
Pictures taken at the Death Row Designs, (DRD) Main Store
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