Ahakista Memorial Of The Air India Crash - Geograph
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Ahakista ( or ''Áth an Chiste'') is located approximately halfway along the Sheep's Head peninsula between
Durrus Durrus () is a village and civil parish in West Cork in Ireland. It is situated from Bantry in County Cork, at the head of the Sheep's Head and the Mizen Head peninsulas. Durrus is on the Wild Atlantic Way driving route which spans the ...
and Kilcrohane in County Cork, Ireland. It is a wooded coastal village with a deep and sheltered harbour.


History


Archaeology

There is a
stone circle A stone circle is a ring of standing stones. Most are found in Northwestern Europe – especially in Britain, Ireland, and Brittany – and typically date from the Late Neolithic and Early Bronze Age, with most being built from 3000 BC. The be ...
in the area at Gorteanish that dates to the Bronze Age (2200 – 600 B.C.).


Air India disaster

The Air India Memorial Garden is located at Ahakista, and each June the local community remembers the terrorist attack of 1985 that resulted in the deaths of over 300 people. On Sunday 23 June 1985 just after 08:00 in the morning, an Air India
Boeing 747 The Boeing 747 is a large, long-range wide-body airliner designed and manufactured by Boeing Commercial Airplanes in the United States between 1968 and 2022. After introducing the 707 in October 1958, Pan Am wanted a jet times its size, t ...
, flying from Canada to India with 329 people on board, was approaching the southwest coast of Ireland when it was blown apart by a bomb, killing everyone on board. In the days that followed, an extensive search was undertaken. Only about half the bodies were ever recovered, and they were brought to Cork Regional Hospital. Shortly afterwards, many relatives of the dead flew from India and Canada and travelled by bus to be near to the place where their loved ones died. They stopped at Ahakista and threw wreaths into the sea. They expressed a wish that a memorial be erected to commemorate the disaster, and Cork County Council subsequently purchased the site and built a memorial. It was officially opened on 23 June 1986 at a ceremony attended by the Foreign Ministers of Ireland, India and Canada. A commemoration is held each year on 23 June at 08:00. A sundial, designed by Cork sculptor, Ken Thompson, is the focal point of the garden and the sun hits the dial at the time of the explosion.


Amenities

Ahakista has a church and two pubs – both with beer gardens and sea views. One pub is known as the 'tin pub'. Other amenities include a wine shop, two Bed and Breakfasts, several self-catering accommodations (two of which are known as "Ahakista Escape") and a garden centre. There is a small sandy beach, and the
Sheep's Head Way Sheep's Head, also known as Muntervary ( ga, Rinn Mhuintir Bháire), is the headland at the end of the Sheep's Head peninsula situated between Bantry Bay and Dunmanus Bay in County Cork, Ireland. The peninsula is popular with walkers, an ...
marked trail crosses through the village. In August 2008 this Walkway became one of the first four publicly funded walkways in Ireland – following agreement between the Department of Rural Affairs and the Irish Farmers Association.


Schools

Ahakista has a primary school and there is daily transportation to secondary schools in Bantry. The local primary school is called Rusnachara National School, and had 26 pupils as of 2013.


Transport

There is a bus service to Bantry three days per week, and the nearest major airport is Cork Airport.


Regatta

The sheltered deep water harbour is home to both fishing boats and pleasure craft and the annual Ahakista Regatta is held each August bank holiday weekend.


People

* Wolf Mankowitz (writer, playwright and screenwriter) lived for many years in Ahakista, till his death in 1998The Writers Directory. London 1973 * Noel Streatfeild (author) spent many summers in Ahakista. The screen version of her children's book "The Growing Summer" (also published as "The Magic Summer") was filmed on the peninsula (Ahakista, Kilcrohane) and in Bantry. Several scenes were shot in the actual places she had envisaged when writing the book. London Weekend Television produced the six-episode serial in 1969, starring Wendy Hiller as Aunt Dymphna. The film won a silver medal at the 1969 Venice Film Festival. * Kei Pilz, Japanese chef. * Graham Norton (comedian and talk show host) owns a holiday home with a private beach in Ahakista which overlooks the harbour and
Dunmanus Bay Dunmanus Bay is a bay in County Cork, Ireland. The bay lies between Mizen Head to the south and Sheep's Head to the north with the small village of Durrus at the head of the bay. The bay is out of the main tidal flow with no significant rivers ...
.


See also

* List of towns and villages in Ireland


Notes and references

{{Use Irish English, date=April 2020 Towns and villages in County Cork