<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?><rss xmlns:dc="http://purl.org/dc/elements/1.1/" xmlns:content="http://purl.org/rss/1.0/modules/content/" xmlns:atom="http://www.w3.org/2005/Atom" version="2.0"><channel><title><![CDATA[Irish Sportsman shatters sporting taboo by deciding to come out]]></title><description><![CDATA[<p dir="auto"><img src="http://tracker.gaytor.rent/bitbucket/donal_135461a.jpg" alt="" class=" img-fluid img-markdown" /></p>
<p dir="auto">Donal Og Cusack ~ age 32</p>
<p dir="auto">Donal Og Cusack, 32, is a solid gold star in the macho world of Irish hurling. Cork's goalkeeper<br />
for more than a decade, this son of a crane driver from the small town of Cloyne has rewritten the<br />
way the game is played, to the fury of many traditionalists.</p>
<p dir="auto">But this week the headlines had nothing to do with his prowess with the hurley. From the Irish<br />
Times to Twitter, the media were throbbing with the revelation that he had come out as gay - the<br />
first elite sportsperson in Ireland to do so.</p>
<p dir="auto">The news broke in the Irish Mail on Sunday. "This is who I am," he told the paper. "Whatever<br />
you feel about me or who I am, I've always been at peace with it." He tells the full story in his<br />
memoirs, entitled Come What May, and published tomorrow.</p>
<p dir="auto">"Since I was 13 or 14," he writes, "I knew I was a bit different. I hate labels though. That's the<br />
way I am. I live with it and I am fine with it. People close to me will tell you there were never<br />
any tears. There was never agony. I just know this thing."</p>
<p dir="auto">The reaction to the news was overwhelmingly positive. The Irish Independent reported that the<br />
goalkeeper had been "overwhelmed with messages of support" from team-mates, Cork supporters<br />
and hurling fans generally. But there were fears, in a country where homosexuality is often<br />
identified with paedophilia and where the Catholic church condemns it as evil, that plenty of<br />
people were quietly hostile.</p>
<p dir="auto">The Gaelic Athletics Association (GAA), the game's ruling body, was said to be concerned<br />
"about the possible reaction of a minority of fans". "The hostility towards him is usually more<br />
slyly expressed than the goodwill," wrote Cusack's co-author, Tom Humphries, in the Irish<br />
Times. The presenter of a radio programme on which the issue was discussed reported getting a<br />
lot of anti-homosexual texts.</p>
<p dir="auto">Although Cusack was widely praised for his courage, it was not exactly a free decision. Like the<br />
similar revelation by Boyzone star Stephen Gately, who died this month in Majorca, it was fear<br />
of being trashed in the tabloids that dictated his pre-emptive strike.</p>
<p dir="auto">In 2006 gossip about his sexuality forced Cusack to drop out of a team tour of South Africa and<br />
fly home to tell his family, fearing that the story was about to break in the media. That was when<br />
he had to break the news to his father. It was clearly a difficult conversation. "Now my father is a<br />
man who would fight for his family," Cusack writes in his memoirs, "but he's 63 years of age.<br />
He's a crane driver. Building sites can be cruel, hard places, he didn't need this. There was<br />
confusion in every line of his face."</p>
<p dir="auto">Bigoted fans have brought their prejudices to the games. At a match against rivals Tipperary in<br />
the summer, one of them began bawling homophobic abuse down a megaphone and kept it up for<br />
the rest of the game. It was not an isolated incident. "My mother doesn't go to games any more,"<br />
Cusack revealed this week. "The stress is too much. My sister Treasa has been deeply upset a few<br />
times by what she has heard. I hate what it does to those around me, especially when it doesn't<br />
hurt me at all."</p>
<p dir="auto">Cusack's revelation came during the week that Ireland passed another milestone: the first national<br />
conference of gay, lesbian and bisexual primary school teachers was held in Dublin. Opening the<br />
event, the novelist Colm Toibin said: "Any historian writing about the slow and often gnarled<br />
progress of liberty in Ireland will see today as a central moment in the assertion of personal<br />
freedom in our country."</p>
<p dir="auto">But as Fintan O'Toole commented in the Irish Times: "There are still tens of thousands of gay<br />
men and lesbians who are in hiding from violence, contempt and ignorance. That is not their<br />
shame - it is ours."</p>
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