Holy tree/bush, Killeighter, Co. Kildare
Co. Kildare |
Holy Sites & Wells
At the northern edge of a graveyard in Killeighter, County Kildare, a mature ash tree carries an accumulation of small devotional objects tied to its branches: rosary beads, holy medals, scapulars, St Patrick's Day badges, and little crosses woven from twigs. The ash is not remarkable for its size or age in isolation, but for what people have quietly been leaving on it, presumably for a very long time.
The tree stands immediately south of a holy well, and the pairing is entirely in keeping with an old pattern across rural Ireland, where wells regarded as sacred were frequently accompanied by a nearby tree onto which visitors would tie rags, beads, or other small offerings after completing whatever ritual the well demanded. Such trees are sometimes called rag trees or clootie trees, and the custom likely predates Christianity, though the objects left at Killeighter are thoroughly Catholic in character. Scapulars are small pieces of cloth worn as a form of devotional garment, while holy medals typically bear images of saints or the Virgin Mary. That St Patrick's Day badges appear among the offerings suggests the tree continues to receive visitors in the present, not merely in some dimly recalled past. The well and the tree sit at the northern boundary of a graveyard, which adds another layer to the site's gravity; the proximity of the dead to a place of continuing popular devotion is not unusual in Irish sacred landscapes, but it gives the whole arrangement a particular quiet density.