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Denise a “leading light” in community 29.03.12

by Linda McGrory

A YOUNG mother who once feared telling her new neighbours she was a Traveller has become a "leading light" among them.
Denise Delaney (32) moved into the brand new Earlsfort council housing estate on the outskirts of Buncrana, with her husband and their three children five years ago.
She has since set up a residents' association for the estate’s 40 families and, as chairperson, has secured new picnic benches for the green, goalposts and sandboxes for the children, better traffic calming measures and tree planting. She designed the stone carved name sign at the estate’s entrance and has set up an Earlsfort Facebook page to advertise litter collections and other communal events.
Softly-spoken Denise, who grew up in Co Mayo, holds regular residents' association meetings at her kitchen table but insists it's all "a collective effort". As the only Travellers on the new estate, Denise was wary at first of being stereotyped.
"When I first moved in nobody asked was I a Traveller and I didn't say. We all got to know each other first. Once I knew they liked and appreciated me for who I was, I was more comfortable telling them," said Denise.
"It's judging the person first, not the cover. We are all equal in my eyes."
Denise Delaney outside her Earlsfort home at one of the new picnic benches.
Denise left school at 16, married at 18, and moved permanently to Donegal where she first visited as a child via caravan in summer. She has since undertaken a two-year community health course with the Donegal Travellers' Project whose leaders singled her out for special praise earlier this month on International Women's Day.
Her efforts have also made a strong impression on local councillors as well as staff in Buncrana Town Council.
Cllr Rena Donaghey said: "Denise is working really, really hard. She is one of the leading lights in that community."
Buncrana town engineer, Donal Walker, said the Earlsfort families were model local authority residents.
"If there's something I haven't done that I promised to do, (Denise) will go around it in a nice way. She'll give me a wee dig but in a subtle manner," he quipped. One Earlsfort neighbour said her family home was overcrowded but, because of Denise, she wouldn’t be moving.
The young mother, whose children are 12, 10, and six, puts her neighbourhood pride down to a negative experience growing up. "I grew up in a horrible estate - it didn't look nice or feel nice. Here, my kids are playing with all their friends who don't judge them.
“I don't hide who I am. Everyone knows who I am and what I am. It's nice to be appreciated for who I am instead of pretending to be someone else. I have great support here, we make a good team," she added.
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