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Dr. Peter Rhee to be Grand Marshall in St. Patrick’s Day Parade on March 12

by on Mar. 08, 2011, under Life, Politics, Religion

Dr. Peter Rhee (Arizona Republic file photo)

The 2011 parade and Festival theme, “Everyday Heroes,” will center on local, national and world personalities that have made a positive difference in the lives of those they touch.

The parade will feature marchers including floats, military units, local dignitaries, media and entertainment personalities and civic, cultural and social groups. The Tucson parade has a 24-year history and provides a good time for the entire family.

This year’s Grand Marshal is Dr. Peter Rhee, UMC trauma surgeon.

We will also have representatives from TPD, TFD, several local hospitals, EMT’s, first responders, social workers, care workers, as well as scores of Tucson teachers represented. Come out and help the Irish community show support and recognize our wonderful hard working men and women of Tucson!

The Honorary Grand Marshal for this year’s parade is Father Eusebio Francisco Kino. This year marks the 300th anniversary of his passing. Father Kino was well known for his ability to create relationships between indigenous peoples and the religious institutions he represented. He fought hard for the rights of the various Sonoran tribes and their individual members. He opposed the slavery and compulsory hard labor in the silver mines. Kino also practiced other crafts and was an expert astronomer, mathematician and cartographer, who drew the first accurate maps of Pemeria Alta, the Gulf of California and Baja California. Truly an Everday Hero!

More info on Father Kino at www.padrekino.com. (Kino Heritage Society)

The Festival begins in Armory Park (220 South 5th Avenue) at 3:00 p.m. with live Irish music, dancers, entertainment, a children’s game area, and food and merchandise vendors. Irish organization, ethnic and cultural tables will be set up in the park as well. Festival Schedule TBA.

Portion of Festival Proceeds to benefit the Tucson Police Officers Association, Kids & Cops Christmas Program.

In memory of the more than one million Irish who died in the Potato Famine 150 years ago, marchers and spectators are asked to remember the hungry of Tucson. The Community Food Bank will accept canned food donations at the parade line-up
area, along the parade route and at Armory Park during the Festival.

The one hour Parade will begin at 5:30PM on 14th & Stone Avenue, wind through Downtown – Congress, Broadway and 6th Street- ending at Armory Park.

This years Parade and Festival coincides with Downtown Tucson’s 2nd Saturday Event. More info can be found at www.tucsonstpatricksday.com or www.2ndsaturdaysdowntown.com.

The Korean American community in Tucson is very proud of Dr. Rhee, who treated Congresswoman Gabrielle Giffords and the other shooting victims who were brought to University Medical Center on January 8. Click here for his bio on the UMC website. He is a Professor at the University of Arizona Medical School, and did his residency at the University of California, Irvine Medical Center (General Surgery).

Wear green for this parade & festival, and again on March 17, St. Patrick’s Day.



  • Carolyn Classen

    And here’s a more personal article in New York Times about Dr. Rhee, his family, and his recent fame:
    http://www.nytimes.com/2011/01/13/us/13rhee.html

  • Lisa

    The Festival actually begins at 3:00 p.m.! Enjoy!

    • Carolyn Classen

      ok Lisa, thanks, I’ve updated the festival time to 3 p.m. instead of 3:30 p.m.  More time to enjoy the Irish festivities.

  • http://hemorrhoidtreatmentreviewer.com/h-miracle/h-miracle-review/ Emmit Hollin

    This will be very touching to attend. On a lighter note – you gotta love St. Patrick’s day. For one day everyone is Irish!

    • Carolyn Classen

      Yes, it will be nice to see Dr. Rhee in the motorcade, though it will remind us of that tragedy of January 8, but also remember it is a celebration of Everyday Heroes.  Almost everyone can be “Irish” on St. Patrick’s Day, even me who spent a lot of time with an Irish Catholic family in Massachusetts & Connecticut (and later honeymooned in Ireland).

  • tiponeill

    >Everyone can be “Irish” on St. Patrick’s Day,
    Speaking as an ex-Irish, that really isn’t true.

    YOU CAN’T BE IRISH IF YOU’RE GAY
    We’ll be coming down Fifth Avenue upon St. Patty’s Day
    A great day for the Irish all across the U.S.A.
    But begorrah, what is this I hear, this cry and ballyhoo?
    There’s a bunch of queers that are getting us scared that say they’re Irish, too.

    Oh, God loves the Irish unless of course, you’re gay
    He won’t be wanting you marching upon St. Patty’s Day.
    You can be a bum, a bucket of scum, sure and that’s okay.
    But you can’t be Irish if you’re gay.

    Now the Order of Hibernians, those eminences gray
    Have delivered this pronouncement upon the Blessed Day
    Sure, a little bit of heaven found nestled in the sea
    But you’re going straight to hell for homosexuality

    Oh, God loves the Irish unless of course, you’re gay
    That was their pronouncement as the pipes began to play
    You can be a con a mafia don we’ll laugh it all away
    But you can’t be Irish if you’re gay.
    Well Just as Cardinal O’Connor is bound to set us straight
    It’s boyos like the Kennedys that made this country great
    We don’t allow no Peter pan a wearin’ of the Green
    And when we say  ”Up the Irish”, that isn’t what we mean.

    Oh, God loves the Irish as long as Men are Men
    Except of course, for leprechauns we’ve never been sure of them
    You can be a bum, a bucket of scum, sure and that’s okay
    But you can’t be Irish
    You can’t be Irish
    Don’t dare to be Irish if you’re gay

    • Carolyn Classen

      Sorry to hear this tiponeill.  Who wrote that poem? My Irish Catholic friends mentioned above had 5 brothers and 2 of them were/are gay.  (One died from AIDS in 1991.)

      • tiponeill

        S’ok – I never figured out what anyone was celebrating on St. Paddy’s day anyway. Green beer and cabbage as contributions to human civilization ?
        Song by Rob Carleson

  • Kathy

    I don’t know, tip, my ancestors are often represented  by a rainbow and a guy in a kelly green suit.  I wonder?…..   No, I guess no self respecting gay man would be caught in kelly green.  I plan to celebrate the gift of Guiness to the world.
    Maybe someday I’ll have wee grand babies who’ll grow up in a world where gay folks can be Irish and married and nobody notices a thing.

  • Carolyn Classen

    Reminder: St. Patrick’s Day parade tonight at 5:30 p.m. downtown.