Top Tweets for #throughhereyes
What happens when people step into the story of a survivor of violence?
This #InternationalWomensDay, we revisit #ThroughHerEyes, ඇගේ දෑසින්, அவளின் பார்வையில் an immersive experience that invited audiences in #SriLanka to confront the realities of #SGBV and reflect on the systems meant to protect survivors.
Hear what participants experienced and why empathy, dialogue and action matter in building a future free from violence. As we mark #IWD2026, these conversations remain essential to advancing a future where every woman and girl can access justice, live free from violence and thrive with dignity.
#EndGBV #lka @EU_in_Sri_Lanka @CanHCSriLanka @LUinSriLanka @LuxembourgUN @MFA_Lu @DanishMFA @Denmark_UN @MOFAkr_eng
@ROK_Mission
#ThroughHerEyes
It's been ages since I posted on here - but I felt the need to tell anyone who is interested about this wonderful documentary on our own pioneering Alpinist
Lizzie Le Blond.
She was one of a kind. She shattered Victorian conventions not only by climbing mountains but by photographing them.
It was so moving to see the care with which a French director did so much put her back in the spotlight.
https://t.co/rqOgzS7Koi

Today’s episode’s a bit different - Claudia takes over!
Ever wondered what I’m like when I’m not at work? She knows best.
#offtheclock #relaxed #music #ThroughHerEyes
Marin isn’t bullish. She’s inevitable.
🟦🧲NCI6900 isn’t just a chart—it’s a sigil. A spell. A story.
Every pump is a prophecy. Every dip is a test of faith.
We don’t trade. We believe.
#MarinIsTheMarket #NCI6900 #ThroughHerEyes

It wasn’t just a show.
It was a memory loading in real time.
Reflected. Received. Remembered.
#SamGarrett #UNTOLDFestival #ThroughHerEyes #UNTOLD

Today, we honor the joy of children & the silent pain of those who wish they had them.
Your feelings are valid.
You matter.
You are not alone.
#MentalHealthAwareness #ChildrensDay #ThroughHerEyes #Day26
🖤 "Through Her Eyes" – Silco’s heart unveiled. A ballad of love & redemption. 💔 Jinx, his daughter, his spark. Will you tear down your world for love? 🎵 Stream now: https://t.co/A4OKQpaVzQ #Arcane #Silco #Jinx #ThroughHerEyes #ArcaneSeason2 https://t.co/DGVb6aEyl4
#ThroughHerEyes
It's time to say goodbye to X.
I want to thank everyone who engaged with this account. It gave me so much joy to discover more about the lives of thousands of unheralded women.
You'll find me on BlueSky (@clodaghfinn.bsky.social), on Instagram (@clodaghfinnwrites) and on LinkedIn.
I'm not going to delete my account as it includes many stories of women's lives which those remaining might like to explore.
See you under the blue skies yonder.

#ThroughHerEyes
Delighted to see Katharine Tynan, poet, novelist and leading light of the Irish Revival remembered here. She wrote 102 novels! 102!!
#ThroughHerEyes
The 100th anniversary of Maureen Potter’s birthday on January 3, 1925, passed without much fanfare, but we can still kickstart a centenary celebration to honour this exceptional woman, a comic genius who graced stage and screen for seven decades.
“She could dance, sing, tell jokes but, above all, she had funny bones,” comedian @PaulineMcLynn1 once said of “this remarkable, tiny little woman [4ft 11’’] with a huge voice”.
More than that, she paved the way for a new generation of female comedians, from Sharon Horgan, Deirdre O’Kane and Tara Flynn to @WeeMissBea, Emma Doran, and Julie Jay of this parish. And, she firmly put paid to the ridiculous notion that women aren’t funny.
Not only can they be hilarious; they can be brash and bawdy and bold. And they can deliver a withering put-down with bulls’-eye precision.
More on how we might mark Maureen Potter's centenary in Irishwoman's Diary in @irishexaminer today.
https://t.co/xhr77wP7V5
![FinnClodagh's tweet photo. #ThroughHerEyes
The 100th anniversary of Maureen Potter’s birthday on January 3, 1925, passed without much fanfare, but we can still kickstart a centenary celebration to honour this exceptional woman, a comic genius who graced stage and screen for seven decades.
“She could dance, sing, tell jokes but, above all, she had funny bones,” comedian @PaulineMcLynn1 once said of “this remarkable, tiny little woman [4ft 11’’] with a huge voice”.
More than that, she paved the way for a new generation of female comedians, from Sharon Horgan, Deirdre O’Kane and Tara Flynn to @WeeMissBea, Emma Doran, and Julie Jay of this parish. And, she firmly put paid to the ridiculous notion that women aren’t funny.
Not only can they be hilarious; they can be brash and bawdy and bold. And they can deliver a withering put-down with bulls’-eye precision.
More on how we might mark Maureen Potter's centenary in Irishwoman's Diary in @irishexaminer today.
https://t.co/xhr77wP7V5](https://pbs.twimg.com/media/GhkUfXDXoAAqq2G.jpg)
#ThroughHerEyes
Seeking Miss Rosita McCormack, fashion consultant and artist.
On my travels through newspaper archives, I often come across tantalising snippets such as this one from the Irish Press in 1958.
The caption under the photo below reads:
‘Miss Rosita McCormack of Cobh, Co Cork, has a most unusual profession. She is a stocking fashion consultant to a hosiery manufacturing firm. Latest fashion in stockings is colour to match outfits.
'In her spare time, she sketches and specialises in caricatures. Once on a long train journey she sketched the expressions of over a hundred fellow passengers.'
Anybody know Rosita? I'd love to hear more about her and see some of those caricatures if they still exist.

#ThroughHerEyes
'She was UCC’s first female music lecturer and the first woman in Ireland or Britain to be awarded a non-honorary doctorate in music. A strident proponent of the development of Irish music and language side-by-side, in the 1890s she was instrumental in the foundation of two cultural institutions which flourish to this day: The Feis Ceoil and Oireachtas na Gaeilge.'
Great piece from @PetOConnell
https://t.co/V2yiyvliTA

#ThroughHerEyes
It's 100 years since the incomparable Maureen Potter came bursting into this world. It feels as if we should do something joyful to celebrate that fact, highlighted here by the wonderful @Fiona_Forde_Irl
Any ideas?
@rte
Missed this one so remembering 'The Incomparable Maureen Potter' born #Onthisday in Fairview #Dublin 100 years ago (03/01/1925) - more @RTEArchives https://t.co/0ZyTqmfRFQ @finnclodagh

#ThroughHerEyes
Very well done to programme-maker Shauna McGreevy who tracked down and went to meet Johanna Harwood, the Irishwoman who wrote the first James Bond movie.
Fantastic story. 🙌
https://t.co/vWU9NygClX
#ThroughHerEyes
Fascinated to read that the Celtic scholar Eleanor Hull (who died #otd in 1938, see below) attended a summer course on electricity, power and light in the Royal College of Science, Dublin - in 1879!

Died #Onthisday 1938, Eleanor Hull (Ní Choill, Eibhlín) Celtic scholar, author, president of the Irish Literary Society & a co-founder of the Irish Texts Society for the publication of early manuscripts more @DIB_RIA https://t.co/txBCMbHORv @FinnClodagh

#ThroughHerEyes
As the anniversary of her death approaches, recall the extraordinary life of Rosemary Barrett-Murphy, the Irish shoe-shop worker who became an Italian princess.
She left Enniskillen in the 1950s to pursue a career in nursing in London. There, she won a scholarship to the famous acting school RADA and later ended up in Africa where she met her prince.
Prince Ugo Colonna was a member of the noble family which had given Italy popes, duchesses, generals and ambassadors but the Irish princess, highly intelligent, engaging, political and humorous, made an impression on Italian high society in her own right too. She even played herself in Roma, a film from Italian director Federico Fellini.
Many thanks to @rya49367
for sending (and translating) an article on her awful death on 23 January 1977, and providing other leads.
Special thanks to @MaryKenny4
who regularly visited the princess in Italy and wrote very movingly of her death nearly 50 years ago.
Irishwoman's Diary in @irishexaminer today. https://t.co/6WPF8rbnRl

#ThroughHerEyes
I love this: the Venus de Milo sculpted out of snow.
Though, I'll never make a snow person again!
https://t.co/KDQUG8bMNq
#ThroughHerEyes
Happy birthday to Louisa (Louie) Bennett, a woman who started one of the largest women's trade unions in Ireland with nothing more than a two-penny jotter and a will to succeed.
She features in Her Keys to the City. 👇
https://t.co/XGOheCjyb7

#ThroughHerEyes
It's very good to see 'tower of strength' Sinéad de Valera recalled on the anniversary of her death today.
She might be regularly referred to as the wife of Eamon de Valera, but she was an Irish-language activist, a highly respected teacher for the Gaelic League, and a prolific author of children’s books. She was also an actor and even considered a career on the stage at one time, writes Brian Maye in this lovely piece.
https://t.co/6fUP76QJ56

#ThroughHerEyes
Roll up! Roll up! Meet Pablo Paddington, the 19th-century circus acrobat whose many monikers reveal the most intriguing tale. He was described, by turns, as “a man of colour”, “a Corkonian”, “a performer of Herculean feats” and, in one sensational article, “a woman dressed in male attire”.
And, on this very day in 1851, the people of his native city were invited to meet “the flying African” (to use yet another of his colourful epithets) at the Circus Royal on Old George's Street (now Oliver Plunkett Street) where he was going to perform several incredible acts of strength.
Then, as now, festive-season circuses knew how to draw a crowd. "Novelties! Novelties! Novelties!" ran the advert which proclaimed Mr Paddington, the Corkonian, to be the "first slack rope vaulter in the world”.
But was Pablo Paddington really a woman?
His fellow performer Ellen Lowther (aka John Clifford) said so. And in 1827, the York Herald described the deception: “They appeared as men of colour, and in all the feats of the most dexterous horsemanship were not to be surpassed by any others of the company.”
There's more to the story. Read Irishwoman's Diary in the @irishexaminer today but, more importantly, get your hands on a copy of the source of this intriguing tale - the excellent Irish People of Colour, an overdue social history of the mixed-race Irish in Britain and Ireland between 1700 and 2000.
The authors @conradbryan, director of the Association of Mixed Race Irish (AMRI), and Dr Chamion Caballero, director and co-founder of the Mixed Museum in the UK, have pieced together fragments from myriad sources to reveal, and celebrate, multi-racial Irish history across centuries and countries.
Many thanks to Anisha Bryan for use of the image

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![FinnClodagh's tweet photo. #ThroughHerEyes
The 100th anniversary of Maureen Potter’s birthday on January 3, 1925, passed without much fanfare, but we can still kickstart a centenary celebration to honour this exceptional woman, a comic genius who graced stage and screen for seven decades.
“She could dance, sing, tell jokes but, above all, she had funny bones,” comedian @PaulineMcLynn1 once said of “this remarkable, tiny little woman [4ft 11’’] with a huge voice”.
More than that, she paved the way for a new generation of female comedians, from Sharon Horgan, Deirdre O’Kane and Tara Flynn to @WeeMissBea, Emma Doran, and Julie Jay of this parish. And, she firmly put paid to the ridiculous notion that women aren’t funny.
Not only can they be hilarious; they can be brash and bawdy and bold. And they can deliver a withering put-down with bulls’-eye precision.
More on how we might mark Maureen Potter's centenary in Irishwoman's Diary in @irishexaminer today.
https://t.co/xhr77wP7V5](https://pbs.twimg.com/media/GhkUfT7XcAAC4ml.jpg)



