One of the main recommendations made by the All-Party Oireachtas Committee was that the National Day of Commemoration should be organised in a way which would reflect its national importance, which would encourage people of different traditions to participate and which would attract the interest and support of the public. The current service and ceremonies closely follow these recommendations. The military and religious ceremonies are held in the presence of the
President, the
Taoiseach and other members of the
Government of Ireland, members of the
Oireachtas, the
Council of State, the
Diplomatic Corps, the
Judiciary, relatives of 1916 leaders, next-of-kin of those who died on service with the UN, Northern Ireland representatives and a wide cross-section of the community, including ex-servicemen and ex-servicewomen. Representatives of the three divisions of the Defence Forces parade and render military honours. Since its inception, music has been provided by the combined bands of the several Army Commands and Dr.
Bernadette Greevy until her death in September 2008. The ceremonies begin with an
interfaith service, comprising prayers, hymns and readings by senior representatives of
the main Christian denominations and of the
Jewish and (since 1994)
Islamic faiths. The military ceremonies include an honour guard of the Cadet School, the laying of a wreath by the President on behalf of the people of Ireland,
Reveille, the raising of
the national flag and the playing of
the National Anthem. The National Day of Commemoration is, along with
Easter Sunday,
Easter Monday, and
Saint Patrick's Day, one of the days on which the
Department of the Taoiseach's
protocol section has advised all government buildings to fly
the national flag. The main 2012 ceremony moved from the Royal Hospital Kilmainham to the
Collins Barracks campus of the
National Museum of Ireland, as the Kilmainham site closed for renovation. Regional ceremonies are planned for
Sligo Town Hall;
Kilkenny Castle;
NUI Galway; Fitzgerald's Park,
Cork;
Limerick City Hall; and Bishops Palace Museum,
Waterford. The ceremony returned to the Royal Hospital in 2013. ==Footnotes==