Most Irish people do enjoy St. Patrick's Day.
St. Patrick (Patraigh) was the Catholic priest who first came to Ireland bringing the knowledge and faith of Jesus the Christ.
St. Patrick is the patron saint of Ireland.
Wherever you find Irish people or people with Irish ancestors, St. Patrick's Day will be celebrated. So all around the world it is celebrated.
It is Ireland's national holiday. Where there are Irish people or people of Irish descent, St. Patrick's day will be celebrated. St. Patrick is credited with bringing Christianity to Ireland, which is why he is so important to the Irish people.
Wherever there are Irish people in the world, St. Patrick's Day is celebrated. There are Irish people all over the world, including Paraguay. So there would be people in Paraguay celebrating St. Patrick's Day.
It is Ireland's national holiday. St. Patrick is the patron saint of Ireland, just as St. George and St. Andrew are the patron saints of England and Scotland, respectively. Irish-Americans make a bigger deal of St. Patrick's Day than the Irish in Ireland do.
Any body can celebrate St Patrick's Day if they wanted to but its more for Christians and Catholics, and Irish people in Ireland and around the world.
Irish food
Yes. St. Patrick is for all Irish people. The green traditions and orange traditions are both Christian and it was Christianity that St. Patrick preached in Ireland, so it is important to all Irish Christians.
Pope Celestine sent St. Patrick to Ireland.
A St. Patrick's Day parade was held in Brussels, the capital of Belgium, in 2009. As St. Patrick's Day is not a holiday in Belgium the actual parade was held on the 15th of March, which was a Sunday, two days before St. Patrick's Day. Wherever there are Irish people in the world, there are St. Patrick's Day celebrations and there are a lot of Irish people in Belgium.