There is no doubt whatsoever that it was the Siol Nan Gaidheal
Transcription
There is no doubt whatsoever that it was the Siol Nan Gaidheal
There is no doubt whatsoever that it was the Siol Nan Gaidheal campaign which prompted the Labour Party in Scotland to'take a stand on warrant sales. They saw the danger signals in the working class areas of Greenock and Port Glasgow as more and more people turned to and talked about Siol Nan Gaidheal. During our campaign we were approached by the Claimants Union, who wanted in on the act. As a result of this, Siol Nan Gaidheal set up an all party (including concerned organisations) meeting in the Glasgow rooms and it was attended by Dennis Canavan, who had put his motion to the Brit Parliament several weeks after Siol had promised to halt warrant sales. It is our opinion that the Labour Party are only using warrant sales for political expediency, just as they used devolution to thwart the SNP. Were they sincere they would have stopped them many years ago — after all, we have had something like 17 years of Labour government since the last war, yet they have done nothing about it. There is no record of Canavan raising the issue of warrant sales during the last term of Labour government. When warrant sales are finally halted throughout Scotland the people of Scotland will have only one organisation to th^nk- SIOL NAN GAIDHEAL. It was this, and the other campaigns launched by the local Comunn that brought people onto the street to watch us march past. For our part, we did not want them to forget that Siol are still very much around and also to encourage our own lapsed members that we are on the go again. I would like to take this opportunity to thank all those who made the affort to attend, particularly the colour party who were magnificent, and the drum corp who get better every time. P.S. There is to be a large CND march and rally in Greenock on August 7th, (Hiroshima Day) and Siol Nan Gaidheal hope to have a few special events organised. Therefore we are looking for the largest Siol turnout ever - eo mark it in your diary NOW. INVERCLYDE COMUNN Inverclyde Comunn received a lot of public support in their successful campaign to force the local district council to abandon an idea they had to pay off a large number of cleansing department staff plus making residents take their refuse to the pavement for collection. After attacks on kilted-scouts by anti-Scottish elements, the local comunn advised the zombies to think very carefully about what they were getting into - latest report is that the attacks have stopped! FALKIRK COMUNN Falkirk Comunn plan to hold a rally in Falkirk on 24th July, to commemorate Sir John de Graeme of Abercorn and Sir John Stewart of Bonkill, two of Wallace's generals at the Battle of Falkirk in 1298. Following on from Inverclyde Comunn, Falkirk has put a press release in the local paper saying they will prevent warrant sales in the Falkirk area. During the regional elections Falkirk Comunn printed leaflets, stickers etc. for campaigns throughout the country. For by-election material contact: SNG, 30 Newmarket Street, Falkirk. GLASGOW COMUNN Hamish MacQueen is collecting material on Scots firms and Scottish-made goods. Pass info to comunn organisers or direct to Hamish at 104 Hill Street, Glasgow. Glasgow Comunn have posters (see below) and various stickers available from the above address. "HM ENGLISH GOVERNMENT SERIOUSLY DAMAGES SCOTLAND'S HEALTH" "SCOTLAND FREE OR A DESERT" "BUAIDH NO BAS" "BRITISH IS ANTI-SCOTTISH" FOLLOW SNG - THE SPECIAL BRANCH DO" ' wi— b-w TI Ml TO — II IL_ hfl L.W J,fTU. LJ!\niHL*ll L/(J Price - £1.50 per 100 plus postage. Stickers - 30p per 100. DON MALLOY sfoL oao garobeaL a fraternal organisation For further information on SnG contact: Callum Miller National Secretary 129 Balfour Wynd Larkhall SCOTLAND THE LABOUR PARTY IS ANTI-SCOTTISH SIOL NAN GAIDHEAL ARE YOU PROSCOTTISH OR ANTISCOTTISH {LIKE IN QUISLING) i SAOR ALBA A â„¢"*s BUY SCOTTISH GOODS AND HELP SCOTTISH EMPLOYMENT. SIOL NAN GAIDHEAL J W Portrait Of A Patriot John Maclean is remembered in Scotland as one of the outstanding socialist pioneers, as the founder of the Scottish Labour College (now defunct), and as one of the main architects of the "Red Clyde". His parents had both been childhood victims of the Highland Clearances, his father Daniel having been born in Mull, and his mother Anne coming from Corpach situated at the foot of Ben Nevis.. So although he himself had been born in Pollockshaws, he had every right to use the pseudonym "Gael" when he wrote the Scottish Notes in the monthly magazine "Justice", from 1911 to1914. I V* I ft I His fight against the First World War (191418) won him international recognition - and also three prison sentences. His second and third trials condemned him to three and five years penal servitude in Peterhead convict prison, but he served only about 20 months of these sentences, as he was released both times after mass popular pressure. After the war finished, he received a royal pardon, which he refused to accept. His long defence speech at the 1918 trial contained some notable passages, including the famous "I am not herj, then, as the accused; I am here as the accuser of capitalism, dripping with blood from head to foot." His statement denying that he was a traitor is also worthy of note here: "I am no traitor to my country.. I stand loyal to my country because I stand loyal to the class which creates the wealth throughout the whole of the world." However, it is not this part of his political career which has revived his memory in recent years, and led to the formation of the John MacLean Society 14 years ago. It was his fight after the war, for Scottish independence which has created the interest. In 1919 he joined Ruraidh Erskine of Mar's National Committee, formed to fight for Scottish independence and Scottish national interests. At this period many Labour Party members were also members of the National Committee, but the majority favoured "Home Rule", that is, a Scottish Parliament for Scottish affairs, leaving important matters like defence and foreign policy to the Imperial Parliament at Westminster. This was not good enough for John MacLean. It was his profound understanding of British Imperialism which had inspired him to fight against the war, and it was this same understanding that led him to reject any policy which kept the imperialist status quo. In the summer of 1920 he issued a leaflet "All Hail! The Scottish Republic!" containing such statements as the following which drove home what he had maintained in his 1918 trial speech, that only the working class deserved loyalty, not the traitorous upper class: "The rebellions of 1715 and 1745 were natural reactions against the treacherous deed of 1707, but these unfortunate outbursts but gave the English the excuse and chance to subdue the Highland chiefs and then corrupt them with an English education at Oxford and Cambridge. Since 1790 the chiefs became Englishmen in outlook, and used their clansmen to defend English capitalism against the revolution started in Paris in 1789. Since the Napoleonic wars the Highland regiments have been used to defend the stolen lands of England all over the Globe, and have largely helped to extend the English empire." Later in 1920 he co-operated with Erskine of Mar in founding the Scots National League, but his imprisonment in May 1921 for three months, for his support for the locked-out miners, and then another imprisonment in October for one year because of his work in organising the Unemployed Workers' Movement, prevented any close association. However, I understand that some members of the League helped him with his campaign in the General Election of November 1922, when he stood as a socialist republican for the Gorbals constituency. He issued a long Election Address, almost a political education in itself, and with it he sent out the "All Hail!" leaflet. The Address contained the following statement - "I mean to fight for a Scottish worker's republic, in which all robbery shall cease. The break-up of every empire, including John Bull's, will make more easy the world revolution from capitalism to communism, and may help to avert a world war which might otherwise come before the workers were ready to take full possession of our planet." It should be carefully noted that by communism he did not mean what it came to mean in Russia under Stalin. What he meant by communism is expressed in the "All Hail!" leaflet - SCOTLAND MUST AGAIN HAVE INDEPENDENCE JOHN MACLEAN "Scotland must again have independence, but not to be ruled by traitor kings or chiefs, lawyers and politicians. The communism of the clans must be established on a modern basis. Scotland must therefore work itself into a communism embracing the whole country as a unit. The country must have one clan, as it were --a united people working in co-operation and co-operatively using the wealth that is created.' THE BATTLEPOST OF THE POOR In memory of John Maclean Born in Pollockshaws on 24 August 1879, And died there on 30 November, 1923. Famous pioneer of working class education, He forged the Scottish link in the Golden Chain of World Socialism. On 2nd December 1973, a large crowd gathered in Pollockshaws, a Glasgow suburb, to witness the unveiling of a cairn built to commemorate the fiftieth anniversary pf the death of John Maclean, and bearing the above inscription. The ceremony began very movingly with the recitation by Dolina McLennan of Sorley Maclean's beautiful poem on John Maclean: CLAN GHILL-EAIN Chan e iasdan a bhasaich ann a ardan Imbhir-Cheitein, dh'aindeoin gaisge is uabhair, ceann uachdrach ar sgeula; ach esan bha 'n Glaschu, ursann-chatha nam feumach, Iain mor MacGill-Eain, ceann is feitheam ar sgeula. CLAN MACLEAN Early in 1923 he founded the Scottish Workers' Republican Party, but the.hardships suffered during his imprisonments had taken their toll, and he died on St Andrew's Day 1923, aged only 44. But he had been intending to stand as a Scottish Workers' Republican Party candidate in the December 1923 General Election, and one week before he died he wrote his Election Address - another comprehensive statement, with the following important passage: "The social revolution is possible sooner in Scotland than in England. Scottish separation is part of the process of England's imperial disintegration and is a help towards the ultimate triumph of the workers of the world." NAN MILTON Not they who died in the hauteur of Inverkeithing, in spite of valour and pride, the high head of our story, but he who was in Glasgow the battlepost of the poor, great John Maclean, the top and hem of our story. Information from: Nan Milton Atholl Cottage Bathgate Road Westfield West Lothian 8 Quisling of the Month Sir, L O N D O N S'.VIA OAA 5th April 1932. Dear I'r. M i l l e r , l-'r. Steel has asked ae to thank you for your letter of 31st !-?arch announcing his success in ths Quisling of the Month crapetiticn. He is deeply conscious of this great honour. Yours sincerely, | a I' I I Miss T. Horton. Private Secretary. Gallum Miller, Esq., National Secretary, Siol nan Gaidheal, 129 Sal four Wynd, Larkhali. Lanarkshire '19 2L T. DAVID STEEL HAS ACKNOWLEDGED THAT HE IS A QUISLING! He was chosen, unanimously, at an AAC meeting held in Falkirk - it was agreed that he had sold his party and his (ex) country down the drain by his decisions to align himself with the English SOP. This was in the false belief that he would be a member and possible leader of a future English government. The sayings of Burns still ring true "we were bought and sold for English gold" - in this case, HE was bought and sold for personal glory. WE WERE DELIGHTED TO NOTE THAT THE GENERAL Assembly of the Church of Scotland has intimated that the correct title in Scotland of the eldest son of the sovereign is 'Duke of Rothesay'. We were horrified, however to read the following sentence in the loyal message of the Synod of the Free Presbyterian Church: "We bewail the fact that the advice tendered by Your Majesty's Ministers with respect to the Pope's visit appears to contradict the Bill of Rights, which is the cornerstone of our Protestant Constitution, and the guarantee of our civil and religious liberties." Are the Fathers and Brethern of the Free Presbyterian Church, a body of presumably highly-educated men, unaware that the Bill of Rights is an English document? The corresponding Scottish one is the Claim of Right! I should like to thank the editorial staff of "Firinn Albannach" for their very interesting and informative magazine. I appreciated the balanced tone of its editorial though I must say that I thought the author of the article on the Hillhead by-election was a little too venomous in his attacks. I have been a regular reader of the Scots Independent for many years and I must say that I preferred it when it was a weekly. That, of course, is where the Independence movement is falling down. We get very shabby treatment from the media. Those of us who have read "The Douglas Affair" will remember that one of James Douglas's first moves was to start a daily newspaper. It is not surprising that the cause of independence is moving so slowly when we remember that the average Scot reads the "Daily Record" or the "Scottish (sic) Daily Express", and, on Sunday, the "Sunday Post", the product of Europe's largest purveyors of kitsch and schmaltz. I know that we cannot do very much about the TV at the moment but why did the BBC choose to serialise "Scotch on the Rocks", written by two collaborators, one of whom is now a minister in the present government. Still, wait until we have the SBC and a real STV! With best wishes ISABEL PURNELL Sir, A few weeks ago I decided to go away for the weekend. I phoned the Tourist Information Office in the town I wanted to visit, but got no reply. I then phoned the Tourist Information Office in the principal town of the region. An English voice answered. I explained what I wanted, addresses for Bed and Breakfast and asked to be sent a brochure. I was told that that was impossible because the girl who did the mail only came in on Fridays. I was then given three names, addresses and telephone numbers. The first call was answered by an English accent. So was the second. In addition, this was two miles from the town and not on a bus route. From the third (who incidentally had a Scots surname) I got the 'Number Unobtainable' signal. I found out the reason next day when I phoned the local Tourist Office where a Scots voice answered. I had been given the right number but the wrong exchange. Also it was six miles away and I would have had to walk three miles to get a bus. With over three hundred thousand unemployed persons in Scotland, why should we have to put up with imported inefficiency? W.A.MILNE