here - Connolly Association
Transcription
here - Connolly Association
- 9 FED 1937 CONFERE#§¥ a The building trade and the Irish Community" Speakers; No. 516 30p FEBRUARY 1987 GEORGE HENDERSON (ITGWU) ERIC FLEMMING (ITGWU) TOM MERNAGH (UCATT) SINN FEIN SENDS UP 27 CANDIDATES Saturday, 21 March 2 pm MARCHMONT STREET CENTRE, WC1 LAST COPY FOR NEXT ISSUE FEBRUARY 18 TORIES BUG IRISH EMBASSY IS Mrs Thatcher going off her head? That arrogant, assertive, alwaysdead-right manner might be thought a symptom of megalomania. But her obsession with spying might more betoken paranoia. Let the American-owned press hush them up as much as they can, spy scandals seem lined up to batter the doors of the editors' offices. BUT THE GAG REMAINS THE QUEEREST ELECTION YET It seems she tTugged the Irish Embassy! So letters that were really confidential had to be sent by special courier. THE Irish General Election of February 1987 bids fair to be the queerest in the history of the state* Yet everybody seems to agree that the winner will be Fianna Fail, which is expected to have a small overall majority. D o you remember that great outcry about bugging the American Embassy in Moscow by sprinkling purple powder round the place? Well Mrs Thatcher's bugs worked. She used them during the negotiations for the Anglo-Irish agreement. N o wonder she got everything she wanted. She knew the weakness of the Irish team. There was no purple powder, but wouldn't you expect a bit of an outcry. There was none. Dr Fitzgerald did not even protest or request that the practice be suspended. Can you imagine such spineless sycophancy? When challenged he tried to brush it aside. Sure, everybody does it. "I never pick up a telephone without taking it for granted it's tapped." Wise man for once. But why all the fuss when Mr Haughey (in our opinion quite mistakenly) tapped the lines of two journalists w h o successfully sued the government? The Labour MP who asked the Prime Minister whether any communication had been received about the phone-tapping replied there had not. He described her manner as "arrogant and provocative." m If it doesn't, then the queerness will show up. For there are two new factors. First the Progressive Democrats, a breakaway from Fianna Fail, but already showing themselves more reactionary and West-British in their outlook than Fine Gael. Second, Sinn Fein are sending up twenty-seven candidates, they admit they don't expect to win. Again if they do, they will take their INFLUENCES It would be i m a g i n e d that the government would have welcomed any step that brought the advocates o f physical force closer to the s o f t e n i n g influences of purely political life. On the contrary, the gag remains. They are not to be allowed on television, and a body dedicated to the increase o f women's representation in Parliament has refused to see the o n e Sinn Fein w o m a n candidate. S o the election is rigged from the start. And this is a purely Fine G a e l decision. F i a n n a Fail would have let them speak. The thin excuse that men w h o advocate violence must be THIS TIME THEY PROTESTED the agreement by saying he would I F there's one classification of a talk with the British Government if m a n you couldn't watch, it's an it was suspended. English Tory. S o Mr King thought he saw an They're prepared to try anything opportunity when the Irish General on. Election looked like interrupting And one of the best at it, albeit a the Anglo-Irish talks at bit clumsy betimes, is Mr Tom King governmental level. o f the six-county office. Remember when he said the "There you are," he said, "there's Anglo-Irish Agreement meant that your suspension. Come into my partition was here for all time? It parlour." w a s most unneighbourly when Dr Of course he was only trying to fool Fitzgerald was pretending as hard , Paisley, or help Paisley fool his a s he could that the agreement (like followers. But he made it more difficult the Single European Act) didn't for Dr Fitzgerald to fool the electorate m e a n what it said. he was facing In an election. Since then he's been at it again. They'll not stand firm when there's a M r Paisley, trying to wriggle out of principle inwrtfed. Bat they chase their his strait-jacket, clim&d down hrarf and cheese like a cat a mouse, from demanding the abrogation of T h , s , 1 m e ^ r e w a s • > silenced doesn't hold water. Is it proposed to silence President Reagan w h o mines the waters o f Nicaragua, asks a thousand million for forcible overthrow o f the elected government of Nicaragua, and is currently preparing the explosion of a war that will end civilisation? Is it proposed to silence Mrs Thatcher for her Falklands adventure, or sending police to kick in the d o o r of Mr D u n c a n Campbell? For thai matter Dr Fitzgerald is a fair candidate for silencing h i m s e l f , f o r he s i g n e d an agreement that abandoned the nationalists o f the north leaving them no political road to salvation. Moreover he did it for the purpose o f bringing the republic into N A T O by way o f the Single European Treaty Dr Crotty has had the courage to challenge. It is natural that people s h o u l d wonder at the Sihn Fein decision. But there is o n e vital fact. While people like Dr Fitzgerald are s o brazenly and successfully selling their country to the international military-financial machine, it is URGENTLY WANTED duplicator, cheap and good, preferably Roneo or Gestetner, for use of the C o n n o l l y A s s o c i a t i o n , in Liverpool. Can be collected in Liverpool/Manchester areas. Maybe you know an office that is. going over to the new technology. A SECONDHAND surely right that republicans should speak out against it. H o w can they d o so effectively if they ignore the o n e place where their speeches cannot be gagged? For if any o f them are returned RTE will be unable to refuse them. And Fianna Fail is not so safe a bet that a lew first preferences g i v e n t o the left mightn't concentrate their minds a bit. Dr Fitzgerald is seen as such a total wash-out that Mr Haughey can confidently g o to the country and say he won't promise anything! If, and this is a possible danger, Sinn Fein deputies gel involved in European politics by acceptance of the C o m m o n Market and suchlike, Mr O'Bradaigh's group may find themselves in the position of a national insurance policy. The Irish electoral system is such that Sinn Fein can g o boldly forward without the fear, o f splitting the Fianna Fail vote, simply by asking their supporters to give their second preferences to Fianna Fail. At this time it is not yet clear whether the CPI will be sending up candidates. I f t h e y d o , a n d they are o f course o p p o s e d to physical force in the six county contcxt, they are likely to be the only ones apart from Sinn Fein w h o put s o m e real issues in front o.f the people. For the other parties offer merely variants o f one basic policy, and that is based on the paranunmicy o f big business. While the Fianna Fail variant may be the most attractive, we can say definitely that the issues before the country in this election, will still be there in the next. Nearer to the police state T H E police raid o n the G l a s g o w premises of the B B C exposes the shallow fraud that Britain is a democracy. They descended in forcc on the premises, dragged technicians out o f their beds in the middle o f the night and hauled them o f f to work. They then seized vanloads of documents and m a d e off with the lot. What's the purpose? Essentially that of Hitler's stormtroopers — intimidation, the essence of the police state. What's m o r e , internment is coming. The g o v e r n m e n t intends to increase the length of time a suspect can be held without charge to 28 days. W i t h o u t a doubt this will be extended at a later date. But as it then will be, only twelve remands will be needed to make a year. As the "Irish Democrat" warned when British publicopinion accepted the emergency measures introduced in Northern Ireland, they were automatically bringing these s a m e things u p o n themselves. THERE will be a special meeting at the Star Club, Carlton Place, at 3 pm on Sunday, 8th February. Its general purpose is to proceed with the reorganization of the Connolly Association branch, and particularly to discuss the best way to celebrate 's night. Page Two IRISH DEMOCRAT February 1987 GUILDFORD 4 From D O N A L L M a c C R A I T H THE end of an era in Irish dancing in Kilburn was marked at the Irish Centre in Camden when Ted Kavanagh - who for years taught a weekly class in Carlton I ale, and will he remembered as one of the greatest Irish dance tutors of all time • gracefully ho wed out. To the evening of tribute to him came farmer pupils, fellow-teachers and numerous friends They came from all over Britain and some from his native Derry. The evening was organised by Margaret Troy, who takes over Ted's school, and who will run it under her own name. Ted Kavanagh first learned his Irish dancing in Derry from Nellie Sweeney and then went on to win numerous titles, PADDINGTON \ HI S^ V ' « Near is e x p e c t e d h\ Parents' \i. foundation, the registered charity which was formed last year by a local Irish community worker to assist parents of children in council care and which distributed to>s and food to OUT a hundred local f a m i l i e s at ( hristmas. including becoming the first Ulster dancer to take an all-Ireland crown. HE came to London in 1952 and founded his school, which went on to establish an unmatched record • winning the seniorfigure dancing championship of Britain for 21 consecutive years. ft hen Ted Kavanagh School w< n the world senior figure championshi/, the world senior ceili championship and the world juniorfigure championship - as well as innumerable all-Britain and allIreland titles. Among his former pupils are Marion Kennedy and her brother Seamus, of Shirland Road, Paddington, who are both qualified dancing teachers with regular classes at various venues in north-west London. KILBURN BRENT FEIS IHL Kilburn-based Innisf/ee H o u s i n g A s s o c i a t i o n , w h i c h Mas started |list over a y e a r a g o . is a l r e a d y s h o w i n g that by w o r k i n g together and pooling their r e s o u r c e s . Irish p e o p l e c a n b e g i n to t a c k l e t h e h o u s i n g p r o b l e m s o f their c o m m u n i t y in a p r a c t i c a l a n d e f f e c t i v c way- THERE is tremendous excitement among the many Irish dancing schools in north-west London as the young pupils practice their steps for the premier event of the competition calender - Brent Feis, the Irish Dancing section of the annua! Brent Festival - which opens at Brent Town Hall in Wembley next Friday evening IJanuary 16). Mthough based in the City of \V e s t m i n s t e r , the charity T h i s w a s stated b \ Coluin e nde a \ o u rs to cover the the Longford-born surrounding a r e a s of north-west M o l o n e y , c h a i r m a n o f Brent Irish A d v i s o r y London. f o u n d e r Anthony D o n l a n , Service, on the o p e n i n g of of f o u r t h \ \ e n u e , Q u e e n ' s Park, lnnisf'ree's n e w hostel w h i c h he was born in M u l l a g h , f u n i s , C o . said w a s a small tribute t o t h e ( lare and has liud in the great w o r k of the late C a t h e r i n e Paddin^ton area for more than 20 C o l e m a n a l t e r w h o m the h o s t e l in uars. C n c k l e w o o d is n a m e d . N L V E R m the history o f L o n d o n Mr D o n l a n , who is the f a t h e r of has there b e e n a s m u c h Irish two children in the c a r e of " W e f eci s a d that she c a n n o t be activity a s there is t o d a y . Westminster S o c i a l S e r v i c e s for here w i t h us today to s e e her the past X u a r s , said: " P a r e n t s ' Aid T h i s is e x e m p l i f i e d b y t h e ' T r i s h e f f o r t s c o m e to fruition, b u t w e first started a s a group of people V o i c e " , o r g a n o f the H a r i n g e y will c o n t i n u e to p r o v i d e vital like me w h o have children in c a r e I B R G w h i c h m e e t s every f o r t n i g h t assistance with housing to b o t h and felt that they needed the o n T u e s d a y e v e n i n g s at the new a r r i v a l s a n d to t h o s e w h o support and help of others in the have b e e n resident here f o r a l o n g T o t t e n h a m C o m* m u n i t v Project. same plight." time, a n d t o highlight their u n m e t T his m a g a z i n e lists the activities " I he group h a s since been j o i n e d n e e d s . " he said. o f the Irish in Britain H i s t o r y In others, like d o c t o r s and l a w y e r s , Centre, t h e L a b o u r C o m m i t t e e o n who do not have children in c a r e Ireland, t h e L o n d o n B i r m i n g h a m themselves, but w h o s y m p a t h i s e Six C a m p a i g n , the G u i l d f o r d with our aims. T h e group first c a m e Four C a m p a i g n , the Irish in into being b e c a u s e of the need FA THEIR Gilmore, Director of Islington Project, Haringey which e \ i s t s in north-west London the Irish Chaplaincy in Britain, has L a b o u r Party Irish S e c t i o n a n d with a total of nearly 2,000 children announced a star-studded line-up the Irish Pensioners Action in care." for the annual fundraising St. Group. IRISH LIFE IN HARINGEY CONCERT Patrick's Festival Concert to he held at the Wembley Conference Centre on March 7th, and he M.ASDES-B ASED Irish advised that early hooking is herbalist Joan O'Brien is offering advisable. new training opportunities to young The artistes include singer people at her [Suture's Own Daniel () 'Donnell and his band; the Institute of SaturaI Health, Beauty Morrisseys ballad and folk group; and Sutrition which has been Sean () Se, the Cork tenor; Mary operating for ten years and recently opened its new and larger premises Hegarty, soprano; the Galwayat Johnston House. Coronation hased Shaskeen traditional group; Road, Park Royal NU10 (961 Irish dancers; and comedian Brendan Blake as compere. For XI59) information phone 263 1477. TRAINING NORTHERN CONFERENCE "The Irish question and the British Labour movement" 13 APRIL, 1987 Socialist Club, Bolton, Lanes. There is a l s o a " S t o p searches c a m p a i g n . " strip W h e t h e r t h e I B R G is wise to s u b d i v i d e its a c t i v i t i e s t o o m u c h is something worth thinking about, but n o d o u b t t h e y h a v e the m e a n s of co-ordination. H a r i n g e y I B R G is f u n d e d bv Haringey B o r o u g h Council, and "Irish V o i c e " is c o n t a c t a b l e at H o r n s e y L i b r a r y , H a n n g e y Park, London. N8. telephone 348-3351, e x t e n s i o n 3. CONGRATULATIONS to Tottenham UCATT who organised a deputation to the Irish Embassy on the subject of the imprisonment of the Birmingham si\ and the Guildford Four. The case of the Birmingham six is now sub-judice and the outcome is anxiously awaited. It is to be hoped there will be no undue dela\ The building w orkers handed in a letter to the Ambassador which said of the Tory Home Secretary Mr Douglas Hurd: "His ruthless disregard for justice show n in the eases of the Guildford Tour and the Maguire family framed and jailed for CHARLES DONNELLY crimes they could nor have commuted. .. lie therefore call AMOSG the heaviest losses on you to speak out in the name in the war for the defence of the of the innocent and for justice." Spanish Republic was that of the Prominent in the depuation w as Tyrone-born poet Charles Secretary Mr Andy Higgins, well Donnelley. know n in the Connolly Association Active in the Republican and Irish community. Congress in Dublin he was unable to obtain employment and emigrated to London. There, together with Leslie Daiken and Ewart Milne, he LONDON members of the founded "Irish Front" the foreC o n n o l l y Association went to runner of the "Irish Democrat." the H o u s e of C o m m o n s to lobby ' Repeal PTA their M P s on January 28th. T hey were protesting at the failure o f the Home Secretary to allow the Guildford four to appeal against conviction for c r i m e s to which other p e o p l e had confessed. T h e y were a l s o d e m a n d i n g the | repeal o f the Prevention of Terrorism Act a n d other e m e r g e n c y legislation which w a s only necessitated by a situation the Tories created for themselves. A T a w e l l - a t t e n d e d m e e t i n g in t h e Friends' H o u s e , E u s t o n R o a d , L o n d o n , M r Michael O ' R i o r d a n s p o k e o f t h e Irish c o n t i n g e n t o f the I n t e r n a t i o n a l Brigade w h i c h went t o f i g h t for the S p a n i s h Republic fifty years a g o in January 1937. IRISH WOMEN S u p p o r t i n g speakers w e r e M r Bill A l e x a n d e r a n d Mr B o b D o y l e . THE first ever Irish Women's Conference in London was organised around the theme of "Our experience of emigration" the second following on from this with the title "Living in England." Dr F l a n n C a m p b e l l w a s in t h e chair. The following evening Mr O ' R i o r d a n s p o k e in L i v e r p o o l together with Liverpool-Irish international Brigader M r F r a n k Deegan. T h e chairman w a s M r Bernard M o r g a n . The third which takes place on Saturday February 14th, 1987 will concentrate on the question of identity. There is a wide range of Irish women's groups operating in London and it is planned to give each group an opportunity to address the conference. The conference begins at 10am. and continues until 5.30pm. followed by a play "Only the rivers run free" and then a Ceili with The Sheclas. The venue is the Albany Theatre. Douglas Way. Deptford SE8. Lunch, tea and coffee and a creche are provided, and further details are obtainable from Irish Women's Centre, 59 Stoke Newington Church Street. London N.16.. telephone 249-7318. CONNOLLY ASSOCIATION LONDON MEMBERS' MEETING SATURDAY, 14 FEBRUARY :: 2 30 pm MARCHMONT ST COMMUNITY CENTRE BOOK THE DATE SPANISH WAR REMEMBERED TO DISCUSS REORGANISATION Mr O ' R i o r d a n said t h a t a p a r t from h i m s e l f there were o n l y t w o survivors f r o m the S p a n i s h w a r left in Ireland. Sustentation Fund WF. D I D N ' T need Donal Kennedy in the bookshop, fresh from his C h r i s t m a s adventures with pipes and drains. For D i d n ' t the freeze-up burst the pipes in the p r e m i s e s over our heads and put the book-shop k n e e deep. Having quite a few building workers in t h e Connolly Association it wasn't long b e f o r e John Macl.aughlin. Michael Keane, a n d a few others sawed their way into the cellar l o cut the water off and see nobody got electrocuted. C asualties? Just a few books, though it didn't do Paddy Bond's nerves any good But we hope the pipes of our r e a d e r s generosity will do the same and the donations will gush out till we're knee-deep in five pounds notes instead of aqua p u r a . In the pipeline is publication of J o h n Boyd's r e m a r k a b l e pamphlet "The m u r d e r of British i n d u s t r y . " And we're trying t o get the Edinburgh Connolly Exhibition south of the border. So t h e r e ' s plenty to spend it on. Our t h a n k s t o : S. Healv £3.20. T & G . Shields £5. R Harmon £5. M. P o r t e r £4. P. W. L a d k i n £1. .1 T a t e £5. J. M c G r a t h £ 4 . C T h o m p s o n £10. M. G u i n a n £44. G O'Reilly £ 3 4 18. S. McKeever £ 5 . S Padgham £ 8 81. P. Greene £4. S o u t h London C.A. £ 1 5 , M . Morrissey £11. F O ' C o n n o r £2, D . Belgrave £5. R. H. £5. C Martin £5. N. M o o r e £5, Ji King £2.40, M Clinton £2.50, P. J . Kenna, £4. A . W a l s h 70p, P. D o p ^ y £ 5 , supporters, in S ^ t h London £I6,Q5. T O T A L : £ 2 | l , « 4 . February 1987 Page Three IRISH DEMOCRAT NORTH-SOUTH DIVIDE - WHOSE FAULT? •PE"*?! IN NOVEMBER last, in Manchester, the Tory Party chairman said most of the north of England's economic wounds were self-inflicted. At fault, he said, were bad industrial relations, a failure to tackle new technologies and leftwing councils. Since then differences between the north and south of England have been quantified in job census reports. The census showed that 94% of jobs lost since 1979 have occurred in the North of England. The Tory government took office in 1979. One of their first acts lifted alt restrictions on the export of capital in line with a policy supporting the internationalising of capital investment. The catalogue of lost jobs and shut down industries is now long and still growing. This government has no intention of reversing that process - whatever it says. Judge people by their actions not what they say. The following two examples suffice to illustrate the point. By JOHN BOYD half its workforce in order to take account of price controls and quotas imposed by the EEC in 1980. The action of the Government can also be seen in the takeover of British Sugar by the Italian monopoly Ferruzzi. Following this takeover Ferruzzi will control 25% of all EEC sugar production. The French part of Ferruzzi has 600,000 tonnes of surplus sugar. This is just part of the huge surplus of sugar within the EEC which has to be dumped somewhere through European outlets. Hence it becomes clear that a major purpose of this monopoly takeover is to buy up or put out of business sugar beet growers, and, Tate & Lyle who have 50% of the market in Britain. The eventual consequence will be a further loss of jobs. This is a case in point where once again the government support the internationalising of capital for maximum profit for those who run the City and to hell with the workforce. DURING November EEC industry ministers discussedfurther cuts in steel production capacity, removal of subsidies and quotas. The cuts amount to 20 million tonnes out of 140 million. The DURING the Christmas period British minister, aptly named Mr Butcher, stated that "the UK a great publicity stunt told all of us remains fully committed to that the EEC farm ministers had progressive liberalisation of the worked very hard without sleep for quota system..." Since this several nights. The object of the government has been in office the exercise was for the outgoing British Steel Corporation has shed British chairmen of the Council of • a 1 9 1a s a a LiECJURES T H E 1987 series, o n alternate S u n d a y evenings at 6 pm at the Irish Centre are: F e b r u a r y 8th, Dr J o h n McGurk on " O w e n Roe O ' N e i l l " soldier of Ireland; February 22nd, D e s m o n d Greaves on Wolfe Tone, father of Republicanism"; M a r c h 8th, Dr F l a n n Campbell o n " J o h n Mitchel, a r t i c u l a t e r e v o l u t i o n a r y " and M a r c h 22nd, P r o f e s s o r E r i c T a p l i n on "James Larkin, Liverpool Irishman". A final l e c t u r e for April 5 t h on Eamon D e V a l e r a is hoped for but not yet a r r a n g e d . DON T H E 1987 series c o m p r i s e s three l e c t u r e s on C o n n o l l y , o n the first S u n d a y s of February and March p l u s M a r c h 29th. O n February 1st D e s m o n d G r e a v e s s p e a k s on the " S i g n i f i c a n c e of J a m e s Connolly T o d a y " ; on M a r c h 1st, Dr John H o f f m a n of L e i c e s t e r University t a l k s about " J a m e s Connolly's P o l i t i c s " and on M a r c h 29th the author and Celtologist Peter Berresford Ellis ( s e e his letter in this issue) talks a b o u t "Labour in Irish H i s t o r y " . Agricultural Ministers to flaunt the notion that a plan had been agreed to cut EEC milk production. This plan based on more quotas and cutbacks in herds was an attempt to reduce the costly butter and milk powder mountains. 'Was'being the operative word because within hours of this plan being adopted the price of milk was put up. Any schoolboy economist will tell you that if the price goes up sales go down. Sales of milk are going down to the point where there is serious concern about calcium deficiencies in the diet, especially amongst women, the low paid and unemployed. The Milk Marketing Board and its company Dairy Crest are having to close creamery works because of the quota system and butter surplus. The Board now has no national rational control over milk or butter production. That has been handed to Brussels with, again, loss of jobs and the dumping of food surpluses in Britain. The same story goes for the cereal surplus. Bread prices are certain to rise following all the rumours and denials that they will not. Put the price up, sales go down and the mountains get bigger still. The cost of intervention buying, storage and eventual destruction is compounded, and we pay for it. Effort to halt treachery J A N U A R Y 1987 h a s seen the H i g h C o u r t in D u b l i n h e a r i n g o n e o f t h e m o s t i m p o r t a n t c a s e s since the F r e e State w a s set u p by the British in 1922. It relates t o the so-called "Single European A c t " which eleven governments have signed, a n d Ireland a l o n e is h o l d i n g o u t . T h e hearing t a k e s p l a c e against the b a c k g r o u n d of almost c o m p l e t e press b o y c o t t , a n d a d e a f e n i n g silence e v e n a m o n g the a n t i - i m p e r i a l i s t " l e f t " in Britain whose interest in Ireland is c o n f i r m e d to the o c c u p i e d area, a n d s i m p l y d o n o t u n d e r s t a n d the s t r u g g l e f o r i n d e p e n d e n c e that is f o u g h t in the t w e n t y - s i x c o u n t i e s year in year o u t . D r R a y m o n d Crotty, a Kilkenny f a r m e r a n d l e c t u r e r in e c o n o m i c s a t T r i n i t y C o l l e g e , D u b l i n , is s u i n g t h e g o v e r n m e n t on the g r o u n d s that the President has illegally signed the S i n g l e E u r o p e a n A c t in D e f i a n c e o f the constitution. The government argues that once I r e l a n d j o i n e d t h e C o m m o n M a r k e t it c o u l d d o w h a t e v e r it l i k e d in p u r s u i t of the a i m s of the E E C . T H E Single E u r o p e a n Act r ^ m m i t s ENQUIRY COUPON Please send me particulars of membership of the Connolly Association Name Address Cut out and p o s t to: CONNOLLY A S S O C I A T E " 244/246 Gray* Inn Road, Lom VC1 E E C countries to military action and t h i s , s a y s D r C r o t t y , is a f r e s h t r e a t y and was not covered by the r e f e r e n d u m held w h e n I r e l a n d joined t h e E E C . Therefore t h e r e s h o u l d be another referendum. W h a t the Fitzgerald coalition has d o n e is t o e n d Irish n e u t r a l i t y in a back-handed way. While the disastrous consequences of EEC m e m b e r s h i p a r e t h e r e t o b e seen by a n y b o d y w i t h e y e s , t h e G o v e r n m e n t is n o n e t o o keen on a r e f e r e n d u m , a l t h o u g h it c o u l d b e h e l d o n t h e s a m e d a y as the general election without a n y extra expense w o r t h talking about. The unpopularity of this g o v e r n m e n t of i m p e r i a l i s t lick-spittles is s u c h t h a t a r e f e r e n d u m m i g h t completely block f u r t h e r progress t o w a r d s their aim of "European U n i o n " so d e a r t o t h e h e a r t s of international bankers a n d armament m a n u f a c t u r e r s . Needless to say the g o v e r n m e n t s i d e is p u l l i n g o u t all t h e s t o p s , in t h e p o s s i b l e h o p e t h a t if t h e y c a n ' t d e f e a t D r C r o t t y t h e y will bankrupt him. T H O U S A N D S o f p o u n d s w o r t h ot legal b o o k s a n d d o c u m e n t s h a v e been p u r c h a s e d on b o t h sides, a n d s o m e of t h e s h a r p e s t l e g a l m i n d s in I r e l a n d h a v e been c o n c e n t r a t i n g o n the case for over a month. T h e resources of the g o v e r n m e n t a r e v i r t u a l l y i n f i n i t e a n d it is a g r e a t rarity for a private citizen to take on so formidable an o p p o n e n t . I r e l a n d is t h e o n l y c o u n t r y in E u r o p e able to p r o d u c e citizens w h o a r e p r e p a r e d t o risk t h e i r f o r t u n e in a n attempt to prevent the most d i s g u s t i n g t r e a c h e r y o f m o d e r n Irish history. For, whether the court holds it l e g a l o r n o t , in p o l i t i c a l t e r m s t h e a c t i o n o f t h e F i t z g e r a l d c o a l i t i o n is despicable beyond words. THE background to the above examples which go to make up the whole process of Britain's decline is the reorganisation of western Europe. This process has just passed into an important but unsignalled phase with the ratification of the Single European Act by both Houses of Parliament. This Act passes yet more sovereignty to Brussels. That is a major policy of this government and everything relevant is subordinate to that aim. Mr Tebbit and the Prime Minister have in mind the forthcoming genera! election. They will blame unemployment, with all the umpteen adjustments to figures, and the economic decline on to anything but the real causes. The causes are not bad industrial relations or councils because neither are responsible for national policies. The government and its subservience to international money and profit is to blame. To have rejuvenated industries and new industries massive investment is required. This government encourages the necessary capital to be sent abroad where it will make, in the short term, more profit than if it were invested in either the North or South of England. So what is needed is a clear picture to be put before the electorate showing how membership of the EEC plays a fundamental part in Britain's decline. Just before Christmas the drinking public in Ireland was ordered to pay f o u r p e n c e extra on its pint. Who by? W h o but the massive transnational, Messrs Guinness. The reason w a s not an increase in costs of production, but the need to finance investments in Britain, in particular the take-over of the Distillers' C o m p a n y . Well now, was it worth fourpence on the pint to witness the fireworks that have followed. Twenty five million pounds vanished into thin air. Resignations of directors. Resignations of directors of associated banks. And a British government investigation. The question arises, why should workers and c o n s u m e r s lie at the m e r c y of international gamblers? W h y , oh, why? The High Court decided that breaking the women T H E m o s t h i s t o r i c site in all I r e l a n d has been s a v e d f r o m d e s t r u c t i o n by q u a r r y i n g . It is the f a m o u s " N a v a n F o r t " , in Irish Eamhain Macha, sometimes identified with Isamnion on P t o l e m y ' s m a p o f Ireland. T h e site of the c a p i t a l o f the a n c i e n t Ulaidh s t a n d s o n the o u t s k i r t s of A r m a g h , a n d it is s p e c u l a t e d that its p r e s e n c e as the c e n t r e o f an i m p o r t a n t Irish k i n g d o m explains w h y A r m a g h b e c a m e the ecclesiastical centre o f Ireland. T h e preservation o f the site a r o s e f r o m a c a m p a i g n in which i n t e r e s t has s o i n c r e a s e d that a n e w periodical " E m a n i a " is n o w b e i n g issued by N a v a n Research G r o u p in the D e p a r t m e n t o f Archaeology in Queens U n i v e r s i t y , Belfast. T h e current issue contains p r e l i m i n a y s c h e d u l e s o f sites a n d finds in this very extensive complex, two early modern descriptions, a draft summary of W a t e r m a n ' s e x c a v a t i o n s and a p r o v i s i o n a l checklist o f E a m h a i n M a c h a in the a n n a l s . T h e p r o d u c t i o n is illustrated with instructive plans and p i c t u r e s . Perhaps b e f o r e l o n g we m a y f i n d u n e x p e c t e d fresh light o n t h e Red Branch s a g a s . clinics law in information abortions in has were offering on Britain. getting With respect to the distinguished all judge t h i s s e e m s t a k i n g t h i n g s a bit f a r It may be abortion, allowed illegal but to are talk to perform you not about an even it? The d a n g e r is t h a t w o m e n w i l l c o m e t o Britain just ignorant the s a m e , but being o f t h e d a n g e r . - , will run into difficulties. The same could explosives. quite At legally how they only be when read were be applied present I a book made. I started them that I might Heritage preserved in D u b l i n two It to to could about would make r u n in t r o u b l e . There was an Irish contingent at the sacked print-workers' demonstration at Wapping on J a n u a r y 25th, and, my goodness, didn't they get an e y e f u l of British " d e m o c r a c y . " There was a massive p r e s e n c e o f f o o t and mounted police. These laid into the unarmed peaceful demonstrators with unexampled s a v a g e r y sparing neither age nor s e x . TTiev even tried t o stop a m b u l a n c e s going j the assistance of the wounded. It was clear they were out for trouble from the start. It is a s c e n a r i o dating f r o m the Miners' strike. O n e of the printworkers' leaders remarked " W e went there unarmed. They went armed." S o w h o is most likely to have started the trouble? The police claim that they were attacked by trouble-makers. The London "Morning S t a r " claims to have spotted a g e n t s provocateurs sent in with p o c k e t s full of missiles to start the ball rolling. Typically the H o m e Secretary has refused a public enquit^. Perhaps he k n o w s the score already. The increasing lawlessness of the British police was illustrated by the raids on the premises of the " N e w S t a t e s m a n " and the h o m e of journalist M r D u n c a n Campbell. A p p a r e n t l y he discovered , a n d the " N e w S t a t e s m a n " stated, that the G o v e r n m e n t was planting a £500 million spy satellite high over the Soviet Union so as to m o n i t o r everything they got u p to. Whether half the spying thai goes on d o e s any good to t h o s e who d o it is ol c o u r s e a n y b o d y ' s guess. But this was d o n e w i t h o u t the c o n s e n t of Parliament by m e a n s of ingeniously laundered funds. T h e n the M.P.s were told that could not sec the B B C film that the s t o r y was based on. (Continued on page 8, column 5) February 1987 IRISH DEMOCRAT Page Four February 1987 KIT CONWAY - HERO OF JARAMA 1 WO excellent books, published within the past few years. h a v e d o n e m u c h t o recall t h e m e m o r > o f t h e 5 9 I n - ' u m e n w h o d i e d in d e f e n c e o f t h e Republic d u r i n g the Spanish Civil War 1 he b o o k s in q u e s t i o n a r e Michael O'Riordan's "Connolly ( olumn" and Sean Cronin's b >graph> ,.i t r a n k ?.;->n. R e a d i n g h -th o n e i i n s t a n t l y i m p r e s s e d bv t h e c irage a n d d e d i c a t i o n of R y a n ' s m e n . P e r h a p s t h e m o s t h e r o i c of t h e m .'II w a s k i t C o n w a y , T i p p e r a r y m a n . ^ d e r a i l of t h e B l a c k a n d T a n s t r u g g l e j i i d the Civil W a r . Kit C o n w a y is n o w a c c l a i m e d a s t h e h e r o of J a r a m a , a n d h i s d e a t h d u r i n g tiiat m a r a t h o n F e b r u a r y b a t t l e 50 v e a r s a g o w a s a l e t h a l blow to his comiades. Both Michael O ' R i o r d a n and Sean Cronin have acknowledged this. H o w e v e r , p a r t of M r C r o n i n ' s information on Conwav (FRANK RYAN, page 93) is slightly mnacurate. H e st;::cs: "Kit Conwav f r o m the G l e n of A h e r l o w . a b o r n soldier with long experience of tight situations, led the Irish in the British was thirtyBattalion. Conway eight years of age with a line r e c o i d in t h e Black and Ian W a r . " Kit C o n w a v was not. however, a By SEAN UA CEARNAIGH n a t i v e of t h e G l e n ot A h e r l o w . H e w a s , in f a c t , b o r n s o m e m i l e s s o u t h o f the Galtee mountains. Always reticent a b o u t his b a c k g r o u n d t o his Dublin friends, he usually stated that he was b o r n n o t f a r f r o m G a l t e e m o r e . H e w a s b o r n in o r a b o u t t h e y e a r 1X97 — t h e d a t e is u n c e r t a i n — in t h e Burncourt area of South West T i p p e r a r y . A n o r p h a n b o y , he was r e a r e d in C l o g h e e n p o o r h o u s e a n d a t t h e a g e of 14 w e n t t o w o r k f o r a f a r m e r in his n a t i v p a r i s h . H i s s t a r t i n g w a g e s w e r e in t h e r e g i o n o f t w o s h i l l i n g s a week. M y k n o w l e d g e of Kit C o n w a y ' s e a r l y c a r e e r is d u e t o t h e f a c t t h a t I g r e w u p in t h a t s a m e c o u n t r y s i d e w here m a n y of his y o u t h f u l years were spent. My father, w h o was about two y e a r s his s e n i o r , w a s K i t ' s b e s t f r i e n d a n d f r o m h i m 1 l e a r n e d m o s t of t h e f a c t s now d e t a i l e d . Kit w a s a r e m a r k a b l e f i g u r e , e v e n in h i s early d a y s . H i g h l y i n t e l l i g e n t a n d articulate, largely self-taught, lighthearted a n d h u m o r o u s , he h a d a n e n o r m o u s capacity lor friendship Y e a r s a f t e r his d e a t h it w a s i n v a r i a b l y the humorous episodes that his f r i e n d s r e m e m b e r e d In T i p p e r a r y h e w a s a l w a y s k n o w n as C h r i s t y — the n i c k n a m e Kit d a t e s f r o m his D u b l i n days. He was always a republican separatist. Yet he j o i n e d the British a r m y in 1915. W h e t h e r it w a s a d e s i r e t o e s c a p e f r o m h i s u n r e w a r d i n g life a s a f a r m l a b o u r e r , a wish t o see f o r e i g n c o u n t r i e s , o r a belief t h a t a w a r e f f o r t bv Irishmen would hasten Home Rule, the r e a s o n f o r his enlisting a r e n o t c l e a r . In a n y e v e n t , h e r e g r e t t e d his d e c i s i o n a l m o s t i m m e d i a t e l v a n d soon parted c o m p a n y with the a r m y . H o w he d i d s o is a f a s c i n a t i n g s t o r y . He devised a most effective plan. H e feigned insanity. He must have been a b o r n a c t o r . In a n y e v e n t , h i s a c t s o c o n v i n c e d a n d a l a r m e d his s u p e r i o r officers at the Military Station ( K i l w o r t h , C o . C o r k ) t h a t he w a s instantly discharged. Even the private soldiers billeted with Kit were c o n v i n c e d of his insanity. H e fought with distinction d u r i n g t h e 1919-1921 W a r of I n d e p e n d e n c e . M v f a t h e r a s C a p t a i n of D C o m p a n y , 6th Battalion. Third Tipperary B r i g a d e , c o m m a n d e d t h e I R A in t h e a r e a . K i t s e r v e d f o r a b r i e f p e r i o d in this C o m p a n y b e f o r e j o i n i n g D i n n y Lacev's Flying C o l u m n . He was an excellent soldier a n d a b o r n leader of m e n . A s a m e m b e r of L a c e y ' s c o l u m n he travelled over a wide area of S o u t h T i p p e r a r y . M a n v s t o r i e s a r e told of his d a r i n g exploits d u r i n g this time. F o l l o w i n g the T r u c e , Kit r e v e r t e d f o r a brief p e r i o d to his f o r m e r occupation of farm worker. The T r e a t y a n d Civil W a r f o l l o w e d . Kit look a step then which greatly surprised everybody. H e joined the Free State a r m y a n d served at the C u r r a g h , a n d l a t e r in C l o n m e l a n d C a h i r B a r r a c k s . At this time nearly all his old c o m r a d e s were on the antit r e a t y side. J o i n i n g the F r e e State a r m y w a s a d e c i s i o n Kit s o o n r u e f u l l y r e g r e t t e d . H e f o u n d himself utterly o u t of s y m p a t h y with his treatyite a s s o c i a t e s . All h i s f r i e n d s w e r e o n t h e o t h e r s i d e a n d his h e a r t w a s v e r y m u c h w i t h t h e i r cause. During the few months he r e l u c t a n t l y s p e n f in t h e F r e e S t a t e a r m y he did, h o w e v e r , render v a l u a b l e assistance to his f o r m e r c o m r a d e s . LETTER ( ( ) \ ( IRATl I \ 1 I O N S to the Irish D e m o c r a t on p u b l i s h i n g Patrick Byrne's article " T h e Irish W h o M a d e C a n a d a : T i l e Siorv ot the l-'enian Invasion', lush D e m o c r a t . J a n u a r y . 19X7 l o Declare mv interest. I have been w o r k i n g on lliis subject d u r i n g the last live vears. spending time researching m C a n a d a a n d tile I ISA. T h e main purpose ot inv research was to use the b a c k g r o u n d ot the invasion and the Battle ol Ridjieway. J u n e , IX6fi, when a b r i g a d e ol I emails d r o v e a s u p e r i o u r force ot British soldiers t r o m the field at b a y o n e t - p o i n t , as the basis ol an historical novel f i n s novel The Rising ol ibe M o o n is published bv M e t h u e n I o n d o n L t d . . at £ 10.95, in March It will also be p u b l i s h e d in tile LISA b\ Si M.iitin's Press in J u n e . I have also w n t t e n an a c a d e m i c study ol the invasion and the battle which is published in the c u r r e n t issue of The Irish S w o r d , the journal of the Military History Society ol Ireland, as well a s c o n t r i b u t i n g a c h a p t e r for the book T h e Irish in C a n a d a , edited by Professor R o b e r O'Driscoll and Dr Lorna Reynolds, University of Toronto. My paper in The Irish S w o r d contains the first Fenian casualty list ot the Battle of Ridgeway and the s u b s e q u e n t skirmish at F o r t Erie ever published. T h i s list took me s o m e time to compile, c h e c k i n g not only c o n t e m p o r a r y reports a n d despatches and n e w s p a p e r s but a c t u a l l y visiting local cemeteries. Holy C r o s s at Buffalo, New Y o r k , f o r example, c o n t a i n s t h e graves a n d m o n u m e n t s of several F e n i a n officers a n d men w h o gave their lives a t Ridgeway. I h e s e graves still s t a n d sadly forgotten e v e n by t h e l o c a l 11 i s l i - A m e r i c a n community. I would like to m a k e a couple ot corrections to M r B y r n e ' s otherwise excellent article. It w a s not at the C i n c i n a t t i IRB C o n v e n t i o n (January. 1X65) that the plan t o send aid to Ireland w a s a b a n d o n e d a n d the idea of invading the provinces ot British N o r t h America (as C a n a d a then u a s ) was seriously discussed. Only after the widespread arrest ot IRB leaders in Ireland in September, 1X65, was the plan to send help to the i n s u r g e n t s in Ireland felt to be untenable. Il w a s at the O c t o b e r C o n v e n t i o n in Philadelphia that the newly elected Secretary for W a r , M a j o r - G e n e r a l S w e e n y , was asked to m a k e a study for an invasion ol C a n a d a . William Randall R o b e r t s (ol C o r k ) was n o t a US General He w a s an h o n o r a r y militia colonel, a title g r a n t e d t o r his work in recruiting for the Irish Brigade of the U n i o n Army A New Y o r k businessman, he b e c a m e chairman of the I R B Senate bv p o p u l a r v o t e at t h e Philadelphia Convention Michael Murphy, w h o commanded the F e n i a n cavalry d u r i n g the invasion, played a very minor role at this period a n d certainly had n o t h i n g t o d o with the f o r m u l a t i o n of the i n v a s i o n plan. He w a s a c o l o n e l and not a g e n e r a l . T h e plan was the b r a i n c h i l d of S w e e n y a n d his field c o m m a n d e r s , w h o led t h e three pronged i n v a s i o n , were G e n e r a l s Tevis, Lynch and Spear. Major-Gerrcral ' F i g h t i n g T o m ' Sweeny ( F r o m C o r k ) was -Still a serving U n i o n A r m y o f f i c e r . H e was o n 'leave,of a b s e n c e ' a t ' t h i s time: H e h a d l o s r h t s right a r m at C h u r u b u s c o during t h e U S - M e x i c a n W a r ; had twice been w o u n d e d during the Civil W a r before c o m m a n d i n g a brigade u n d e r G e n e r a l Lew W a l l a c e at Shiloh a n d a division of the XVI C o r p s during S h e r m a n ' s m a r c h against Atlanta. It is significant that a f t e r the invasion he was reinstated in the U n i o n Armv. M r Bvrne d o e s n o t go into the complications of the IRB split in D e c e m b e r 1 8 6 5 / J a n u a r y 1X66 when the President of the IRB, J o h n O ' M a h o n e y . refusing to accept the d e m o c r a t i c decisions of the Philadelphia C o n v e n t i o n , led a b r e a k a w a y m o v e m e n t taking only 10 per cent of the m e m b e r s h i p with him O ' M a h o n e y c o n d u c t e d his own invasion fiasco at New Brunswick in M a r c h , 1X66. M r Byrne quite rightly says I R B delegates went to see A m e r i c a n President J o h n s o n to enlist his s u p p o r t . But he says Secretary of State Seward was not i n f o r m e d of the plan until the eve of the invasion. This is not so. President J o h n s o n knew a b o u t the plans a s early as O c t o b e r , immediately a f t e r the C o n v e n t i o n , a s indeed did most of the American newspapers who r e p o r t e d on the plans! T h e American A d m i n i s t r a t i o n actively helped the a r m i n g of Sweeny's a r m y , allowing them to p u r c h a s e US ex-surplus w e a p o n s , not just old muskets but new repeating rifles a s well a s batteries of artillery. The sanction f o r the Fenians to p u r c h a s e fully e q u i p p e d e x - s u r p l u s warships f r o m the U S Navy D e p a r t m e n t h a d to c o m e f r o m a high g o v e r n m e n t a u t h o r i t y . F o u r such warships were p u r c h a s e d in p r e p a r a t i o n for the invasion. G o v e r n m e n t i n v o l e m e n t w a s needed t o allow a n a r m y of-25,000 men t o g a t h e r at their a r m s d u m p s , a l o n g the b o r d e r a r e a . W h a t becomes a b s o l u t e l y clear is t h a t President J o h n s o n initially s u p p o r t e d "the F e n i a n plan for I r i s o w n political p u r p o s e s . BY S. O. D i O C H O N COLONIAL EXPLOITATION Finally, h o w e v e r . Kit deserted. F i n d i n g it i m p o s s i b l e t o c o n t i n u e t o r e m a i n a m e m b e r of an a r m y he o p p o s e d he d e s e r t e d in the l a t e a u t u m n of 1 9 2 2 . A i d e d b y my f a t h e r and other republican friends he managed to escape to Dublin. Soon a f t e r his a r r i v a l t h e r e h e m a d e c o n t a c t with an a n t i - T r e a t y g r o u p a n d f o u g h t on the R e p u b l i c a n side d u r i n g the r e m a i n i n g m o n t h s o f t h e Civil W a r . A l t h o u g h he n e v e r revisited his native county he d i d , f o r a n u m b e r of y e a r s , k e e p in t o u c h w i t h s o m e o f h i s f r i e n d s t h e r e . I n D u b l i n he w o r k e d m a i n l y in t h e b u i l d i n g i n d u s t r y w h e r e he acquired f i r s t h a n d knowledge of t h e p r o b l e m s o f t h e u r b a n w o r k e r s . In 1928 he e m i g r a t e d t o N e w Y o r k b u t r e t u r n e d t o D u b l i n in 1932 f o l l o w i n g t h e d e f e a t of t h e C u m a n n na n G a e l Government. H e r e t a i n e d all h i s o l d r e p u b l i c a n a r d o u r . W h e n t h e m o v e m e n t split in 1934 o n ideological issues. Kit, remembering the plight of the Tipperary farm workers and observing now t h e privations of D u b l i n ' s p o o r , w e n t w i t h t h e l e f t . In his heart I think he w a s always a socialist. He b e c a m e actively involved w i t h a n d h e l p e d t o t r a i n a n d drill t h e reorganised Irish C i t i z e n A r m y . In o u r o w n h o m e ( 1 h a d n o t , a s y e t , been born) my f a t h e r a n d m o t h e r were r e m i n d e d of K i t e a c h e n d o f y e a r w i t h t h e arrival of a C h r i s t m a s c a r d , invariably an Irish o n e . N o C h r i s t m a s c a r d a r r i v e d , h o w e v e r , in 1936. T h e r e a s o n w a s s o o n c l e a r . K i t w a s in S p a i n with F r a n k R y a n a n d o t h e r socialist comrades defending the threatened Republic against Franco's f o r c e s . In a l l , o v e r 140 I r i s h m e n f o u g h t for the S p a n i s h Republic a n d 5 9 o f t h e s e d i e d in a c t i o n . Kit w a s t h e life a n d s o u l o f t h e little g r o u p . He c o m m a n d e d a d e t a c h m e n t w i t h d i s t i n c t i o n a n d g r e a t g a l l a n t r y in Britain had s u p p o r t e d the Confederacy d u r i n g the Civil W a r , a l l o w i n g C a n a d i a n soil to be used as a base of operations by the Confederates a g a i n s t n o r t h e r n towns. T h e most f a m o u s incident was when Confederate irregulars crossed from M o n t r e a l into New Y o r k a n d burnt the t o w n of St A l b a n s . T h e American Administration s o u g h t reparation a n d J o h n had no c o m p u c t i o n but to use the threat of the Fenians to squeeze c o m p e n s a t i o n out of the British. It was o n l y on the promise of reparation that President J o h n s o n i n v o k e d the 1818 Neutrality Act and closed the border a n d c o m m e n c e d the arrest of the Fenians. A few years later Britain m a d e the payment of $15 millions to the American Government. T h e Fenian invasion was n o wild schcme o f i n d i v i d u a l s bul a carefully w o r k e d o u t a n d viable p l a n The establishment o f a n ' I r i s h Republic-inFxile' o n the_soil o f British N o r t h A m e r i c a , to be used either Fngland or as a base o f a bargaining operations pawn against lo secure i n d e p e n d e n c e for I r e l a n d , w a s q u i t e feasible. T h e p o l i t i c a l c o m m e n t a t o r s o f the t i m e were all in a g r e e m e n t thai h a d it n o t been for President J o h n s o n ' s ' a b o u t face' t h e n it was fairly certain t h a i the Fenian A r m y , c a l l i n g itself the I R A ( t h e first time the initials w e r e u s e d officially) c o u l d h a v e achieved their o b j e c t i v e s . Looted at in Canadian terms, the Fenian invasion '"is been acknowledged as the point at which the tide ol Canadian public opinion swung behind the formeily unpopular idea of confederating the provinces of British North America into one single state. A year later, in 186V, the provinces became the Dominion of Canada. The Irish invasion had given birth to a new state but not the one intended. . ,. . . Page Five LAGAN LIGHTS IRELAND AND INDIA m a n y of w h o m w o u l d h a v e b e e n a r r e s t e d a n d i m p r i s o n e d w e r e it n o t for Kit's timely tips. H e h a d access to information concerning projected raids and arrests w h i c h he passed on to the republicans. M y f a t h e r was the r e p u b l i c a n c o m m a n d i n g o f f i c e r in h i s a r e a , a n d n o t a s i n g l e m e m b e r of h i s C o m p a n y w a s a r r e s t e d while Kit r e m a i n e d in t h e F r e e S t a t e f o r c e s . I have p r e v i o u s l y m e n t i o n e d that K i t w a s a l w a y s k n o w n a s C h r i s t y in T i p p e r a r y . In D u b l i n he a d o p t e d the n a m e of Kit R y a n ; t h i s w a s o b v i o u s l y a subterfuge to a v o i d detection and to o u t w i t the F r e e S t a t e a u t h o r i t i e s . A year or two later w h e n the danger was o v e r , he r e v e r t e d t o his p r o p e r s u r n a m e b u t c o n t i n u e d t o r e t a i n Kit in preference to C h r i s t y . IRISH DEMOCRA1 KIT CONWAY who died at Jarama. C o r d o b a in t h e s o u t h e r n p r o v i n c e o f A n d a l u s i a . In F e b r u a r y , 1937, h e l e d his countrymen in the crucial e n g a g e m e n t at t h e J a r a m a valley n e a r M a d r i d . N i n e t e e n I r i s h m e n fell d u r i n g the m o n t h long battle. They included E a m o n M c G r o t t y , a n ex C h r i s t i a n Brother from Derry; Liam Tumilson, a Protestant republican from Belfast; Dick O'Neill, also f r o m Belfast; R e v R o b e r t Hilltard, a C h u r c h of I r e l a n d clergyman from near Killarney, a n d the brilliant T y r o n e poet C h a r l i e Donnelly. Kit C o n w a y ' s h e r o i s m a t J a r a m a has been widely acknowledged. Following the d e a t h s of s o m e of his fellow officers he c o m m a n d e d three separate companies at a particularly _rucial juncture o n F e b r u a r y 12th, 1937. It w a s o n t h i s d a y , s o o n a f t e r 12 n o o n , t h a t he w a s f a t a l l y w o u n d e d . One of his comrades, James P r e n d e r g a s t , d e s c r i b e d his p a s s i n g : " I reach reach the hill-crest w h e r e K i t is d i r e c t i n g f i r e . H e is u s i n g a r i f l e himself a n d pausing every while t o g i v e i n s t r u c t i o n s . S u d d e n l y he s h o u t s , h i s rifle s p i n s o u t o f h i s h a n d , a n d h e falls back. ' H e is p l a c e d in a b l a n k e t . N o s t r e t c h e r s l e f t n o w . H i s v o i c e is b r o k e n with a g o n y . ' D o y o u r b e s t b o y s , h o l d o n . ' T e a r s g l i s t e n in o u r eyes. M a n y are f r o m o t h e r c o m p a n i e s . B u t all r e m e m b e r K i t a t C o r d o v a a n d Madrid. His gallant leadership t h e n a n d t o d a y w o n t h e m all. 'Kit is t a k e n a w a y . I see K e n S t a l k e r . H e is t h e o n l y e x p e r i e n c e d m a n l e f t . I r u n to him a n d he t a k e s c o m m a n d . ' I n t h e a m b u l a n c e I m e e t K i t . H e is in t e r r i b l e a g o n y a n d c a n t a l k l i t t l e . " H o w a r e t h e r e s t ? " is h i s c o n s t a n t question. 'Next m o r n i n g they told m e o u r great leader was d e a d . " CONFERENCE IN APRIL T H E Standing Committee of the Connolly Association met in L o n d o n on Saturday, February 1st, and decided that the delayed Annual Conference will be held in London on Saturday and Sunday, April 25th and 26th. Prior to that it is hoped to reorganise the Association in London to provide for a number o f functioning branches and a L o n d o n co-ordinating committee, whose main task will be in the realm of organisation. It has therefore been decided t o call together all L o n d o n activists — though all members are welcome — to a meeting in the Marchmont C o m m u n i t y Centre, near Russell Square, L o n d o n , W C 1 , at 2.30 pm on Saturday, February 14th. A m o n g matters to be discussed apart from the Annual Conference will be the lectures o n J a m e s Connolly, the conference o n the building trade o n March 21st, the petition for the release o f the Guildford F o u r , and further action in relation to this. Peter Berresford-Ellis Mr EMh will Ucwv on James CommoUyU-Lak*mr in Irii* Hiuory •• March l*tk « the flhidb—t Arm* A L M O S T a century and a half has passed since Robert Kane, the Irish scientist, wrote: "A very peculiar deposit o f fuel -- the lignite o f Lough Neagh stretches f r o m Washing Bay in Tyrone to Sandy Bay in Antrim. In some parts the deposit of lignite is so a b u n d a n t that the local people sink pits to raise it when fuel is scarce. The area of these deposits" e x t e n d s o v e r o n e hundred square miles. Therefore this e n o r m o u s quantity of fuel is of great public interest." news for colonial and marginal e c o n o m i e s like that of the Six Counties. This multi-national failed in property deals in Los Angeles and San Diego. They lost m o n e y on their coal and anthracite interests in South Africa and Pennsylvania and owing to the Iraq-Iranian war, Iraq did not pay them for work done. The miners'year-long strike in Britain cost them £300,000 per month. In June 1985 dealings in their shares o n the London Stock Exchange were suspended pending re-structuring o f the The local p e o p l e mentioned by company. A s part of this reRobert Kane were the Quinns, the structuring they sold the Crumlin Devlins, the O'Hagan's, the project to British Petroleum Coal O'Neill's a n d the Donnellys o f Division for £ 8 million p o u n d s . East Tyrone w h o settled in the B.P. n o w have the right to work area around the tenth century. the deposit as the extractor and Today they f o r m a closely-knit,, supplier o f the raw lignite. deeply r o o t e d community of The British government then fishing people, small farmers a n d invited bids for the building and some small light industry. They operating o f a 450 megawatt now feel that their mode of life lignite-fired p o w e r station to be and indeed their continued erected beside the mine and survival as a c o m m u n i t y in this estimated t o cost more than £ 5 0 0 area may be threatened by the million. T h e r e are three proposals of the Government and contenders for this contract - t w o big mining interests to exploit the private and one public. The lignite deposits. When they U.S.A. Bechtel Corporation, with watched a T . V . programme last G.E.C. Turbine Generators as a year which described how 26,000 minor partner are competing people and five villages were against the Costain Group and the uprooted in West Germany to Northern Ireland Electricity make way for a lignite mine it did Service. The interests of the nothing to relieve their fears. people of the Six Counties w o u l d be best served in every way if the If the G e r m a n authorities could construction and operation of the do that to their o w n citizens why plant were given to the N.I.E.S. should the mere Irish around Mr Hadfield, chief executive o f } Lough Neagh put their trust in the the N.I.E.S., says that his board, British G o v e r n m e n t ' s decisions? given the co-operation of the The continuing political crisis government, could build the over the constitutional position of station just as quickly as any Northern Ireland has killed the private c o m p a n y . However there public debate which should have is little chance of that happening evolved around the question o f under this present Thatcher the use of these (in Irish terms) government. In fact leading Trade enormous fossil fuel reserves. F o r Unionists in Belfast consider that example, in the Government t h e . e n t i r e project could be an Stationery Office in Belfast there experiment by the government for j f i s not one scrap of printed the privatisation of the supply and ^ information o n the lignite issue. distribution o f electricity which » could, in the future, be foisted o n ; In 1978 the British government, the consumers in Britain. through its Northern Ireland v Office granted a prospecting The environmental and social ilicence to Burnett a n d impact of tearing up hundreds o f iallamshire H o l d i n g s , a British- acres of land to get at the based transnational company lignite, if it is not strictly vith interests in the U.S.A., Chile, controlled, could be disastrous for |lhe Phillipines and South Africa. the local c o m m u n i t y . The Lignite lis exploration, carried out in Action Committee, formed in "the Crumlin area of Antrim, 1985, has been spurred to greater i confirmed substantial reserves of activity by recent developments. iignite up to 4 5 0 tonnes in this The Northern Ireland Office and 'istrict alone. In May 1984 the British Petrolium have so far u r n e t t H a l l a m s h i r e g r o u p ignored the request of Lignite ibtained planning permission and A c t i o n for an independent public twelve-year mining licence to enquiry into the social, e c o n o m i c (velop a site o f 515 acres with and environmental consequences serves of 100 million tonnes, o f the u n d e r t a k i n g . The hey proposed t o p r o d u c e committee is not opposed to rmually about ten million tonnes lignite mining but they will not o f raw fuel over ten years from an accept it if the cost is the open-cast pit 350 feet deep. In destruction of their community" their annual report for 1985 they In an interview with the "Irish [^euphoricaliy d e s c r i b e d t h e D e m o c r a t " Mr Niall Fitzduff, orthern Ireland project as the chairman of Lignite Action, 'largest venture o f all their world pointed out that East Tyrone is a 'ide operations. low-lying area, only fifty feet i In the e v e n t subsequent levelopments were t o prove, as lappened so o f t e n before, that lulti-national c o m p a n i e s are bad at its highest point above the level o f Lough N e a g h . He claims logically that f l o o d i n g will be an inevitable consequence if o p e n : A Y O U N G lady in Bristol is writing a thesis on the relations between the national m o v e m e n t s of India and Ireland from the 1870s to the 1940s. It i s a very useful and interesting subject. Every Irish person knows h o w shaky British power had b e c o m e in Ireland in 1919, what with the declaration o f independence by Dail Eireann, the Limerick Soviet and the massive strike wave that swept the country. What is not so widely k n o w n is that the s a m e year a mighty strike wave a l s o struck India. The British g o v e r n m e n t replied with repression, and Indian militants migrated to America only to find themselves under deportation at the time o f the notorious Palmer raids. The c o n t a c t between the t w o m o v e m e n t s was probably sealed when Indian T U C founder Lajpat Rai c a m e to N e w York. He w o u l d automatically contact the American U n i o n s and the very active Irish Progressive League which was supporting the Russian revolution and anti-colonial movements throughout the world. T H E R E was a gradual "special relation" built up between the Irish and Indian movements. Rai spoke o n Irish platforms for example with Liam Mellows. Indians wrote in the Irish nationalist papers. And o n St Patrick's D a y 1919, as a result o f Mellows's initiative, Indians t o o k part in the parade. It was, I think, C. P. Joshi, w h o cast mining takes place. He doubts that the highly-automated extractive process will provide more jobs than it will replace. On Lough Neagh five hundred commercial fishing licences are issued and produce about £3 million worth o f fish each year with e m p l o y m e n t of up to 1,000 people. Niall Fitzduff estimates that over three hundred fishing jobs would be lost due to mining. He is well aware that the laws operate in f a v o u r of big business against the c o n c e r n s of the local community a n d affirms that his committee a n d the local people will fight to see that the interests and welfare o f the community will be given the priority that is its right. He l o o k s to the Trade Unions to support the demand for an independent enquiry now before the situation is driven to the point o f n o return by the bulldozing B P. C o a l . While the U n i o n s have taken a positive stand against the threat of privatisation o f the electricity system, the short-term prospect of three or f o u r hundred jobs for their members, and the lack of informed public interest, may be dulling their o u t l o o k to the broader and longer-term problem of how this vast source of mineral wealth could be used to the benefit of the Irish p e o p l e in the future. As Niall Fitzduff says: CHANGES NEEDED AT ARMLEY told me first of the fact that secret messages to Indian c o m m u n i t i e s throughout the world were sent through Irish Republican seamen, and this was no doubt the way Irish revolutionary literature was MR J. T E M P E S T writes to us taken to India, where it was avidly from Hull on behalf of the family read by the newly developing of Republican prisoner Con national movement. McFadden recently transferred Are there any survivors from from Armley Jail. those days? It was in New York His mother, Mrs M. FcFadden. that the alliance was sealed though subsequently I n d i a n wanted to visit him and secured a national leaders visited Ireland. Visiting Order dated November Some Irish people in Britain, for 9th. 1986. which was valid for any example the daughters o f Mrs of the following twenty eight days. Woods of Sligo. were active in She contacted the prison on the Krishna Menon's "India League." And the "League 17th and 18th to confirm the visit, against Imperialism" had both and was told that all was in order. Irish and Indian sections. But when she arrived at the If any readers of the "Irish prison on N o v e m b e r 19th. at the Democrat", particularly in N e w appointed hour o f 3pm the visit York, have any recollections o f the Irish-Indian connection in was refused on the grounds that those days, they could help bv there was no female officer sending them to the "Irish available to search her. Democrat" which will pass the information on. — C . D . G . BIRMINGHAM SIX APPEAL NOT before time the Home Secretary has announced that he accepts that fresh evidence has been disclosed affecting the Birmingham pub bombing case, and that the six prisoners in jail over twelve years, are to be allowed to appeal. In no sense can this decision be regarded as a vindication of "British Justice". It was wrung out of the Minister by public pressure and it is an indictment of the British judicial system that the men were not allowed to appeal long ago. The decision to refuse the right of appeal to the Guildford Four is one which many will regard as possessing political overtones. It wouldn't do to be enquiring into police methods in too many places simultaneously. S o the campaign will have to go The Home Office pretence t h a t no new e v i d e n c e , no "consideration of substance", no "fresh opinions" have emerged in the Guildford and Maguire cases holds no water. One factor is the d i s c r e d i t i n g of the test f o r nitroglycerine that was used by the police. Dr Brian Caddy of Strathclyde University is on record as saying he would never have deduced the presence of nitroglycerine from the test. If this test is flawed then the prosecution is left with nothing but the confessions the police induced the defendants to make. Unless of course some of the policemen had a direct telephone line to the omnmiscent Almighty as some of them appear to be claiming. It is typical of the British Tories that they are completely without one trace of generosity or feeling. The right thing to have done would be to say, the basis of the Crown argument in all these cases has shown a flaw. Even if the chances are that an appeal would be turned down, as long as the new issues are not tested in court, the doubt remains. "With multi-national exploitation the regions never get the best bite of the cake. Scotland did not become rich as a result of North Sea Oil and Northern Ireland will not become rich from the current proposals for the exploitation of The generous thing to do would the lignite by transnational be just to M then all out. corporations." Mr Tempest d o e s not say where . she had c o m e from, but says that she incurred serious financial loss, as well as the disappointment of not seeing her son whom she had not seen for over a year. The situation would seem to call lor an apolopv A s p o k e s w o m a n in the Welfare Off ice told Mrs M c F a d d e n about a week later that nothing could be done since she had not c o n f i r m e d the identity of the officer who assured her the visit was in order. But when asked her identity she refused to disclose it In a telephone conversation later that day an officer described as a "Class 4 G o v e r n o r " denied all knowledge of the visit being either accepted or refused, even though the Visiting O r d e r had been signed by the governor. Particula rs ot the case have been sent by Mr Ternpe.;t to the H o m e Office, local M e m b e r s of Parliament a n d the National Association of P r o b a t i o n Officers Is this deliberate, politically motivated h a r a s s m e n t ' ' Mr T e m p e s t a p p e a r s to think it is. Or is it just o n e f u r t h e r example of the a r r o g a n t i n h u m a n i t y of those drest in a little brief a u t h o r i t y o v e r their fellow h u m a n beings? In either case there is a case for a change. EISIMIRCE 0 T H U I T an toin as eacnamaiocht na S e C o n t a e Fichid faoi c h o m h r a i l t a s an G h e a r a i l t i g h thainig meadu mor ar an eisimirce on chuid sin d'Eireann, Meastar gur thug an bad ban leis tuilleadh is 75,000 eisimircigh as an phoblacht o 1961 i leith. Murb e an pleascadh daonra a tharla ana blianta roimhe sin beadh an lion ba isleariamh ann fa lathair. Ar an chuid is lu h'fheidir go gcaithfimid bheith buloch go nadmhalonn an Rialtas gurbh e laige an gheilleagair agus easpa jabanna is cuit leis an eisimirce seo. Nuair a tharla an tubaiste ccanna faoi rialtas Sheain Lemass fiche bliain o shin duirt seisean narbh fhadhb eacnamaloch amhain a bhl san eisimirce ach g o raibh se i nduchas na nGael le bheith ag fanaiocht timpeall na cruinne Is rud sonraioch e grub annamh a bhios aon dlospoireacht sna S e Contae fan eisimirce d'ainneoin an oiread ceanna pro rata ag imeacht thar an tir amach gach bliain. Sna blianta roimhe seo ba iad na NAisiAnai is m 6 ad'imigh tharsailearlorgoibre ach sna laethe difhostaiochta ata inniu ann bionn an oiread Dilseoirt ar a n bhAdbhAff in aontacht leo. v -< February 1987 WISH DEMOCRAT February 1987 IRISH D E M O C R A T Page Six IRISH SONGS Edited by PATRICK BOND NANCY SPAIN O l all lilt stars that t u r shone Not one does twinkle like your pale blue eves. I ike golden corn at harvest time, your hair Sailing in my boat the wind gently blows and fills my sail. Nour sweet scented breath is everywhere. Davlight peeping through the curtains of I hi' passing night time is your smile, I he sun in the sky is like vour laugh, ( o m e back to me Nancy linger for just a little while. S i n c e you left these shores I know no peace nor j o y . W H F N b o y h o o d ' s fire was in my blood, I read of ancient freemen. O f ( i r e t e e and R o m e who bravely stood, I hree hundred men and three men; And then I p r a y e d I yet might s e e O u r fetters rent in twain. And Ireland long a province, be A Nation o n c e a g a i n ! CHORUS: \ N a t i o n o n c e again, \ N a t i o n o n c e again, \nd Ireland, long a pro.ince, be I'LL walk beside you through the world today, While dreams and songs and flowers bless your w a y I'll look into your e y e s and hold your hand, I'll walk beside you through the golden land. I'll walk beside you through the passing years, Through d a y s of cloud and sunshine, j o y and tears. And when the great ( all c o m e s - the sunset g l e a m s I'll walk beside y ou through the land of dreams. NIALL PLUNKETT O'BOYLE \ N a t i o n o n c e again. And from that t i m e through wildest NANCY HOGAN'S GOOSE \ n d she swore by all the high courts That she would have the old gander hung! " O h , you cannot hang my gander now For she wanders over every morn And w i g g l e s her bum so vou know she's g a m e . " Hut a policeman c a m e next morning And took the ol" gander o f f to jail; Put him back to the next a s s i z e s And don't let him out without strong bail.'' When the gander heard this sentence l i e looked the old justice in the face; S a y s he: "Is it for doing me duty I hat I must leave me native place?" I he j u d g e he listened to his plea And s a v s he: "Young man, I'll set vou l o o s e . Hut when vou get back to ( . r o g a n ' s store Stay away from Nancy l l o g a n ' s g o o s e . " liut when I gel back to (Irogan's store, I II till myself with oats and grass And I'll Hog Nancy l l o g a n ' s g o o s e \ n d Nancy l l o g a n can kiss mv arse. Sliabh Ra mBan Sliabh Ka mBan IS oth liorn feinig bualadh a n lae ud Do dhul ar (iaeil bhocht" sua ceadta shlad; Mar (a na meirlig ag deanamh game dinn S a' nach einni led pike no slea. Nior thainig ar Major i dtus an lae chughainn Is ni rabhmar fhein ann i gcoir na 'greart, Ach mar sheolfa aoireacht de bha gan aoire, Ar thaohh 11a greine de Shliabh na mBan. I a n I rancach faobhrach sa loingeas g l e a s t a , I.e c r a m a i b h geara 'ca ar muir le seal. Is e sceal go bhfuil a dtriall ar Firinn, S go gcuirfid Ciat.il bhocht' aris 'na gceart. Da mba dhoigh lion feinneach go mb fhior an s c i a l ud, Bheadh mo chroidhe chomh heatrom le Ion ar sceach. ('•» n>!i' -.idli claoi ar mheirlig, 'san adhairc da seide • ' ' : , . jr. mo de Shliabh na m B a n . Is That It? Bob Geldof. Penguin. £3.95. 443pp. (p/b) Reviewed by Donal Kennedy. I'll walk beside you through the world tonight, Beneath the starry skies ablaze with light; And in your heart, love's tender words I'll hide, I'll walk beside you through the eventide. woe. That hope h a s s h o n e a far light, Nor could love's brightest summer ( horus: glow Outshine that s o l e m n starlight; No matter where I wander I'm still haunted by vour smile. It seemed to w a t c h above my head Ihe portrait of your beauty stays the same. In forum, field and f a m e . Standing by the o c e a n , wondering where you've g o n e . Its angel voice rang round my bed, If you'll return again. A Nation c o n c e a g a i n ! Where is the ring l gave to Nancy Spain? It whispered t o o , that freedon's O n the day in spring when the snow starts to melt and streams to flow. ark. And service h i g h and holy, With the birds I'll sing to you a song. Would be p r o f a n e d by feelings dark In the while I'll wander down by bluebell grove And passions vain and lowly; Where wild f l o w e r s grow For, Freedom c o m e s from G o d ' s And I'll hope that lovely Nancy will return. right h a n d . - Barney Rush And needs a G o d l y train; And righteous m e n must make our land A Nation o n c e a g a i n . S o , as I grew f r o m boy to man, I bent me to that bidding ( A i r : I' i r t l a i r g e ) M v spirit of e a c h selfish plan O i l . I w a s doing no-one harm And cruel p a s s i o n ridding. When to (.'rogan's store I set my course For, thus 1 h o p e d s o m e day to aid. \ n d 'twas there I spied Ned Flanagan's gander O h , can such h o p e be vain H o g g i n g Nancy Mogan's g o o s e . When my d e a r country shall be Oul' Nance was there and herself was c o a r s e . made And the Lord knows she had the divil's o w n tongue A Nation o n c e a g a i n ! l or the goose herself she is to blame. Kicks, Halfpence and Band-Aid I'LL WALK BESIDE YOU A NATION ONCE AGAIN KILLETER FAIR A T T E N T I O N ! honest country folk A wee while, if you please; I'll sing for y o u a verse or two To amuse y o u at your e a s e . It's all about a handsome girl T o find her e q u a l would be rare; And the first p l a c e that I met her W a s at Killeter Fair. H e r eyes did shine like diamonds. Her c h e e k s bloomed like the rose; S h e is my first and only love, No matter where she goes, S h e completely stole my heart, m v boys, Ihe truth I now declare. And the first p l a c e that 1 met h e r . Was at Killeter Fair. But now we have got married. And we're happy as you know; We're a l w a y s light-hearted. Let it either freeze or snow. And sitting by the fireside. She laughs quite heartily there, S a y i n g : " I h e first place that I met you J o h n Was at Killeter Fair." We're blessed with a family. Two girls a n d a boy . They are the sunshine of our h o m e . Our heart's delight and joy, And little J o h n , the youngest. Laughs when sitting in his c h a i r , S a y i n g : " T h e first place that y o u met m y M a , Was at Killeter Fair." The Bodham Makers. By John B Keane. Published by Brandon. Price £4.95. pps. 353. (Killed bv ( ret Slate forces. Wicklow, F e b r u a r y , 1923) W h laid h i m t o rest b y t h e r i m of t h e o c e a n , N e a r t h e h o m e of his f a t h e r s we laid h i m t o r e s t , O l d I r e l a n d h e lived with t r u e f a i t h a n d d e v o t i o n , H e f o u g h t a n d he d i e d f o r t h e c a u s e he l o v e d b e s t . W h e n t h e call it w e n t o u t t o t h e s o n s of t h e h e a t h e r O'Boyle w a s the foremost to answer the call; T h e s o n s o f t h e R o s s e s he b a n d e d t o g e t h e r T o drive the oppressor f r o m Dark Donegal. O h b r a v e l y h e f o u g h t with t h e f o e all a r o u n d h i m Till a l o n e a n d o u t n u m b e r e d , a c a p t i v e h e f e l l , T o the b a s t i l l e a t N e w g a t e , a p r i s o n e r t h e y b o r e h i m — He escaped through a tunnel and bade them farewell. Again on the But it is Oh no, 'twas And the hillside, u n d a u n t e d and d a r i n g , n o t t h e S a x o n t h i s t i m e o n his t r a i l . t h e b l o o d h o u n d s of R i c h a r d M u l c a h y , m e n w h o sold I r e l a n d , t h e d r e g s o f t h e G a e l . O n c e m o r e o n t h e hillside u n d a u n t e d a n d d a r i n g . Till all h o p e a b a n d o n e d , h e t u r n e d o n t h e f o e , " L o n g live t h e R e p u b l i c , " h i s w o r d s r a n g o u t c l e a r l y , T h e n t h e g u n s t h u n d e r e d f o r t h a n d O ' B o y l e w a s laid l o w N o w b r a v e l y h e s l e e p s b y t h e rim of t h e o c e a n , N o r w i n d n o w , nor, t e m p e s t his s l u m b e r c a n s p o i l , L o n g , l o n g 'we'll r e m e m b e r w i t h f a i t h a n d d e v o t i o n T h e f a t e of o u r h e r o , N;all Plunkett O ' B o y l e . NELL FLAHERTY'S DRAKE O H my n a m e it is Nell, the truth for to tell, I c o m e f r o m Cootehill which I'll never deny; I had a fine drake, the truth for to speak, That my g r a n d m o t h e r gave me and she going to d i e . The dear little fellow, his legs they were yellow, H e could f l y like a swallow or swim like a hake But s o m e wicked savage to grease his white c a b b a g e Most wantonly murdered Nell Flaherty's drake. His neck it w a s green, most rare to be seen, Fie w a s fit for a queen of the highest degree, H i s body w a s white that would you delight, H e was plump, fat and heavy and brisk as a bee. H e w a s w h o l e s o m e and sound and he weighed twenty pound, And the universe round I would roam for his t a k e ; Bad luck to the robber, be he drunk or sober, That murdered Nell Flaherty's beautiful drake. M a y his spade never dig, may his sow never pig, M a y e a c h nit in his wig be as large as a snail, M a y his d o o r have no latch, may his house have no thatch, May his turkey not hatch, may the rats eat his m e a l . M a y every old fairy from C ork to Dun Laoire Dip him snug and airy in river or lake, Where the eel and the trout they may dine on the snout O f the m o n s t e r that murdered Nell Flaherty's drake. May his pig never grunt, may his cat never hunt. That a ghost may haunt him in the dead of the night; May his hen never lay, may his ass never bray, M a y his g o a t f l y a w a y like an old paper kite. That the flies and the f l e a s may the wretch ever t e a s e And a bitter north wind make him shiver and s h a k e . M a y a big hairy bug make a nest in the lug O f the monster that murdered Nell Flaherty's drake. The only good news that I have to diffuse Is that long Peter H u g h e s and blind piper M c P e a k e That M i c h a e l O ' D w y e r and Cornie Maguire H a v e e a c h g o t a grandson of my darling drake. My treasure h a s dozens of nephews and cousins And one I must get or my heart it will break. To set my mind easy or else I'll g o crazy S o ends the whole song of Nell Flaherty's drake. Page Seven O W I N G to the imminent arrival a n d the a c t u a l birth of o u r first child, I h a d the m i s f o r t u n e to read Ihe preface of this book several times. It was only a f t e r things had died d o w n s o m e w h a t a n d I f o u n d myself with n o t h i n g to read that I reluctantly p i c k e d it up again Bob G e l d o f s story takes us f r o m an u n h a p p y childhood in D u n L a o g h a i r e and a miserable adolescence in Blackrock College on an itinerary t h a t includes a s q u a l i d squat a n d a d r u g - i n d u c e d suicide a t t e m p t in L o n d o n , a jail in Helsinki, a bug r i d d e n f l o p h o u s e in C a n a d a , a n u n a p p e t i s i n g brothel in B a n g k o k , the f a m i n e - p a r c h e d lands of A f r i c a , and the insides of B u c k i n g h a m Palace, the White H o u s e , the Elysee Palace a n d A r u s an U a c h t a r a i n . The biggest s u r p r i s e is not that he h a s n ' t lost the c o m m o n t o u c h , but that he is a powerful a n d accomplished storyteller. True, he h a d the help of a prizew i n n i n g journalist, but he leaves on each line t h e imprint of his o w n c h a r a c t e r , a character as o f t e n e x a s p e r a t i n g as exasperated G e l d o f was a l w a y s a n o m n i v o r o u s r e a d e r , a n d he consciously e c h o e s Joyce in t h e description of his C a t h o l i c e d u c a t i o n . T h e r e are pieces t o o which recall Patrick M a c G i l l ' s Children of the D e a d E n d , but I ' m m o s t reminded of M y l e s n a G o p a l e e n ' s " B e a l B o c h t " , satirically set in " C o r c a D o r c h a " , a region of p e r p e t u a l darkness. F o r example, he recalls the f o g horns, w h o s e m o u r n f u l calls are f a m i l i a r t o those of us raised on the D u b l i n c o a s t . You'd n e v e r t h i n k , to read G e l d o f . t h a t the sun a l s o shines there, m a k i n g D u b l i n a n d Killiney bays the m a t c h of a n y t h i n g on the Riviera. His father used t o t a k e h i m sailing, a n o p p o r t u n i t y millions w o u l d e n v y , but B o b was scared of water a n d d i d n ' t enjoy it. M r . Keane, what m a d e you start your b o o k in such an inauspicious m a n n e r ? G o d k n o w s h o w many p u n t e r s replaced your b o o k o n t h e shelf a f t e r r e a d i n g t h e preface a n d p l u m p e d f o r Jeffrey A r c h e r instead. N o w , I have a question f o r your p r o o f r e a d e r . Could you kindly tell us why J. P. Crolly becomes P. J. Crolly h a l f w a y t h r o u g h the b o o k ? A small p o i n t , I know but upsetting when you a r e in full flow. T h a t said, you will h e a r n o m o r e c o m p l a i n t s a b o u t this b o o k f r o m me. In the late I940's, the s m a l l h o l d e r s of D i n a b e g are finding it m o r e a n d m o r e difficult t o feed a n d clothe their families. The y o u n g e r people have emigrated t o B o b ' s c h i l d h o o d w a s hit by t h e tragedy E n g l a n d , leaving the o l d . middle-aged and of his m o t h e r ' s d e a t h when he w a s very the y o u n g e r children t o play o u t the y o u n g , and his f a t h e r , a c o m m e r c i a l t o w n l a n d ' s swan-song. They are m o c k e d traveller, could only be h o m e at weekby the p e o p l e of Trallock a n d their age-old e n d s . , H i s h o m e life was s h a r e d mostly with St S t e p h e n s D a y wren d a n c e is surpressed t w o o l d e r sisters, themselves still a t school. by C a n o n Tott, the brutish all-powerful His f a t h e r did his best, sending him to priest. C a n o n Tott plans the d o w n f a l l of. B l a c k b r o c k ' s j u n i o r d a y - s c h o o l , with, each the one m a n who understands and speaks w e e k , a cash instalment of his fees. When u p f o r t h e smallholders, the school teacher. a t t e r m ' s end the f a t h e r w a s still billed f o r M o n t y W h e l a n . He plans t o replace him in t h e m , Bob had spent t h e m . H e g o t a hiding the s c h o o l by the d a u g h t e r of P. J. Crolly. a a t s c h o o l , plus a n o t h e r f r o m his f a t h e r , rich local businesssman w h o subscribes w h o b o u g h t a cane specially f o r the heavily t o b o t h ( h u r c h a n d priest. o c c a s i o n . That p r e m e d i t a t i o n w a s never B l u e n o s e , the elderly leader o f t h e wrenf o r g i v e n by Bob, a n d , he says, t h e school boys with D o n a l H a l l a p y the b o d h a m never forgave his ten years old's player, the dancing Costigan twins a n d t r a n s g r e s s i o n . F r o m high g r a d e s he slipped o t h e r s p l a n their wren d a n c e in secret a n d t o f a i l u r e grades a n d f u r t h e r p a t e r n a l even repel a n attack by dissident wrenp u n i s h m e n t , right t h r o u g h secondary boys o n their liquor wagon b e f o r e g o i n g on s c h o o l . Asthmatic, he d i d n ' t s h a r e the t o their d a n c e , the o u t c o m e of which I will r u g b y - b a s e d muscular C h r i s t i a n i t y of leave the readers to discover for B l a c k r o c k , a n d he d e v e l o p e d a c o n t e m p t themselves. There are plenty of o t h e r finely f o r t h e s m u g a s s u m p t i o n s of t h e Irish d r a w n c h a r a c t e r s . F a i t h f u l F e r g , the m i d d l e class. He delighted in s h o c k i n g his s h o p k e e p e r a n d Nora Devane, the C a n o n ' s t e a c h e r s , presenting all his c l a s s m a t e s with h o u s e k e e p e r . These a n d the o t h e r s I will M a o ' s Little Red B o o k , picketed a rugby also let t h e readers disepver f o r themselves. I n t e r n a t i o n a l (against S o u t h Africa), The b o o k has at its core the s t o r y of the affiliated t o (Britain's) C N D , a n d , b e f o r e it b o d h a m m a d e by Bluenose to be given to was fashionable, opposed America's war D o n a l H a l l a p y on the night of t h e wren in V i e t n a m . He also h u n g a r o u n d cafes dance. In a passage full of s y m b o l i s m , listening to American blues m u s i c a n d Bluenose takes the finished d r u m into a e x p e r i m e n t e d with d r u g s . Besides striking c e n t u r y ' s old blackthorn fairy ring o n a rebellious attitudes he involved himself knoll at the highest point on his f a r m a n d with t h e Simon C o m m u n i t y which begins t o play a reel. The s o u n d is carried b e f r i e n d e d D u b l i n ' s homeless, alcoholics for miles across the bleak wintry a n d o t h e r " u n t o u c h a b l e s " , a p o r t e n t of c o u n t r y s i d e , heard by the s m a l l h o l d e r s , the things t o come. people of TralLpck a n d the priest. It is the His adolescent years were the late Sixties h a u n t i n g s o u n d of the b o d h a m that unhinges the c a n o n when it seems that he a n d e a r l y Seventies, when Ireland was e n j o y i n g unprecedented p r o s p e r i t y , a n d a has b e a t e n t h e wren d a n c e r s of D i n a b e g . J o h n B. Keane is a m a s t e r story teller. ( r a s h ) c o n f i d e n c e in i t s p e r p e t u a l He is t h e a u t h o r of over twenty b o o k s and c o n t i n u a t i o n . It was a lively c o u n t r y , the plays. H e is a l s o a m e m b e r of A o s d a n a . t h e signs of liveliness including the u r b a n reIrish A c a d e m y of Arts. Set aside a few discovery of lri$h music, the q u e s t i o n i n g of t v e n i n g s , read this book and you will be every m a t t e r u n d e r the s u n , a n d the c o n f i d e n t self-assertion of the Civil Rights richly r e w a r d e d . m o v e m e n t in the N o r t h . T o read G e l d o f WILLIAM J. WALSH y o u ' d i m a g i n e the c o u n t r y was static, a n d > t h o u g h elsewhere he shows sensitivity t o the c u l t u r e of the E s q u i m o a n d t h e liturgy of E t h i o p i a , nowhere d o e s he display a n y acqu3inyn.ee with Irish l a n g u a g e , music or GARLAND and Wolff, the Belfast history. His professed d e t e s t a t i o n of Shipyard h a s a n n o u n c e d that 800 w o r k e r s n a t i q p a l i s m seems sincerest w h e n d i r e c t e d will be laid off. The yard n o w e m p l o y s just at his fellow-nationals whilst his pacifist >ver 4,000 p e r m a n e n t a n d t e m p o r a r y leanings lie oddly with his recent Concert workers. T h e a n n u a l subsidy is t o be o n a 'British aircraft carrier in the d i s p u t e d ttcreased f r o m £37 million t o £ 6 8 million. t e r r i t o r y o f G i b r a l t a r . T o be f a i r , he V ) an a r e a with a population of 1.5 million, d o e s n ' t c l a i m t o be a p h i l o s o p h e r . I n d e e d >>J,0Q0 registered workers a r e on the dole. he a d m i t s t h a t ?pme of his s t ^ f d o p i n i p p s . I r f t s i p l o y m e n t in Northern Ireland n o w m a y be nonsense, or s o m e t h i n g t o tb#t t a n k s ' a ; 22 p e r cent, twice the British effect. Kvaeage. In Scotland, T r ^ f a l a e r H o y s e G e l d o f m i g h t have settled in j o u r n a l i s m uhn o w o — t i.L J_-r a r " SCO" L i t h g o w yarcf h a s n n o u n c e d t h a t its,workforce of 2,200 will e reduced t o 300 in the. next q u a r t e r . where he was showing promise d u r i n g a n illegal s o j o u r n .BrOad and was s u b s e q u e n t l y f r u s t r a t e d a s a p u b l i s h e r by t h e p a c e of the Irish Posi O f f i c e , a n d the t i m i d i t y of an Irish b a n k manager. W o r k i n g in dead-end j o b s he started his b a n d - the Boomtown Rats, as a h o b b y He w r o t e their songs and sang t h e m . - singing m u s t be the least noticeable of his talents, a n d t h r o u g h a genius lor publicity a n d selfp r o m o t i o n . created an alternative Irish dance circuit lo t h e s h o w b a n d m o n o p o l i s e d halls and the b l a n d discos. A f t e r an R T E interview in Ireland he w a s read out from the A l t a r a n d he a r r i v e d with his band in E n g l a n d when E n g l a n d ' s nihilitic " p u n k " m u s i c rebellion w a s being examined by s o l e m n " p o p " critics f o r sociological significance. This new priesthood was scandalised by G e l d o f s honest manifesto of his aims - " t o get rich, f a m o u s and laid". But t h e b a n d n o n e t h e l e s s was popular with t h e public a n d t w o of its records headed the British c h a r t s . G e l d o f also learned the business of product-plugging both sides of the Atlantic. Pictures of the Irish The pictures collection. above "Portraits p h o t o g r a p h s by L i a m Elgy - Gillespie are of in the the Irish", B l a k e . Text - Price II0.9S P u b l i s h e d by A p p l e t r e e Press, p p s 96 T h e s e p i c t u r e s s h o w t h a t B l a k e is a G e l d o f s career had peaked when the A f r i c a n f a m i n e caught his a t t e n t i o n . This i n s p i r e d Band-Aid. originally i n t e n d e d as a " o n e - o f f " Christmas record calculated to raise £70.000 for relief. G e l d o f cajoled l e a d i n g p e r f o r m e r s to join h i m in the v e n t u r e , the record c o m p a n i e s to f o r g o their p r o f i t s a n d t o have the r e c o r d o n sale with unprecedented speed. T h e sales exceeded the wildest expectations a n d the idea o f a world-wide TV m a r a t h o n with a t a r g e t of 500 million dollars t o o k root. Overheads were cut d o w n to an infinitesimal sum. The c a t e r e r s at Wembley Stadium expected their a c c u s t o m e d profits. Geldof told t h e m he'd t e l l - t h e c r o w d to bring packed lunches. Newspaper propr 'tors, airlines, b r o a d c a s t i n g companies, a n d o t h e r h a r d nosed businesses found that their i a v p l v e m e n t would cost t h e m , a s a n y m o n e y t o be m a d e from the v e n t u r e was to go t o t h e starving. Geldof had created a n e w w o r l d - w i d e constituency o f goodwill, to w h i c h a l o n e he was b e h o l d e n . T h i s o p e n e d d o o r s for him which n o one h a d e v e r been through. W h e n he visited s t r i c k e n a r e a s he sought out famine-relief w o r k e r s a n d he could meet Presidents a n d Prime Ministers and tell them things their o w n officials a n d the guest relief-workers d a r e d n o t tell t h e m . He m a d e s u r e he w a s p r o p e r l y b r i e f e d by authoritive s o u r c e s s o that he c o u l d argue constructively with politicians, but he ensured the media got q u o t a b l e , o r , in polite society, u n q u o t a b l e , headlines. His views are not simplistic a n d are w o r t h e x a m i n a t i o n . When G e l d o f visited A r u s an U a c h t a r a i n he fell on Patrick Hillery's neck a n d kissed him, telling the startled President that he, Dr Hillery, represented I r e l a n d . Ireland, through the President's h a n d s , h a d just given Bob £7 million. It was q u i t e a h o m e c o m i n g f o r the Pordigal Son, t h o u g h the Fatted Calf was n o t f o r his o w n c o n s u m p t i o n . The Prodigal Son had been t r a n s f i g u r e d into the most unlikely, and t h e m o s t spectacular. G o o d S a m a r i t a n in h i s t o r y . H e ' s now aged 35, a n d r e m a r k s he s h o u l d live a s long again. Let's h o p e so. _ ^ B O NAL KENNEDY FOUR PROVINCES BOOKSHOP T h e best thing is to call in to 244/246 G r a y s Inn Road, close to Russell Square tube, b u t t h e second best is to send f o r a booklist, which is available f o r 30p from the shop a n d 50p b y f i r s t class post in answer t o post or p h o n e enquiries. iPhone jywpber 01-8.33-3022. Closed Mondays. fellow photographer. show ,1 p a i n t e r he can break out In o f llie arts m o u l d t h e r e is a l s o a h i s t o r i a n a n d a world famous maturity are O'Flaherty. v e r y gif t e d p h o t o g r a p h e r . In his u s e ol Cusack b a c k g r o u n d a n d l i g h t i n g h e is n e v e r represented itirist Wisdom represented bv The S t u a r t s and while b\ the that and I mm Cyril young are talented film predictable. The faces a r e a very good d i r e c t o r Neil J o r d a n o f " M o n a 1 i s a " b l e n d i n g of the m a t u r e a n d the young. fame. P o p stars are r e p r e s e n t e d B l a k e k n o w s t h e l i m i t a t i o n s o f his Bono of range and he stays within c o n c e n t r a t e s o n p e o p l e in t h e it He Arts, the 112 g r o u p and by Mary B l a c k . C l a s s i c a l m u s i c is r e p r e s e n t e d bv Brian Bovdall a c t o r s , singers, musicians, writers, an Bernadette architect, a composer, a conductor, a contralto (composer) Creevy the and me//,<>- — (>. ( SOVIET THREAT DENIED I'eace Through Non-Alignment, fThe case for British withdrawal from NATO). By Author Lowe. Price £1.50. pps 43. Sponsored by: The Campaign Group of iMbour MPs. The Socialist Society. The Campaign for Non-Alignment. W H E N looking at the sponsors of this pamphlet I had high hopes that I was in for a refreshing read. I can only say my hopes were dashed. The most commendable feature of the material presented was a fairly well constructed critique of present Labour Party p o l i c y to u n d e r t a k e nuclear disarmament whilst nevertheless remaining in NATO. That covers 9 of the 4 3 pages of text. My main disappointment was the virtually c o m p l e t e absence of any socialist perspective for us in our struggle to free ourselves from NATO. The question of nonalignment, advocated in the title, is dealt with in the most casual of manners, and briefly at that, at the end of the work. It Is true that NATO is described as a nuclear, military pact, dedicated above all else to protect and advance the interests of the Government of the United States; as being undemocratic in content; as being prepared and capable of striking at democratic forces opposed to NATO wherever they exist. All good stuff! Vet there is little analysis of the nature of the class system that NATO is dedicated to defend. A paragraph on page 29 dealing with the industro-military structures of this country is hardly sufficient. When dealing with our supposed enemy, the Soviet Union, there is no expression of socialist solidarity by the author, a member of The Socialist Society. Instead we treated to sniping, anti-communist descriptions that must spread a grin of delight over the face of our class enemy. For example, the Soviet Union's response at the time to moves by the Western Powers to set up NATO is described thus (page 4): "Soviet leaders reacted to these moves with a mixture of belligerent rhetoric and acts of repression in Eastern Europe." What belligerent rhetoric? Repressive acts against whom? The pamphlet does attack the m y t h of the "Soviet Threat' and concludes that it does not exist. That conclusion however is based on analysing Western assessments and there to ao explanation of how socialism and war art incompatible. There is scant attention to the many peace initiatives that have cume from the Soviet Union and the Warsaw Pact. Maybe the internationalist outlook of the pamphlet can best be summed up by quoting in full a paragraph on page 10: "A serious study of Ihe post-war wo<ld leads one to the conclusion that Europe is threatened with destruction (along with other parts of the world) not because.of any Soviet intent, but because of the confrontation between the two blofs. Apart from those whose political imagery is derived from Ihe adolescent 'evil empire' films, no one has ever explained what Ihe Soviet Union might hope to gain from an attack on Western Europe. The countries that do face Soviet military pressure, especially in Eastern Europe, also suffer as a direct result of the bloc antagonism between N A T O and the Warsaw Pact. The final tightening of Moscow's control in Eastern Germany, Czechoslovakia and Hungary started in response to the development of a powerful antiCommunist bloc in the West, and the Soviet Union has justified subsequent military interventions, in East Germany. Hungary and Czechoslovakia, as being within the unwritten ground rules of the bi-polar system." If like the liberal section of the " - l s s media in Britain you echo these sentiments then perhaps this pamphlet is for you. I choose to contest this outlook for it is in essence the philosophy of "a plague on both your houses". This philosophy, whilst better than servility to the USA Government, is insufficient for socialists and cannot lead to success when combating NATO. I could go on to deal with other points, but this would be quibbling. In conclusion. I do not feel that this pamphlet is really useful in combating NATO. The danger is that because of its apti-NATO content many will identify with it. That would not be so bad if it were not for the fact that it claims to be arguing from a socialist standpoint. Page Eight Peter Mulligan's peep show T H I C O S T O F PARTITION — " T h e cost of this runs ;it a r o u n d £ ! million a d a y , a bill which falls four limes as heavily on citizens of the Irish Republic as the cost of the Rl ( a n d the Army falls on the British " Guardian. This is p u t t i n g a very low figure on it — Irish Democrat. A l l ! M P I S AT a British Solution — August l<>69 10.000 British t r o o p s sent in: August 1971 British soldiers collect a n d intern V'7 k n o w n dissidents, by May 1972 over 1.?()(/people are interned w ithout trial and m a i n are not released until D e c e m b e r 19" 197; Direct Rule: 1973/4 power shannir 1975. convention: 1977 Roy M a s o n s 'Five Point Plan' 1979 H u m p h r e y Atkins ' W h i t e P a p e r ' o n d e v o l u t i o n : 1980 H a u g h e v / T h a t c h e r Summits: 1982 Priors S t o r m o n t Assembly for Unionists: 1985 the Anglo-Irish Agreement, an American invention accompanied by an 'aid p a c k a g e ' of 250 million dollars f o r the British to spend in N. Ireland over five years a n d an Fxtradition Treaty being passed by Senate and Congress to return wanted Irish Republicans to the British Security Services. Await further developments. P O C R O M — "Over 106 families in Lisburn have applied to be r e h o u s e d because of intimidation a n d petrol b o m b s thrown in the middle of the night t h r o u g h their windows. Seventy five have been rehoused since the start of J u l y . N e a r l y 550 families have asked the h o u s i n g executive to move, a n d nearly 300 of these have been granted priority when a h o u s e c o m e s up. There are 1 3 c a s e s o f i n t i m i d a t i o n a w e e k . " G U A R D I A N . What the G u a r d i a n did not say was the N o r t h e r n Ireland H o u s i n g Executive will only give c o n s i d e r a t i o n t o such a request if it is c o n f i r m e d by a Royal Ulster C o n s t a b u l a r y officer t h a t the house of the family in question is t h e subject of sectarian violence. Many R U C o f f i c e r s will not m a k e such a statement as they have put the finger on such families, a n d a l s o their houses are likely to be petrol b o m b e d by protesting fundamentalists. C O L L A B O R A T I O N — "The a g r e e m e n t has p r o d u c e d this tension a n d the situation where people are m o r e open t o n e w ideas, sceptical of their original political leaders, and losing interest and h e a r t in their elected representatives. T h e National F r o n t has stepped in to capitalise o n this t h a t ' s why I am here - to build the f o u n d a t i o n s of a much s t r o n g e r political o r g a n i s a t i o n . " — J o h n Field full time o r g a n i s e r in Northern Ireland in an interview with the Belfast N e w s Letter, a Unionist p a p e r . " T H E O R A N G E O R D E R is not just a ritualistic o r d e r , it is a religious-military o r d e r on active service." Fr. D e s m o n d Wilson. S T R I P S E A R C H I N G — J u d i t h W a r d who was sentenced to a m i n i m u m ot 30 years for b o m b i n g a c o a c h l o a d of innocent British soldiers on the M62 in F e b r u a r y 1974 has claimed that c o n s t a n t strip, searching is effecting her h e a l t h . J u d i t h w h o is incarcerated in D u r h a m G a o l s ' H ' wing was convicted on the basis of her ' c o n f e s s i o n ' which she w i t h d r e w in C o u r t . She h a s always proclaimed her i n n o c e n c e and is not recognised as a Republican Political prisoner. T H E WAV O U T — o n e w o m a n a n d 27 men h a n g e d themselves in p r i s o n s in E n g l a n d a n d Wales last year a c c o r d i n g t o a H o m e Office reply to an M P s q u e s t i o n . CAPITAL EXPORT — CementR o a d s t o n e holdings, the largest industrial company in Ireland, continues its ' i n t e r n a t i o n a l e x p a n s i o n ' by investing 8.1 million in the USA T H E T I M E S . Printed by Ripley Printers L t d (TU), N o t t i n g h a m R o a d , Ripley, D e r b y s , a n d published by C o n n o l l y Public a t i o n s Ltd, 244 G r a y s Inn R o a d , L o n d o n WC1. Telephone: 01-833-3022. February 1987 IRISH DEMOCRAT DIARIES, DOCTORS AND A RROKEN DREAM TO JLDGE from the number of ihem on display, diaries must be among the most popular gifts at Christmas — popular with the givers at any rate, whatever about the recipients' I have often resorted to manufacturing a diary myself out of old notebooks in preference to splashing out on the commercial product and 1 think I'd have done so again this year if someone hadn't presented me with a shopone. But unlike perhaps the vast majority of people who have diaries given them at Christmcs. 1 persevere with mini and at the end of the year the likelihood is that there may be only one or two blank days at the very most. The act of making a daily entry is something that at the time scarcely seems worthwhile — why bother putting down the trivia that makes up most of our uneventful lives? — but after the passage of a year or a few months, even, those same trivia often become quite interesting and I for one tike to browse back among the pages of old diaries, marvelling at the fallibility of my memory and often cringing at the evidence of my immaturity. And so to anyone contemplating keeping a diary this year 1 would say, stick at it. No matter how pointless it may seem at the time, later on you may be glad that you did. I wouldn't go so far as to echo the words of the wise man who told a younger (and presumably less wise one!) 'Keep a diary in your mouth, boy, and it will keep you in old age!' That is undoubtedly very good advice for politicians or those with a hand in the shaping of world affairs but I don't think that the ordinary chap's diary will contribute to more than a bit of wry amusement orfond nostalgia in his old days — and sure, that itself, as the fellow said, is not to be sneered at! A problem for most diarists is that what they write may be all too easily read by others; I have narrowed down that possibility considerably by always keeping mine in Irish; it was something 1 did from the very beginning, quite without motive let me say — it just did not occur to me to write it in English! But I often think it is a great pity that more people were not literate in bygone times and that of those who were literate more of them did not keep diaries. How much poorer we would be without the works of Samuel Pepys now. or the diaries of Amhlaoibh O Suilleabhain! If there had been a Pepys in every government department or in every walk of professional, commercial or labouring life, how enriched our understanding of the past would be. And if Irish spailpini and labourers from those who worked on the Roaring U P. Trail to those who tramped from the Liverpool boat with their reaping hooks wrapped in straw rope to the rich farmlands of East Anglia — if some By DONALL MacAMHLAIGH of ihem at least had left us an account of their lives and times, what they saw, thought and felt, what they earned and what they spent, how avidly we would dwelt on their pages. Indeed — and I hope no one will take it amiss for me to say this — I would have preferred if Patrick MacGill himself had kept a minute diary of his navvying. tramping and tatie-hoking years in Scotland and England rather than present us with that experience in the fictionalised form that he did. For popular and all as MacGill was in his day. and considerable and all as his achievement was as a writer (against odds that few w riters have had to contend with) his work lacks that uniqueness which I dare to suggest it would have had if his writings had been done in the form of a diary with no striving for literary effects, and with the consciousness that what he was portraying w ould fascinate generations to come. READING GO LEOR Sometime back in the 1930's a writer of. I believe, considerable note stayed in our village in a horse drawn caravan, I vaguely remember the man and the time but / remember very clearly an incident which occured then in relation to him. The writer - no countryman, it would seem — committed the cardinal sin of leaving a gate open and in consequence some stock, a few heifers or milch cows maybe, of a neighbour escaped onto the long acre and had to be brought back at some annoyance to their owner. The owner, an old chap with a battered caubeen hat on his head, a perpetual dribble and a limited command of the King's English berated the writer for leaving the gate open — and in fairly intemperate, if almost unintelligible language too! The Ma happened to be passing and with a proper respect for published authors she was aghast at Tom She4in's lack of a similar respect; she remonstrated with him. in the following words: "Oh. Tom. you shouldn't speak to the gentleman like that — he's a writer, you know." Tom Sheain transferred his outraged attention from the author to the Ma and sez he without putting a tooth in it: "A writer. Mary? Sure he is a writer, he has nothin' else to do — isn't it readin' and writin' the likes of them do be always? He hasn't a puck goat to his name not to speak of a cow. only livin' on the side of the road like a tinker — what else w ould he do only be readin' and writin'?" Hell 1 can't lay claim to a goal or a cow myself and contrary to w hat a lot of my friends seem to think I haven't made any money worth talking of from writing but I do have bags of lime for reading at the moment and over the Christmas in particular -anything rather than let the attention be fastened by the so-called festive programmes churned out on the Box. Among the books I have read this Christmas are Meda Ryan's Liam Lynch, the Real Chief and Noel Browne's Against the Tide. I hope that these t w o b o o k s will be reviewed in the Irish Democrat by someone more properly equipped for the job than yours truly but that needn't stop me expressing my appreciation of them. Tm sure. Meda Ryan's Liam Lynch published at £6.95 b v Mercier. Cork, held me glued to each page until I had finished it. Elsewhere in a review I headed the article I wrote The Grief and the Glory for if glory there was in the fine struggle put u p by volunteers against the might of the Crown Forces there was shame and sorrow in the civil war that followed the Truce. Liam Lynch was totally opposed to any acceptance of less than an all-Ireland Republic and he seems to the ordinary reader like myself to have entertained a far too optimistic belief that the original goal was achieveable — even in the face of that infamous threat of Llovd George's of immediate and terrible war. But Lynch strove with might and main to prevent the break between old comrades and unlike many others he never stooped to pettiness or vindictive revenge. A fine character it would seem. Liam Lynch must have embodied all that was best in the generation that won independence for the 26 countries as all too many of his comrades in time came to symbolise all that Mis^orst. But as we know to our cost he strove in vain to prevent the civil war that has left its baleful influence on Irish politics to this day. The final chapters in which the defeat of all he had fought for loomed up like a spectre before him make grim, in fascinating reading ... Liam Lynch's last words were: "God pray for me. All this is a pity. It should never have happened. I am glad now to be going from it all. Poor Ireland. Poor Ireland!" Liam Lynch must be essential reading for anyone wanting to widen his or her understanding of those glorious and tragic years but before I pass on to Noel Browne's book a word about another Mercier publication, The Stalker Affair (£3.95) by /ournalist Frank Doherty. This book is subtitled 'Including an account of British secret service operations in Ireland' and contains some terrible indictments of the Irish Government for. its role in tolerating cross-border intrusions where not actually colluding with them. Perfidy could hardly be exceeded, it seems, by some of our people in power today, politicians, members of the Irish army, Gardai and others — but read it for youself and iudge. Judas must have many disciples in Ireland today! Noel Bro wne s book is praised, as they sa > in Irish, if I never opened my mouth. It is a most excellent autobiography by any standards but of course its main interest for Irish people will be the role that Dr Browne played in Irish politics, his efforts to introduce the Mother and Child Scheme and his successful war on T.B. a disease that caused more dread in its time than the present scourge of AIDS. The book was an eye-opener for me in many ways and though people who are far better qualified to speak of these matters have said to me that Dr Browne was unfair to Sean MacBride and others on some points — though not as regards their cowardly submission to the Bishops when the Mother and Child Scheme was to be brought in — I read thex(ortured pages with a mixture of disbelief and shame that Irishmen could have been so craven in the face of clerical power. Small wonder that Orangemen can throw it at us that we are a priest-ridden people! Even the bravest of the old IRA veterans, the Blacksmith of Balinalee and others, cowered at the thought of a clerical rebuke. And Labour 'h'ow-arevou! A Jesuit said at the time of the hulabaloo that the introduction of such a scheme would reduce medical treatment to the level of the dispensary service then available to the poor — without seeming to be aware at all that here was a terrible reflection on that same service! (If I may go from one level to a lower one many Irish people took exception to what I said myself in my own first book. Dialann Deoraf. about v the state of Irish dispensaries. dim. cold and forbidding, and the arrogance of Irish doctors). Gill & Macmitlan publish,Against the Tide at £9.95 — and it's worth every penny of it! Nottingham development FIFTEEN people attended a . meeting held in the International Community Centre, Mansfield Road, Nottingham, to hear Mr Desmond Greaves explain the We were i n t r o d u c e d t o a c o m m u n i t y future, policy and prospects, of w o r k e r , a middle-aged m a n of rock-solid the Connolly Association, c o m m o n s e n s e , a n d a n ironic way of It was agreed to re-establish the m a k i n g t h e p o i n t , w h o c h a t t e d with her for half a n h o u r on m a t t e r s o f c o m m o n Nottingham Branch, amongthose interest. He was the type of m a n , w h o , in present being Imelda Connolly a n y c o m m u n i t y on e a r t h , w o u l d be turned who was active with Chris to by n e i g h b o u r s f o r advice o r help. But, as Maguire in the fifties. we were on holiday, a n d h e a d i n g f o r the Moving spirit is Josephine West of I r e l a n d , I'd f o r g o t t e n h i m , until, three d a y s later, his p h o t o g r a p h l o o k e d out Logan, uasal, and her mother, at m e f r o m the Irish Press. H e w a s carrying both of them socialists and a c o f f i n , within which lay the b o d y of his Liverpool-Irish. s o n , Sean D o w n e s , killed a t p o i n t - b l a n k After the meeting, members range by a plastic bullet f i r e d b y a n R U C m a n . Sean D o w n e s , with his wife a n d went to the Irish Centre, secretary i n f a n t , h a d a t t e n d e d a p u b l i c meeting in Mrs Walsh, and enjoyed an A n d e r s o n t o w n held b y Sinn F e i n . evening of music provided by the local Comhaltas Ceolteori, which The last person I recall, I met with and spoke at some length, in the Lobby of the House of is very strong in Nottingham and Commons, and I also exchanged letters with is planning a visit to the Irish him. I liked him, though his politics and mine Centre in Liveipool. were diametrically opposed. Why should I say that? I've never found that liking anyone hinged BIRMINGHAM on agreeing on any subject. Some of the people I Plans are being discussed for a most dislike hold similar views on politics and religion! He was my local MP, Sir Anthony conference on Labour policy in Berry, and he died in the Brighton Bombing. I Ireland to be held in Birmingham was recently clearing out old papers and I came early in May, 1987. ' on a copy of a perhaps too emotional letter I sent MEMENTO MORI - Donal Kennedy C O N S I D E R I N G the times we live in, I've m e t , seen, or spoken with, few p e o p l e w h o died by violence or were t o u c h e d by it. A friend of mine tells me that his f a t h e r - i n law in D u b l i n , a law-abiding citizen, k n e w five or six murdered in that city o v e r a period of little more than a year. My sister, w h o lives in Dublin, recalled a recent tragedy, where a young m a n died. She passed by the scene shortly a f t e r w a r d s , a n d was relieved to hear it was an a c c i d e n t . A p p a r e n t l y like hurricanes in H a m p s h i r e , haccidents in Dublin 'ardly hever ' a p p e n . For the benefit of those whose m a i n s o u r c e of Irish intelligence is the British p r e s s , Dublin is in the Irish Republic, w h e r e death f r o m political causes is relatively rare, c o m p a r e d with the area blessed with British rule. But all those I'm dealing with here died f r o m political causes. O d d l y , though I k n o w some will say I'm n a m e d r o p p i n g a g a i n , none of the c a u s e s was a s o b s c u r e as the law of averages w o u l d suggest. The first one I met, a b r o t h e r of a f r i e n d of m i n e , died in battle, leading a n Irish p l a t o o n t h r o u g h a tunnel in Elizabethville, in the C o n g o , or the secessionist s t a t e of K a t a n g a . He died in the service of t h e U N , a n d the Belgian press, which s u p p o r t e d t h e Belgium mining interests b e h i n d t h e secession, described his b e h a v i o u r a s heroic, t h o u g h how much c o n s o l a t i o n t h a t was t o J i i s family I never t h o u g h t t o a s k . T H E N E X T one, w h o m I saw r i d i n g in an o p e n car to lay a wreath at A r b o u r Hill was J o h n F. Kennedy, At the t i m e , like most I r i s h m e n , I'm a f r a i d I t o o k t h e U S a t its o w n valuation a n d its President b y t h e p r o p a g a n d a a s to his own virtue. I c o n f e s s I was later relieved to find that he d i d n ' t quite fit t h e h a l o of St D o m i n i c Savio, whose b l a m e l e s s and f o r e s h o r t e n e d life was h e l d u p as a realistic e x a m p l e to C a t h o l i c y o u t h trying to c o m e t o terms with p u b e r t y . It was less than five m o n t h s a f t e r his t r i b u t e to Connolly a n d Pearse, M a c D o n a g h a n d MacBride, t h a t K e n n e d y fell t o rifle-fire in Dallas. As my m o t h e r h a d d i e d five weeks to the day, a l m o s t t o the h o u r , previously, I've never been able to d i s e n t a n g l e the e m o t i o n s caused by b o t h , a n d t h e night before K e n n e d y d i e d , I was r e a d i n g Rex MacColl's a c c o u n t of the d e a t h o f Michael Collins, which s h o o k Ireland, even those in a r m s a g a i n s t h i m . T h e next person I r e m e m b e r , I s p o k e with, a n d sat in a cafe with. H e d i e d , a p p a r e n t l y a f t e r j u m p i n g f r o m a block of flats in his native Newry. N o t l o n g a f t e r I s p o k e w i t h him in North L o n d o n , he a n d his wife were dragged f r o m their b e d by police w h o b r o k e down the d o o r t o their flat. T h e y were held for eight d a y s u n d e r the so-called Prevention of T e r r o r i s m Act, then r e l e a s e d , with n o charges against t h e m , t o r e t u r n to their h o m e , w h e r e the f r o n t d o o r remained k n o c k e d o f f its hinges. W h a t e v e r h a p p e n e d d u r i n g his stay a p p a r e n t l y u n h i n g e d the m a n , f o r h e g r e w p a r a n o i d , a n d his death seems t o be a direct r e s u l t of his being pulled in. T h e D e m o c r a t d e a l t with the incident in detail, a n d it w a s the basis o f t h e p l o t of a n episode in t h e T V series " B l a c k S i l k . " In August 1984 I had occasion to visit Belfast for a day, and my (English) wife, whose work involves dealing with young people who get into trouble with the police, contacted a Belfastman with similar concerns shorn she'd met on a course. We visited his project, and later went for a drink in the GAA club in Andersonstown. him when the first H-Block Hunger Strike started in 1980.1 wrote thqt if the hunger striken died and the bodies came out from the Kesh with Tncolors on them, all the Queen's horses and all the Queen's men couldn't avert an upsurge in violence, and that although I wanted such Horses and men removed from Ireland, I wanted them removed in a way that would mimmtse bloodshed and recrimination. He wrote me a polite letter. As I said, these violeat umes have barelv impinged on my serene life, and maliy a street in Belfast or Deny could give intimate accounts of scores of people untimely obliterated. iiiTaiiP Continued from p a g e 3 The Attorney-General sent a ciitular to n e w s p a p e r editors d e m a n d i n g an undertaking that they would not publish a word about the affair. They refused togive j i t So the Special Branch turned: over t h j f W w NS and Mr Campbells and took a w y a ^ -' of documents that had nothing t o f k y ' o t h the case. Makes you wonder wher^jp, 1 Chile or South Africa. Why not turn over some o n B K , Offices for evidence of insidet i r i a m q F y t