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Weekly Worker 620 Thursday April 13 2006
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A blow for democracy
Jinxed
I
knew I would jinx April’s fund if I was too positive about the “perky”
start it got off to last week.
As if to mock me, readers this week have sent just £30 via post
and precisely nothing via Pay Pal - despite 17,164 visitors paying
a call on our website - but not paying. OK, I take the hint comrades.
Rest assured I am considerably less jaunty this week and am making
a special appeal to readers. With our total for April as the third
week of the month looms standing at just £130, we need a dramatic
surge over the next seven days to get back on track.
A special effort is called for, comrades!
Robbie Rix
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The Easter Rising of April 24 1916 was not simply a pivotal event in
Irish history. It signalled the beginning of a revolutionary wave in Europe
that reached its highest point in Russia in 1917 - Lenin wrote that the
tragedy of the Irish was that they rose too soon, before
the revolution had matured in other countries. Today, the democratic legacy
of the rising is under attack. Liam O Ruairc surveys the debate
Geoffrey Wheatcroft’s opinion piece in The Observer will give
British readers a taste of the sort of arguments that one can find in
the Irish media on the 1916 Easter Rising on its 90th anniversary (‘The
evil legacy of the Easter Rising’ April 9 2006). Reactions have been cautious
at best and hostile at worst: that the rising was a criminal, undemocratic,
sectarian act, led by fanatical madmen who had no ‘mandate’ from the people,
caused untold carnage and misery in the heart of Dublin and was roundly
denounced by all sides at the time. Far from being celebrated, such an
event should be denounced.
For Wheatcroft, the Easter Rising was “a bloody rebellion against parliamentary
democracy” because it occurred in a democratic state and the insurgents
had no electoral mandate. The rebels thought this was an irrelevance as
the Act of Union had been contrived without a democratic mandate and the
British presence in Ireland persisted without a democratic mandate (Vincent
Brown, ‘The 1916 Easter Rising was a success’ Village February
16). Leaving aside how far democracy existed under the Union, a clear
majority had voted for the Irish Parliamentary Party in the previous election.
However, it was then obvious that the democratically endorsed Home Rule
Bill of 1914 was going to be frustrated by Loyalist, British army and
Tory opposition.
What was the import of arms to Larne and the Curragh mutiny, aided and
abetted by the Tory opposition, if not an undermining of democracy? More
generally, what characterises critics of the 1916 Rising is their inability
to understand the colonial nature of the relationship between Britain
and Ireland. British rule in Ireland was entirely a product of conquest.
All Irish political discourse was maintained in the context of the threat
of superior force by an imperial power. This was vividly illustrated only
three years later when the democratic will of the first Dail was met by
state terrorism.
Some of the critics of 1916 deny that Ireland was then a colony or that
the rising can be understood through the prism of anti-colonialism. They
argue that it was an eastern European or Balkan ethno-national style problem.
As to the inappropriateness of an anti-colonial struggle between 1916
and 1923, Nicholas Mansergh, a leading Irish and commonwealth historian
stated in 1965: “The contribution of Ireland was successively to weaken
the will and undermine belief in empire. Beyond a certain point, it was
not worth it. Stanley Baldwin summed it up when he said there must not
be another Ireland in India” (quoted in Martin Mansergh, letter to Village
October 15 2005).
What gave 1916 and its proclamation a global significance was that it
represented the revolutionary assertion of a national sovereignty in the
context of the imperialised world.
Subjugated peoples everywhere found inspiration in the Easter Rising;
Gandhi and Ho Chi Minh, for example. “Its imaginative power hastened
the end of the imperial and colonial ages and, critically, its wider context
as both cultural and political revolution created a template that changed
the world.” (Tom McGurk, ‘The Easter Rising: the shots that changed the
world forever’ Sunday Business Post March 12).
The Easter Rising was globally recognised as a blow for democracy; nothing
similar can be said of any ‘deeply divided’ societies’ ethno-national
conflicts.
Critics say that celebrating the rising ‘glorifies violence’ and that
the democratic credentials of the insurgents were suspect as the majority
of voters supported the Home Rule party.
It is undeniable that violence was central to the emergence of modern
Ireland, but the same could be said of most countries that have emerged
since the French Revolution. It is true that the insurgents of 1916 did
not seek an electoral mandate before the rising, but neither did the French
revolutionaries in 1789, 1830, 1848 or 1871. Neither did Garibaldi or
Algerian and Vietnamese revolutionaries.
It was the Tories and the Unionists who first abandoned constitutional
procedures and introduced the gun into Irish politics. It was Bonar Law,
the Tory prime minister, who stated that “there are things stronger than
parliamentary majorities”. Had this not happened, it is doubtful whether
the rising would have taken place.
Instead of focussing on the suspect democratic credentials of the insurgents,
it is reasonable to concentrate on the deliberate infringement of democratic
rights by Tories and Unionists. If critics are so concerned about commemorations
associated with unnecessary violence, they should begin by opposing the
carnival of militarism and glorification of British terrorism that is
Remembrance Sunday. In a typical 10 minutes on the western front, the
numbers of people slaughtered in the interests of British imperialism
was greater than the total numbers who died during the Easter Rising.
While the rising was very much a reaction against World War I and militarism,
the poppy is a celebration of it.
Other critics have argued that the rising was unnecessary. It is suggested
that constitutional nationalists could have achieved just as much without
recourse to insurrection as Home Rule was inevitable. A Home Rule bill
was enacted on September 18 1914 (implementation was delayed until after
the war), the empire was being dismantled. So the Easter Rising was superfluous
to history.
In fact, the modest measure of Home Rule enacted by the House of Commons
was rendered meaningless by a combination of the armed revolt by Ulster
Unionists, the mutiny against parliament by the British army, the rejection
of the legislation by the unelected House of Lords and by the British
Conservative and Unionist party. So, after nearly three decades of debate
and three Home Rule bills, and even with Home Rule formally on the statute
book, it was still not going to happen.
More importantly, the rebels of 1916 did not rise in order to hasten
Home Rule. Home Rule and an Irish Republic were not simply two totally
different concepts, they were actually diametrically opposed to
each other. Home Rule would have granted Ireland a ‘caretaker’ parliament
in Dublin, but the proclamation set its sights on the higher goal of unimpeded
Irish sovereignty - the right of the people of Ireland to the ownership
of Ireland and to the unfettered control of Irish destinies.
A Home Rule parliament was simply a devolutionary device to corral the
growing demands for Irish self-determination into a legislature whose
ultimate control lay with the crown and the Commons. If the notion of
an Irish Republic was freehold, then Home Rule would give the sovereign
Irish people no more than tenancy status in their own country (Tom McGurk
ibid).
Further, the brutal suppression of independence movements in India, Cyprus,
the then Rhodesia - the list goes on - hardly indicates that there was
a recognition of the need to dismantling the empire. The rising achieved
Irish independence much quicker. Had it not been for the rising, Ireland
would not have won independence until the end of World War II - if then.
It is sometimes alleged that the rising was a mystical ‘blood sacrifice’.
As the noted historian Eoin Neeson recently pointed, the rebellion was
never intended to be any such thing, that this idea has been “one of the
most effective and enduring examples of black propaganda this country
has been subjected to in modern times.”
At the time of the rebellion, Germany was expected to win the European
war; certainly its defeat was not anticipated. The general consensus was
that the war would be followed by a peace conference at which, the insurrectionists
hoped, Ireland would be represented - but only if the country had sent
out a strong message to underline that it was determined to achieve independence.
The 1916 leaders hoped they could hold out for three days during Easter
week. If it could, this would satisfy the requirement that had been laid
down by Germany and allow it - if victorious - to fulfil its promise
to give Ireland a hearing as an independent belligerent nation at the
post-war peace conference. Hence the reference in the proclamation to
the “gallant allies in Europe” (Eoin Neeson, letter Irish Times
February 6).
For Wheatcroft, the Easter Rising was “the forerunner” of Mussolini’s
1922 March on Rome and Hitler’s 1923 Munich putsch. “Patrick Pearse’s
exalted (or insane) words about the tired old earth that needed to be
enriched by the spilling of much blood … was the very language of ‘blut
und boden’ (blood and soil) that the National Socialists would soon use.”
Nothing could be further from the truth.
Take this archetypal Pearseian phrase: “The tree of liberty must continually
be watered with the blood of martyrs and the blood of tyrants.” In fact,
this was written by Thomas Jefferson. So are we to take it that the American
war of independence was a forerunner of fascism? Keep in mind that the
most strident critics of the so-called 1916 ‘blood sacrifice’ are those
who enthusiastically take part in the militaristic ceremonies of empire
at the Somme, support ‘Poppy day’ or try to rehabilitate the ‘peaceful’
Redmondism - the recruiting sergeant for the empire’s war against Germany
and Turkey in which thousands of Irish men gave their lives.
Those who think that 1916 was a mistake should promote its true alternative:
the aforementioned imperialist war-monger John Redmond, who was prepared
to organise a ‘blood sacrifice’ of 50,000 Irish people in exchange for
an unfulfilled promise of a measure of local government!
According to Wheatcroft “for Ireland to celebrate the 90th anniversary
of the 1916 rebellion is to betray democracy.” He adds: “In 1916, the
United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland was a democracy with limited
representative government and a rule of law.” His assertion that the Rising
was not a democratic event should be put in a wider context. While the
1916 proclamation at least accepted ‘the suffrages of all [Ireland’s]
men and women’, Westminster was “still refusing to concede women the vote
on the basis that to do so would be to give in to terrorism”! All the
contemporary Irish MPs were against women’s suffrage! It appears
that the rebels may have had a better grasp of some of the fundamentals
of democracy than their critics give them credit for.
While it was not perfect, the proclamation remained an important step
forward for women’s rights even before the self-proclaimed cradle of modern
democracy in Westminster was able to contemplate the step. At a recent
conference, president Mary McAleese argued that the rising was not sectarian,
contradicting some revisionist claims that republicans intended to set
up a catholic-dominated state and persecute their protestant neighbours.
At the same event, Owen McGee threw further light on the matter by explaining
how the catholic nationalist followers of political parties, such as Redmond’s,
were vigorously opposed to the Irish Republican Brotherhood on the assumption
that it was anti-catholic and that it would attempt a separation of church
and state such as was being conducted in republican France.
These Irish Parliamentary Party supporters and the like were not too
concerned whether their state gained Home Rule under a monarch as long
as its catholic character remained intact. It can be seem from this that
protestant unionists had less to fear from republican revolutionaries
than catholic constitutional nationalists. The 1916 proclamation set out
to guarantee religious tolerance and liberty for all the nation’s citizens
(Nick Foley ‘1916 versus Whig history’ Irish Political Review February).
While fascist regimes were turning away from democracy, the Easter Rising
was aspiring to it.
Given that the official ideology of the southern Irish regime is one
of ‘peace and reconciliation’, one would expect that Liz McManus, the
Labour Dáil member on the cross-party committee organising the ceremony,
would insist that all participants should be remembered. “I put forward
the view that we should commemorate the civilians who died and people
who were doing their duty in the police and the British army as well”,
she suggested. In an example of political revisionism, the Irish government
is planning a second state ceremony in July to remember those who perished
on the Somme in 1916, fighting alongside the British (Owen Bowcott ‘Dublin
still split on Easter Rising’ The Guardian April 10).
The two, however, are incompatible. While the insurgents were fighting
for democracy and freedom, those Irish people fighting at the Somme were
dying for king and country. They were fighting for the British empire,
a 300-year project of world conquest, colonisation, ethnic cleansing and
genocide. With their help, the British imperialism gained vast territories
in Africa and the Middle East from this Great War and went on to pile
horror upon atrocity all the way down to Palestine and Iraq today.
In contrast, a common heritage that could bring unionists and republicans
together could be a campaign for monuments to IRA men like Tom Barry and
Dan Breen to be erected in the UK. After all, these men were British up
to 1922 according to official history and therefore are as much a part
of Britain’s past as they are of Ireland.
The objection to this will be its potential to offend the sensibilities
of Unionists and of people who have had relations in the security forces.
If Unionists and the relatives of people killed fighting Irish independence
have a veto in Britain, why should republicans and the relatives of those
who died in the independence wars not have the same privilege in Ireland
(Nick Foley ibid)?
By confusing the insurgents with those who fought against them and those
who died in Dublin and those who died in the imperialist blood-bath of
the Somme, the original democratic intent of the 1916 Rising is lost.
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