Monday, January 26, 2009

A great moment



January 26th 09

A great moment

To begin and for those interested in finding more about the First Dáil event last week, try www.ancheaddail.com

Maith go leor?

And for those interested in my reflections on the Barack Obama inauguration read on.

Billions of words have probably been written and spoken about the inauguration of Barack Obama. The television coverage drew multitudes around the globe.

Since I’ve come back to Ireland everyone asks me “what was it like?”

What was it like?

It was great. Not just the speeches or the hoopla or the sense of occasion. For me the biggest and most significant aspect of that big and significant event was the people.

Some of them were on the train from New York to Washington. Elderly African-American ladies with packed lunches and wooly hats to ward off the cold. Old white guys with Obama badges on their backpacks. Young kids of all ethnic backgrounds.

In Ireland there would have been a sing-song. Here there was a quiet undercurrent of excitement.

When the train disembarked at Union Station – along with trains from all over the USA – the stream of passengers became part of an ocean of humanity making its way to the exits. By now the sense of excitement and good humour and expectation was palpable. Like an All Ireland Sunday. By fluke I found myself next to George Mitchell. I dunted him gently. He turned in surprise.

‘Of all the gin joints in all the world Gerry,’ he exclaimed.

I meant to ask him about the media speculation that he was to get the Middle East job. But he was there with his clann and in the good natured jostling and pushing I forgot.

It was ‘chaos’ outside the station. Organised cheerful chaos. There were cops everywhere – and firemen. The roads around the station were chock full of people. They included young African American families. Our hotel was the same. And early next morning at the American Legion Club adjacent to Capitol Hill where we were to meet our host Congressman Richie Neal it was the same. As we chatted with Richie’s other guests the plasma television screen showed images of Barack and Michelle Obama going into church. He waved at the cameras. The small group of grizzled African American veterans seated before the TV screen burst into applause. Watching them I felt the tears well in my eyes.

And then it was out onto the sidewalk led by the intrepid Billy Tranghese. Two hours later accompanied by Dave and Chris Keaney, and Mike and Barbara Ashe from Springfield Massachusetts and the Blasket Islands I was in our designated area. Richard McAuley and Joseph Smith had long ago left me. They, irony of ironies, were in the Orange area. I didn’t care. I was in the seated area in Section 11. But when we arrived the seated area was packed and the passageway soon filled up.

‘Sit down, sit down’ the people in the seats chorused cheerfully.

‘Give us back our seats’ the standing up crowd chorused cheerfully back at them.

All the while huge screens beamed out images of former Presidents, First Ladies and other notables. Some got booed. But every time the Obama clan appeared the crowd cheered. I made my way through the throng with my County Kerry compatriots. Soon we were in Section 7. A very good natured usher entreated us all to sit down. I hitched up my long johns, cast my aran hat before me on the frosty ground and knelt on it. As I did so the sun came out, the breeze disappeared and the San Francisco Boys and Girls Chorus began to sing.

The next singer was Aretha Franklin. She sang My Country, ‘Tis of Thee. Marian Anderson had sang that song seventy years ago at the Lincoln Memorial after being banned from performing in The Daughters of American Revolution’s Constitution Hall because of her skin colour. Ms Franklin was in fine voice from where I genuflected, a beat away from her. But the air of My Country ‘Tis of Thee was vaguely familiar. I knew I had heard it before. It was the same as God Save Our Queen. That put me off momentarily. I was glad I wasn’t standing. Unlike Richard and Joseph. In the Orange Section.

Joe Biden’s swearing in passed without incident and to loud applause. John Williams composition which followed, on strings cello and clarinet contained elements of what seemed to me to be Lord of the Dance. It also passed without incident. Apparently it was mimed.

Barack Obama’s swearing in wasn’t and I was reassured when the Lord Chief Justice stumbled over the words. Been there, done that. It keeps you grounded. When they concluded the crowd, and me, exploded with tumultuous cheers, amens and wild applause.

And then the new President made his speech and ushered in a new era in USA and hopefully world politics. By now we were all on our feet as Elizabeth Alexander’s poem cast magic word pictures into the bright sunshiny day.

The Reverend Dr Joseph E. Lowery, considered the Dean of the Civil rights movement, and compatriot of Martin Luther King, gave benediction. He knew his day had come. He drew loud Amens and louder chuckles with his,

May the white embrace right.
May the brown be around.
May the yellow be mellow.
May the redman be the headman.

And one US National Anthem later and that was it.

A great moment in our shared history. I left immediately for Ireland and our United Ireland event back in Dublin in the Mansion House.

What did it all mean?

The cynics will say ‘very little’.

But cynics don’t believe. To believe you have to set aside disbelief. Cynics can’t do that. Cynics are giver uppers.

Fact is the majority of the electorate in the USA voted for positive change. They elected an African American. That is significant in itself. But they also elected an African American – a US President - who promises positive change. Will he succeed? Who knows?

The world needs change. We know that. Real change. In Ireland. In the USA. Everywhere. It’s a long time acoming.

But we can hope. And I do. And we can wish the new US President well. And I do that also.

(Editor's note: Our pictures show Gerry Adams with Congressman Richie Neal, Chair of the Friends of Ireland in the US Congress and Gerry Adams before proceedings began.)

Monday, January 19, 2009

First we take Manhattan


FIRST WE TAKE MANHATTAN. 19 JANUARY 2009.


This blog comes to you from Penn Station New York. At least that’s where it starts. On the train. En route to Washington DC. And to the Inauguration of Barack Obama. I arrived here with our trusty leader, RG McAuley late yesterday. The city as usual was buzzing. And snowing. Go han-fhuar. Up early for a quick walk around the block and then to where I now sit, waiting for the three hour journey to commence. The train is a good way to travel. It also means we get to avoid the Hudson.

This morning’s newspapers are filled with news of the Obama family, tomorrow's inauguration and yesterday's big concert at the National Mall. Seisún iontach mór. There is a great photograph (above) in USA Today of Bruce Springsteen and Pete Seeger bopping it up with This Land is Your Land. Seeger, a special hero of mine, was there risking life and limb during the civil rights struggle and all the other great causes. He and thousands of other unsung, and unsinging, heroes and heroines helped make tomorrow.

Seventy years ago Marian Anderson, a famed American contralto, was banned from singing in the Daughters of the American Revolution’s Constitution Hall because of her skin colour. Instead she performed on the steps of the Lincoln Memorial to an integrated audience of 75,000. She sang My Country, ‘Tis of Thee. Last night it was sung again. With gusto. Marian helped make tomorrow also.

Today is Martin Luther King Day. That gives tomorrow's event a special significance. He especially made tomorrow.

Barack Obama, I am sure, knows all this and more that I can only speculate about. Expectations here are very high about what he can deliver. I wish him well. Go n-éirí an t-ádh leis. I feel very privileged to be a guest at such a watershed moment in the history of the USA. The world needs change. Republican Ireland will look to the new administration to help encourage movement towards unity and end to the partition of our small island. Plenty of work for Irish America and our friends. The rest of the world including Ireland will look also for peace in the Middle East and Iraq. For even-handedness everywhere. For progress on the big environmental issues. So tomorrow marks the beginning of all that. We hope.

Next week this blog hopes to give you my sense of the Inaurguration. We are only in Washington for one night. Back on the plane tomorrow. Tuesday, to London and then Dublin for the First Dáil celebration on Wednesday. With a good tail wind we should make it.

The Irish government has its commemoration tomorrow. It almost forgot about it. Or at least by the time it remembered it was too late to book the Mansion House. Sinn Féin had got there first. Not that we would have denied the Oireachtas access. No indeed not, as this blog has noted before this. When we were approached we offered to share the space if the event was truly a national one with co-equal speaking rights. No thanks was the reply. Ach well.

But no matter. The focus on these commemorations and the Democratic Programme of the First Dáil should allow some discussion about what all this means for Ireland today. I think we need a national conversation on the core values that we want for our country and our communities.

That will also mean addressing the genuine fears and concerns of unionists. We need to look at ways in which the unionist people can find their place in a new Ireland.

There are many issues for republicans and unionists to talk about. Within the British system, unionists are fewer than two per cent of the population; they cannot hope to have any significant say in the direction of their own affairs. As 20 per cent of a new Ireland, unionists will be able to assert their full rights and entitlements and exercise real political power and influence.

So, our vision of this new Ireland must be a shared Ireland, an integrated Ireland, an Ireland of which unionists have equal ownership.

I believe there is growing support for Irish unity and there is a growing awareness of the importance of the all-Ireland economy to our nation’s future prosperity and growth.

The celebration of the First Dáil Éireann is one example of how we can begin to promote and explain the need for a fair, just and united Ireland. See you in the Mansion House. I hope. Bígí linn.

Monday, January 12, 2009

Remembering Friends


January 12th 2009-01-12

To begin with, a few words about friends and comrades of mine who died over the festive season. They include Christine Bap Beatty and Seán McKenna. (Editor's note: Sean McKenna is pictured as he appeared on publicity photo for 1980 hunger strike which was also used on posters of the time.) But the biggest shock was on Christmas Eve when I got the sad sceál that Mike Doyle had died suddenly in Philadelphia. Mike came from Castlerea in Roscommon. He never forgot his roots, visiting his homeplace regularly. He was a true friend of Ireland, an ally to many people who arrived over the decades looking for work in Philly and a mainstay of support for the republican cause.

I was with him in the Autumn at a highly successful event and on our many visits to that fine city Mike and his pals were there to greet us. He epitomised in many ways the best of Irish America. Through hard word he did well for himself and his clann. Through it all he stayed true to the Irish cause. Go ndéana Dia trócaire ar a anam dílis. Alex Maskey travelled at short notice to represent Sinn Féin at Mike's funeral and to convey our solidarity to Bernadette and their son, daughters and grandchildren.
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A sad day also in Dublin when we buried Tony Gregory TD last Wednesday. Tony was one of those alternative voices that is so needed in Ireland today. He died after a battle with cancer. He will be badly missed by his family and friends and by his constituents. For decades Tony and Christy Burke were the only radical elected voices for working people in Dublin’s inner city. He stood against the scourge of poverty, unemployment, bad housing and disadvantage of all kinds. An authentic and hard working socialist and republican, Tony was given a very fitting send off.

I met an old friend Fr Piaras Ó Dúill who officiated at the funeral mass and scores of other people who I admire. At the Church of Saint Agatha there was a notice affixed to the rows of seats at the front, Reserved For Canvassers, it said. I thought that was a nice touch and a fitting tribute to the folk who got Tony elected year in and year out, sometimes against all the odds.

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Another old friend, Ulick O'Connor sent me a copy of his latest book. Go raibh míle maith agat Ulick. The Kiss is a collection of poems and translations of poems by one of our island's leading literary lights and I am pleased to say that age has not blunted Ulick’s perceptive pen. I love books and this is a well turned out representative of the species, worthy of its author’s high quality verse. Well done Ulick.

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Ulick has been a consistent visitor at Sinn Féin’s Ard Fheis. I hope he will be there again this year. The Ard Fheis is in the RDS on the weekend of February 20. On January 20 the southern state is commemorating the 90th Anniversary of the First Dáil at the Mansion House in Dublin. Those of you who study these matters will know that the First Dáil met there on January 21. Sinn Féin booked the Mansion House for that date. Not that that should have been a problem.

A source close to Sinn Féin tells me the party was prepared to make the venue available to the Oireachtas if the state commemoration was made a national event and if there were co-equal speaking rights for all involved. Ah no, came the reply. So there you are……. At least it was accepted that MPs, MLAs and MEPs from the north should be invited. And that’s a good thing.
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The Sinn Féin commemoration is a national event. Everyone is welcome. There will be tours of this historic venue throughout the 21st January, an exhibition and a conference that afternoon and a rally that night. For details see the Sinn Féin website.

So what was the First Dail?

The First Dáil Éireann – the first democratically elected Irish Parliament – was established after the Irish people overwhelmingly endorsed the demand for independence from Britain in the 1918 election.

The meeting of the First Dáil Éireann is one of those seminal moments in Irish history. It was the democratic desire of the Irish people for freedom and independence taking shape.
The democratic, social and economic programme of the First Dáil Éireann was radical and visionary. They declared that society should be “ruled in accordance with the principles of Liberty, Equality and Justice for all”.
Grand words, reflecting the goals of the 1916 Proclamation and espousing the great principles of freedom, democracy and social justice to be found in other national declarations around the world.

But the First Dáil was suppressed by the British government, its preceding outlawed, its mandate ignored, and Ireland was partitioned by London. Consequently, the commemoration on January 21st will provide an opportunity to refocus attention on the overriding requirement for an end to partition and for a United Ireland. See you there.
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I spoke at a rally in Dublin on Saturday in protest at the Israeli
Government’s attacks on the people of Gaza. In the course of my remarks I argued for a negotiated peace settlement, an end to all armed actions and direct talks between the Israeli Government and Hamas. War should not be an option. Peace is the only option. Peace with justice. Direct dialogue is the only way to secure and sustain that.

Whatever happens in the short term in that region it is my conviction that all democrats must commit ourselves to working for that and to working for a Palestinian state which is sustainable and viable. Sinn Féin tried to raise the issue on Monday in the Northern Assembly under Matters of the Day. Procedures prevented us from doing that but the Ceann Chomairle Willie Hay has agreed to investigate how international issues like this can be dealt with in the future. In the meantime our Assembly team has tabled a motion on the matter.

Thursday, January 8, 2009

IN THE MEANTIME...


I HAVE TO SAY THAT THIS BLOGGING BUSINESS COULD BECOME CONTAGIOUS. THE INITIAL RESPONSE TO MY FIRST BLOG HAS BEEN VERY INTERESTING. THE PROBLEM IS WHEN I SEE ALL THE COMMENTS I FEEL GUILTY THAT I CANT RESPOND ON AN INDIVIDUAL BASIS. IT IS LIKE NOT ANSWERING A LETTER. AND I ALWAYS TRY TO ANSWER ALL MY LETTERS.

IT WOULD BE GREAT CRAIC IF I COULD ANSWER ALL THE BLOGGERS WHO TOOK THE TIME TO COMMENT. IF I HAD THE TIME. BUT I DONT HAVE THE TIME. SO WHAT TO DO? WELL TO BEGIN LET ME WELCOME ALL COMMENTS, GOOD OR BAD. BLOGGING SEEMS TO BE A VERY DEMOCRATIC CARRY ON AND I LIKE THAT. LET ME ALSO THANK EVERYONE WHO TOOK THE TIME TO ENTER THIS SPACE. GO RAIBH MAITH AGAT. LET ME ALSO EXPLAIN HOW COMPUTER ILLITERATE I AM. FOR EXAMPLE I NOTICED A FEW LINES BACK THAT I AM TYPING IN CAPITALS.

I DONT KNOW HOW TO UNDO THAT AND I DONT WANT TO START ALL OVER AGAIN. YOU SHOULD ALSO KNOW THAT GETTING THIS FAR TOOK ME HALF AN HOUR EVEN THOUGH THE EXPERT AT THE BELFAST MEDIA GROUP GAVE ME TWO PAGES OF WRITTEN INSTRUCTIONS. AND IM ONLY BACK FROM DUBLIN.

I WAS THERE YESTERDAY AS WELL FOR TONY GREGORYS FUNERAL AND CAME BACK TO DO MEDIA ABOUT UPCOMING CHANGES IN THE SINN FÉIN LEADERSHIP AT NEXT MONTHS ARD FHEIS AND TO MEET THE USA SPECIAL ENVOY THIS MORNING BEFORE HEADING BACK TO DUBLIN AGAIN. IT IS THE LAST WEEK OR SO OF HER REMIT AND ALONGSIDE OUR OWN ISSUES WE RAISED THE USA ATTITUDE TO THE ISRAELI GOVERNMENTS ATTACKS ON THE PALESTINIAN PEOPLE. SEE STATEMENT BELOW.I ALSO GOT NEWS ABOUT FG WILSON LAY OFFS. BAD SCEAL! SO WE ARE TRYING TO DO SOMETHING ABOUT THAT.

ALL THIS IS BY WAY OF EXPLANATION AND ME THINKING ALOUD IN A BLOGGY SORTOFAWAY ABOUT HOW I INTEND TO PROCEED. FIRST OF ALL IT SEEMS TO ME THAT BLOGGING IS A PROCESS. SO SUBJECT TO HOW I SURVIVE THIS WAY OF WORKING I WILL TRY TO GET AROUND EVENTUALLY TO THE ISSUES MY BROTHER AND SISTER BLOGGERS HAVE RAISED. OF COURSE I ALSO WANT TO RAISE ISSUES THAT ARE OF CONCERN TO ME. SO WE WILL SEE HOW ALL THIS WORKS OUT. FOR THOSE WHO ARE INTERESTED I HOPE THIS INTERIM FEED BACK IS SUFFICENT. NOW LETS SEE IF I CAN POST THIS.... WHAT DO THE INSTRUCTIONS SAY? HIT PUBLISH POST. OK. HERE GOES!!! UNTIL MY NEXT 'PROPER' BLOG ....SLÁN.

Editor's note: our photograph shows Paula Dobriansky (right), outgoing US envoy to the North of Ireland, with Geraldine McAteer, ceo of the West Belfast Partnership Board, and former US Consul General Dean Pittman during a June 2007 visit to West Belfast.

Sunday, January 4, 2009

A BLOG IS BORN

January 4th 08

A BLOG IS BORN.

As 2008 comes to an end scribblers and scribes, hacks and ordinary decent journalists are filling space with copious copy about the twelve months that have expired. This blog is about to follow suit. Blogging is new to me. It is an entirely foreign place. So safety first! A quick backward glance before plunging forward into space and into whatever it is that we will all face in this new year of 2009.

Bertie gets my prize for great farewells. He did it in style. No matter about the Tribunals, Bertie exited stage left via Westminster, Washington, the Boyne and eventually in an amazing piece of theatre, Government Buildings in Dublin. Rumour has it he was advised a little while before by a very senior party rep that the FF ice was wearing very thin and that maybe, just maybe, he might be pushed if he didn’t jump.

Not so much a heave as a hint of a heave. But methinks Bertie knew the game was up anyway. He didn’t need anyone to tell him. And though he resented being so advised he put it to one side for the duration of his departure and left with considerable panache and a great deal of aplomb. Long runs the fox.

Another wily and older fox bowed out also last year. Ian Paisley gave all of us a really good spin on the merry go round in last twelve months of his leadership. In my view he was genuine about his embrace of the process. I don’t mean that he was up for all the equality measures and other necessary protocols. But he was up for creating a better atmosphere and embracing powersharing and partnership between the people of this island. Eileen Paisley put it very well when she spoke at the Battle of the Boyne ceremony in County Meath. In the end it was all too much for his colleagues. So Ian went. He also did it in great style. And his loyalty to his party peers was in marked contrast to their disloyalty to him.

The Celtic Tiger went out with a whimper. Its nine lives were kaput. Not long after Brian Cowen’s arrival. Remember the scenes at Leinster House that day and throughout his constituency for days after? It was like Offaly won the All Ireland. Then the government took the summer off and the Celtic Tiger expired. And the government didn’t notice. Not for a while anyway. Why would they? Sure it wasn’t their money anyway. They were too busy not bothering to read the Lisbon Treaty.

Bertie had something which so far Brian Cowen has been denied. Bertie had luck. He was steeped in it. 2008 brought no luck whatsoever to our present Taoiseach. Will 2009 be any different? We’ll see.

As the seánfhocál says ‘It’s a very unlucky man who is unlucky all the time’.

So there you are. My first blog almost finished. But not quite.

As I sit here on the first day of this New Year, my thoughts are with the people of Gaza. The attacks on them and the people of the Palestinian territories are totally and absolutely wrong. The timing of the current Israeli offensive is as calculated as every other aspect of these operations.

It is no accident that these attacks occurred in the last weeks of the Bush presidency. The Israeli assertion that its operations are in response to Hamas’ rocket attacks is threadbare. The rocket attacks should cease. Israeli citizens, like Palestinian citizens have the right to live in peace. The rocket attacks also play into the hands of the militarists on the Israeli side.

The timing of their current offensive is directly linked, in my opinion, to Barack Obama’s move into the White House on January 20. It comes after a lengthy embargo on Gaza and the closing of border crossing. Those responsible seem to be about making sure that the ongoing crisis in the Middle East is the new US Presidents first foreign policy test.

The rest of us need to make sure, as best we can, that the international community, and that includes the White House, uses it considerable influence to bring about a lasting peace settlement. Anything less will see the continued cycle of conflict, death and destruction in that region.

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