Skip to main content

Palestinians deserve our support also: Springhill/Westrock Massacre – 50 years ago: Write On!: Seachtain na Gaeilge

 



Palestinians deserve our support also

There are two photographs in this week’s column. One is of a school. Totally destroyed. Levelled. Classrooms reduced to rubble. The work of students scattered across the ground. The other is of a hospital. Mickey and Minnie Mouse and other favourite Disney characters look down over floors strewn with the flotsam of war. Life saving equipment destroyed. Walls and floors shattered by shrapnel. Both buildings were the target of rockets indiscriminately fired at civilian targets.

Had these images been taken in Ukraine and resulted from attacks by Russian war planes or rockets the international media would have plastered them over their front pages. Politicians in the EU, Britain, the USA, and elsewhere, including Irish government Ministers, would have been falling over each other to express their outrage and condemnation.

What the Russians are doing in Ukraine is totally and absolutely wrong and deserves being highlighted, exposed and opposed. But there is a need also to be consistent.

The photographs I refer to above were taken in Gaza in 2009 when I and some comrades visited the region for four days. In the intervening years the situation for Palestinians living in the besieged Gaza Strip, in East Jerusalem and the west Bank has further deteriorated. A year ago Human Rights Watch published a damning report on the policies and actions of the Israeli State against the Palestinian people accusing it of committing the crime of apartheid and of crimes against humanity.

At the beginning of February Amnesty International published a 280 page report that also concluded that Israel’s treatment of the Palestinian people constitutes apartheid.

Last week video and photographs emerged of an 11 year old Palestinian child being attacked by Israeli soldiers in East Jerusalem. The terrified wee girl suffered a fractured jaw. This is not an isolated incident. According to the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) 2021 witnessed the killing of 76 Palestinian children by Israeli forces using tank fired shells, live ammunition and missiles from warplanes, helicopters and drones. At the same time Palestinian families are being evicted from their homes - that are then occupied by Israeli settlers - and others have to watch as their homes are destroyed by Israeli bulldozers.

Where is the international outrage at these actions? Are Palestinian children or adults any less deserving of our humanity than those Ukrainian citizens fighting desperately in defence of their homeland? Of course not.

Sanctions against Russia are a necessary response to its invasion of Ukraine. But many of those who support such sanctions rail against sanctions against Israel. This includes the Irish government.

When reminded that seven years ago the Oireachtas voted to recognise the State of Palestine the Minister for Foreign Affairs Simon Coveney says it can only happen as part of the peace process. A peace process that doesn’t exist and that Israel has successfully undermined.

This is hypocrisy, especially from an Irish government that is currently on the UN Security Council and could provide real humanitarian leadership at this dangerous time.

Governments that support the right of the people of Ukraine to self-determination should also support the right of the people of Palestine to self-determination. Those who urge tough sanctions against Russia should also urge tough sanctions against Israel.

Write On!

Last Thursday was World Book Day. This year is the 25th anniversary of the event. This reminded me of the volume of publications produced by former republican prisoners. There is my own modest contribution and Danny Morrison’s offerings including his current timely book about the false narrative from the Dublin establishment about the good old IRA.

Jazz Jim McCann has given us a special insight into life on the blanket. Eoghan Mac Cormaic has just published PLUID, his personal take í nGaeilge  of life in the H  Blocks, 1976-81.  Big Laurny, Laurence McKeown, has published his prison memoir. Pat Magee has given us a compelling account of his experiences.  Gerry Kelly has a new book of poetry to add to earlier works. They join Síle Darragh’s ‘John Lennon Is Dead’ and Tom Hartley’s fine tomes on Belfast history, including Presbyterian history.

Rosaleen Walsh is another fine writer and a good poet. Ella O Dwyer is exemplary. So is Tony Doherty from Derry. Jake Mac Sachais adds to the Gaeilge literature on the Irish penal experience.  There are others too like Chrissie McAuley, and Lily Fitzsimmons  who have produced  their own stories  and  there are also compilations of women’s writing like In The Footsteps of Anne.   Richard McAuley and I are publishing a new book on The Armagh Women in the next few months. 

Jim Mc Veigh only this week launched his new novel Stolen Faith.  I am minded to single out the late Brian Campbell for special mention. He and Laurny and others pioneered prison writings. There are others too. Playwrights, songwriters. Like Brendan McFarlane. The problem is that once you start to name names you are likely to leave someone out. One or two deserve to be left out because of the untruthful twistedness of their ruminations.

And of course the finest of our prison writers is Bobby Sands. As I write this I am very mindful that this time 41 years ago Bobby was on hunger strike and writing his prison diary on scraps of paper to be smuggled out. Bobby’s poetry, prose, political polemic and other writings in Irish and English are now part of the tradition.

So we republican authors have added a lot to the understanding of the struggle and in particular the prison struggle. Little wonder the British Government says it plans to commission an official history. They are too late.

Springhill/Westrock Massacre – 50 years ago

On 9 July the people of Springhill and Westrock will mark 50 years from the massacre by British troops that left 5 local people dead. Three of those shot by British snipers were children. John Dougal was aged 16. Margaret Gargan was aged 13. David McCafferty was aged 15. Fr. Noel Fitzpatrick was based at Corpus Christi Church, in Springhill and Paddy Butler was killed by the same bullet that struck Fr. Fitzpatrick as the two tried to pull victims to safety.

Like the Ballymurphy Massacre that had occurred 11 months earlier in August 1971 the British Army claimed that those killed were shot during a gun-battle with the IRA. They also claimed to have killed six gunmen.

At the weekend the families met with local representatives, including Aisling Reilly MLA, to organise for the 50th anniversary; to hear a legal update from their lawyer Pádraig Ó’Muirigh; and to prepare for the inquest which the families hope will take place next year. Currently no date has been set for the preliminary hearing that will determine the date for the inquest but the hope is that this will be known in the next month.

The Springhill and Westrock families have never given up on getting justice and the truth of what happened on Sunday 9 July 1972. They are to be commended for their tenacity and courage in the face of British state efforts to thwart their efforts and cover-up the actions of their soldiers.

Seachtain na Gaeilge

Seachtain na Gaeilge is the biggest celebration of Irish language and culture in the world. The festival used to run for one week but became so popular it was extended. It now runs annually from 1 March to 17 March – St. Patrick’s Day. 

Two years ago before Covid there were over 30,000 events held in Ireland and across the world with an estimated three quarters of a million people participating.

Seachtain na Gaeilge embraces language, music, dance and sport, and increasingly events on social media. Writers too have brought a focus to the language.

Is í Seachtain na Gaeilge an ceiliúradh is mó den Ghaeilge agus Cultúr na hÉireann ar domhan. Bhí an oiread sin ráchairt uirthi gur síneodh amach chuig coicís í. Bíonn sí ar siúl ó 1 Márta go dtí 17 Márta - Lá Fhéile Pádraig, achan bhliain.

Bhí 30,000 imeacht ann ar fud na hÉireann agus an domhain roimh Covid agus measadh gur ghlac trí cheathrú milliún duine páirt iontu.

Tá an teangaidh, ceol, damhsa agus spóirt mar chuid de Sheachtain na Gaeilge, agus níos mó imeachtaí ná riamh ar na meáin shóisialta anois. Tá aird dírithe ag scríbhneoirí ar an teangaidh anois.

So, if you have the opportunity there are lots going on in Seachtain na Gaeilge. Why not come along and enjoy the craic and company.

 

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Turf Lodge – A Proud Community

This blog attended a very special celebration earlier this week. It was Turf Lodge: 2010 Anois is Arís 50th Anniversary. For those of you who don’t know Turf Lodge is a proud Belfast working class community. Through many difficult years the people of Turf Lodge demonstrated time and time again a commitment to their families and to each other. Like Ballymurphy and Andersonstown, Turf Lodge was one of many estates that were built on the then outskirts of Belfast in the years after the end of World War 2. They were part of a programme of work by Belfast City Corporation known as the ‘Slum clearance and houses redevelopment programme.’ The land on which Turf Lodge was built was eventually bought by the Corporation in June 1956. The name of the estate, it is said, came from a farm on which the estate was built. But it was four years later, in October 1960, and after many disputes and delays between builders and the Corporation, that the first completed houses were handed over for allocation...

Slán Peter John

Sinn Féin MP Conor Murphy, Fergal Caraher’s parents, Mary and Peter John, and Sinn Féin Councillors Brendan Curran and Colman Burns at the memorial in South Armagh dedicated to Fergal Caraher It was a fine autumn morning. The South Armagh hilltops, free of British Army forts, were beautiful in the bright morning light as we drove north from Dublin to Cullyhanna to attend the funeral of Peter John Caraher. This blog has known Peter John and the Caraher family for many years. A few weeks ago his son Miceál contacted me to let me know that Peter John was terminally ill. I told him I would call. It was just before the Ard Fheis. Miceál explained to me that Peter John had been told he only had a few weeks left but had forgotten this and I needed to be mindful of that in my conversation. I was therefore a wee bit apprehensive about the visit but I called and I came away uplifted and very happy. Peter John was in great form. We spent a couple of hours craicing away, telling yarns and in his c...

The Myth Of “Shadowy Figures”

Mise agus Martin and Ted in Stormont Castle 2018 The demonising of republicans has long been an integral part of politics on this island, and especially in the lead into and during electoral campaigns. Through the decades of conflict Unionist leaders and British governments regularly posed as democrats while supporting anti-democratic laws, censorship and the denial of the rights of citizens who voted for Sinn Féin. Sinn Féin Councillors, party activists and family members were killed by unionist death squads, o ften in collusion with British state forces. Successive Irish governments embraced this demonization strategy through Section 31 and state censorship. Sinn Féin was portrayed as undemocratic and dangerous. We were denied municipal or other public buildings to hold events including Ard Fheiseanna. In the years since the Good Friday Agreement these same elements have sought to sustain this narrative. The leaderships of Fianna Fáil, the Irish Labour Party, the SDLP and...