A Warm House for Everyone: Seeking a Pathway to the Future by Lucilita Bhreatnach: Wear an Easter Lily
A Warm House for Everyone
I
am writing this column in New York. Richard and I are here for the weekend
working on my remarks for Monday night when President Bill Clinton and I will
share reflections on the Good Friday Agreement negotiations and developments
since then. I will return to this in next week’s column.
President
Clinton played a critical role in the build up to the Agreement, encouraged and
supported by Irish America. He was at the end of the phone as agreement was
reached and has been an enabler of our process ever since. So too has Hilary
Clinton.
Our
Monday night event is in Cooper Union Great Hall. I’ve spoken there once
before. So has Abraham Lincoln, Barak Obama, Bill Clinton and a range of other
renowned speakers from the Arts, Science, politics and activist sectors. Just
saying.
‘If
you can make it here you can make it anywhere’ says Richard.
Our
last event before leaving Ireland for New York was a Peoples’ Assembly in
the Carrickdale Hotel in Carrickcarnon, right on the border in County
Louth. This Peoples’ Assembly was an opportunity for citizens from
the Armagh, Down and Louth border region to have their say on the future
of Ireland.
The
ill-effects of living under British rule are keenly felt in this area and the
implications of Brexit casts a long shadow. So too does the British
Government’s Legacy Bill of Shame and its mean spirited ‘Borders and
Nationalities Bill’ which makes it mandatory for visitors travelling into the
North from the South to firstly obtain an Electronic Travel
Authorisation. This is the latest threat from London to the people
here particularly in this region.
The Carrickdale
event was the fourth organised by Sinn Féin’s Commission on the Future of
Ireland. It was chaired by Conor
Patterson of Newry and Mourne Enterprise Agency. The panel included; Reverend
Karen Sethuraman; ICTU Assistant General Secretary Gerry Murphy; Mairéad
McAlinden former CEO of the Southern Health & Social Care Trust and Aidan
Browne of Dundalk’s DkIt's Regional Development Centre.
They
gave valuable insights and their contributions were well worth listening to. So
also were contributions from the audience. They were thoughtful, spirited,
informed and very interesting for me, as someone not from that region, as well
I am sure for everyone else.
It was standing room only and the packed gathering
heard Uachtarán Shinn Féin Mary Lou McDonald open the event.
In
a wide ranging address Mary Lou spelt out the difficulties caused by partition
and the opportunities which will be created by ending division and she
addressed the importance of reaching out to our unionist neighbours. She
said: “We want to encourage popular grass roots participation in that ongoing
conversation about our shared future. Everyone should have their say. There are
many people in this region who are unionist. The Orange was founded
in neighbouring county Armagh.
That
tradition is reflected in our national colours. This is the place that we
all call home. Our resolve is to make it a better place for all, unionists are
our neighbours and they should also be our friends’.
This
column hopes that Jeffrey Donaldson’s DUP officer board picked up on this.
The Sinn
Féin President extended the hand of friendship to them when she said: “To
those from the unionist culture I extend a sincere welcome – the new Ireland
must be a warm house for all and your traditions and beliefs must be respected
and cherished. I invite you especially to be part of the conversation and for
us all to plan for the future together … Conversations are happening across the
country – in our places of work, in our universities, as we drop our children
at the school gates and at the match on Sundays!”
In recent years a vast amount of academic research,
new studies and books on all aspects of reunification have been produced. They
all urge the Irish Government to begin planning and preparing for
constitutional change and there is now an urgent imperative for the government
to establish a Citizen’s Assembly to prepare the groundwork in advance of a
unity referendum.
As Mary Lou said: “This is an exciting time for
us all; filled with opportunity and hope for a better future. That’s why
we need to get it right. Our new constitutional national democracy will
emerge from a phased transition and that is why planning and preparation should
begin now. Grassroots communities should be involved at the beginning of that
process, not at the end.”
The Sinn Fein President pointed out that the
Commission on the Future of Ireland is about inviting working people, trade
unionists, business owners, community activists, women, our youth, LGBTQ
people, Gaeilgeoirí, academics, our new communities, Travellers, those with
disabilities and others to have their say on the process of change.
Speaking directly about the challenges facing the
border region Mary Lou said: “Our shared challenge is to create a future
which is warm and welcoming for everyone and where the potential prosperity of
areas like this border region can be fully unlocked.”
So
there you have it. Perhaps when this column returns to Ireland the DUP attitude
to participating in the Northern Assembly will be clearer.
Or,
perhaps not?
This week
Lucilita Bhreatnach, one of our negotiators at Good Friday 1998 recalls these
events.
Each one of us involved in the
negotiations has their reminiscences of the days leading up to the Good Friday
Agreement. Also, of the preceding years, talks about talks and then, the actual
talks with the three governments, Dublin, London and the White House.
We were seeking a pathway into the
future. Negotiations involve taking risks, listening to the other side and
being willing to move into a new space. Every obstacle we faced had to be overcome
or talks would have broken down on many occasions.
Our negotiation teams comprised party
members, including ex-prisoners and elected representatives. We were pursuing a
peaceful and democratic solution to an undemocratic situation. England's policy
in Ireland was still resisting that democratic outcome.
In the late hours of April 1998, there
were tensions and bad tempers, emotional and technical problems; loads of bi-laterals
and papers galore. The party leadership had resolved to engage and to reach an
agreement, if possible based on the democratic principles governing our outlook
on the negotiation process.
At some stage Bairbre De Brún, Alex
Maskey and I found ourselves in a room with officials checking on papers late
into the night. We engaged on human rights issues, a Bill of Rights, policing
and the Irish language.
In a corridor, I bumped into Bertie
Ahern and he said ‘tell Martin and Gerry I have told them we are not giving any
more.’ I put an Easter lily into the palm of his hand and offered my
sympathies, as his mother had died that week.
Some days earlier, I drove to Dublin to
be with my daughter for the birth of her first child, Aoife. Back in Stormont,
Bríd Curran gave me a card signed by the team for Aoife.
We waited all night long. At some stage
Mitchel McLoughlin, Bairbre and I addressed the media outside in the freezing
snow. We tried to keep hope alive but the talks were confidential and none of
us wanted any damaging leaks to the media. Bairbre and I did the international
media, in Spanish and French agus as Gaeilge.
Back inside, Siobhán and I sat next to
a photocopying machine in the hall ready to copy the all-important document
once it arrived when the Unionist reached a decision.
There were phone calls back and forth
with the prisoners. It felt surreal at times. We knew we were on the cusp of
something big but also that we would not get everything we wanted.
Gerry and Martin appeared, documents
were handed out, which we all read. No time then for much sleep for we had to
get ready for the plenary session chaired by George Mitchell. I had met him in
the hall and he shook my hand saying ‘you did very well’, (meaning all of us I
am sure).
When formalities were over one of the
loyalists told me he had studied Irish and got a Fáinne while in jail.
Twenty-five years later, the Good Friday Agreement has yet to be fully implemented along with other agreements. I look forward to a New Ireland that is multicultural, pluralist and non sectarian based on equality with full inclusion of the Unionist and other communities in Ireland.
Easter is only days away.
It is a time when tens of thousands of people across the island, and
internationally, will attend Easter commemorations to mark the anniversary of
the Easter Rising and the Proclamation of the Republic. The symbol of our
enduring commitment to those ideals is the Easter Lily.
The first Easter Lily badges were designed in 1925
by Cumann na mBan. The dual purpose of the Easter Lily was to raise money for
the Republican Prisoners’ Dependents Fund and to honour the sacrifice made by
the men and women of the 1916 Rising. The original Easter Lily badge was
hand-made.
So, wear an Easter Lily
this weekend with pride and in remembrance of past generations.
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