“I stand with the people of Ireland” - Jessie Jackson: The partitionist mindset of RTE: Fly Me To The Moon.:
“I stand with the people of Ireland” - Jessie
Jackson
Reverend Jesse Jackson has been a long-standing
friend of Ireland and an advocate for equality and peace. He has visited here
many times and I have been fortunate to have also had the opportunity to meet
him in the USA. During a visit to the North in 2011 Rev. Jackson said:
“The pattern of communities struggling for freedom, justice and democracy is
essentially the same … Where there is no justice, there can be no peace. As Dr.
King often reminded us, peace is not the absence of noise but the presence of
justice.”
On his last visit in June 2017 Rev. Jackson opened
the newly rebuilt Museum of Free Derry along with Fiachra McGuinness and his
mother Bernie. He also visited Martin’s graveside. Four months later Rev.
Jackson was diagnosed with Parkinson’s Disease.
As well as telling the story of Bloody Sunday the
museum is dedicated to the civil rights movement which drew inspiration
from the African-American civil rights struggle in the USA. Jesse Jackson was part
of the leadership of that movement and was with Martin Luther King when he was
assassinated in April 1968. He is an iconic figure for all of those across the
world who struggle for civil rights and social and economic justice.
Last week Rev Jackson, now aged 81, announced that
he was stepping down as head of the Chicago-based Rainbow PUSH Coalition which
he founded. Despite this move he and the Rainbow Coalition have made it clear
that his commitment to civil rights is unwavering, and he will now focus on
“teaching ministers how to fight for social justice and continue the freedom
movement.”
In 2020 Rev Jackson sent a video message to
the annual New York-New Belfast conference. He told his Irish and American
audience: ““We're not going backwards; we're not going to give up. There's a
sense of spirituality in our marches.
It's a healing time, it's hope time. I stand with
people of Ireland and Irish Americans and Irish in Ireland. Fred Douglass
was there, and I've been there. I look forward to coming to Ireland again.
Please let me come back. I love you guys very much.”
Well we love him to and would very much hope that
he would come back for a visit. Until then we extend our solidarity to a unique
and inspirational leader and to his family.
PS
Next week a statue of Frederick Douglass is being
unveiled in Belfast. More of that then.
The partitionist mindset of RTE
The recent controversies surrounding RTE –
problematic payments, a lack of transparency, questionable management, deeply
flawed oversight, the blocking of GAA matches to the North, the GAAGO saga and
the geo-blocking of the Women’s FIFA World Cup into the North– and much more,
will have surprised few who have watched the unacceptable behaviour of
governments and RTE Executives and management over many decades.
Many will remember the failure of RTE over the
years to hold successive governments to account, to expose the corruption
within the political system or to challenge the golden circles and the elites.
In addition, the partitionist mindset within
sections of the RTE big shots that has dictated strategy and policy, especially
since 1969, led some in that institution to think it was ok to produce a map of
Ireland that disappeared the North into the Atlantic and created a new
coastline running from Donegal to Louth. Worse their reflection of life in this
part of the island during the decades of conflict frequently bordered on the
shameful and misrepresented the lived experience of nationalists and
republicans living under military occupation.
Not all RTE staff follow that agenda. I have met
many fine, fair minded and courageous journalists and others who do their best
to inform and educate listeners and viewers and I love some RTE programmes
especially radio programmes.
But
Section 31, imposed by a Fianna Fáil government in 1971 was ruthlessly applied,
especially after the Labour Minister Conor Cruise O’Brien included Sinn Fein in
1976 among the banned organisations. Songs of a national character – some older
than the state - were banned from the airwaves. Sinn Fein activists who were
witnesses to non-political events were banned.
Over
the years I have had many a run in with the powers that be in RTE.
On
one occasion in 1993 I published a book of short stories – The Street and
other stories. My publisher, Steve MacDonogh of Brandon decided to go for a
short twenty-second radio advertisement on RTE. The advert was as follows “This
is Gerry Adams speaking. My new book is called The Street and other
stories and it’s on sale in good book shops in the 32 counties. Most
of the stories are about ordinary people and everyday events and there’s a fair
bit of craic in them also. That’s The Street and other stories and
this is Gerry Adams. I think you might enjoy it. Slán.’
RTE
refused to carry the ad and Steve took the case to the Dublin High Court. The
former Labour Party Minister, Conor Cruise O’Brien, testified in defence of
banning the advertisement. He claimed that my short stories were thinly
disguised propaganda for the IRA. In his submission O’Brien argued that while
the advert was not political the opening words would offend and corrupt the
Irish public. “I have in mind” he said, “the opening words ‘This is Gerry
Adams speaking.’” The court found in favour of RTE and Section 31.
In
three years – 2026 – RTE will celebrate 100 years as a public service
broadcaster. The new Authority and management need to demonstrate that they are
in fact and in action a national broadcaster - a real public service
broadcaster for all the people of the island of Ireland.
Fly Me To The Moon.
I am a longtime fan of
Tony Bennett. News of his death at
the fine age of ninety six brings
an end to an amazing life and a wonderful singing career lasting over
sixty years. In more recent times this column reviewed an album he did
with Lady GaGa. Cheek to Cheek is an
envigorating stroll through some old favourites like
Anything Goes alongside more modern melodies. Tony Bennett was
then 94 years of age. He was also suffering from
Altzeimers. You wouldn’t
know that from listening to him singing on that album.
Tony Bennett is celebrated for
his decades of singing hit songs. But he has also been a
life long activist, a dedicated pacifist and an advocate for social
justice and a cleaner environment. He marched with Martin Luther King in the
Selma to Montgomery Civil Rights demonstration. He is also an
acclaimed painter whose work has raisedmillions for good causes.
But it is his singing that most of us enjoy. I have had the good luck
to hear him sing live a few times. These wereduring conferences organised by The
Clinton Global Initiative(CGI) in New York. He sang a few songs to round off
the evenings.
I recalled one such
event in one of these columns once before. No harm to do so again. It was in
Carnegie Hall. It has long been my habit, as RG will testify, to
slip out off gatherings as quickly as possible. I used to slegg Martin
McGuinness for the slowness of his exiting from events. ‘Getting you
out of there is like getting a drunk out off a public house’ I
would berate him. RG is even worse than
that. Me? Once the business is done I vamoose.
Lots of times by side doors or back entrances. So it
was in Carnegie Hall. The main exits were blocked by slow moving CGI
attendees, all of us bouyed up by Tony Bennett’s closing performance.
So as is my wont I exited stage left, out a sidedoor,
crooning ‘I left my heart in Ballymurphy’ quietly to myself.
The
side door opened up onto West 56th Street. From there it
was only a matter of yards to 7th Avenue and the Sheraton Hotel
– where we were staying. I was so happy
at my good luck - at other times I have succesfully withdrawn from a
gig only to be lost in a maze of corridors or back entries.
Guess what?
Standing on
his own, in the corridor leading to outside, was Tony Bennett. I
opened the door for him and he walked out as a limo easedby to pick him up. As he passed he saluted me. And
RG.
‘Goodnight Mr Adams’ he said.
‘Good night Mr Bennett’ I
replied.
Starstruck.
Ní bheidh a leithid aris
ann.
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