Cage
Eleven.
This
coming weekend O’Brien Press are republishing my book – Cage 11 - about my
experience of life in Long Kesh between August 1975 and February 1977. Cage 11
was first published in 1990. By that time the Cages of Long Kesh were empty of
political prisoners. In their place the British had built the H-Blocks and
embarked on a ruthless prison policy that resulted in the 1981 hunger strike.
The
stories contained in Cage 11 reflect the trials and tribulations, as well as
the escapades that were then a part of our lives, of our families lives and of
our community. Get a couple of ex-POWs together and they will joke and
backstab, laugh and reflect on the meaning of life while talking politics. And
so it was within the barbed wire Cages of Long Kesh.
The
bulk of Cage 11 is drawn from articles which were smuggled out of the
cages and published, under the pen-name “Brownie". I was one of a small
number of Long Kesh POWs who contributed to the weekly column in which we
wrote, sometimes none too fluently, about a litany of issues that caught our
attention.
For
the first time this new edition contains some drawings by Danny Devenny a long
time resident of Long Kesh who went on to become one of our best known,
pioneering and leading mural artists. His work over decades is there for all to
see on the walls of Belfast and other places.
Almost
35 years later the Cages and the H-Blocks are gone. Armagh Women’s Prison lies
abandoned and Crumlin Road prison is now a tourist attraction.
Cage 11 is formally scheduled
for publication on Monday 4 November and will be available from most good
bookshops including from www.sinnfeinbookshop.com and
An Fhuiseog 55 Falls Road www.thelarkstore.ie
No
Parking
I
remember Father Des Wilson many moons ago lamenting the narrowness of streets
in Turf Lodge and Ballymurphy. “The City Planners don’t think the
working class should have motor cars” he said one day as we tried to
manoeuvre our way by tightly packed vehicles in Ballymurphy Drive.
There
was a time when there were very few cars on our streets. When I was a child the
street was our play-ground. We played handball at Harbinson’s gable in Abercorn
Street North, or Shootie-Ins at the other corner down towards Sorella Street
using an old sock stuffed with newspapers as a ball. Or Rally Oh and Kick The
Tin, Marlies, street soccer, hurling and Rounders. Quoits on. Cribby. Up and
down and across the street. Sometimes we gathered up a wee gang and fought
running battles with wee bucks from Getty Street. Girls played Hop Scotch,
Skips, numerous and intricate games with hand balls, while reciting or singing
street songs and skipping rhymes. Ropes were draped from the old gas lamps and
utilised as swings even though yards away the Dunville Park had more
conventional swings for us to play on.
Cars
were a novelty. Coalcarts, the bakers van, the milkman, the Hobby Horse Man,
the 'Reg' Man and the Refuse Collector made up most of our traffic. Trams
and later trolley buses were restricted to main roads. So the streets
were safe. Occasionally if we were too noisy or if our ball hit a neighbour’s
window or door we were rebuked with ‘Why dont youse go and play at your own
door’. We always paused play when women were passing. ‘Hold the ball. Hold the
ball’ was the usual cry until the passer byes passed by.
Nowadays
it is rare to see children playing in the streets. There isn’t space and some
drivers don’t slow down as they should. So it’s dangerous. Too many cars. Some
communities are lucky. They have play parks which are always packed with
screaming running yelling jumping squealing weans. All enjoying themselves. And
all our sports clubs and youth clubs and leisure centres are really well used.
As they should be. And our glens and hills are well walked. Filled with fun and
adventure. Places in which the imagination can thrive. We probably can’t
legislate for the excess of cars in our streets. But we can be more careful
about how we park them.
Sanctions
Now
In
April 2009 as part of a Sinn Féin delegation I entered the Gaza Strip. The
blockade of the area by Israel was two years old at that point. The UNWRA
staff, school teachers, doctors, university students, elected
representatives and workers we met were dignified and courageous, quiet but
resolute. They were the survivors of an Israeli siege and a military incursion
in 2008/09 that had left many dead and key facilities devastated.
From
the minute we passed through the Erez Crossing into Gaza under the gaze of
Israeli watchtowers and the huge security wall that surrounds the enclave my
overwhelming sense was of entering into a huge open air prison.
Today
I am horrified at what continues to unfold each day in that place. The Gaza
City I saw 15 years ago is gone. It doesn’t exist now having been reduced by US
supplied bombs and shells into piles of rubble. They have become headstones for
the many still buried beneath them. The people who survive are being
deliberately starved. They are sick and terrified. Israel is blocking
humanitarian and medical aid.
The
images coming out of northern Gaza defy description. The ethnic cleansing
of Gaza, and at this time of northern Gaza, by the Israeli military and the
forced displacement of an impoverished people are a stain on the world.
Thousands of refugees are being forcibly shifted from one part of Gaza to
another by a ruthless and intolerant enemy. There is now no health service in
northern Gaza. The last operational hospital was occupied by Israel forces late
last week. Doctors were arrested. Seriously ill patients had to be moved or
face murder by Israeli forces who destroyed all of the sparse drug stocks the
hospital had.
B'Tselem
is a prominent Israeli human rights group. In recent days it has said that the
Netanyahu government is committing what it describes as some of the gravest
crimes under the laws of war. It reported that hundreds of thousands of
Palestinian are "enduring starvation, disease without access to
medical care and incessant bombardments and gunfire", and that Israel
has "cut them off from the world". It reports that since
the beginning of this month the northern Gaza Strip has been under total
military siege with almost no food, clean water or medical supplies
entering.
Calls
for a ceasefire are rejected by the Israeli Government. The overwhelming demand
of the international community for Israel to stop is ignored. Why should Israel
halt its genocide when its allies in the British and American governments
defend its use of mass murder? Why should Israel worry when those same allies
refuse to stop supplying it with the weapons of war?
The
demand now must be for sanctions against the state of Israel. In particular,
the Irish government which eventually recognised the state of Palestine,
must now take the next steps needed to defend and uphold the democratic right
of that state to exist.
Mary
Lou McDonald has written to An Taoiseach Simon Harris to ask him to work with
the Opposition in the Oireachtas to ensure that the Occupied Territories Bill
can pass into law before the general election is called. This would be a
landmark sanction that would set an example to others around the world. The
Sinn Féin leader has requested that the Select Committee on Foreign Affairs and
Defence be convened next week to allow this legislation to be swiftly processed
before the general election campaign and the formation of the next
government.
An
Taoiseach should say yes. The people of Palestine need sanctions now against
those who are trying to remove them, not just from Gaza, but from the face of
the earth.
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