Leo’s unity words are welcome
Irish Unity is the big idea
that will positively transform society on this island. Its popularity is
growing and the economic, political, and social arguments in support of it are
advancing each day. The recent interventions by former Taoiseach Leo Varadkar
are an example of this. In June at the Ireland’s Future event in Belfast he
said that the goal of a united Ireland had to be more than a “political
aspiration.” It needed to become a “political objective.”
Two weeks ago he addressed
students in Derry where he spoke of the need for all political parties to
include within their election manifestos, as a clear objective, a definitive
commitment to Irish Unity. Leo Varadkar also proposed the establishment of a
body, similar to the New Ireland Forum of 1983, at which future constitutional
arrangements can discussed and agreed.
Mr. Varadkar’s very welcome
remarks reflect the views of many others, including the SDLP, the civic group
Ireland’s Future, many academics and economists, Sinn Féin, and the Oireachtas
Good Friday Agreement Committee, who have all called for unity referendums and
in particular the need for the Irish government to begin the process of
planning and preparation. All have stressed the importance of establishing a
Citizen’s Assembly or Assemblies or Convention to encourage the widest public
debate on future constitutional arrangements.
Mr. Varadkar’s suggestion that
a two stage referendum process – first voting in principle for constitutional
change and then voting for the new governance structures agreed through
negotiations –is worth reflecting on. Obviously citizens will vote in a referendum
under the terms of the Good Friday Agreement to retain or end the union. There
is then another process to put in place the type of Ireland that would be
established if the referendum to end the union is won.
The centrality of dialogue and
the imperative of commencing a process of preparation has been at the heart of
the discussion on unity going back many years. In July the Oireachtas Joint
Committee on the implementation of the Good Friday Agreement published a
landmark report on Unity. The Committee represents all of the major
parties in Leinster House, as well as independent voices. It called for
a whole of government approach, led by the Department of the Taoiseach,
and involving all government departments and state agencies examining the
implications of constitutional change.
The Joint Committee further
recommended that a government Green Paper should be published setting out a
vision for a united Ireland. Critically it called for the Irish
government to begin immediately planning for a referendum on constitutional change.
In its conclusion it states: “Preparation for referenda on Irish unification
will be a historic task. The Committee calls for preparation to begin
immediately.”
The contributions on Irish
Unity by Mr. Varadkar are important. They did not happen in isolation from what
is an expanding debate and will hopefully encourage others within Fine Gael and
beyond who may still be reluctant to speak out positively on this issue. There
are obviously no insurmountable barriers to unity. Fundamental demographic
shifts, all-island economic growth and electoral changes are all having their
impact. The historic task for all of us who believe in unity is to
build a consensus on the kind of new Ireland we want to have. Ending the
union and replacing partition with a new democratic dispensation is now a
doable project.
Seeds For The Future.
This
is the season for tree planting. That is for planting bare root trees. Any
month with an ‘R’ in it is the general rule for tree planters, though there is
always a debate on whether planting should happen before or after the risk of
frost. As an ad hoc tree planter who struggles to get free time I think
September or October are fairly safe even in these muddled climate changing
times. I try to plant native broad leaf species though some like the
Beech or Horse Chestnut are here for so long that they are probably
naturalised by now.
Still
there is something romantic about planting native Ash and Rowans,
Blackthorn and Hazel, Oak and Birch. Holly and Elder. Native trees encourage
native bugs and insects which sustain native wildlife including native
birds. The great circle of life.
Native
trees also find themselves in our place names. Niall Mac Coiter’s excellent
IRELAND’S TREES gives a sense of place names derived from trees. For
example, he cites Charles Nelson’s TREES OF IRELAND and the more than 1,600
townlands in Ireland containing Doire or oakwood, which reflects how widespread
oak forests once were. There are numerous other examples. Of course trees in
ancient times were seen as sacred. Some of us still see them like this. In
ancient times they were also part of our folk lore. They still are. We are
lucky that our folklore and culture is thriving.
Many
people may think tree planting is beyond them. But growing trees from seeds is
well within most of our capabilities. Trees come from seed. And this is
the season for gathering seeds. A walk through any woodland or park or nature
reserve will soon provide generous harvests of hazel nuts,
acorns, sycamores and chestnuts. I go for the easy and
lazy option of simply planting these in pots or growbags and leaving them
out in the open to their own devices. It never fails.
There
are other processes of stratification, particularly for seeds contained in
berries but I rarely venture into these. When I do the outcomes
are always very rewarding. Nope the lazy way works well for me. An added
advantage is that when your first little shoots appear they can be transplanted
to other pots and will grow contentedly for years for as long
you upgrade your pot size in tune with their growth.
These
make for great gifts. To mark the birth of a new baby or in memory of a loved
one or a friend. Or simply as a token of appreciation and acknowledgement. So
these are little individual initiatives that most of us can do.
There
are also bigger collective reforestation projects always looking for
volunteers. In this parish great work is being done in The Bog Meadows, Colin
Glen and the Belfast Hills. I am sure there are other initiatives where you
live. So get involved. Plant seeds for the future.
It didn’t begin a year ago
At the weekend millions of
people across the world took to the streets in solidarity with the people of
Palestine and those of Lebanon. The decision by the governments of the USA,
Germany, Britain and the EU to back Israel has unleashed a vicious war on the
Middle East. Monday marked one year since the 7 October attack by Hamas. The
nature of that attack was and remains unacceptable. But the viciousness and
brutality of the Israeli response has been unparalleled in modern times.
Israel and its allies have torn
up international law, carried out and support actions that have resulted in the
deaths of thousands of people - many of them children. Starvation,
disease, the bombing of schools and mosques and hospitals, the invasion of
Lebanon - a neighboring sovereign state - the systematic assassination of
journalists and the use of genocide have all been normalized as weapons of war
by Israel and its western allies. The people of Beirut, of Gaza and the west
Bank are the terrified victims’. The UN Secretary General Antonio Guterres
has been banned from Israel by the apartheid regime. The governments of
the USA, Germany, Britain, the EU and other backers of Israel are as guilty of
genocide as is Netanyahu and his regime. Can any of them tell us how this is
all going to end? That is if they really want to end it?
And as the situation worsens
hostages and Palestinian prisoners are still held and bombs and missiles are
now falling on parts of Israel.
The conflict in the Middle East
didn’t begin one year ago. It is a consequence of western colonial ambitions in
the region going back generations and the forced displacement of Palestinians
from their homes and towns and villages in 1948. Israel is the aggressor and
the Irish government – as its peacekeeping mission faces threats from Israeli
military forces – must take a stand in support of peace and justice and human
rights and impose the most stringent sanctions on Israel.
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