Prison Poems by Bobby Sands | Rally to Defend Moore St this weekend | Irish Government fails Palestinians
Prison Poems by Bobby Sands
In a recent interview Christy
Moore remarked that the death of Bobby Sands robbed us of a great writing
talent. Christy was praising the quality of the work Bobby created in
the harsh conditions he endured. He was making the point that you can
only imagine what Bobby might have gone on to produce in different
circumstances where his creative imagination could have been nurtured and not
repressed. But of course this was not to be. Bobby led the second
hunger strike in the H-Blocks of Long Kesh and he was the first of the ten
men who fasted to death in that awful summer of 1981.
I remember years earlier Bobby
practicing his singing and guitar playing in Cage Eleven, where we were guests
of the British Government, before the H-Blocks were built. Christy Moore was
one of Bobby’s go-to performers as he honed his musical skills. He would be
delighted that Christy has done so much to perpetuate his poetry and song
writing alongside the sacrifice of the blanket men and the
Armagh women. ‘McIlhatton’ and ‘Back Home in
Derry’ are now part of the Irish singing tradition.
Another man who has helped to
perpetuate Bobby’s writing is Danny Morrison. Danny, a very diligent member of
The Bobby Sands Trust, is editor of a new collection of Bobby’s poetry (which
first came out in October 1981). This reprint is a beautiful book,
with wonderful illustrations and cover design by renowned artist Tony
Bell.
There
are twenty-four of Bobby’s poems. All of these poems were written in
remarkable circumstances. Hundreds of mostly young protesting
prisoners were cooped up naked for over five years – with only a blanket for
cover- in the Special Control Units of the newly built H-Blocks. They
were denied washing and toilet facilities and the right to exercise
and to any form of intellectual or recreational rights, including
pens and paper. They were beaten regularly. All of this was part of a
British Government offensive to criminalise the republican struggle. Women
republican prisoners in Armagh Prison were also targeted as criminals.
As Danny Morrison points out in
his Introduction to Prison Poems, “The real criminality throughout
Irish history is English/British interference in the affairs of another
people.”
That essential truth is borne
out in Bobby’s writings, which include short stories, songs, and
his statements and comms reproduced in David Beresford’s
classic, Ten Men Dead. One Day In My Life (Introduction
by Sean MacBride) was first published by Mercier Press in 1982,
which also published his Writings From Prison (Introduction by
myself, 1998 ed.). His Prison Diary sold 40,000 in 1981,
alone. All of this writing was accomplished secretly in his cell and
scribbled on cigarette papers secreted in his body and smuggled out to the Sinn
Féin POW Department in Belfast where Tom Hartley had the foresight to archive any
of the material which he received so that a large amount of this prison
literature has been preserved.
Danny
Morrison’s ‘Introduction’ traces the history of the prison protests
as well as the span of Bobby’s poetry and it is a reflective and moving
reminder of the genius of the man and his unbreakable spirit.
Prison Poems is published
by An Fhuiseog and is available from good bookshops and online @AnFhuiseog
and www.sinnfeinbookshop.com
Rally to Defend Moore St this
weekend
The campaign to protect
the 1916 Moore St Battlefield site from demolition is moving up a
gear. As regular readers will know An Bord Pleanála - the planning
authority in the South – gave the go ahead recently for the Hammerson
development plan which will see much of this historic site reduced to rubble.
Last week the Moore St.
Preservation Trust published ‘The Battle
of Moore Street' by Ray Bateson, a bi-lingual history of the final battle of
the Easter Rising in the words of those who were there. Renowned Irish
actress Fionnula Flanagan formally launched the book in Liberty Hall in Dublin
saying; “It’s a great honour to have been asked to be here today and to launch
this wonderful book." It is available from https://msptshop.myshopify.com and
from good bookshops and online including @AnFhuiseog and at www.sinnfeinbookshop.com
This
Sunday the Moore St. Preservation Trust is holding a rally in Moore St. to
protest against the decision by An Bord Pleanála. The rally will take
place at 1pm and I would encourage all of those who believe that this
iconic 1916 historic site should be protected to join with us this Sunday.
The
Moore St. Preservation Trust has produced a short video introduced by historian
Liz Gillis. It can be viewed at: https://www.facebook.com/MooreStreetTrust/videos/11233766693550977
So,
join us this Sunday at 1pm in Moore St. to defend this historic site
from the wrecking ball.
Irish
government fails Palestinians
More
massacres. More children dead and maimed. More civilians killed by the Israeli
government in a series of deadly assaults in Gaza and Lebanon. Health workers,
journalists, and children continue to be the preferred targets for a right wing
Israeli government that is being armed, funded and empowered by its western
allies.
International
condemnation and accusations of breaching international law make no difference
to Netanyahu and his cronies. Only sanctions that are economically effective
have any chance of shifting Israeli Government opinion.
Last
week at the United Nations, the U.N. special rapporteur on the occupied
Palestinian territory, Francesca Albanese, published a major report - “Genocide
as Colonial Erasure. The report makes frightening reading. Ms Albanese
described Israel’s order on “14 October 2023 for 1.1 million
Palestinians to move south from northern Gaza in 24 hours as ‘one of the
fastest mass displacements in history.’
In
the year since then at least 90 per cent of Palestinians in Gaza have now
been forcibly displaced amid calls from Israeli officials and others for
Palestinians to leave and Israelis to ‘return to Gaza’ and rebuild the colonies dismantled in 2005…
High-ranking Israeli officials, ministers and religious leaders continue to
encourage erasure and dispossession of Palestinians, setting new thresholds for
acceptable violence against civilians. The Nakba, which has been ongoing since
1948, has been deliberately
accelerated.”
As
a result of her courageous stand Albanese has been accused of being
anti-Semitic by the United States and Israel.
This
is the desperate context for the appalling decision by the Fine Gael/Fianna
Fáil and Green Party coalition in the Oireachtas to reject an offer by Sinn
Féin and other opposition parties to provide time this week to facilitate the
passing of the Occupied Territories Bill which the Government has stalled on
for five years.
Uachtarán
Shinn Féin Mary Lou McDonald wrote to the government last week. In her letter
to Simon Harris she wrote: “The people of Gaza cannot wait one moment
longer. Israel must face the strongest of sanctions for the genocide that is
unfolding. It is unconscionable to ask the people of Gaza to wait even one
moment longer. The genocide is continuing and Israel is being allowed to act
with impunity. A ceasefire will only happen if Israel faces consequences for
their actions”.
With
a general election in the South likely to be called by the end of this week
there was only a short window in the political calendar for the Bill to be
passed into law. An election campaign and then the negotiations needed to form
the next government means that the Occupied Territories Bill will not become
law until the new year.
This
is unacceptable. Irish government Ministers claim to oppose Israel military
aggression, especially at a time when Irish peacekeepers are under threat from
Israeli forces in Lebanon and genocide is occurring in the Gaza Strip but
refuse to take the decisive action needed to stand up to Israel.
Whatever
the outcome of the general election a priority for the incoming Irish
government must be firm and resolute action against the Israeli statement.
Nothing less will do.
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