Martin Mc Guinness. A Reflection. | A Courageous Advocate for Palestinian | The only answer is Unity
Martin Mc Guinness. A Reflection.
Friday the 21 March was the eighth anniversary of the death
of our friend and leader Martin McGuinness. Like many others, I am sure, I was
perplexed as it dawned on me that eight years had passed since we lost him. In
my head I thought it was five or six years ago. But as we people of a
certain age should now know time waits for no one. I remember as if it was
yesterday dashing to the hospital. Even though we were anticipating his death
there was nonetheless a numbness, a shock to be told that Martin was gone.
Of course the love of his life Bernie, and their children
and grandchildren and his siblings were the ones most effected but yet in their
grief they knew that Martin mattered to a lot of people, particularly from his
other family. His republican family. And they let us grieve with them. Grief is
the price we pay for love. There are layers of feelings, unpredictable and
unique to each of us personally as we adjust to the absence of a loved one. And
it can affect each of us differently.
I miss Martin to this day. He and I had so many adventures
together, funny episodes, fraught and turbulent and dangerous experiences. It
is still difficult to accept that all that is gone. But accept it I do. In
fact, I am philosophical about death. I remember Martin remarking one day that
he didn’t expect to live beyond his mid-twenties
’Jeepers’ I exclaimed. ‘I was exactly like that too.’
So to have such an active and much longer life is a
blessing. For me it is also a matter of wonderment. We have lost so many
friends particularly during the conflict. Many never survived beyond their
mid-twenties. Some were even younger. They died suddenly, violently. That’s the
way it was. And our enemies died the same way. So did many uninvolved people.
Victims of all the combatant forces, including the IRA. I regret that very
much. So did Martin.
Some like the H Block hunger strikers died in a public
contest of will with a cruel establishment much more powerful than prisoners
with nothing in their arsenal but an unbreakable integrity . And yet the
prisoners defeated that establishment by giving up their lives. They didn’t
want to die but that was the risk they took. So they went bravely before us.
They taught us how to die.
Those of us, like Martin or myself, who were privileged to
have such comrades and friends could only marvel at their bravery. We lived
with death for decades. And against all the odds we survived the conflict. We
helped bring it to an end. For that we are thankful to and for Martin
McGuinness. We were lucky to have him. I have been blessed with my friendships,
including some who have died recently. Colette’s two sisters Anne and Mena and
sister-in-law Belle gone in the last few months. And Ted. And Bik.
Life is like a lottery. Few of us can determine how it will
end for us. Martin died bravely. He battled against his illness stubbornly and
resolutely. His concern was for Bernie and the weans. The ancient Irish
believed that the spirits of the dead live on in places which they loved. In
rocks. Trees. Rivers. I believe that friendship is one of the most
important gifts any of us can have. If a friend goes off to live in
Australia they don’t cease to be our friend. So too with our friends who die.
They are still our friends. They are still part of our lives. That’s how it is
with Martin McGuinness and me. I remember him with great fondness and pride. He
is still my friend. So is Ted. And Bik. And many others who gifted me with
their friendship. Including the ones who are still alive. Martin valued their
friendship also.
A Courageous Advocate for Palestinian
Ms. Francesca Albanese is the Special Rapporteur for the
United Nations in the Palestinian territories. She is a remarkable champion for
human rights and international law whose moral integrity and deep rooted
humanity are an inspiration. Her leadership on Palestinian rights, her
unremitting and courageous criticism of Israel’s decades long illegal
occupation of the Palestinian territories, is an example for all of us who seek
a just peace between the peoples of Palestine and of Israel.
Last week Ms. Albanese was in the South of Ireland
addressing Universities, giving interviews, attending the massive
pro-Palestinian march in Dublin on Saturday and meeting a wide range of
individuals and groups.
Do you know who refused to meet her? The Irish Government.
Apparently all of its 15 Ministers and 23 Ministers of State were too busy.
Shameful.
This is the same government that is stalling on the Occupied
Territories Bill or on introducing decisive economic and
political sanctions against a rogue state engaged in genocide. In
addition, if Micheál Martin has his way the Irish government intends accepting
the International Holocaust Remembrance Alliance (IHRA) definition of
antisemitism. This conflates Judaism with Zionism. A criticism, any
criticism of the state of Israel will be defined as anti-semitic. This means
that Ms. Albanese’s reports on Israel’s war crimes or this article or the
marches in solidarity with the Palestinians, can all be defined as
anti-Semitic.
Is our outrage at the bombing of hospitals and the killing
of babies to be dismissed as anti-semitic?
The total now killed in Gaza is over 50,000. 18,000 are
children. Netanyahu’s claim that his war is about defeating Hamas or
securing the release of Israeli’s held by Hamas, is a lie. Hamas is stronger
now than before. Israel’s murder campaign and demolition of Gaza has
radicalised a new generation of Hamas fighters. Moreover, Israeli hostages are
more likely to be killed by Israeli actions than by their captors.
So, this is not about defeating Hamas. This is about
Netanyahu’s determination to hold on to power. He does so with the support of a
right wing Zionist cabal that intends forcing the Palestinian people out of
their homes in Gaza, the west Bank and East Jerusalem. But he also does this
with the active endorsement and through the provision of weapons and funding
from the United States, the British government and other western allies of
Israel. President Biden boasted of being a Zionist while Trump describes himself
as Israel’s protector. The genocide in Gaza is as much the responsibility of
America, of Britain, and the EU as it is Netanyahu’s.
Where are the voices of condemnation from these governments
to Israel’s extermination strategy toward Palestinians. They are silent.
The Irish government must take a stand against the genocide.
Francesca Albanese reminded it last week that international law, irrespective
of the Occupied Territories Bill, requires the Irish government to ban goods
and services from illegal Israeli settlements on Palestinian land. This
responsibility derives from the finding by the International Court of Justice
that the occupation of Palestinian land is unlawful and trade should not
continue. Is this the real reason why none of the 38 government Ministers in
Dublin could find the time to meet Ms Albanese? It wanted to avoid being told
face to face that it is failing in its human rights duty; that it is not
fulfilling its moral and legal responsibilities under international law.
Francesca Albanese is an inspiration. I applaud her courage
and her stand in defence of the human rights of the Palestinian people and of
international law.
The only answer is Unity
There are at least 50,000 people in Belfast reliant on PIP
(Personal Independence Payment). Given that levels of disadvantage and poor
health indicators are higher in west Belfast it is safe to assume that many
thousands of families in that part of the city are especially vulnerable to
British government cuts to the PIP system.
Over the years Labour governments have shown scant regard
for their socialist roots. Often they are just a pale imitation of the Tories
who care even less. They especially show no empathy when it comes to the North.
Year after year the British block grant fails to meet our basic public service
requirements whether in the provision of health, education, housing,
agriculture or the environment. The Executive scrambles to stretch a finite
budget.
Five billion is to be cut from PIP. Billions will now be
spent on armaments as Europe engages with Russia in a new arms race.
The reality is that English interests are not our interests.
No London government gives a damn about the people of the North. Or any part of
Ireland. There is only one long term solution – a new shared Ireland in which
we have control over our own affairs and can manage our taxation and public
service expenditure in our interests and not those of England. Free from London
rule.
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