Who fears to
speak of Easter week?
English Poet Edmund Spenser was a product of
his time. His attitude to the native Irish he encountered during his stay in
the country in the late 16th century was typical of Elizabethan
England. He stated that…
‘The evils of the
Irish people fall into three prominent categories: laws, customs, and religion.
These three elements work together in creating this disruptive and degraded
people.’
Today his
views would be considered racist in the extreme but his comments would have
passed as normal in the time and society he moved in. Spenser was also clear on
how the Irish were to be cured of their ‘evils’ when he wrote…
‘England
will bring the Irish so low that he shall have no heart, nor ability to endure
his wretchedness. So pluck him on his knees that he will never be able to stand
up again.’
Of course history taught us that the Irish
were not the sort of people to stay on their knees for long. There have been
around 20 major or minor armed insurrections in Ireland since Spenser’s time,
with other related activities in Britain, USA, Canada and Australia. In the 400 years since Spenser wrote the
words above, the Irish have fought on through penal laws, man-made famine,
military occupation and the colonial exploitation of their country to
eventually claim the right to self-determination for most of their island. To
do this in the face of the might of imperial Britain was an astonishing feat. For
much of Irish history Britain was one of the most powerful countries in the
world and had built an Empire which spanned the globe. Despite this she had
never totally subdued the small nation on her doorstep which despite, or maybe
because of, repression and the horrors of an Gorta Mor still harboured those
who dreamt of being free from English domination.
This year marks the centenary of the 1916
Easter Rising and the event will be marked with ceremonies in Ireland and
elsewhere. There will be television dramas and documentaries as well as a host
of books on the significance of the events of Easter week 1916. The
Proclamation read by Padraig Pearse outside the General Post Office in Dublin
in April 1916 remains a very interesting document. The seven men who signed it
were of course all shot in the aftermath of the Rebellion and it’s interesting
to speculate who had the most influence in drafting it. Connolly’s socialism
may perhaps be discerned in the clause which states that there will be "religious and civil liberty,
equal rights and equal opportunities to all its citizens" in the new Republic.
Universal suffrage at a time when women were denied the vote was a progressive
step for any nation. It has been suggested that Tom Clark’s long involvement in
the nationalist cause gave him a natural authority as did Padraig Pearse’s role
as ‘Commanding Chief of the forces of the
Irish Republic.’ However the document, like the rising itself was a joint
venture which called on the men and women of the Socialist leaning Citizen
Army, the Irish Republican Brotherhood and the Irish Volunteers. It invoked the
generations of the past who struggled for freedom and spoke of "cherishing all the children of the
nation equally".
Britain’s
reaction to the rising was hardly surprising given they were in the midst of a
life and death struggle with imperial Germany in the trenches of Flanders. As
the Rebels occupied strongpoints in Dublin many of their compatriots were
preparing for that summer’s big offensive on the Somme. Three Irish Divisions
(36th Ulster, 16th Irish & 10th Irish)
were to fight in the bloodbath which raged from July to November 1916 and
suffered appalling casualties. Many other Irishmen were enlisted in other
Divisions and fought with distinction. The British saw the rising as something
of a stab in the back and set up military tribunals to deal with the rebels. As
the executions started and details of them emerged, initial anger at the rebels
actions felt by many Irish people turned to sympathy. Connolly was shot in a
chair as he was badly wounded and couldn’t stand. Plunkett was shot a couple of
hours after marrying his sweetheart Grace Gifford. Sean McDermott was recorded
as saying before his execution, "I
feel happiness the like of which I have never experienced. I die that the Irish
nation might live!” Even in apparent
defeat, the men and women of 1916 felt that they had kept faith with the past
and had perhaps inspired others to continue their struggle.
Joseph Sweeney 1916 Revolutionary and former
Major General in the Irish army recalls the order to lay down their arms after
a week of intense fighting in Dublin. He recalled Sean McDermott addressing the
men and saying ‘This is only the
beginning of the fight, all our leaders will be executed but it’s up to you men
to carry it on.’ As the captured Rebels laid down their arms a British
officer walked along the line of prisoners noting each man’s name in a book. He
stopped at a man near Sweeney and said nothing as he wrote his name in the
book. When he had moved on Sweeney asked how the officer knew his name without
needing to ask him. The volunteer replied, ‘because
he’s my brother.’ In that incident the tangled nature of Anglo-Irish
relations is exposed.
The British pretence of being democratic was
exposed in the 1918 General Election which saw 75% of the Irish people vote for
independence parties. They were of course ignored and the War of Independence continued
and led to the eventual partition of the country, an act which hard line
Republicans could never accept. The brutal and tragic civil war which followed in
the new ‘Free State’ saw more Irishmen killed by other Irishmen than the
British killed in the Independence struggle 1916-22. In the north a third of
the citizens in the new ‘Northern Ireland’ province were left to an uncertain
fate. There is much evidence of the prejudice the minority nationalist
population in the north suffered after partition as the sectarian attitudes
James Connolly had warned against reasserted themselves and sowed the seeds of
future conflict.
My own Grandfather was a product of those days
and at the time of the Easter Rising was fighting in the trenches of Flanders.
His return to Ireland in 1918 found a country in turmoil. As the British used
terror tactics to cow the people, the nationalists fought fire with fire and a
bitter conflict ensued. His military experience was put to use training
volunteers to fight the very army he had just left. For him there was no
conflict of interest; Ireland came first and always would. As a child I recall
him reciting an old poem which he knew off by heart:
‘Who fears
to speak of Easter Week?
Who dares its fate deplore?
The red gold flame of Eire's name
Confronts the world once more!
Oh! Irishmen, remember then,
And raise your heads with pride,
For great men and straight men
Have fought for you and died.’
Who dares its fate deplore?
The red gold flame of Eire's name
Confronts the world once more!
Oh! Irishmen, remember then,
And raise your heads with pride,
For great men and straight men
Have fought for you and died.’
So it is now 100 years since the events which
so shaped Irish history in the century since. Ireland has come through some
difficult times as it struggles to reconcile the past with the present and the
future. I like to hope that whatever the future holds for this proud and
spirited people that it will be decided without any more bloodshed. Violence drives
a wedge between people and creates division which can last for decades or even
longer. The words carved on the memorial at the Island of Ireland Peace Park in
Flanders put it better than I can when it states…
‘As
Protestants and Catholics, we apologise for the terrible deeds we have done to
each other and ask forgiveness. From this sacred shrine of remembrance, where
soldiers of all nationalities, creeds and political allegiances were united in
death, we appeal to all people in Ireland to help build a peaceful and tolerant
society. Let us remember the solidarity and trust that developed between
Protestant and Catholic Soldiers when they served together in these trenches.’
The men and women of 1916 should be
remembered as people who did what they thought was right for their country. They
fought courageously against impossible odds to keep faith with the past and perhaps
give hope for a better future for all the ‘children of the nation.’
Who fears to speak of Easter week? None of us
should but in celebrating the past we should also remember our duty to the
future.
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