Open to all
Like many men of his generation, my old man
was called up for national service at the age of 18. He would tell us with no
little pride that he absconded and made his way back to Glasgow for every round
of the Scottish cup in 1954 and watched Celtic beat Aberdeen in the final. He
was finally caught by the MPs and on the long journey south to Aldershot was
handcuffed to the suitcase rack. His arm was numb for days afterwards and he then
had some months in the ‘Glass House’
to ponder his audacity. He ended up doing almost three years in the army
instead of two due to his misbehaviour but told me it was worth it to see the
Celts.
I still have a photo of him in army uniform
and he always saw those days as a straight choice; ‘Ye either dae yer time or go tae jail.’ When he’d get drunk at the
new year he’d tell us all sorts of tales of his escapades and on one memorable
occasion said he told that he said to an officer discussing the ongoing Malayan
war of Independence, ‘Well, I’m no
fighting in the Jungle for 30 bob a week!’ My Uncle cut in at this point
and said, ‘Only Jungle you fought in was
the wan at Parkhied!’ His brief encounter with military life didn’t stop
him being Celtic to the core and be the first to give us a good old Irish tune
at family parties. I can still see him in memory’s view in the smoky living
room calling for quiet and begin with the words….
‘In Mountjoy
Jail one Monday morning, high upon the Gallows Tree
Kevin Barry
gave his young life for the cause of liberty….’
My old man and uncles were sons of an
Irishman from County Clare who left for World War one with most of Redmond’s
Irish Volunteers in 1914 to ‘fight for the
freedom of small nations.’ They had been promised home rule for their own
country when the war was over and most of them believed they would get it. Upon
his return to Ireland in 1918 he found a country utterly transformed and
already preparing to take up arms against the British. There were no qualms
about it for him, Ireland came first and he put his military experience to use
in the cause of Irish independence. It was an era in his life he spoke little of
but he did what he thought was right on behalf of his people.
It was not unusual for Irishmen who had
served in the British Army to do this. Tom Barry, famous leader of the West
Cork Flying Column, had spent some years in the British Army before returning
home to Cork. He was so appalled at the torture of Republican prisoners by the
British that he decided to throw his lot in with the Rebels. Actions like the
wiping out of 18 Auxiliaries in the ambush at Kilmichael in November 1920
sealed his reputation as one of the most formidable guerrilla fighters of the ‘Tan
war.’ Barry said in his memoirs...
‘They said I was ruthless, daring, savage, blood
thirsty, even heartless. The clergy called me and my comrades murderers; but
the British were met with their own weapons. They had gone into the mire to
destroy us and our nation and down after them we had to go.’
James
Connolly too served in the British army having lied about his age and enlisting
at just 14. He often said that the time he served in Ireland
with the 2nd Battalion of the Royal Scots during the so called ‘Land War’
in which the military and police were used to supress and evict poor tenants fighting
for their rights fed his growing socialist ideology and led him to fight for
the rights of others all his life.
You might wonder why I’m relating these stories
of folk who served in the British armed forces to you. It has to do with some
internet chat I noticed this week after a banner emblazoned with the words ‘Willie
Angus VC CSC’ appeared at Celtic Park. A tiny minority were displeased that
such a banner was seen around the stadium and were scathing that any reference
to Celtic supporters with a military background should be seen at Celtic Park.
This narrow minded attitude runs counter to the principles of a club for all
open to all. Everyone is certainly entitled to their opinion but no one has the
right to say who can and who cannot follow Celtic. There is an increasingly
intolerant attitude among some who seem to have no patience for anyone’s
opinion but their own. Celtic is a broad church with room for folk from all
walks of life. We long ago opened our arms to all who wished to follow the
team. We don’t ask creed, don’t judge on race or ethnicity, don’t care about
gender or sexual orientation, why then should some get a hard time because they
have some connection to the armed forces? Most UK based Celtic supporting families will have some history in that area.
Willie Angus, like James Stokes, won the
highest award for bravery this country can offer. The Celtic Supporters club in
the Gorbals bears Stokes name to this day. Willie Maley was the son of an Army
Sergeant and was born in Newry Barracks. Celtic’s emerging side of the late
1930s saw 22 players called up for military service in World War 2. It was a
similar tale in the First World War with men like Peter Johnstone and at least
six other former Celtic players perishing in the trenches. Hundreds of
thousands of young men from Celtic supporting families would have served in the
two world wars as well as those called up for national service in the decades
after the last war.
Celtic and their supporters can rightly be
proud that they are in general an open, welcoming bunch. Other clubs may have
dabbled in the sort of narrow, exclusivist mind-set which in the end leads them
into the barren land of intolerance. That has never been the Celtic way. The
club is proud of its roots which are unashamedly in the Irish diaspora but is
also proud that it opened its arms to all from earliest times.
My old man left us at the tragically young
age of 63. A hard life contributed to his early passing. As he made his last
journey along the London Road to Dalbeth cemetery he stopped one last time at
his beloved Celtic Park. Here he had shared the highs and lows of his team’s
fortunes; here he had known the warmth and comradeship of the terraces. He
cared not about the creed or colour of his fellow fans or whether they had
served in the military. They were all Celts and that was good enough for him.
It should be good enough for all of us.
How true
ReplyDeleteThere was an old boy who always wore a kilt & glengarry with i am assuming his regimental medals. Sat in North Stand. Last i recall seeing him was late 90's, i always wondered what his story was.
ReplyDeleteDoes anybody remember him?
I hadn't heard of that chap but there was a quiet turnstile operator with a heart full of courage http://tirnaog09.blogspot.co.uk/2016/11/come-on-dubs.html
DeleteHH🍀
ReplyDeleteI was born into a Protestant family although I am now an atheist and have been most of my life. My brother was an ardent Rangers fan as were most of my relations. I have, as far as I know no family ties to Ireland although I have spent many happy times there. I discovered Celtic when I was around 9 or 10 and fell in love. A love I have to this day more than 50 years on. I defy anyone to tell me I have no right to be a Celtic man.
ReplyDeleteWell said HH
DeleteI tried to get this very point across on the Celtic Foundation page on the day of the absail down Paradise as the Bhoys from the Willie Angus CSC had taken part.. I was vilified. So much so I had to lock my Twitter account.. I can't say to someone it's a Club Open to All except for A B or C.. we either welcome everyone or no one.. I recall admining a Celtic page when Ireland played England in a friendly. The first since the Landsdowne Rd incident. Anyway one of the admins put come on Ireland get into the English scum.. soon after an English Tim voiced his unhappiness at it saying he's English but supports Celtic so where does that leave him when it came to supporting the Hoops? Was it only Scottish/Irish supporters allowed? I left the page that day because I agreed with the bhoy from England.. Brother Walfrid didn't care about colour or creed or where you were from like your dad Tir Na Og.. once you were able to help those less fortunate that's all that mattered.. Anyway a great article and enjoy your day ������ xxx
ReplyDeleteI lived in England for 10 years, two of my kids were born there. Like any other place it has good, bad & indifferent people. Some lack the capacity to differentiate and it tells us more about them than the folk they target for abuse. Celtic fans are rightly credited with being humorous & accepting but as with any large group of people there will always be a few who behave poorly. There is no point lambasting the bigotry we see elsewhere & failing to see our own petty prejudices. How easy it is to become that which we claim to despise.
ReplyDeleteSo very true... and of late a minority of our own are not the wonderful accepting people they claim to be..
DeletePs: it's Babs.. :) For some reason my Google has me logged in under my daughter's username lol xx
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ReplyDeleteReally!!!!
ReplyDeleteA club open to British soldiers who happily murdered Irish people in the 6 counties?
Thousands upon thousands of Celtic fans will have some connection with the armed forces in their family, are you suggesting they all steer clear of Celtic Park? The excellent CAIN website statistics suggest groups responsible for deaths in the Troubles are as follows....
DeleteRepublican paramilitary groups 2058
Loyalist paramilitary groups 1027
British security forces 363
Persons unknown 79
Irish security forces 5
The six counties is now 20 years into a peace process which is far from easy but generally holding. No side came out of the conflict with much credit, not the British Army, nor the paramilitaries but it is time to think of the future. The past is a point of reference not of residence.
This is, without a doubt, not even up for debate, the best article i have read in 2017
ReplyDeleteHH