| LETTERS Move
On, Reverend
SOME of Father Sean McManus’s remarks in his letter “MacBride
Still Crucial,” (April 4-10) are inexcusable and very harmful to
Northern Ireland.
McManus’s assertions that “there is still deep seated and
virulent anti-Catholic sectarianism” in Northern Ireland, and that
there is a mindset that sees Catholics as inferior, are so ridiculously
exaggerated that they are very damaging to our efforts to continue Northern
Ireland’s progress.
Yes, you can still find individual Protestants who hate Catholics, just
as you can find individual Catholics who hate Protestants, but in the
main we are so far beyond that now that it is tragic and frustrating to
read such dated rhetoric in a newspaper. Indeed, I challenge McManus to
walk into any Protestant neighborhood in Northern Ireland and find someone
who feels that Catholics are “inferior.”
McManus is one of a handful of voices occasionally seen on this page so
utterly out of touch with the new Northern Ireland that his words are
dangerous. Dangerous because they can motivate men of violence to fight
battles that either don’t exist, or certainly don’t need to
be fought in a way they once may have. For years we accused Ian Paisley
of such inflammatory language, and we thought, and hoped, we had left
that behind.
If McManus needs Irish America to believe Northern Ireland in 2007 is
the same as Northern Ireland in 1967 in order to make relevant his role
as president of the Irish National Caucus, then could someone please give
him a job.
Thomas Keown
Somerville, Massachusetts
Irish vs. English
IN Peadar O’Fiach’s letter “English Domination,”
he seems to overlook the atrocities committee by the Royal Ulster Constabulary,
while emphasizing the atrocities committed by the IRA. Both sides are
guilty and nobody condones those horrible acts of terrorism.
Has he ever read about the reign of terror which Cromwell imposed on Ireland
during the 1640s ? He was sent by Britain to slaughter and plunder Ireland
and force the people from all of Ireland to Connaught with his motto “To
Hell or to Connaught.”
In Drogheda alone, only 30 men escaped the sword out of a garrison of
3,000. The land was then given to the English settlers who became rich
landlords.
Does O’Fiach think these actions endeared the English to the Irish?
Or is this trade and development as he suggests in his letter? Remember
this was done by the people who gave us the Magna Carta!
The Irish economy is booming thanks to the European Union. Where does
O’Fiach get the notion that Ireland is under England’s wing
in the EU? It is my understanding that all countries have equal standing
and voice in the EU.
The young Irish of today can live full and satisfying lives in the country
of their birth, surrounded by family and friends, and it makes me proud
to see it. This would not have happened under England’s domination.
One Englishman I greatly admire is British Prime Minister Tony Blair,
who has done much to further the peace process in the north of Ireland
and doesn’t seem to be interested in being the dominant member,
a far cry from Margaret Thatcher (the Iron Lady) who didn’t want
to move forward and was stuck in the glories of the past.
Mae Doyle Sullivan
Media, Pennsylvania
Foolish English Lover
PEADAR O’Fiach’s letter “English Domination”
(March 28-April 3) of the blessings bestowed by the British Empire is
a scholarly wonder.
First he cites the 25% of the world population living in commonwealth
nations who so appreciate English rule for bestowing stable free democracies
upon them. Even flag and currency designs using British symbols are invoked
as proof of this appreciation.
Since he credits no sources for his statistics of appreciative former
colonials, are we to assume he personally conducted massive surveys of
commonwealth citizens? Quite an impressive feat from his stronghold near
the Botanical Garden Metro North station.
Next a giant leap of logic — sort of — in claiming India’s
rising economy is a benefit of “its long and close relationship
with England.” Gandhi didn’t see it quite that way when he
marched to the sea for salt and made homespun cloth as a protest against
English economic bondage.
O’Fiach seems not to grasp that colonialism, by design, sucked colonies
dry of natural resources, displaced native products in favor of the occupiers’
manufactured products and forced cultural changes contrived to suit the
agenda of the occupiers. It was all about power and wealth, not altruism.
And then another giant leap of logic (?) — apparently he thinks
Ireland, as a smaller EU member, is still “really under England’s
wing, since England is the EU’s dominant member.”
Does the membership of the EU agree? Do the citizens of Ireland concur?
Ireland participates fully in EU membership while England, which joined
for fear of being sidelined by a strong united Europe, still holds themselves
separate from the larger European community, did not join member nations
in accepting the euro and distanced themselves from the findings of the
European Court of Human Rights regarding British violations of the rights
of Irish dissidents.
Finally O’Fiach talks about his great respect for the English. I
respect many individual English, but neither their empire nor their treatment
of colonial subjects is worthy of respect.
Some of my English friends understand well that England abused Ireland
in the past. Ask descendants of the Amritsar massacre or the Croke Park
massacre or the Black and Tan solution how their families felt.
Go see Ken Loach’s historically accurate The Wind That Shakes the
Barley. Civil war marked the exit of the British from many of their colonies
besides Ireland.
In Ireland, they deliberately left weapons behind and pressured Michael
Collins with threats of returning if he didn’t attack the Four Courts.
They intentionally offered a choice between their return or civil war,
which they may have hoped would result in their return anyway. Remember,
they tried to make a comeback here in 1812.
I recall O’Fiach’s earlier letter disputing readers who blamed
English policy for the Famine. He suggested that the British were always
motivated by a desire to bring Ireland to level of prosperity comparable
to England’s.
I can’t help thinking of O’Fiach as the Irish American equivalent
of a Holocaust denier. My big question is, what is his game here? Why
the many letters over an Irish language name version praising English
involvement in Ireland?
Is it worth continuing to debate this Holocaust denier? And does Peter
from the Bronx think adopting his Irish nom de plume fools us?
Anne T. Murphy
A/k/a Aine Ni Murchadha
New York, New York
Goodwill for All
WHEN I was with the now defunct American Irish Political Education Committee,
I wrote their editorial praising the Good Friday Agreement but pointed
out that it would work in practice only if both sides in Northern Ireland
exhibited the goodwill needed to make it work. That goodwill was not present
at that time for reasons we need not go into now.
I greet with even greater hope the recent peace agreement, and support
the positive views of Niall O’Dowd as expressed in his recent editorial
comments in the Irish Voice. This is the hope too of the great majority
of the people in Northern Ireland, of that I’m sure.
It will be up to the political figures in the Nationalist and Unionist
communities to make the Assembly work for the benefit of all the good
people of the North, and not to allow themselves to fall back into the
petty squabbling which prevented a better life for all in the past.
The time for finger pointing over past injuries is past. And I particularly
address the Nationalist community in saying that this way forward is the
best road to a united Ireland, better by far than the road of coercion.
Albert Regan Doyle
Sanibel, Florida
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