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Dublin - Event Notice
Thursday January 01 1970

eirigi to commemorate 91st Anniversary of James Connolly

category dublin | miscellaneous | event notice author Saturday April 28, 2007 16:54author by eirigi - eirigi Report this post to the editors

Former MP Bernadette McAliskey to address Dublin commemoration in Arbour Hill on Saturday 12th May.
James Connolly 1868-1916
James Connolly 1868-1916

The socialist republican group éirígí will commemorate the 91st Anniversary of James Connolly with a ceremony in Arbour Hill cemetery on Saturday 12th May at 3.30pm. The commemoration will be addressed by long time socialist republican campaigner and former MP Bernadette McAliskey. The well known Dublin actor Jer O’Leary will read from the writings of James Connolly and there will be traditional Irish music.

All are welcome to attend.

For further information email [email protected] or telephone 086 2367298.

"We went out to break the connection between this country and the British empire, and to establish an Irish Republic. We believe that the call we thus issued to the people of Ireland was a nobler call in a holier cause that any call issued to them during this war having any connection with the war. Believing that the British government has no right in Ireland, never had any right in Ireland, and never can have any right in Ireland, the presence in any one generation of even a respectable minority of Irishmen ready to die to affirm that truth makes that government forever a usurpation and a crime against human progress."
James Connolly, Commandant General, Dublin Division, Irish Republican Army.

Related Link: http://www.eirigi.org
author by Joe Lpublication date Mon Apr 30, 2007 11:51author address author phone Report this post to the editors

Bernadette had some home truths for the merry band of peace processors in the Irish Times today.

Peace in NI bought by 'fraud and lying', says McAliskey
Lorna Siggins

Peace has been bought in Northern Ireland by "perjury, fraud, corruption, cheating and lying", according to socialist and community activist Bernadette McAliskey.

In what "sane, civilised community" would anyone be suggesting that the "three male groupings" involved in several decades of conflict would "now make up a police force," Ms McAliskey told the Cúirt Forum in Galway.

Ms McAliskey, north Belfast playwright Gary Mitchell and Croatian writer Dubravka Ugresic were speaking in the Town Hall Theatre at the weekend on the theme of "outsider/insider". The forum, presented by Cúirt International Festival of Literature in association with The Irish Times, was chaired by Lelia Doolan, currently chair of the Solas arthouse cinema project in Galway.

Ms McAliskey, who was the youngest person to be elected to the British parliament when she was 21 in 1969, described how she and her husband Michael had decided not to move house after they survived an assassination attempt at their home in Dungannon, Co Tyrone, in 1981.

"Now I'd walk away from the North in the morning and clean the dust off my feet," she said.

Award-winning playwright Gary Mitchell - forced to leave north Belfast along with his extended family because of paramilitary anger over his portrayal of the loyalist community - said he would like to support a "true police force where people solved crimes".

Describing the police response to the attacks on his home and that of his relatives, he said that the North required a "proper society" which allowed someone like him to work. "Otherwise no more plays will be put on where they really need to be - at the heart of the loyalist community", he said.

Croatian writer Dubravka Ugresic, who was forced into exile in 1993, described how she had been found "guilty" of writing against "a collective passion called nationalism". It was two years into the war in former Yugoslavia, and she and four female colleagues were accused by the media of "conspiring against Croatia". She subsequently left the country and settled in Amsterdam.

Both Ms McAliskey and Mr Mitchell were highly critical of the "overwhelming" power of the media. In Mr Mitchell's view, there was a "real truth" and an "agreed truth", and when the "agreed truth becomes accepted, the real truth becomes a lie".

The media was reporting the "agreed truth", and the real truth "doesn't get a look in", he argued.

Ms McAliskey said that what she did not like about the media was its "total egotistical arrogance", and its private ownership by "self-important, greedy people who think they are guardians of society", and who were "well paid and very illiterate".

"The media thinks that if you are not within its sights, you don't exist," she said. But it was "surprising how much you can get away with when they are not looking at you". She added that the "new outside" in Ireland were the immigrants. Referring to the behaviour of many Irish employers, she said that it was "just as well that no one really believes in hell, or they'd roast in it for what they are doing".

Ms Ugresic said that Europe was "full of people coming from somewhere, leaving their homelands in search of other places". She contrasted the fear fomented when people believed their own employment was at threat from the "Polish plumber" with the "invisible movement" of people with disposable income, like "the Dutch going to Bulgaria for sun and cheap property".

© 2007 The Irish Times

 
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