CONCERNS AND MISGIVINGS OF IRISH-AMERICAN ACTIVISTS!

Posted By: August 04, 2013

NORTH RELEGATED DOWN REPUBLIC’S PRIORITY LIST

Denis Bradley. Irish News ( Belfast). Friday, August 2, 2013

ORPHANED. To be orphaned once is natural. To be orphaned twice might be described as careless. It is the feeling of many who live in the north of Ireland.

It is the feeling of those who have emotionally and intellectually attached their loyalty and their aspirations to the Irish state.

They feel that the family home that was always there, if only occasionally visited, is now empty.

The parents are no longer in residence and the old place is looking neglected and desolate. No place to go on the days when the heart needs to touch and be touched by the familial.

It has happened slowly over a good number of years. Ironically, it began under a Fianna Fail government.

The same people who had invested so much time and energy and reputation into the peace and politics of the north initiated the psychological and even physical withdrawal.

As the violence receded from the streets and the memory, the political strategists decided it was safe and even beneficial to force our politicians away from their dependency on one or either or both governments.

When the economic crisis erupted the north receded even more in prominence and import.

The Irish government was particularly traumatised by the loss of economic sovereignty and the north was relegated far down the priority list.

That distancing and disinterest increased under the coalition government of Fine Gael and Labour.

Those are the stated reasons or excuses or explanations for leaving the nationalist-minded people of the north feeling like orphans.

As one of those who feels orphaned I want to respond – how dare you.

I do not accept the reasons or the excuses. I think they are misplaced, ill-advised and pathetic.

If the rationale behind the excuses were once thought out and pertinent, they have long since lost purpose and credibility.

It has been clear for a number of years that there are legacy issues in the north that are complex and difficult and need the attention of both governments.

It is clear that Taoiseach Enda Kenny was probably surprised and certainly embarrassed on St Patrick’s Day when US president Barack Obama told him he would need to pay a bit more attention to what was happening in the north.

It is embarrassing that Joe Biden, the US vice president, shows more concern and insight into the north that Eamon Gilmore, the Republic’s minister for foreign affairs.

Eamon Gilmore has responsibility for the normal political intercourse with the north and with the British government.

I could count on one hand the number of times he has visited the north since he took on that responsibility.

I cannot remember one thing that he has said that could be considered insightful or memorable.

Between the lines I interpret his current strategy as getting past the G8 summit, the Irish presidency of the European Union, into the autumn and seeing what happens then.

The Northern Ireland Office is generally ‘laissez-faire’ minded and Irish Foreign Affairs shows no inclination, under Gilmore’s leadership, to upset their slumber.

Well, excuse me, but the Anglo Irish Agreement is not something that you pay a bit of attention to on a quiet day.

It is the agreement that underpins the peace in the north and is the context in which divided Irish and British communities, both living in the north, try to find a path into the future.

Enda Kenny has displayed as much political courage and integrity as any Irish taoiseach in my lifetime.

But not on the north. Irish policy on the north might formally reside in foreign affairs but anyone long enough in the tooth knows that it is ultimately the taoiseach’s office that has the final word.

His advisers have kept him away from the issue.

Just the odd visit and the timely statement, enough to spare the blushes and keep the SDLP quiet. Nothing that would comfort and reassure the nationalists of the north that their feelings were understood and in good hands.

Nothing to show that they will be properly represented and included within the strands of governance while they patiently wait and hope for a new Ireland.

On the contrary, Martin McAleese, presumably appointed because of his interest and experience of northern affairs, steps down from the Seanad, a body that had as one of its founding aims to give a voice to the various strands of politics in the north.

Enda has replaced Martin McAleese with one of his own Fine Gael councillors from Co Galway.

Letters to the Editor
Irish News
Friday, August 2, 2013

Dear Editor,
Denis Bradley’s column will have Irish heads nodding all across America (“NORTH
RELEGATED DOWN REPUBLIC’S PRIORITY LIST.”  August 2).
The column captures the concerns and misgivings of Irish-American activists who
support the peace-process.
One nice dividend of the peace-process was that it  ” ended the Irish Civil War
syndrome,” as I argue in my Memoirs, “My American Struggle For Justice in Northern
Ireland.” By that, I mean, it ended the divided loyalties that were inflicted upon
Irish-Americans by the Fine Gael-Fianna Fail – Irish Republican bitter divide.
My Memoirs also outline the inexcusable role the Irish Embassy played in covering
up London’s nefarious role in The North — how that Embassy had, in effect, become
a wholly owned subsidiary of the British Government.

All that changed when Taoiseach Albert Reynolds — God bless him — had the vision
to accept Bill Clinton’s expressed interest in the North — unlike the way Garret
FitzGerald had rejected, indeed sabotaged, Jimmy Carter’s interest in 1976.
Reynolds’ leadership instantly changed the attitude of the Irish Embassy, which
would go on to do excellent work in promoting the peace-process, while welcoming
the good will of Irish-American activists — not trying to divide it, as in the
past.Irish-Americans would continue to rejoice in the commitment that Reynolds and successive  Prime Ministers — John Bruton, Bertie Ahern  and Brian Cowen — would demonstrate  on The North… But concern would begin to develop with the Kenny-Gilmore leadership. (Shutting down the Irish Embassy at the Vatican certainly sent an odd message to Irish Americans — who are very conscious that,due to anti-Catholic bigotry, the United States itself had not fully and  formally

recognized The Vatican  until January 10, 1984,  when the Vatican  Delegation was
finally  elevated to the rank of Nunciature).

Denis Bradley captures the concern of Irish Americans when he says:
Eamon Gilmore has responsibility for the normal political intercourse with the
north and with the British Government. I could count on one hand the number of
times he has visited the north since he took on that responsibility. I cannot
remember one thing that he has said that could be considered insightful or
memorable. … Enda Kenny has displayed as much political courage and integrity as
any Irish taoiseach in my lifetime. But not on The North … His advisers have
kept him away from the issue.”

All this — plus the fact that the Irish Ambassador to Washington, Michael
Collins, is being reassigned  — raises Irish-American concern. Ambassador Collins
had deep knowledge of the entire peace-process, and has performed excellently.

 

Fr. Sean Mc Manus

President

Irish National Caucus

P.O. BOX 15128

Capitol Hill

Washington, DC 20003-0849

Tel. 202-544-0568

Fax. 202-488-7537

sean@irishnationalcaucus.org