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Fr. Mc Manus’ Speech in Dublin
Castle on the Launching of his
Memoirs
My American Struggle for Justice
in Northern Ireland
Tuesday,
April 5, 2011

Father Sean McManus Speaks at
Dublin Castle
When I first went to America
on October 2, 1972, I
assumed that there were two
basic constituencies I could
appeal to: The left wing of
the Democratic Party
(especially the prominent
Irish-American members) and
the Social Gospel wing of
the Catholic Bishops
Conference.
I knew I had my work cut out
for me when Tip O’Neill—in
response to my
pressurizing—would put his
big hand on my shoulder and
say with evident glee, “Now
Fr. Sean, how can you expect
me to be more patriotic than
Taoiseach Liam Cosgrave or
Taoiseach Jack Lynch?”
But as Speaker (1977 – 1987
)Tip’s collusion with the
British Government would go
to extraordinary and
appalling lengths.
We got the famed Jack
Anderson Column – nationally
syndicated and carried in
nearly 1, 000 papers – to
expose Tip’s collusion three
times within one year,
1977-1978.
(1) “ Speaker Thomas (Tip)
O’ Neill, the big beloved
boss of the House, is as
Irish as anyone who ever
kissed the Blarney stone.
But he quietly squashed a
congressional hearing on
alleged British outrages
against the Irish…To dig up
atrocities, the speaker
pleaded, would only inflame
the already emotional issue.
It would be an
“inappropriate” time to stir
up trouble over Irish
rights, he said”. (“ Irish
Politics”. Jack Anderson and
Les Whitten. New York Daily
News. October 21, 1977).
(2) “ Under pressure from
two foreign governments,
President Carter is
betraying a campaign promise
to speak out against human
rights violation committed
by British authorities in
Northern Ireland. He made
the pledge to…[the Irish
National Caucus] in
Pittsburgh six days before
the 1976 election, in
exchange for their
endorsement. Shortly after
Carter took office… the
Irish National Caucus…
supplied the White House
with 10 documented cases of
alleged torture perpetrated
by British security forces
against suspected IRA
members or sympathizers… A
move to air the charges on
Capitol Hill is being
thwarted by House Speaker
Tip O’Neill at the behest of
the Irish government…An aide
told us that the Speaker, a
Carter confidant, was told
by prominent members if the
Irish government that an
investigation would be
counterproductive. In
Dublin’s view, the Irish
National Caucus is pro-I.R.A.,
and a congressional hearing
would signal U.S. support of
the terrorist IRA gunmen”.
(“White House Policy”. Jack
Anderson. Washington Post,
June 17, 1978).
(3) “ Human rights
violations, reported to us
by a number of reliable
sources, have put Northern
Ireland on an unenviable par
with some of the most
barbarous regimes of
communist commissars or
tinhorn Latin American
dictators. The British are
trampling on the rights of
Irish citizen in a manner
reminiscent of Oliver
Cromwell’s iron-fisted rule
more than three centuries
ago…An Ad Hoc Committee of
119 members has been formed
in congress. But the
committee’s attempts to
publicize the outrages being
committed in Northern
Ireland, along with the
efforts of the Irish
National Caucus, have been
blocked by House Speaker Tip
O’ Neill and other
congressional leaders who
are reluctant to offend our
British ally”. (“Carter
Pressured on Northern
Ireland”. Jack Anderson.
Detroit Free Press. October
29, 1978).
Congressional Hearings on
British violations of human
rights were banned from 1974
to 1995. If that is not
collusion, what is? However,
we must not fail to mention
here that that Garret
FitzGerald has also proudly
claimed credit for the ban
on the Congressional
Hearings.
How do you think history is
going to judge that
collusion?
Now, to my second parable:
the collusion of the
American Catholic Bishops
The Office of International
Justice and Peace is the
department of the U.S.
Catholic Conference of
Bishops that would deal with
the Northern Ireland issue.
On January 6,1978, I met
with that office. Afterwards
I said, “ It was just like
being at the British
Embassy. The Office of
Justice and Peace has become
the ecclesiastical arm of
British propaganda”. As if
to prove my point, that
Office would release the
following letter:“ It is the
Provos who are mainly
responsible for the violence
in Northern Ireland and this
is recognized by every
careful and impartial
observer… after due
consultation with the Irish
bishops, and in recognition
of the efforts being made by
the governments and church
bodies directly concerned,
we [the US Catholic
Conference] had concluded
that there is no appropriate
basis for public
intervention in the problems
of Northern Ireland, either
by this conference, or any
branch of the United States
government…" (October 17,
1979).
Do you think for a moment
the Office of Justice and
Peace would have made such a
statement without checking
with the Irish Embassy, and
probably with the British
Embassy too? Although Irish
diplomats may deny it, I
regard that statement as the
clearest, most accurate
expression of the policy of
the Dublin governments of
that time :there no basis
for United States
intervention.
In August 1979 the Irish
National Caucus led a
successful campaign to have
a ban put on the sale of
U.S. weapons to the RUC.
Well, later on, in January
1981, Archbishop Hickey of
Washington and Bishop Thomas
Kelly, Secretary General of
the US Catholic Conference,
visited The White House to
urge President Reagan to
continue the ban on military
aid to El Salvador.
I wrote to them, urging them
to also urge President
Reagan to continue the ban
on the sale of US weapons to
the RUC.
Archbishop Hickey responded
to me saying, "… Bishop
Kelly and I will be in touch
with our counterparts in
Northern Ireland to seek
their advice in this vexing
question. Our intervention
will depend on their
response". And Bishop Kelly
replied "… We have known of
your position [on the RUC]
for some time… In the case
of El Salvador, we have been
encouraged to take what
action we have taken by the
local hierarchy. We have
not, at this time, received
such encouragement from the
Irish hierarchy on the
subject you have brought to
our attention…” (Hickey’s
letter, February 6, 1981;
Kelly’s letter, January 29,
1981).
How do you think history
will judge that
ecclesiastical collusion?
The thing that has made the
biggest personal impression
on me regarding my work with
the U.S. Congress is that –
at least in the early years
-- those who helped me most
were not Irish and often not
Catholic. They were
Jewish-Americans,
Italian-Americans and
African-Americans.
Congressman Mario Biaggi (
D-NY) is the great Italian
example. And Congressman Don
Payne( R-NJ) is the prime
African-American example
Many Irish-American Members
of Congress were blackmailed
into silence by the London
and Dublin governments!
“Thou shall not condemn the
Brits, lest you be seen as
helping the IRA.”
Here is a simple statement
of fact. Big name
Irish-Americans did not lead
the charge in pressurizing
the British government on
injustice in Northern
Ireland.
· Not on the torture
of political prisoners
· Not on the
shoot-to-kill policy
· Not on anti-Catholic
discrimination
· Not on the
Birmingham Six or Guilford
Four
· Not on the State
assassination of Pat
Finucane
Indeed, big name
Irish-American politicians
tried to block our efforts
on these campaigns and tried
to sabotage the Mac Bride
Principles.
That is a simple statement
of fact. The compliant
media never challenged those
in Ireland—North and
South—who advised those
American politicians to
oppose our non-violent
campaigns.
And yet, despite this huge
opposition, we prevailed.
Once the House of
Representatives was no
longer controlled by
Irish-Catholic Speakers we
got our Hearings and we got
the Mac Bride Principles
passed, not only into State
law, but also U.S. law. It
took a Protestant Speaker,
the conservative Newt
Gingrich, to lift the ban on
Hearings; and it took a
Jewish-American -- the
great Congressman Ben Gilman
as Chairman of the House
International Relations
Committee -- to schedule
many Hearings. And it took a
good Baptist from The Bible
Belt, Bill Clinton, to end
the immoral policy of, “
hands off Northern Ireland
lest we offend jolly old
England”.
Here is another thing about
my American struggle: I was
never supported by big
money. No big foundations
helped us. No famous Irish
-American rich people helped
us significantly. My
support came from the
ordinary working class
people. That makes me feel
good because with big money
comes big strings. And I
had no big political or
ecclesiastical strings to
hold me down.
God bless America, and God
save Ireland.

Donal Donnely and Fr.
McManus

Frank McManus
Frank Mc Manus, Chairman of the
Committee for the Dublin Book
Launch and older brother of Fr.
Sean, calls the Meeting to
order. |