Minister Michael McDowell's performance on Questions & Answers last week
was, as usual, totally predictable, but his parting shot that Sinn Féin
would be "drummed out of politics come the next general election" needs to
be examined rationally.
Even the most vehement anti-Sinn Féin political analysts are openly
conceding that the party will take 12-14 seats at least in the next Dáil.
These seats will be won with the votes of the ordinary hard working people
who have decided, at long last, that they want to change the way they are
represented, and by whom.
The people who will be voting for Sinn Féin have absolutely nothing in
common with the McDowells, Harneys, Aherns or Cowens of this world. Minister
McDowell or his colleagues will never have a monstrosity developed, towering
over the back of their homes in their leafy suburbs. Their loved ones will
never lie on beds in hospital corridors — the same beds that miraculously
disappear when a Minister arrives to promise funding, already promised by
the previous minister before he moved to a better seat on the gravy train.
They will never know the hopelessness of the dole queue, or the constant
struggle to make ends meet.
On the other hand, Sinn Féin representatives and workers know exactly what
these conditions are like, because we live them daily. We continue to build
our support from our own people, the ordinary people. Minister McDowell and
his colleagues have been, and always will be, both socially and politically
aloof from the ordinary people.
The minister sees the growth of Sinn Féin as a serious threat to the cosy
existence in power that his party has undeservedly enjoyed for too long.
Hence his daily scaremongering about perceived threats to national security,
etc in the vain attempt to muddy the real political issues of everyday life.
The people have learned the hard way, especially over the last two decades,
how the establishment parties have consistently betrayed them and they are
saying "no more"!
The minister is right in that many politicians will be drummed out come the
next Dáil elections, but this time the ordinary people will be beating those
drums, and many of the minister's colleagues will be marching out of
politics to that drumbeat.
P Ó Sabhaois,
PRO, Charles Kickham Cumann,
Sinn Féin, North Tipperary.
Let them eat cake
A Chairde,
I was very annoyed, but not surprised, at the current Tánaiste and Minister
for Health Mary Harney's recent comment in Limerick that the cost of
healthcare insurance cover in this country is very reasonable.
This clearly echoes the way the PD coalition partner views Irish society. It
ignores the reality that the two-tier entrenching of society, not only in
healthcare, but in all aspects of life is nothing short of a complete
failure of government to transform the state for the benefit of all citizens
during the current phase of growth.
It seems strange that while Ireland leads Europe in so many sectors, the PDs
and their Fianna Fáil conductors cannot make any real change in healthcare.
Why is this so when financial institutions, the legal profession, big
business and property developers have been so well catered for? It is
simple. They view people as economic units and favour financial stability
and profitability over personal wellbeing.
One of the minister's solutions to the health crisis was to raise the cost
of private beds in public hospitals. So her solution is to charge sick
people more money when they need medical attention on the grounds that they
have insurance. She is as creative as a bull in a china shop, not moving in
any direction for fear that something will break.
I have to inform the Minister that it is already broken. Her flippant
response to health insurance subscribers that "health care is expensive"
reminds me of Marie Antoinette's words in France when told the people were
hungry and had no bread. The ill-fated response was 'let them eat cake' and
history followed.
Is it not time to clear the boards of such self-serving economic idealogues
as the PDs and their Fianna Fáil puppeteers? Viva la revolution!
Joe Desmond,
Tuam Sinn Féin.
Understanding Russell
A Chairde,
How very sad that the desecration of Seán Russell's statue in Dublin has
prompted some people to denounce him as pro-Nazi. The most prominent images
evoked by use of the word Nazi will forever be of the holocaust and Hitler's
death camps, images seared into the collective unconscious of most of the
world. But when Russell asked for German help in 1939 he, along with the
rest of the world, could not possibly have known these horrors were going to
occur. Britain and its allies fought the Germans to prevent fulfilment of
German expansionist and invasion plans, not to prevent a holocaust they
didn't know was going to happen. This year, we commemorate the discovery and
liberation of Hitler's death camps in 1945. In 1939, they had not even been
designed.
The Germans' bombing of Belfast and the consequent deaths are obviously to
be deplored. But let us not forget that both the Germans and the British
regarded the six northern counties of Ireland as part of Britain. Belfast
was contributing greatly to Britain's war effort through shipbuilding and
munitions production and preventing this would therefore have been regarded
by both sides as a "legitimate" target for the Germans. Neither side would
have viewed this as an attack on Ireland.
By 1939, Germany was already a long and well-established supplier of aid and
arms to the Irish. Remember Childers, Casement and even the arming of
Carson's original UVF. In 1939, Russell was working closely with Joe
McGarrity of the Clan na Gael in America. McGarrity, through the Clan, was a
major promoter of and fundraiser for the IRA and had already established
strong contacts in Germany for arms purchases. When Britain entered the war
in Europe, Russell found himself stranded in America with no safe shipping
route back to Ireland. At McGarrity's instigation he wrote to the Germans,
seeking help to get home, which the Germans agreed to. He managed to get to
Germany and the Germans subsequently put a submarine at his disposal to take
him home, a thing they had done before with Casement.
Aside from their traditional role as supporters of the IRA, the Germans were
undoubtedly particularly pleased to accommodate the Chief of Staff of the
IRA at a time when they were planning an invasion of Britain. But any
possibilities of collaboration they saw would have cut no ice with Russell,
unless he saw potential for achieving his lifelong goal of a free and united
Ireland. To apply the term Nazi to Russell is to desecrate the memory of one
of Ireland's true patriots, who had dedicated his entire adult life to the
cause of Irish freedom.
He had been a 1916 man, fighting at Fairview, the Metropole and finally the
GPO. Following his imprisonment at Frongoch he went on to command Dublin's
2nd Battalion and was then appointed the IRA's Director of Munitions by
Michael Collins. He was anti-Treaty and was arrested and imprisoned several
times during the 1920s and 1930s, including one period when he did a 41-day
hunger strike. He began to form a close friendship with McGarrity in 1929
and subsequently visited America on fundraising trips. He was appointed
Chief of Staff of the IRA in 1938. In 1939 his English bombing campaign
began and he went to America soon after to raise more funds for it. When he
got stuck there all he wanted was to get back to his beloved Ireland and
continue his life's work.
Sue Stuart,
Penzance,
Cornwall.
Basque solidarity
A Chairde,
Readers of An Phoblacht may be interested to know of the recent
establishment of the Basque Solidarity Campaign in Scotland.
It is a campaign that actively promotes the Basque people's right to
national self-determination by highlighting a number of issues, such as
human rights for all Basque political prisoners, the right of the Basque
people to vote for their chosen representatives, the repatriation of Basque
political prisoners to the Basque Country, and the defence of all forms of
Basque culture. A recent example of this was the successful campaign on the
right to fly the National Flag of the Basque Country, the Ikurrina, in
Strathclyde without police interference.
We support the current political initiatives that are taking place within
the Basque Country and would ask anyone willing to join and/or receive more
information to contact us at the Basque Solidarity Campaign, PO Box 7518
Glasgow, Scotland G42 2AA (email: basquesolidaritycampaign@hotmail.com).