as not heard the comments of Ballymena
DUP Cllr Roy Gillespie who said: "The Pope is the Antichrist and is the head
of the Catholic church, which is not a true church or faith. As a Catholic,
he [Michael McIlveen] won't get into heaven unless he has been saved.
Catholics are not accepted into heaven." If that is not sectarianism, could
Mr Keane please tell us what is? He and his ilk need to open their eyes and
stop blaming the victims of sectarian attacks, which, as James Connolly so
accurately predicted, have been a feature of the northern state since it was
created.
Since Michael's murder, some commentators have tried to revert to the tired
old "both sides to blame" line. The PSNI first said that there was a fight
between sectarian gangs. However, it turned out that Michael and his two
friends were not involved in any fight but were chased by a 20-strong before
he was beaten to death.
It is well past time that the media stopped pedalling the insulting "warring
native tribes" nonsense. Three Catholics have been killed and many injured
by loyalist gangs in the past nine months. In contrast there have been no
killings and very few sectarian attacks in majority nationalist areas like
South Down, South Armagh, Fermanagh, Tyrone and Derry. I believe it is no
coincidence that councils where Sinn Féin and/or SDLP have a majority have a
policy of sharing power with ALL parties, including the DUP, which have a
mandate. On the contrary, in unionist dominated councils like Ballymena,
Sinn Féin and the SDLP are excluded from even the most trivial positions and
are sometimes shouted down while trying to speak.
The obvious lesson is that, to defeat sectarianism, the two governments must
stand up to bigotry and not allow the DUP and UUP to continue to exclude any
democratically elected party from sharing power in the north.
Is mise,
Dr Sean Marlow,
Dublin 11.
A chara,
There has been much debate recently regarding the roots of sectarianism in
the North, and it is clear that many people continue to see this as
essentially a reflection of religious intolerance between Protestants and
Catholics. This is a fundamentally flawed assumption and the dissemination
of this crude analysis makes it all the more difficult to tackle the true
roots of sectarianism in the six counties, which are, in reality, purely
political. Of course there is a religious dimension to the type of
sectarianism that recently led to the tragic murder of Michael McIlveen in
Ballymena, but only in terms of acting as an identifier or cue for the
victim's perceived political beliefs, in much the same way that a person
having a Gaelic name or wearing Gaelic sportswear could be associated with a
particular political viewpoint.
The notion that Michael and others were murdered because of their religion,
provides a dumbed-down apolitical analysis, which too many within the
so-called independent media are only too happy to espouse. Michael was
murdered because he was perceived to be a republican/nationalist, not
because of his perceived opinions regarding transubstantiation, the
immaculate conception, the confession of sins, or the authority of the Pope.
I very much doubt that those who perpetuate these attacks even attend
Church, or could identify any fundamental theological differences between
the Church of Rome and the reformed Christian denominations.
Even when this distortion is explained, there are still those who maintain
that religious intolerance is at the core of the problems in the North.
Perhaps the following hypothetical scenario might help them see the truth.
It's 2006 in the North of Ireland, but not as we know it. There are no
republican or nationalist political parties, just unionist. Northern
Catholics have for many years abandoned their aspirations for Irish
unification, and are now very comfortable with a British identify, fully
supporting all manifestations of British political and cultural identity at
all levels of society. There are no Irish speaking nursery, primary, or
secondary schools. There are no Gaelic sports played. All Catholics can be
clearly identified as British. In this context, do the doubters believe
that sectarian attacks on Catholics would continue?
Is mise,
D McS,
Belfast
Fine Gael and Irish
A chara,
I wish to express my absolute disgust regarding Fine Gael's recent policy
decision on the Irish Language. I feel that this is a stunt by Fine Gael to
attract the anti-Irish language vote particularly amongst naïve young people.
It is clear that many Irish people feel that Irish has no use in their lives
and that secondary school pupils in the 26 counties hate their Irish classes
at school. In my opinion, scrapping compulsory Irish for Leaving Cert.
students is not the answer. The Irish Language, especially within the
education system, needs to be completely reformed. A curriculum which
concentrates on speaking the language instead of concentrating on grammar
needs to be adapted. More important than anything is how the language is
taught. Instead of just being taught as an academic subject, it needs to be
taught as a living language, something that is a part of our identity. If it
is not taught in a way that inspires a pupil to want to learn it then there
is no wonder that young people resist it so much. The image of the language
also needs to be reformed. Young people today feel that it is an old, dead
language and associate it with the likes of Peig and old thatched cottages
in rural Galway. If we are to succeed in reviving the language a modernised
image needs to be out there. I feel that there is huge potential within Sinn
Féin to be the driving force behind this renewal and revival.
Is mise,
Ursula Ní Shionnáin,
Cúige Laighean
Civil War information sought
A chara,
I am researching the Civil War period, in particular the 77 Volunteers
executed by the Free State. I would greatly appreciate any information e.g.
last letters or photographs of the following executed volunteers.
Volunteers Joseph Spooner executed Beggers Bush Dublin 30 Nov 1922, Patrick
Farrelley executed Beggars Bush Dublin 30 Nov 1922, 1923 Leo Dowling
Portobello 8 Jan, Sylvester Heaney Portobello 8 Jan, Terence Brady
Portobello 8 Jan, John McNulty Dundalk 13 Jan, Thomas Murray Dundalk 13 Jan,
John Clifford Tralee 20 Jan, James Melia Dundalk 22 Jan, William Conroy Birr
Offaly 26 Jan, Patrick Geraghty Portlaoise 27 Jan, Joseph Byrne Portlaoise
27 Jan, John Newell Tuam 11 April and Edward Greanney.
I intend to launch Seventy Seven of Mine said Ireland a book containing
biographical material on the 77 Volunteers in late summer 2006.