Remembering 1981: Former H-Block O/C Brendan McFarlane
Brendan 'Bik' McFarlane was Officer Commanding (O/C) the H-Block prisoners
during the 1981 Hunger Strike. Last Friday, 5 May, on the 25th anniversary
of the death of Bobby Sands, McFarlane spoke to An Phoblacht's ELLA O'DWYER
about the journey that brought him to undertake one of the most difficult
challenges ever faced by an Irish republican.
A noticeable feature of Brendan McFarlane's personality is the comprehensive
way in which he looks at things. Observant and lateral thinking, he sees the
bigger picture. In terms of awareness, he has an edge. This awareness
carried him through his prison sentence and, no doubt, impacted on his
selection as O/C during the 1981 Hunger Strike.
Following a group visit to the hospital wing in the H-Blocks on the morning
of the 25th anniversary of Bobby Sands' death, I asked Bik McFarlane about
his recollection of the Hunger Strike. Conscious of the pain that was likely
to be involved in being repeatedly questioned about this time, I wondered
how he coped. "Sometimes it's fine, if for instance you're talking with
other republicans", he said. "Other times you get choked up, angry or
emotionally charged. The Hunger Strike will never, ever leave me".
As our group walked around each of the Hunger Strikers' cells in the Blocks
that morning, I noticed something that illustrated those emotionally charged
moments, while also indicating McFarlane's keen awareness. Each of the
Hunger Striker's cell had a window and in one cell Bik picked up the bed,
rearranging its position. "It wasn't facing that direction" he said. "It was
facing this way", to which Jim Gibney responded: "Yes you're right, we would
have been trying to keep the sun out of his eyes".
Born in 1951, Brendan McFarlane was raised in the Ardoyne area of Belfast
and from an early age had a thirst for knowledge. Between 1968 and 1970 he
studied at St David's Catholic seminary in Wales. The desire to learn
followed him throughout his life, particularly during his period of
imprisonment where with like-minded people, he engaged in ideological
discussion and debate.
While theological studies might seem to be an unlikely pursuit for someone
who later became involved in armed struggle, Bik saw no contradiction: "We
were studying liberation theology. I'd have turned up somewhere like South
America with a bible, in one hand and an AK47 in the other.
As it turned out, he decided to return to Belfast at a time when loyalist
attacks agsinst the nationalist community were rife. Then came internment
and the British army. Bik took regular holidays from college to Ireland.
"After one holiday I went back toSt David's, but it wasn't the same.
Something twigged." Two years into his studies, Bik came home and got
involved in armed struggle.
At the time the IRA were in defensive mode. "There were loyalist attacks in
Derry and Belfast, houses were burnt and riots were the norm. Internment was
introduced and the Brits arrived". The Shankill Butchers were at work and
loyalists were kidnapping, torturing and killing Catholics. The IRA soon
moved to the offensive, hoping to "physically drive the Brits out.
"Things moved at a pace, but there was a lack of real political analysis.
Sinn Féiners were treated rather badly. They were illegal until 1974. They
were the poor relation, but doing crucial work. During those early days, the
political took second place to the military. Some Volunteers thought that if
you were in Sinn Féin you didn't have the balls". However, like a lot of
other forward thinking people he "didn't like that".
Like many republicans, Bik found himself in a prison cell. "I went to jail
at 23, I was an old man by then". Like his comrades, Mc Farlane was an
ordinary person living in extraordinary times. Arrested and sentenced to
life in prison, he arrived at Cage 11 where he met Gerry Adams, Brendan 'the
Dark' Hughes and others.
There was a lot of study, discussion and debate going on at the time but
Bik's initial focus was on escape. On his first night in the cages he
discovered, to his delight, that a tunnel was already in place right under
his feet. This escape was not to happen and so he ended up spending more
time in the company of like-minded people in Cage 11, all engrossed in the
pursuit of knowledge. "I found cage 11 to be a really, really important
time. I learned more politics in Cage 11 than I learned in the entire of my
previous life".
Censorship was rife in the Cages. "We had to smuggle in the likes of
Kitson's writings. This was military stuff. We weren't allowed The War of
the Flea". So the prisoners smuggled that in too. "You could get Harold
Robbins and all the filth of the day. You could poison your mind, but you
were not allowed to revolutionise your mind". Bik, Gerry Adams and others,
worked out for themselves what the British policy of criminalisation was
about, an awareness that served McFarlane well when he ended up in the
Blocks.
Bik ended up 'on the boards'; the punishment cells of the H-Blocks when he
and committed escapist Larry Marley, were caught in an escape attempt. "The
first blanket man I saw was Pádraig Wilson. He was in a cell opposite me
with nothing but a blanket. I was wearing my own clothes, had parcels and
papers. It was a matter of dates- if you were arrested before a given date
you had status, if arrested afterwards you were dealt with as a criminal."
Arriving at the protesting wing of the blocks was a claustrophobic
nightmare. "The first two weeks in the blocks were depressing. I had to
forget about escapes and the cages and knuckle down to the protest". But
from his previous period in the Cages and his own ability to see the bigger
picture, he had long ago figured out what was going on in terms of Britain's
policy on Ireland. The British government aimed to criminalise the struggle
and the prisoners seemed like the obvious targets.
"We had to fight or surrender". Surrender was not on the agenda for
republicans. To the British, the prisoners were the soft targets. They were
in for a surprise.
"Nobody had decided on a strategy for dealing with the protest", said Bik.
But then republicans do what republicans do. "When the Brits threw down the
challenge we accepted the challenge". They chose the battlefield and the
prisoners responded." Kieran Nugent refused to wear a uniform and the rest
is history.
By the time it came to the hunger strike republican prisoners were
significantly politicised. "Prisoners were thrown to the forefront of the
struggle", so they continued to analyse, discuss and look at where they were
going". By the late 1970s the prospect of hunger strike seemed inevitable.
The protest escalated and The Relatives' Action Committee was established,
consisting mainly of mothers, wives, girlfriends and family members. The
Pope's visit in 1979 seemed a likely opportunity. But the time wasn't right.
Later other support groups developed like the H-Block/Armagh Committee.
In 1980 the time was right. At the end of the 1980 hunger strike when the
POWs realised that another strike would take place, Bobby Sands stood down
from his role as O/C in order to take part. Replacement was essential, both
in terms of Bobby's position as hunger striker and his role as O/C.
As Vice O/C Seanna Walsh was the obvious candidate. Bobby had other ideas.
He targeted McFarlane for the job saying: "Seanna Walsh is my best mate.
When a crisis develops Seanna Walsh will not let me die. You will. You have
to". It was a dubious compliment for Bik.
The idea of replacement hunger striker was a major consideration for Sands
and he asked Bik: "Do you have your head around this? You better know what
you're doing. Do you have a replacement for me?". A bit taken aback Bik
answered: "Yes I have, its Joe Mc Donnell". "That's a good choice" replied
Sands, "Joe is a solid man. He won't let you down.'
On his role as O/C during the Hunger Strike McFarlane says: "I wouldn't want
to see anyone in that position. I didn't want the job. I might have to make
the call if a potential deal came through from the Brits. But the pressure
and heartache I felt paled into insignificance when you looked at the
suffering of the Hunger Strikers and their families. I steeled myself to do
the necessary".
Currently people are writing their own versions of history, not least
Richard O'Rawe who recently asserted that the offer of a deal from the
British Government was put on the table. According to O'Rawe, a conversation
was held in Irish between Bik and another republican through the cell
windows. O'Rawe claims that Bik suggested to another comrade that it was a
deal that should be accepted. O'Rawe's claim is a "total and absolute
fiction", says McFarlane."There was no such deal". According to McFarlane,
the IRA prisoners were well prepared for false promises and the British
clearly had no interest in a just resolution to the Hunger Strike.
Looking back again on the visit to the jail that morning, McFarlane referred
to something Martin McGuinness had said in an interview when he asked what
influence Margaret Thatcher exerted today compared to the long standing
influence of Bobby Sands.
On the morning spent in the hospital wing of Long kesh, he said; "This
morning was very dignified, very emotional. Another hunger striker Sheila
Darragh, was there". One striking feature of the Hunger Strike is that,
after a quarter of a century, its impact is stil felt. The events of that
time projected onto the course of the struggle in a profound way, much as
1916 did. As Bik said, "the hunger strikers in the Blocks play as much of a
role today as they did a quarter of a century ago. They are still part and
parcel of the struggle". And, as he stressed, so do the protesting women
hunger strikers of Armagh.
Chatting in the kitchen of his Belfast office last Friday afternoon I asked
Bik about his dreams before he got involved in Republicanism. "I wanted to
be a musician", he said. " I went out last night and heard a musician play
and I'm not a musician". Brendan/Bik Mc Farlane is no Mozart, but he has his
own strengths. Asked what he thought of Bobby Sands he said: "He was of the
strongest people I ever met". When you look at Bik's ability to 'twig',
Bobby's choice of replacement O/C in 1981 makes a lot of sense.
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