Tuesday 17 March 2009

Happy Saint Patrick's Day

The Pope first gave the Kings of England the Lordship of Ireland. A Papal Blessing was sent to William III when he set out for Ireland. The Lateran Palace was illuminated for a fortnight when news of the Battle of the Boyne reached Rome. During the 1798 Rebellion, the staff and students of Maynooth sent a Declaration of Loyalty to the King. The tiny number of priests who adhered to that Rebellion were excommunicated, the bishops calling them “the very faeces of the Church”.

Into the nineteenth century, Catholic priests participated in the annual prayer service at the Walls of Derry, an ecumenical gesture with few or no parallels at the time. Jacobite and Hanoverian were always united in supporting the closest possible ties among the historic Kingdom of England (including the Principality of Wales), the historic Kingdom of Scotland and the historic Kingdom of Ireland.

Prominent Belfast Catholic laymen chaired rallies against Home Rule, with prominent Catholic priests on the platforms. There were numerous Catholic pulpit denunciations of Fenianism, which is unlike any of the three principal British political traditions in being a product of the French Revolution. Hence its tricolour flag. And hence its very strong anti-clerical streak, always identifying Catholicism as one of Ireland’s two biggest problems.

Jean Bodin’s theory of princely absolutism, held by the Stuarts and their anti-Papal Bourbon cousins, was incompatible with the building up of the Social Reign of Christ, subsequently the inspiration for all three great British political movements. Likewise, ethnically exclusive nation-states deriving uncritically from the Revolution do not provide adequate means to that end.

By contrast, the absence of any significant Marxist influence in this country has been due to the universal and comprehensive Welfare State, and the strong statutory protection of workers and consumers, the former paid for by progressive taxation, and all underwritten by full employment. These are very largely the fruits of Catholic Social Teaching.

Such fruits have been of disproportionate benefit to ethnically Gaelic-Irish Catholics throughout the United Kingdom. Even in the 1940s, Sinn Féin worried that they were eroding its support. She who led the assault on these things remains a Unionist hate figure, since the Anglo-Irish Agreement is an integral part of any Thatcherism honestly defined.

Only an industrial or post-industrial economy, not one built on the sands of EU farm subsidies and film-making, can make provision such as existed before Thatcher. A United Ireland would exclude therefrom people who would otherwise participate in it.

Northern Ireland has both a large bourgeoisie and a large proletariat, like the rest of the United Kingdom, but unlike the Irish Republic. Gaelic-Irish Catholics are to be found in large numbers in Northern Ireland’s middle and working classes alike. Many bourgeois and proletarians in Great Britain are ethnically Gaelic-Irish, devoutly Catholic, or both.

Middle-class expansion since the Second World War, like the civilised intellectual and cultural life of the pre-Thatcher working class, was in no small measure due to the Catholic schools. The only way to maintain the Catholic school system in Northern Ireland is to keep Northern Ireland within the Union.

For each of this Kingdom’s parts contains a Catholic intelligentsia, whereas the Irish Republic’s is the most tribally anti-Catholic in the world. There are precious few Mass-going, and no ideologically Catholic, politicians, journalists, radio or television producers, or other public intellectuals. Rather, the memories of Samuel Beckett and James Joyce are venerated. Anyone who objects to even the most extreme decadence is accused of wishing to “return” to “the bad, old, repressive Ireland.” The Republic’s Catholic schools, among much else, are doomed.

As would be Northern Ireland’s, if Sinn Féin had its way. Under the pretext that they teach through the medium of Irish, wholly and militantly secular Sinn Féin schools are being set up at public expense, in direct opposition to the Catholic system, by the Sinn Féin Education Minister. Her exclusion of Anglican, Presbyterian and Methodist clergy from their historic role in the government of schools is the dry run for her party’s openly desired exclusion of the Catholic Church from schools throughout Ireland.

Furthermore, there is no desire in the Republic, either for the much higher taxes necessary to maintain British levels of public spending in “the Six Counties”, or for the incorporation of a large minority into a country which has developed on the presupposition of a near-monoculture.

The Civil Rights Movement was explicitly for equal British citizenship, not for a United Ireland. Even the old Nationalist Party, never mind Sinn Féin, was permitted no part in its early organisation. And it was classically British Labour in identifying education, health care, decent homes and proper wages as the rights of citizens, who are demeaned precisely as citizens when they are denied those rights. The fruits of Catholic Social Teaching, indeed.

So the Catholic case is for the Union. Look at the Ulster Unionist and Democratic Unionist votes in largely or entirely Catholic wards. Even Ian Paisley’s huge personal vote could not happen without Catholic support. With no corresponding Nationalist vote in Protestant wards, the Union, simply as such, is manifestly the majority will of both communities. As for Paisley’s theological opinions, the definitive Catholic answers to them have been available for centuries.

The left-wing case is also for the Union, which enables more people than would otherwise be able to do so to benefit from the building up of social democracy. The dismantlement of this by an enemy of the Union was mostly opposed by the old High Tory oligarchs of the Ulster Unionist Party, and consistently resisted by the Democratic Unionist Party, with its Old Labour electoral base.

And the all-Ireland case is for the Union. As is appreciated in the Irish Republic, what is now Northern Ireland has been profoundly different from the rest of the island, but very like Great Britain, since long before any prospect of partition. That was precisely what necessitated partition. The Irish Republic does not want, and could not sustain, the incorporation of Northern Ireland.

So Happy Saint Patrick’s Day.

And God Save The Queen.

3 comments:

  1. I think it might be relevant that an ENGLISH Pope gave the Lordship of Ireland to an ENGLISH King.

    Either way I know of few Irish people who actually think it would stand up in court.
    Perhaps the Vatican should break off diplomatic relations with Ireland.
    The Maynooth students..well clearly 1798 happened in the wake of the French Revolution, obviously anti Catholic and Maynooth was financed in 1795 by the British government. Certainly today at Maynooth College that flag modelled on the French tricolour will be flying.
    Possibly they have changed their mind.

    its rather peculiar that the post Enlightenment period changed things radically. Public education, literacy, emancipation, transport.......all contributed to Irish nationalism and all generously the gift of the British.

    One might say....indeed the historic record shows that the 19th century marked a transition.

    Protestants and Presbyterians who had previously believed in seperation from Britain decided that they needed union with Britain to best represent their interests.
    Catholics believed their best interests served by Irish independence.

    I dont know of a single IRISH Catholic that wants a United Kingdom. Of course I know several ENGLISH Catholics who still believe that there is a case to made along 18th century lines.
    Perhaps we need a Catholic who can articulate that view.

    And of course I fully endorse the sentiment ...Happy Saint Patricks Day!

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  2. The Pope gave the King of England the Lordship of Ireland

    - I suppose that makes a later Pope's tacitern approval of Mussolini's brutal invasion (with the use of chemical weapons) of Ethiopia ok then. Now we know - Ethiopia is forever to be bound to Italy becuase David Lindsay and a dead pope say so.

    While we are at it, would the Pope during William II and III's invasion been so approving if he knew Billy was planning to bring in the Penal Laws?

    - No Catholic to own firearms

    - No Catholic to own a horse valued more than £10

    - No Catholic to be able to buy land or sell any they do possess

    - Protestant children of Catholic parents to be the sole inheritors of their parents' estate with their Catholic syblings ignored despite whatever provisions in a will.

    Yep, the Catholics of Ireland were begging for it!

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  3. "I think it might be relevant that an ENGLISH Pope gave the Lordship of Ireland to an ENGLISH King."

    Why? He was the Pope. That is what is "relevant".

    "The Maynooth students..well clearly 1798 happened in the wake of the French Revolution, obviously anti Catholic and Maynooth was financed in 1795 by the British government."

    Exactly.

    "Certainly today at Maynooth College that flag modelled on the French tricolour will be flying.
    Possibly they have changed their mind."

    Well, that's certainly one way of putting it.

    Maynooth, of course, now has almost no students. Just as the Republican movement has always wanted.

    "I dont know of a single IRISH Catholic that wants a United Kingdom."

    If you mean the reincorporation of the Republic into the United Kingdom the no, of course not. But joining the Commonwealth, re-adopting sterling (sooner rather than later, I reckon), having their banks (so closely integrated with ours) bailed out...

    And voting for candidates and parties is one thing, as is voting for something that you know isn't going to go through, but who on the Falls Road is ever really going to risk casting the vote that brings about their own transfer out of the United Kingdom into a country where you have to pay to visit the doctor?

    "I suppose that makes a later Pope's tacitern approval of Mussolini's brutal invasion (with the use of chemical weapons) of Ethiopia ok then."

    There is no comparison at all. And my point is that the Catholic Church has always supported the closest ties across the Irish Sea.

    "While we are at it, would the Pope during William II and III's invasion been so approving if he knew Billy was planning to bring in the Penal Laws?"

    Against Gallicanism? Oh, yes!

    "Yep, the Catholics of Ireland were begging for it!"

    Ladybird Guide stuff, I see. I say again ... well, just read the post.

    ReplyDelete