Wednesday 20 May 2009

There Never Was A "Catholic Ireland"

Purely in the twentieth century, there used to be very high levels of weekly Mass attendance. But that was all. There has never been in Ireland the profoundly Catholic culture that one encounters on the Continent. Into the nineteenth century, the Irish were so pagan that they were widely polygamous, and practising Catholics did not predominate until at least the middle third, or even the third quarter, of that century.

Each of this United 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.

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.

3 comments:

  1. Hardly 2007 Election
    North Antrim 30% Catholic

    SF vote 16%, SDLP 12% (Nationalists 28%)
    Alliance & Independents 3% and 1%)
    Both Independents were nationalist.

    No Paisley "Catholics".
    2005 Westminster
    SF...15.7%
    SDLP...12.2% (29.9% Nationalist)
    AP...3%

    No Paisley Catholics.
    Myth

    ReplyDelete
  2. There was no way that he got those huge Strasbourg votes without some Catholic support.

    ReplyDelete
  3. So your evidence is anecdotal and mine is based on figures. The vote in North antrim being in rough proprtion to the ethnic make up.
    So Strasbourg then.
    The last Euro Elections Paisley fought was 1999.
    SDLP and SF got 45.4% of the vote. Catholics are only about 42% of the population.
    Paisleys "huge" vote in 1999 was 192,000 (2,000 more than Hume).

    In 2005 when Paisley did not stand Nationalist and Republicans only got 43.8% of vote.

    ReplyDelete