This article of mine appears in the London Progressive Journal:
The Irish Free State that became the Irish
Republic was not founded by the IRA. It was founded by people who had split
from the IRA, by people who had broken alliances with it, by people who had
always opposed it, often at terrible cost to themselves, and by people who had
studiously stayed out of the whole business.
Likewise, Kenya was not founded by the Mau Mau.
It was founded by people who had split from the Mau Mau, by people who had
broken alliances with it, by people who had always opposed it, often at
terrible cost to themselves, and by people who had studiously stayed out of the
whole business.
Therefore, the IRA violently subverted the Irish
Free State and the Irish Republic for decades after independence. And
therefore, the Mau Mau violently subverted Kenya for decades after
independence.
But if, in order to placate the Sinn Féin
electorate or whoever, the Irish Government ever felt like erecting an official
monument to the IRA, then obviously it could tap Her Britannic Majesty’s
Foreign and Commonwealth Office for the cost. Obviously, since that is what the
Kenyan Government has managed to do in order to erect, for reasons best known
to itself, an official monument to the Mau Mau.
The news having got about that I had re-joined
the Labour Party, I was lately summoned into the presence of one of the most
influential trade union leaders, certainly in the North East, and at least arguably
in the country. In quite possibly the most profitable meeting that I have ever
had with anyone, we discussed two grave matters.
One of them was the possibility of erecting,
depending on how you looked at it, either three monuments or a three-part monument.
Perhaps a pyramid, or a triangular column. Perhaps three tablets side by side.
But in any event, one part commemorating those who rendered non-military
service during the morally ambivalent and civilisationally catastrophic
conflict of 1914 to 1918.
A second part commemorating the ILP Contingent,
which went to Spain in order to fight Fascism, but whose members were killed
there by the agents of Stalinism. And the third part commemorating the
Palestine that from 1920 to 1948 existed as a country on the map, under the
British Crown as a Commonwealth country with the Union Flag in the corner of its own until
bombed out of existence by the founders of modern terrorism. Those did not
relent, but if anything the very reverse, while the British Commonwealth was
fighting the Third Reich.
There are monuments to conscientious objection
generally but that is not quite what this project is about. There is a small
plaque to the ILP Contingent in the Working Class Movement Library in Salford.
But nothing to compare with the Soviet-directed International Brigade’s
considerable monument, at which an annual ceremony is held on London’s South
Bank, together with at least four more memorials in England, three in Scotland,
two in Northern Ireland, two in the Irish Republic, and one in Wales.
To British Palestine, and to those who fell in
and for her, there is no monument anywhere in the world. That is nothing short
of a national disgrace. But, like the other two, the matter is now in hand.
Anyone who might be able to make a contribution, please contact davidaslindsay@hotmail.com. And why not public
money? After all, if the Mau Mau can have some.
The news having got about that I had re-joined the Labour Party, I was lately summoned into the presence of one of the most influential trade union leaders, certainly in the North East, and at least arguably in the country. In quite possibly the most profitable meeting that I have ever had with anyone, we discussed two grave matters.
ReplyDeleteOne of them
Aye, aye? This "one of them" would not appear to have anything to do with your party membership. Last we heard that was still in limbo. But "one of the most influential trade union leaders, certainly in the North East, and at least arguably in the country" doesn't seem to think so. Come on, Mr. L, you can't leave us with only half a story like this.
Excellent idea about Palestine.
ReplyDeleteIt never existed as a self-governing state, but its people regard themselves as a nation and that is all that matters.
They and the Kurds are the largest stateless peoples in existence-and
a thousand Joan Peters hoaxes cannot make us forget.
I am not convinced that it has never been a self-governing state. That depends how you define one.
ReplyDeleteAnd it was undeniably a country on the map between 1920 and 1948. The maps are still readily available. Palestine is shown in pink, and its flag has the Union Flag in the corner: a nation under the Cross as surely as during the Frankish period.
There is no memorial anywhere to that integral part of the British Commonwealth in its struggle against the Axis. But there soon will be. If we can raise, primarily, the cash.
Assume you won't be asking your former colleague Dan Hannan to play any role in this project. Just seen your tweet linking to his post today about the EU and Israel, saying that as Secretary-General of a "neocon secession" he "embodies the case against the EU as surely as" the Far Right and Far Left factions he shares a chamber with. He calls Israel "the state which most obviously embodies the national principle" and claims that is why Euro federalists are agin it. Absolutely ridiculous. Who is he to comment? He is an Irish Peruvian whose parents decided if they bought him an expensive enough education he could end up running Britain.
ReplyDeleteIt was always a part of one Empire or another-never a self-governing state.
ReplyDeleteThat, however, doesn't take away from the strength of their claim-the UN guarantees a "right to self-determination of peoples" which every Israeli settlement, curfew, wall and home demolition is in grave breach of.
Not to mention the other basic rights (including freedom of movement and private property) which they are routinely denied by checkpoints, settlers, walls and various other camouflaged land grabs.