By; Dr Seán Maguire, Mayo,
son of the late Comdt-General Tom Maguire, last faithful
survivor of the Second (All-Ireland) Dáil Eireann.
A cháirde,
"We have come to the holiest place in Ireland: holier to us than
the place where Patrick sleeps in Down. Patrick brought us life,
but this man died for us. And though many before him and some
since have died in testimony of the truth of Ireland's claim to
nationhood, Wolfe Tone was the greatest of all that have died
for Ireland whether in old time or in new. He was the greatest
of Irish nationalists. I believe he was the greatest of Irish
men. And if I am right in this I am right in saying that we
stand in the holiest place in Ireland and that the holiest sod
of a Nation's soil is the sod
where the greatest of her dead lies buried."
That is the first paragraph of the address
delivered by Pádraig Pearse at this spot on June 12, 1913.
Pearse spoke again in Glasnevin Cemetery on
August 1915 at the grave of another unconquerable man, Jeremiah
O'Donovan Rossa. During that address he said, "Our foes are
strong and wise and wary but strong and wise and wary as they
are they cannot undo the miracles of God who ripens in the
hearts of young men the seeds sown by the young men of another
generation."
Pearse continued: "Life springs from death and
from the graves of patriot men and women spring living nations."
At Wolfe Tone's grave we are at the source of all the seeds sown
by all the generations and we have the unbroken sequence of
loyalty and faithfulness to Tone's teaching right down to the
present day.
Tone had a close friend and comrade, Thomas Russell, a Cork
Protestant who is remembered in the famous ballad as "The Man
from God Knows Where". He was interned without trial in the
1790s and was with Emmet who sent him to the North to organise
the 1803 Rising there.
Those are the first three links in the chain,
Tone, Russell and Emmet. Michael Dwyer carried on in Co Wicklow.
Thomas Davis, the Young Irelander, visited
Bodenstown and found Tone's grave unmarked but guarded by the
local blacksmith who would allow nobody to set foot on it. The
blacksmiths were one group who suffered excessively in '98
because it was they who made the pikes. Through the blacksmiths
we have the connection and sequence with the local people -
unbroken all the time.
Tone was captured on a French warship in Lough
Swilly, brought to Dublin and sentenced to death. While he was
awaiting execution his captors made a botched attempt to cut his
throat and tried to brand him as a suicide, a travesty which I
do not believe. They tried to destroy his character as well as
his body. They adopted the same manoeuvre with Roger Casement
later on.
When Tone's body was released for burial an attempt was made to
keep the people away. It failed. The people would not tolerate
his body being hijacked. The same treatment was given to Terence
Mac Swiney. His funeral was hijacked also and we saw the same in
our own day in the case of Frank Stagg.
Davis, a Young Irelander, was here. The Fenians
were here and that brings us to Pearse as I have said already.
We know that Pearse's faithful disciples, Liam
Mellows, Brian O'Higgins, Mrs Margaret Buckley and Miss Mary
MacSwiney, Seán Russell and Dáithí Ó Conaill, among others,
spoke here.
Pearse proclaimed the Republic at Easter 1916.
The Proclamation was ratified by the people in the 1918 election
and the deputies assembled in the Mansion House in January 1919.
This was the First Dáil Éireann. It was the functioning
sovereign Parliament of the 32 Counties.
There was another election in 1921 which elected
the Second Dáil Éireann. There were six women elected to it. The
members - Teachtaí Dála - swore to defend the Republic against
all enemies foreign and domestic. The term Dáil Éireann by
definition refers to the sovereign parliament of the 32 County
United Ireland. The present occupants of Leinster House call
themselves the
29th Dáil Éireann when in fact they are the 27th 26-County
Assembly.
The second Dáil Éireann voted on the Treaty of
1921 and by a majority of seven voted to accept that Treaty
which would give them a Home Rule type of government with the
King of England at its head. Those who voted for the Treaty
reneged on their oath which was freely given and thereby
committed perjury which was and is a poor foundation for any
enterprise and signs on them. None of the six women voted for
the Treaty.
The faithful members of the Second Dáil continued
the sequence that had been legitimately established and kept
their unbroken links and sequence back to Wolfe Tone. They
continued to strive to achieve his motto "to break the
connection with England, the never-failing source of all our
political evils and to unite Protestant, Catholic and
Dissenter".
Permit me an interesting deviation. In 1973 Brian
Inglis wrote a book on Roger Casement. The book was reviewed by
AJP Taylor, Professor of History at Oxford University. This is
what he wrote, "Here is Casement's message for the present day.
There is no Irish problem without solution. The problem that had
marked Ireland for centuries is the British presence in Ireland.
That problem can only be solved by British withdrawal." That is
an independent Englishman's opinion.Having reneged on the
Republic the Free State assembly attacked the faithful
Republican forces in the Four Courts and released the Free State
Reign of Terror.
The Republican Sinn Féin members of the Second
Dáil continued to meet and organise but life was not easy and
numbers began to diminish as deaths took place. In 1938 at a
Sinn Féin meeting Miss Mary MacSwiney proposed that the
authority of the Second (All-Ireland) Dáil be passed on to the
Army Council of the Irish Republican Army. This is a procedure
recognised in international law that when a legitimate
government is under attack it may pass on its powers.
The speaker here at Bodenstown in 1930 was one of
the faithful members who voted for Miss MacSwiney's motion. He
lived on to become the last faithful survivor of the Second
(All-Ireland) Dáil Éireann. In 1969 he endorsed the Provisional
Movement but when the Provisionals reneged and became a
partitionist party that endorsement was promptly withdrawn in
1986. He recognised and endorsed the Continuity Movement as the
successors of the 1938 leadership and consequently as successors
to the Second (All-Ireland) Dáil Éireann and the lineal
descendants of 1916, 1867, 1848, 1803 and 1798, right back to
Wolfe Tone.
One of the arguments in favour of accepting the
Treaty of Surrender is that the Irish Republican Army would be
unable to carry on the fight any longer. Dom Brian Murphy OSB in
his book Patrick Pearse and the Lost Republican Ideal refuted
this theory and quotes from leaders in the south and west and he
also quotes a memorandum from the British Commander, General
Macready, to
the British Cabinet, written on May 23, 1921: "I am convinced
that by October unless a peaceful solution has been reached, it
will not be safe to ask the troops to continue there another
winter under the conditions which obtained during the last."
The 25th anniversary of the Belfast hunger strike
is with us and those who reneged on Republicanism and became
Stormont parliamentarians tell us that the hunger strikers were
the beginning of their moves to accept the Good Friday
surrender. Who do these people think they are that the can
deceive people into their way of thinking. No matter how often
Mr Adams and his
hangers-on perform the Pontius Pilate manoeuvre and wash their
hands in public they will convince nobody that Bobby Sands and
his comrades died on hunger strike rather than wear a prison
uniform no more than he died on hunger strike in order that
young men and women could join the RUC/PSNI and wear a peeler's
uniform.
Participation in a partition parliament attempts
to deny the sovereignty of the Irish people. Sovereignty is
unalienable and cannot be voted away no matter how great the
majority.
The referendum which purports to withdraw the claim to the Six
Counties is invalid because the Six Counties are an integral
part of the ancient Irish nation. The Six Counties are as much
part of Críoch Fodhla as any other county.
Mr Adams must try again because to quote an
American aphorism you can't fool all the people all the time. My
only comment is what Pearse said: "Let no man blaspheme the
cause that the dead generations of Ireland served." We can trace
back through all the years and all the vicissitudes right back
to Wolfe Tone. The chain is unbroken and it now behoves us as
faithful inheritors of a glorious past to pass on our
inheritance clean and unsullied to our children and
grandchildren and generations yet to come.
Let the generations be able to look back on us
and say they were faithful and they left us a priceless legacy.
We saw that Thomas Russell and his comrades were
prisoners during the 1790s and now today we have Republicans
held as prisoners in both partitioned areas of our country. We
send them our warmest greetings and we will remain faithful to
the principles for which they are suffering.