391 lines
17 KiB
Plaintext
391 lines
17 KiB
Plaintext
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** Who are the Travellers? **
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ARE TRAVELLERS a distinct "ethnic" group with their own
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traditions and customs? Very few people want to accept that
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they are. This reflects the widespread racism towards them,
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a racism which insists on seeing them as "failed settled
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people". They are seen as "problems" rather than a people
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who have been denied even the most basic rights.
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Irish Travellers are a very small minority group,
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constituting less than 1% of the population. Their numbers
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currently stand at approximately 23,000 people in the 26
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counties and another 1,500 in the North. There are also an
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estimated 15,000 Irish Travellers in Britain and 7,000 in
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the U.S.A.
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The criteria internationally accepted as defining
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ethnicity are:
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*A long shared history of which the group is aware.
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*A cultural tradition of its own, including family and
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social customs.
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*Descent from common ancestors.
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*A common language.
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*A common religion.
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*Being a minority within a larger community.
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Irish Travellers meet all these criteria.
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Travellers are often segregated into separate classes
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in school. They are banned from almost every pub in the
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country. They are routinely refused service in shops,
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cafes, cinemas, laundrettes and clubs. Social contact with
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settled people is minimal because Travellers have been
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denied such contact.
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The effects of this racism are not hard to find. Most
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Travellers lack self-esteem. Pride in their cultural
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identity is a very new experience and confined to the
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minority who have had some adult education. For others,
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self-destructive and even anti-social behaviour arises out
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of this total experience of racism. Less than 14% of
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Travellers currently make it into post-primary education and
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80% of the adults are illiterate.
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Within the EU, Travellers and Gypsies currently form a
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population of over one million people. Another million live
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in Eastern Europe. These have faced, and still face,
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vicious persecution and racism which reached its peak this
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century with the murder of over a quarter of a million
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Gypsies and Travellers by the Nazis. Today in Eastern
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Europe they are experiencing brutal racist attacks.
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Over the past decade we have seen the emergence of a
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small number of articulate, politically active Travellers.
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Until fairly recently, Travellers and their supporters were
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essentially fighting for little more than an end to the very
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worst forms of discrimination.
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However the situation is now very different with
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Traveller groups throughout the country asserting their
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right to be treated with respect as an ethnic and cultural
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minority with their own beliefs, customs and values. By
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adopting this strategy, Travellers are finally aligning
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themselves with the struggles of nomadic and Indigenous
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peoples everywhere. It is this new and very unacceptable
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demand for respect as a cultural and ethnic minority that
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has fuelled the latest outburst of racism against them.
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In recent years, these concepts have gained acceptance
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from a growing number of people. Racist descriptions and
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abuse on TV and in the newspapers have been challenged, with
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the result that Travellers<72> rights - as a separate minority
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group - have begun to gain acceptance in wider circles.
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Once it was no longer acceptable to define them either as
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objects of charity or as failed settled people in need of
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social work and rehabilitation, the alternative was to
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accept them as different with all the rights and appropriate
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services they require to live decently in accordance with
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their cultural values. Such an idea really annoyed the
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bigots.
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Ironically, settled society has always considered
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Travellers to be different. Now that Travellers are
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asserting their right to be different but not inferior, they
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have provoked outrage. Travellers' struggles for civil
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rights should be seen in the context of all the major social
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and political movements of the past fifty years and not as
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something separate or peculiar to Ireland or Irish
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Travellers. Their struggles bear remarkable resemblence to
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those of Native Americans and Indigenous peoples throughout
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the world.
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Anarchists have no great interest in who belongs to
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which ethnic group, except in so far as each tradition adds
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to a rich cultural diversity. But we do understand that
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there will be no real equality until racism is uprooted, and
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all people are accorded the dignity they deserve. Equality
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is certainly not about trying to make people deny their own
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history and heritage.
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Patricia McCarthy
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********** Anti-Traveller racism ************
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from Workers Solidarity No 39
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ANTI-RACIST work is a major concern of the
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left in Europe at the moment. Given the
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rise of racist attacks in Germany and
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France especially, this is important work.
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However very few groups or individuals on
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the left in Ireland understand that the
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situation of Travellers is the most
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explicit form of racism in this country.
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Because Travellers are white, people have
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difficulty applying the concept of racism
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to them. However it takes no more than a
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quick perusal of recent press clippings to
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gather abundant evidence of the racism
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faced by Travellers. A few examples are
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as follows:
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"A round the clock picket by protesting
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residents continued today to prevent a temporary
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site being set up for Travellers in Limerick".
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Evening Herald.
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"The residents of an estate outside Arklow who
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are now to undertake a rent strike over the
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council decision to house the family of
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Travellers......" Wicklow People.
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"Residents of a housing estate in Rathfarnham
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will this morning place a picket on the entrance
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to land which is to be developed by Dublin
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Corporation as a halting site for 20 itinerant
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families'. Irish Press.
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"A horrific attack involving the spraying of
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foul smelling cattle slurry against caravans of
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Traveller families has been criticised by a
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priest... a Garda spokesman at Tullow described
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it as a minor incident." Irish Independent.
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The publican who barred 'Glenroe' actor Michael
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Collins from his pub confirmed last night he did
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so because he was a Traveller" Irish
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Independent.
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Recently in Clondalkin two Traveller families
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have been intimidated out of their houses by
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mobs. Traveller camps have been petrol bombed,
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families have been physically attacked by
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farmers in Galway, all in the very recent past.
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Travellers are subjected to the most extreme
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forms of social exclusion and segregation which
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can only be described as apartheid.
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They are refused service in pubs, cafes, many
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shops, launderettes, hairdressers, discos,
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hotels, cinemas and even some doctors refuse to
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serve them. At an institutional level they are
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forced to sign on at different times to the rest
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of the population and in Dublin all Travellers
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who claim Supplementary Welfare have to do so in
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one separate health centre, Castle Street,
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whether they live in Bray or Balbriggan.
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Officially this is done to provide them with a
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service that respects their nomadic culture. In
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reality nothing could be further from the truth,
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which is that it is done in order to
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discriminate against them more efficiently. At
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school many Traveller children are taught in
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totally segregated classes which cater for
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Traveller children of all ages in the one class.
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Some notorious schools have gone so far as to
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paint a white line down the middle of the
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playground and Traveller children are not
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allowed to cross over it.
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Racism is a particular form of domination,
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exploitation and exclusion. Racism against
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Travellers and Gypsies is rooted in an ideology
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of sedentarist superiority. This is the belief
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that the settled person's way of life is the
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modern norm and that nomadism is a throwback to
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less civilised times.
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Nomadic people also pose a threat to the values
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of property ownership and the accumulation of
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possessions. Racism involves power domination
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by one group over the other. Because Travellers
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are such a small minority of the population
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(0.5% approx) they are totally at the mercy of
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the settled population. The effects of this
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racism and exclusion can be graphically seen in
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the health statistics of the Traveller
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population.
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Traveller infants have three times the infant
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mortality rate of the settled population.
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Traveller women have a life expectancy that is
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fifteen years less than their settled
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counterparts and Traveller mens' life expectancy
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is ten years less than settled mens'. They
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don't fare any better educationally. In 1993
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only a handful of Traveller children, about 50
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nationwide, have made it into second level
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education and there are still only three
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Travellers nationwide who have completed a third
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level course.
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About 80% of the adult population are illiterate
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and still only about 70% of the primary school
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age children get to school. Schools still
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refuse to take them as a school in D<>n Laoghaire
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did in March. These are the statistics of
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racism... a group of the population whose health
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and educational standards are at least 50 years
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behind that of the rest of the population. But
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the best is yet to come as the official response
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to these kinds of statistics is to blame this
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scandalous situation on Travellers themselves
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and on their preferred nomadic lifestyle.
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A recent official report from Dublin County
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Council is a very good example of racist
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thinking. In this report which went to all the
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councillors in January, Travellers' lifestyle is
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blamed for all the major social problems in the
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county, including unemployment! The report
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concludes that it is time to break the cycle of
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Travellers' culture by discouraging them from
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marrying each other and forcing them to adopt a
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more responsible (i.e. settled) lifestyle by not
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building halting sites. Given that there are
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3,000 families already on the housing waiting
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lists in Dublin alone it is not clear how
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exactly this policy is going to improve anyones'
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situation.
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Even within liberal and left wing circles there
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is a belief that there is nothing wrong with
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promoting the idea of quotas when it comes to
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Travellers. The idea that only ten families
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should be accommodated in an area has been
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promoted by everyone from the Labour party to
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the 'Militant'. Of course this is an inherently
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racist position to adopt. It would not be
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acceptable to suggest that only ten black
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families should be housed in any one community
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and it is no more acceptable to suggest this for
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Travellers. Likewise the idea of separate
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segregated and inevitably inferior services must
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be opposed.
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Racism against Gypsies and Travellers goes back
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to the time they started migrating from India
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around the 11th century. It reached its height
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with the extermination of a quarter of a million
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Gypsies and Travellers by the Nazis. In Ireland
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the racism against Travellers is so deep and so
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all pervasive that few people even recognise it
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for what it is. In the fight against this
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racism Travellers themselves and their
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organisations need to be centrally involved.
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They must set the agenda, deciding on what
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issues and how they want to fight. They need
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the active support of the left, and especially
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of the trade union movement because they have
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very little muscle on their own. There have
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been attempts over the past thirty years at
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Traveller self-organisation but these
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organisations were quickly smashed by the state.
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In 1963 the Gardai planted explosives on Gratton
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Puxon, the organiser of the Irish Traveller
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Community which was becoming a force to be
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reckoned with. Nearly twenty years later they
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planted stolen jewellery on Nan Joyce, a leading
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member of the Traveller-only organisation
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Minceir Miscli. Nan ran against a racist
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candidate in Tallaght in the General Election of
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1982 and got twice the number of votes as he
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did. Currently the Irish Traveller movement is
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organising around the country. It remains to
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be seen if it will become a fighting body or
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confine itself to lobbying. For left wing
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activists concerned about racism there is plenty
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of it to fight in relation to Travellers.
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**********************************************************
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** Moate mimics Mississippi **
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** Stand up for Travellers Rights **
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WS 47
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THE PROTESTS against the housing of a Traveller
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family in Farnagh near Moate were racist. The
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organisers deny this but then go on to say that
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their main objection is that they "were not
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consulted" by the Council about rehousing the family
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of Alice and Joe Joyce. Do these same people expect
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to be "consulted" everytime a settled family is
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given a house? Of course not.
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One of the ringleaders, local priest Fr Liam Farrell,
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even claimed that the protesters were concerned for the
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family, worried about their transition from an urban to a
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rural area! More honest was the one who told journalists
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that he did not want "inferior people" in his town.
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This gang of racists held their meetings in St
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Patrick<EFBFBD>s Hall (which is under the control of Fr Liam
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Farrell, who also represented the racists at meetings with
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Westmeath County Manager Jack Taaffe), and in a room
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attached to the Auld Shebeen pub. Knowing full well they
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were doing nothing to be proud of, they organised everything
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anonymously.
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At their meetings they threatened to withdraw children
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from the two national schools if any of the Joyce children
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were admitted. Similar threats worked at nearby Clonbunny
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recently when locals heard that Traveller children were to
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be admitted.
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The mob blocked the main Dublin-Galway road for two
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hours but, despite this being illegal, there was no garda
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action. And given the way the ruling class treats
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Travellers that was no surprise.
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Antagonism towards the Joyces was whipped up with
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claims that "Travellers contribute nothing to society" and
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"wherever there are Travellers there is trouble". Exactly
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the same kind of hatemongering that was used against blacks
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in the American deep south thirty years ago.
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Scapegoats are great for diverting attention away from
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problems like unemployment, low wages and poor housing.
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When you look closely you will usually find wealthy vested
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interests behind racist agitation.
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Who was behind all the trouble in Moate? Who was on
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the secret committee? Alongside the priest were stud farm
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owner Michael Scott, shopkeeper Mary Flynn, Fine Gael
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councillor Tom Flanagan, restaurant boss John Joe Claffey,
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supermarket owner Seamus Dolan and farmer Mick Kelly. In
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other words the type of people who live the good life at the
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expense of both Travellers and working class people.
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Even middle class liberals get sucked into seeing
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Travellers, rather than the discrimination they face, as the
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"problem". Nell McCafferty writing in the Sunday Tribune on
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June 11th said "there has been, equally, no official
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acknowledgement from government about the way a national
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social problem has been landed in dark of night - without
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warning or attempt to prepare opinion - upon the people of
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Moate".
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Would she have come out with the same crap if it was
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another group of people who were being picked on by the
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bigots, if it was Bosnian refugees, or Pakistanis or Jews?
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Of course not.
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We can protest against racism in other countries (and
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we should protest against it) but we also need to confront
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it at home. It is not enough to decry the electoral success
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of the fascist National Front in France or the murderous
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anti-black attacks of the British National Party if we stand
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aside and ignore the problem on our own doorsteps.
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Anti-racists have to take a stand in their own
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communities when the racists and their politician pals try
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to stir things up. In Ireland's wealthiest constituency it
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is <20>liberal<61> Progressive Democrat TD Liz O<>Donnell who is
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stirring up opposition to the temporary halting site in
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Sandyford. In Navan it is Democratic Left<66>s Christy Gorman
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who objected to the extension of the only official halting
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site in County Meath, and labelled Travellers "brutal,
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savage and threatening".
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It is well past the time when these bullies in suits
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were told where to get off. In opposition to their bigotry
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we have to publicly support Travellers rights to appropriate
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housing and services, we have to recognise that they have a
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cultural tradition that is as valid as any other.
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We start by taking a stand every time we witness
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discrimination. If a shop, cinema, disco or pub refuses to
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serve somebody because they are a Traveller we make sure the
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management knows they won<6F>t get our custom and we walk out.
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Inside the MANDATE and SIPTU trade unions we should fight to
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commit our unions to defending any worker who refuses to
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operate blanket bans on any group of customers because of
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their race or ethnicity. In the local authority trade
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unions we should work to get the same protection for workers
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who refuse to be involved in evictions.
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Three decades of polite appeals to <20>liberal<61>
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politicians have changed little for Travellers. It is up to
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anti-racists, trade unionists and other ordinary working
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class people to join with Travellers and deal a crushing
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blow to the politics of discrimination. As Jim Larkin was
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fond of saying, "an injury to one is the concern of all".
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