718 lines
27 KiB
Plaintext
718 lines
27 KiB
Plaintext
Workers Solidarity Movement
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Talk given by Andrew Blackmore in Dublin,
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February 5th, 1992
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SECTARIANISM
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This talk is about sectarianism in the North.
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Sectarianism is something that has existed to a
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greater or lesser extent in Ireland since the
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plantations and must be overcome if socialism can
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be introduced in the North.
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Like racism in South Africa, sectarianism is not
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just something that came out of thin air. As
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racist laws are enshrined in the South African
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constitution, denying blacks equal rights to
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whites, so is sectarianism an integral part of
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the northern statelet.
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When the state was formed it was designed
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deliberately so that Protestants would have a
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permanent majority, six counties was the perfect
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size. 3 counties would have been too small and 9
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counties was rejected because it would have meant
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a majority of Catholics.
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By 1923, the Stormont government had set about
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gerrymandering the electoral boundaries to secure
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Protestant controlled councils and MPs were
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elected. This was so effective that the
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nationalists went from controlling 25 local
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councils out of 80 in 1920 to only controlling 2
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at the next election in 1924.
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The most famous example of Gerrymandering was in
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Derry, with a 66% Catholic majority was fiddled
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to return a Protestant controlled city council.
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The Catholic population in that city increased so
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fast that Stormont had to gerrymander again in
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1936 to keep the unionists in control!
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Not only did the state twist and turn the
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electoral boundaries whichever way it suited them
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to get unionists elected but they also abolished
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PR and only allowed people paying rates to vote.
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Both had the effect of decreasing the
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Catholic/nationalist representation.
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Others devices were used to favour Protestants,
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the allocation of houses by councils was purely
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arbitrary and since letting a house to someone
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meant one new ratepayer, and so one new voter,
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Unionist controlled councils were strongly
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against giving houses to Catholics. And from the
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start of partition Protestant employers were
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urged to employ Protestants only.
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Northern Ireland was truly a Protestant State for
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a Protestant people. This was not because there
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was something inherently superior about
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Protestants in Northern Ireland, nor was it
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because Protestants were naturally in favour of
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retaining the union with the British empire and
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Catholics were naturally in favour of becoming
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independent.
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The reality was that there was a clear economic
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reason for dividing the working class on
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religious grounds. If Ireland had achieved
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complete independence from the British Empire it
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would have resulted in huge losses for the
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textiles and shipbuilding Industry concentrated
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in the North of the country.
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They relied on selling their goods to the rest of
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the Empire - the Belfast shipbuilders were part
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of the triangle of Glasgow, Liverpool and Belfast
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which supplied Britain with the bulk of its navy
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and commercial ships. In 1907 95% of goods
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manufactured in Belfast was exported to the
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British Empire. In was cheaper to ship goods to
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Glasgow than to send them by rail to Dublin.
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If Ireland was to become independent, the raising
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of tariffs, economic wars etc would have
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seriously damaged the profits of the
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industrialised North. The rest of the country was
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much less industrialised and still largely based
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on farming which is why the Southern bosses
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wanted independence with the protectionist
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policies that could go with it.
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So there was a clear difference of interests
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between the bosses up in the North and the bosses
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in the rest of the Country. Likewise it was
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more vital for Britain to hold onto the
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industrialised regions of the north than any
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other part.
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In order to keep the North British, the bosses of
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the North and the British ruling class exploited
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the difference in religion between the majority
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Protestants in the North East of the Country and
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the majority Catholics everywhere else. They
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used the old imperialist ploy of divide and rule
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to split the working class. Divide and rule
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meant working on the working class so that one
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section allies itself with the bosses and sees
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its interests as being the same as the bosses.
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The enemy is made out to be the other section of
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the working class which is made out to be the
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main threat to standard of living, jobs etc.
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Thus by dividing the working class, the ruling
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class get to rule.
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In the early 1900's, sectarianism was encouraged
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to grow politically and militarily. The ' Solemn
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League and Covenant' which was against Home Rule
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was signed by 400,000 people in 1912. Unionism
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began increasing its military presence as well.
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The UVF, a private unionist army was recruited
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from the orange order. The Orange order was and
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is a Protestant only club and has been a strong
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breeding ground for the Protestant supremacy
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politics of sectarianism. The UVF was taken over
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by a retired British General and in April 1914
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they landed 25,000 rifles and 2.5 millions rounds
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at Larne. The arm were for the express use of
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fighting against a united Ireland.
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They were backed in their organisation against
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Irish Independence by the Tories and the British
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military establishment. In July 1912, Bonar Law
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the Tory leader said " I can imagine no length of
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resistance to which Ulster will go in which I
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shall not be ready to support them." As we know,
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the Unionists managed to create partition and the
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Orange state was created with sectarian divisions
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and has been that way ever since.
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But of more interest to us as socialists than why
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were anti Catholic laws made, is why did the
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Protestant working class believe the crap that
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they were better than Catholics and should unite
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with their bosses to keep Catholics down.
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The working class in Northern Ireland has always
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been poor and the Protestants have always been
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told that there are only a few jobs going around.
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Catholics are made out by Unionist leaders to be
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a threat to their jobs unless they are kept down.
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This is what is called playing the orange card.
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Any show of strength by the Catholics is
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portrayed by Unionist leaders as a direct threat
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to the livelihood of the Protestants. The orange
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card is also used against the left wing
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Protestants who go on strike.
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This has been why Catholics have been attacked
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murdered kicked out of their homes and pogromed
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with the full support of the British government
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and the Northern Irish ruling class throughout
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the history of this state.
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Two weeks ago over 15 ,000 people commemorated
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the twentieth anniversary of Bloody Sunday where
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14 people were murdered by British paratroopers.
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For those people their only crime had been to go
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on a civil rights march.
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The first Bloody Sunday is now hardly ever
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mentioned. It took place in 1920 in Derry. That
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time it was after the Catholics had done
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something completely inexcusable - they had
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elected Sinn Fein to the city council. This
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incensed the Unionists and gave confidence to the
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Nationalists. After the local head of the RIC
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was shot by the IRA, the UVF started firing
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indiscriminately from the walled city into the
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Catholic Bogside, the RIC did nothing to stop
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them.
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Fighting broke out for a week, Catholic families
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were driven out of the Protestant Waterside and
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Prehen areas. Several Catholics were stopped by
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the UVF, asked their religion and shot dead. The
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Catholics sealed off the Bogside and shot the son
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of the Governor of the Apprentice Boys and
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another Protestant.
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Like in 1972 the British troops moved in in
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force. They fired on the Catholics, using
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machine guns and occupied the city with 15,000
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soldiers. The UVF were left unmolested. The
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final death toll was 18, 14 Catholics and 4
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Protestants.
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In order to create a socialist Ireland,
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sectarianism which can lead to what happened
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above needs to be confronted and defeated. This
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is not going to be easy. Protestant workers are
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told that it is good to keep down Catholics
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because it means that Protestants will get the
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jobs, and houses. They are not told that because
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they fight Catholics instead of uniting with them
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that the working class of Northern Ireland has
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higher unemployment, and lower wages than
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anywhere else in Britain.
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In order for us as anarchists to work out how we
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will convince the majority of the Unionist
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working class to our views we should look at some
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examples of how sectarianism was beaten, albeit
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temporarily, in the past, analyse it and find out
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what went wrong so that we will not make the same
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mistakes.
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the 1919 Dockers and Engineers strike in
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Belfast.
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For a time the 1919 strike looked like it had won
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Protestant workers away from their bosses, but
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these hopes were pinned on shaky ground and the
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increased support for class politics was only
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temporary.
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During the First World War the shipyard and
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Engineering workers had been working 54 hour
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weeks and once peace came they wanted to get back
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to the old conditions. The bosses were having
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none of it. In fact this action was part of a UK
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wide movement as there were strikes in Britain as
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well at the time, especially in Glasgow.
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The strike was voted for by 20,225 to 558 at a
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public meeting, after they had marched to the
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city hall.
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On the 25 January the strike started and from the
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beginning it had a big impact on the city. Gas
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was cut off, electricity limited to hospitals and
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essential services, trains stopped and any shop
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turning on lights was stoned. By the end of the
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first week there were 40,000 out and 20,000
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others laid off by the businesses closed due to
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having no power.
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The strike was solid for the first 3 weeks
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despite the orange card being played. The
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Belfast Newsletter of 8 February called the
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strikers "Bolsheviks, anarchists and the
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hirelings of Germany" The Belfast Grand Orange
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Lodge condemned the strike. The state then got
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more involved. The Defences of the Realm Act was
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invoked to make it illegal not to supply
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electricity. 3 magistrates were moved into the
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city to deal with the increased number of
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arrests. The army was moved into the power
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stations.
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After four weeks the strike ended with a 47 hour
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week won and what seemed to be 10's of thousands
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of Protestant workers won away from unionist
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politics to class politics.
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A few months later 100,000 took part in a May Day
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march to Ormeau Park in a Protestant area of
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Belfast and listened to speeches demanding more
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labour representation. And next January Labour
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candidates won 12 seats out of 60 on the local
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council elections where they had previously held
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none. This included one Labour councillor who
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topped the poll in the Protestant stronghold of
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Shankill.
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And at the next May Day march there was another
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massive demonstration with a resolution passed
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supporting the Bolshevik Government in Russia.
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However this shift to the left was short lived.
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By the end of July there started a massive pogrom
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against Catholics, and left wing Protestants.
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According to the Catholic Protection Committee,
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10,000 Catholic men and 1,000 Catholic women were
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expelled by Protestant workers from the
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shipyards, engineering works, and linen mills.
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The Labour vote at the 1921 general election was
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minimal.
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To see why this happened, we must look at the
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political composition of the strikers and how the
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Unionist bosses reacted to the growing "socialist
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threat".
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In order to coordinate the strike, a strike
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committee had formed composed on one side of
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trade unionists (like the mildly anti-partition
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members of the Independent Labour Party such as
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Charles McKay, James Baird and Sam Kyle) and on
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the other side members of the Unionist Labour
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Association such as Robert Weir and William Grant
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who was later to be a Unionist MP and Cabinet
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Minister.
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The Unionist Labour Association was obviously pro
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unionist and allied to the bosses politically.
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There was only a slight disagreement on the hours
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of labour that workers should have to work.
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William Grant said afterwards that he had voted
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against the strike and had only joined the strike
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committee to oppose the socialists that were on
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it.
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The two sides of the committee had opposing views
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on partition and so "to preserve unity" as they
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said the ILP said that "politics have nothing to
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do with the hours of labour". The Independent
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Labour Party made no effort to win the majority
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of Protestant workers over to the anti-partition
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side in case they caused a split in the
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committee.
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So while Labour was popular when it came to
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fighting on purely economic issues like a
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reduction in hours worked, it had won very few
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anti-partition Protestant recruits.
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While the anti-partition side avoided politics
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the unionist side did not. Edward Carson along
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with other Unionist leaders was deeply concerned
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that the workers would break with Orangism and
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develop their class consciousness. At the same
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time the IRA was waging a highly successful
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guerrilla war in the South and Unionists were
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worried that the Protestants would link with
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this. The Orange card was laid out.
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Carson made a violently inflammatory speech at a
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Orange rally at Finaghy outside Belfast calling
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on the government to get rid of Sinn Fein and all
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it stood for. He then called on the UVF to do
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the job for the government making it clear what
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sort of violent methods they should use. He then
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went on to say about the Independent Labour
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Party:
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"those who come forward posing as friends
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of Labour care no more about labour than does the
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man on the moon. The real object and the real
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insidious nature of their propaganda, is that
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they mislead and bring about disunity amongst our
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own people and in the end, before we know where
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we are, we may find ourselves in the same bondage
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and slavery as is the rest of Ireland.
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On 17 July Colonel Smyth, head of RIC Munster was
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shot dead by the IRA. He was a well known Orange
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man and had told the RIC a month before "The
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more you shoot the better I will like you, and I
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assure you no policeman will get into trouble for
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shooting any man.
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Carson's speech, the murder of Smyth, the IRA
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actions, combined with the fact that all jobs
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were under threat in the post war depression,
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brought sectarian tensions in Belfast to breaking
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point.
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On the day of Smyth's funeral a meeting was held
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at the gates of Workman Clark and Co shipyard.
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It was decided to kick the Sinn Feiners out of
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the shipyard and the pogrom started. Armed with
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sledgehammers and other weapons the Catholics
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were attacked, beaten and driven out.
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It quickly spread and as I mentioned before left
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wing Protestants were also removed, including
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James Baird a labour councillor, and Charles
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McKay ILP and chairman of the old strike
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committee.
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The Protestants by carrying out their purge of
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11,000 of their "disloyal" workmates had made
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their jobs safer and stopped what was called the
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"socialist threat".
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The anti partitionists of the strike had not been
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prepared for the backlash against them and they
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suffered for it. Loyalty to the Unionist bosses
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had been reaffirmed with a vengeance.
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The Outdoor Relief Strike 1932
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It is worth looking at the Outdoor Relief Strike
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of 1932 to see if any lessons had been learnt
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from the 1919 strike.
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As before capitalism was having a depression.
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Wall Street had crashed and the industrial
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countries were feeling the pinch. In Northern
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Ireland the two biggest industries, textiles and
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shipbuilding were taking a hammering.
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The famous Poor laws which had been scrapped in
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the South and Britain were still in use by
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Stormont in the North. There were also many
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restrictions concerning who got unemployment
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benefit and who didn't. Those who failed had to
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apply for what was called Outdoor Relief.
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For a married man to qualify for Outdoor Relief
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he had to do two and a half days 'task work' per
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week on what were called Outdoor Relief schemes,
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which was work such as mending roads and laying
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pavements.
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There was no Outdoor Relief for women, and single
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men only got anything if they were lucky enough
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to get task work.
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Because there were so many unemployed there was
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not enough task work for everyone for every week
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so the men had to take turns. In the weeks that
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you didn't get task work you were paid in kind,
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which meant being given a donation of food. So
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on many weeks there was no money to pay bills,
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buy cloths or to spend on entertainment.
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At the time of the strike there was crippling
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poverty in Belfast. A survey showed that 37% of
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working class families were living in absolute
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poverty. This meant such a lack of food,
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clothing or fuel as to endanger health.
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Tuberculosis killed off 45% of people between the
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ages of 15 and 25 and a quarter of all children
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dying under the age of one, died in the
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workhouse.
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Despite the unemployment crises the government
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didn't give a damn. The last time the government
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had met had been to extend its summer holiday by
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a month until November.
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However the unemployed were organising to fight
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back. Here in the south the Irish unemployed
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workers movement was holding large
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demonstrations, one as large as 1,000 in Longford
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and in Britain there were Hunger marches taking
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place alongside disruptions of political banquets
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and invasions of factories to appeal for an end
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to overtime and speed ups.
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The Revolutionary Workers Group had formed in
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Ireland. This crowd later went on to form the
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communist party of Ireland but at that time, the
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early thirties, Stalin's crimes were not widely
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known and it was the only socialist organisation
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of note that was active.
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The RWG argued for a fighting response to the
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dole queue and managed to win around a large
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amount of unemployed. An Outdoor Relief Workers
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Committee was set up and Tommy Geehan of the RWG
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who was also a delegate to the Belfast Trades
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Council called for a strike by the ODR workers.
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They held a mass meeting on September 30th and
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voted to strike in four days time if their
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demands were not met which were abolition of task
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work, and an increase in payments, no payment in
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kind, all street work to be paid at trade union
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rates, adequate outdoor allowances for all single
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unemployed men and women who are not in receipt
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of unemployment benefit.
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Since their demands were not conceeded they were
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out on strike the following Monday. It was 100%
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solid, there was no task work being done. That
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evening a crowd of 30,000 marched from Frederick
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St to the Custom House steps where a mass meeting
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was held. This was the first time since 1919
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that workers had ignored the bigots and united on
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class lines to fight for their own interests.
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Catholic and Protestant made common cause against
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the ruling class.
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The strike went on and by the end of the week
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rioting and looting had taken place in the main
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Catholic and Protestant areas. Despite baton
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charges by the RUC, the army being put on stand
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by, and partial offers of improvements from the
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Lord Mayor, the strike continued. When a
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demonstration was banned on Tuesday 11th, the
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fighting got serious. Hand to hand battles took
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place on the Falls and Shankill against the RUC,
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with the RUC starting to use their guns.
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However the government came up with a strategy to
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beat the strikers. Instead of firing
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indiscriminately at both Catholics and
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Protestants, the RUC were told to only shoot at
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Catholic areas. The Orange card was being
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played. The strikers were told that the IRA were
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using the ODR strike as a cover to overthrow
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'protestant rights'.
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The newly formed sectarian Ulster Protestant
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League said that they "deplored that these
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unfortunate conditions were used as a cloak by
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the communist Sinn Fein element to attempt to
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start a revolution in our province. We also
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greatly deplore that some few of our loyal
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Protestant unemployed were misled to such an
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extent that they associated themselves with the
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enemies of their faith and principles. We
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congratulate the government of Northern Ireland
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on the firm steps they have taken to preserve law
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and order in our city.
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In fact the IRA who had many members on Outdoor
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Relief at the time had given local support to the
|
|
strike but had no real influence in the
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|
organisation or course of the strike.
|
|
|
|
There was little success in rekindling sectarian
|
|
hatreds during the strike and they won big cash
|
|
increases in their relief pay. But relief to
|
|
single persons was not won and there was heavy
|
|
criticism of the strike committee for ending the
|
|
strike before winning this. Two were shot dead,
|
|
one Catholic and one Protestant and 15 were
|
|
injured from gunshot wounds - all in Catholic
|
|
areas.
|
|
|
|
There is an article on the ODR strike in our
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|
pamphlet NI and BI from which I got part of this
|
|
account. I did not read it word for word in case
|
|
some of you have read it already.
|
|
|
|
I will go on the look at some of the problems of
|
|
the strike, and they again come partly from the
|
|
politics of the leaders of the strike in this
|
|
case the RWG. Firstly it was Stalinist policy at
|
|
the time to refuse to work with any other groups
|
|
on the grounds that they were what they called
|
|
"social fascists". So the RWG were not heavily
|
|
involved in Trade Unions and so it was very hard
|
|
to implement their plan for a general strike. If
|
|
that had happened the potential for winning an
|
|
outstanding victory would have been much
|
|
increased.
|
|
|
|
Also, being a communist party they confined
|
|
themselves to being the leadership of the strike
|
|
and made no effort to give people the confidence
|
|
to fight for themselves. The unemployed were
|
|
encouraged to listen to speeches and then fall in
|
|
behind as they went on a march, shouting the
|
|
correct slogans.
|
|
|
|
But most importantly, for this talk, they did
|
|
little to promote anti imperialist and anti
|
|
capitalist ideas within the Protestant working
|
|
class. At the barricades when they were all
|
|
fighting together was the ideal opportunity to
|
|
win Protestants away from support for their
|
|
bosses and over to class based anti imperialist
|
|
and anti partitionist politics. As it was the
|
|
unity was based more on common suffering than
|
|
common beliefs and so it was easily broken.
|
|
|
|
After the strike Unionist politicians started
|
|
having success in stirring up sectarian hatred
|
|
again. On 27 August Senator Sir Joseph Davison,
|
|
Grand Master of the Orange Order made a speech
|
|
saying " When will the Protestant employers of
|
|
Northern Ireland recognise their duty to their
|
|
Protestant brothers and sisters and employ them
|
|
to the exclusion of Roman Catholics? It is time
|
|
Protestant employers realised that whenever a
|
|
Roman Catholic is brought into their employment
|
|
it means one Protestant vote less. It is our
|
|
duty to pass the word along from this great
|
|
demonstration and I suggest the slogan should be
|
|
"Protestants employ Protestants"
|
|
|
|
Without the unifying pressure of the strike,
|
|
these words had an effect and sectarianism
|
|
increased. At a Unionist rally called to protest
|
|
against the Catholic Church being allowed to use
|
|
the Belfast Corporation owned Ulster Hall,
|
|
Protestants were told by Dorothy Harnett to "get
|
|
training in firing", a mob coming home from this
|
|
meeting attacked Catholic homes in the York St
|
|
area of Belfast.
|
|
|
|
Violence increased until the 23 June 1935 when
|
|
the aftermath of an Orange parade resulted in
|
|
three weeks of sporadic riots. 56 Catholic homes
|
|
were burnt out in the docks area. Mobs attacked
|
|
the Catholic ghettos of Short Strand, Sandy Row
|
|
and Peters Hill. Many people were killed and
|
|
when the shipyard reopened after the July 12
|
|
holiday, the Catholic workers were expelled
|
|
again. This time there were only 200 out of
|
|
4,000 workers to expel.
|
|
|
|
the last example
|
|
Anti sectarianism, is not just a thing of the
|
|
past. Now in the past two decades there have
|
|
been lots of examples of Protestants and
|
|
Catholics being anti sectarian.
|
|
|
|
One short and successful example was the DHSS
|
|
strike of August 1986, only six years ago. After
|
|
the Anglo Irish Agreement there had been a big
|
|
rise in the number of sectarian attacks against
|
|
Catholics by the UDA and the UVF.
|
|
|
|
In Lisburn Catholics and Protestants are not
|
|
divided into separate ghettos, most streets are
|
|
mixed. This is why they were picked by loyalist
|
|
terrorists who wanted to separate the Catholics
|
|
from the Protestants. The UDA had made threats
|
|
to the DHSS, health board and housing offices of
|
|
Lisburn that Catholic workers in them were going
|
|
to be killed. The object of the threat was to
|
|
terrorise the Catholics and force them out of
|
|
their jobs.
|
|
|
|
In response all 124 DHSS workers walked out in
|
|
solidarity with their threatened workmates.
|
|
Catholics, Protestants and those of no religion
|
|
stood together as workers. The next day 2,000
|
|
workers in another 12 offices joined in and the
|
|
following morning 14 offices were shut. Without
|
|
any lead from their national officials, local
|
|
activists of the union (NIPSA) had organised the
|
|
strikes and had found that nearly all staff were
|
|
eager to stand up to the hate-mongers. Action
|
|
also took place in the Eastern Health and Social
|
|
Services Board. Since then workers in the DHSS
|
|
have had the confidence to fight back together
|
|
each time the bigots try to split them. Their
|
|
example has led to a similar stance recently
|
|
being agreed by workers in Northern Telecom.
|
|
|
|
Conclusion
|
|
The great thing about these examples is that it
|
|
shows that sectarianism can be beaten. If it
|
|
happened before it can happen again. But we must
|
|
learn from the historical examples.
|
|
|
|
Catholic and Protestant workers in extremely
|
|
divided areas like Belfast or Derry have only got
|
|
together under specific circumstances. That is
|
|
when they have been thrown together to fight for
|
|
a common objective. They will not get unite just
|
|
by us arguing that you have to be nice to each
|
|
other.
|
|
|
|
Nor will the Catholics and Protestants get
|
|
together after British initiatives like the Anglo
|
|
Irish Agreement or the Brooke talks, no matter
|
|
how well he can sing. Since it is in the
|
|
interests of the ruling class to keep the working
|
|
class divided they are hardly likely to arrange
|
|
talks which could possibly link them together.
|
|
On the contrary such talks have always led to a
|
|
big increase in sectarian violence as Protestants
|
|
see their interests threatened. 36 Catholics
|
|
were killed in a spate of murders after the
|
|
Brooke talks last Summer.
|
|
|
|
Unity has the best chance of occurring when it is
|
|
clear that both Protestants and Catholics will be
|
|
materially better off by getting together. That
|
|
is why they united in the 1919 strike and the
|
|
Outdoor Relief strike and that is why they united
|
|
in the Jim Larkin led strike in 1907, which I
|
|
hadn't got time to go into.
|
|
|
|
But in order to keep them united it is crucial to
|
|
win the anti imperialist pro socialist battle of
|
|
ideas with the Protestant and Catholic workers
|
|
while you have the chance.
|
|
|
|
Obviously it is in everyones' interests to have
|
|
an anarchist society, where bosses and
|
|
exploitation have been removed and there will be
|
|
a rise in living standards for the whole working
|
|
class. The problem is convincing Protestant and
|
|
Catholic workers of this, and in the heat of the
|
|
struggle is the best time. People are in those
|
|
times confident enough to realise that they can
|
|
overthrow the State and run society for
|
|
themselves.
|
|
|
|
Not only is it probably the most profitable time
|
|
to argue anarchist politics, but if they are not
|
|
argued for and won, there will certainly be a
|
|
Unionist backlash as Protestants realign
|
|
themselves with their bosses and see the main
|
|
threat to their livelihood yet again as the
|
|
Catholics instead of British Imperialism and the
|
|
Capitalist system.
|
|
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
|
|
|
|
The Workers Solidarity Movement can be contacted at
|
|
PO Box 1528, Dublin 8, Ireland
|
|
|
|
Some of our material is available via the Spunk press electronic archive
|
|
|
|
by FTP to etext.archive.umich.edu or 141.211.164.18
|
|
or by gopher ("gopher etext.archive.umich.edu")
|
|
|
|
in the directory /pub/Politics/Spunk/texts/groups/WSM
|