141 lines
7.6 KiB
Plaintext
141 lines
7.6 KiB
Plaintext
The Only Hope of Ireland
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by Alexander Berkman
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[Originally published in The Blast! vol.1, no.13, page 2; May 15, 1916]
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Most Irishmen, in and out of Ireland, seem unanimous in condemning the brutality
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of the British government toward the leaders of the unsuccessful revolt.
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There is no need to recite here the atrocious measures of repression practiced
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by England toward her subject races. The arrogant and irresponsible tyranny
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of the British government in this relation is a matter of history. The point of
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interest just now is, what did the Irish people, or at least the Sinn Feiners,
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expect England to do in the given circumstances?
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I am not interested in the weak-kneed editors of Irish-American papers
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who bemoan, with all due decorum, Great Britain's "lack of generosity"
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in dealing with the captured Sinn Feiners, or who hide their cowardice
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by arguments about the "mistake" the British government has committed by
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its harsh methods.
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It is disgusting to hear such rot. As a matter of fact, it is entirely in keeping
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with the character and traditions of the British government to show no
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quarter to rebels. Those familiar with the colonial history of Great Britain
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know that the English government and its representatives have systematically
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practised the most heinous brutality and repression to stifle the least
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sign of discontent, in Ireland, in India, Egypt, South Africa--wherever
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British rapacity found a source of aggrandizement. Burning villages,
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destroying whole districts, shooting rebels by the wholesale, aye, even
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resorting to the most inhuman torture of suspects, as in the Southwestern
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Punjab and other parts of India--these have always been the methods
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of the British government.
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"The measures taken by us," said Sir Michael O'Dwyer, Governor of
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the province of Punjab, in his Budget speech in the Punjab Legislative
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Council, April 22, 1915, "have proven that the arm of the Sirkar (British
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government) is long enough to reach and strong enough to strike those
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who defy the law." The nature of this "long and strong arm" is clearly
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characterized by Lord James Bryce: "The English govern India on absolute
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principles. There is in British India no room for popular initiative or
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popular interference with the acts of the rulers, from the Viceroy down
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to the district official. Society in India is not an ordinary civil
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society. It is a military society, military first and foremost. The
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traveler feels himself, except perhaps in Bombay, surrounded by an
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atmosphere of gunpowder all the time he stays in India."
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The Irish rebels and their sympathizers know all this. But what they
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don't know, or refuse to admit, is that these methods of suppressing
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discontent are not merely colonial policy. They have also been practiced
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by the English government at home, against its native sons, the English
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workers. Just now the iron hand of conscription is driving thousands of
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Great Britain's toilers into involuntary military servitude. Long terms
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of imprisonment are meted out to everyone having conscientious scruples
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against murder, to every anti-militarist protestant, and many have been
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driven to suicide rather than turn murderers of their fellowmen. The
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Irish people, like everyone else, ought to know that the claim of the
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English government of "protecting weaker nations and fighting for
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democracy" is the most disgusting hypocrisy ever dished up to a
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muttonhead public. Nor is the British government in this respect any
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better or worse than the governments of Kaiser, Czar or President.
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Government is but the shadow the ruling class of a country casts upon
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the political life of a given nation. And the priests of Mammon are
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always the ruling class, whatever the temporary label of the exploiters
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of the people.
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We don't fool anyone by paroting that it was "a mistake" on the part of the
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British government to use the sternest methods against the Sinn Fein leaders.
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It was *not* a mistake. To the English government, to *any* government, the
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only safe rebel is a dead rebel. The ruthless shooting down of the
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insurrection leaders, the barbourous execution of James Connolly, who was
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severely wounded in the Dublin fighting and had to be propped with pillows that
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the soldiers could take good aim at him -- all this may serve to embitter the
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Irish people. But unless that bitterness express itself in action, in
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reprisals -- individual or collective -- against the British government, the
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latter will have no cause to regret its severity. It is dangerous to let
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rebels live, If the Irish at home have no more spirit than the Irish in
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America, the English government has nothing to fear. The Irish-Americans
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are easily the most powerful influence in American political life. What have
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these Irish-Americans done to stop the atrocities of Great Britain? They have
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held mass meetings here and there to "protest" against the continuing
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executions of Sinn Feiners. They have sufficient political power in the
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country to cause President Wilson to call a halt to British atrocities, to
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force the English government to treat the Sinn Feiners as prisoners of war,
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which they are. But the Irish-American priests of Church and State would not
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dream of such drastic measures: politicians don't do that.
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More effective yet it would have been if some member or members of the
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numerous Irish societies had captured a few representatives of the British
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government in this country as hostages for the Irish rebels awaiting execution.
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A British Consul ornamenting a lamppost in San Francisco or New York would
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quickly secure the respectful attention of the British lion. The British
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Ambassador, in the hands of Washington Irishmen, would more effectively
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petition his Majesty, King Edward, for the lives of the Irish rebel leaders than
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all the resolutions passed at mass meetings.
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After all, it is the Redmonds and the Carsons who are chiefly responsible
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for the failure of the rebellion in Ireland. They were the first to condemn
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the "rash step" of a people for centuries enslaved and oppressed to the verge
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of utter poverty and degradation. Thus they in the very beginning alienated the
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support that the uprising might have received in and out of Ireland. It was
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this treacherous and cowardly attitude of the Irish home rule politicians that
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encouraged the English government to use the most drastic measures in
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suppressing the revolt.
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May outraged Ireland soon learn that its official leaders are like unto all
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labor politicians: the lackeys of the rulers, and the very first to cry
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Crucify!
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The hope of Ireland lies not in home rule, nor its leaders. It is not
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circumscribed by the boundaries of the Emerald Isle. The precious blood shed
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in the unsuccessful revolution will not have been in vain if the tears of their
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great tragedy will clarify the vision o fthe sons ad daughters of Erin and make
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them see beyond the empty shell of national aspirations toward the rising sun
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of the international brotherhood of the exploited in all countries and climes
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combined in a solidaric struggle for emancipation from every form of slavery,
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political *and* economic
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ALEXANDER BERKMAN
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REVOLUTION
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Friedrich Nietzsche
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There the gallows, rope and hooks
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And the hangman's beard is red;
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People 'round and poisoned looks,
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Nothing new and nothing dread!
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Know it well - from fifty sources
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Laughing in you face I cry:
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Would you hang me? Save your forces!
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Why hang me who cannot die!
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Beggars ye! who hate the tougher
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Man who holds the envied lot;
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True I suffer, true I suffer
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As to you - ye rot, ye rot!
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I am breath, dew, all resources,
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After fifty hangings, Why!
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Would you hang me? Save your forces!
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Would you kill me who cannot die!
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