"The odes of the chief bards were stored in the people's memories, as were the chanted records of their race, the genealogies and boundaries of their tribes, and the names of their famous men. Poor and rich of 'the blood' were reminded of their tie of kinship and the tradition of the Irish race and nation, whereby it came to pass, in times of trouble and dissension, that they made great parties and factions, adhering one to another with much constancy ; because they were tied together, vinculo sanguinis [with blood bonds)"
Stopford Greene on role of shared literature and history in cultivating national consciousness and sustaining resistance to English conquest in medieval and early modern period. Notion of shared race helped unite rival kingdoms etc
'The Making Of Ireland And Its Undoing' (1920)
Stopford Greene on role of shared literature and history in cultivating national consciousness and sustaining resistance to English conquest in medieval and early modern period. Notion of shared race helped unite rival kingdoms etc
'The Making Of Ireland And Its Undoing' (1920)
Archiving Irish Diversity Stuff (AIDS)
O'Malley describing Dublin during the Lockouts and Jim Larkin/James Connolly giving speeches as well as some newsboys getting bashed up by police for holding a strike.
“I defy any man here or anywhere to challenge my standing as a Catholic, as a socialist, or as a revolutionist. We of the Irish Citizen's Army take communion before we go into battle. We confess our sins. We seek absolution. If a bullet strikes, we hope to have the last rites administered to us before our souls leave our bodies. We do not let the Church stand in the way of our struggle, but neither do we let our struggle stand in the way of the Church."
- James Larkin in his famous 1913 Lockout speech in America
- James Larkin in his famous 1913 Lockout speech in America
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Archiving Irish Diversity Stuff (AIDS)
“I defy any man here or anywhere to challenge my standing as a Catholic, as a socialist, or as a revolutionist. We of the Irish Citizen's Army take communion before we go into battle. We confess our sins. We seek absolution. If a bullet strikes, we hope to…
Further proving Connolly and Larkin would spit on what Labour has become today
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Forwarded from Griptmedia
Dr MATT TREACY: Desmond Fennell remains a voice that should be heard
#gript
https://gript.ie/desmond-fennell-remains-a-voice-that-should-be-heard/
#gript
https://gript.ie/desmond-fennell-remains-a-voice-that-should-be-heard/
Gript
Desmond Fennell remains a voice that should be heard | Gript
One of Ireland’s outstanding and prolific writers and intellectuals, Desmond Fennell turned 90 last year.
Griptmedia
Dr MATT TREACY: Desmond Fennell remains a voice that should be heard #gript https://gript.ie/desmond-fennell-remains-a-voice-that-should-be-heard/
"People without a nation are homeless in the world. They do not know where they stand...We wish to have a nation once again. We wish to build once again an Irish community of communities, a nation in the proper sense of the word"
Fennell, 'A New Nationalism For The New Ireland'
RIP Dr. Desmond Fennell. A talented and prophetic thinker.
Ar dheis Dé go raibh a anam
Fennell, 'A New Nationalism For The New Ireland'
RIP Dr. Desmond Fennell. A talented and prophetic thinker.
Ar dheis Dé go raibh a anam
Pages from the 8th century Irish Gospels of St. Gall.
Archiving Irish Diversity Stuff (AIDS)
Pages from the 8th century Irish Gospels of St. Gall.
The manuscript has been kept in the library of the Abbey of St. Gallen, Switzerland, since the early middle ages (originally an Irish monastery founded by St. Gall).
Forwarded from Catholic Arena
Catholic Arena
Desmond Fennell's Warning About Capitalism's Impact on Irish Catholicism — Catholic Arena
The following extract is taken from Desmond Fennell's 1962 essay ‘Will the Irish Stay Christian?’ You can read the full essay at the following link Will the Irish Stay Christian? | Lux Occulta (wordpress.com) Fennell passed away today aged 92. Ar dheis…
Desmond Fennell writing in 1962 about the tendency to idolise the EEC among Irish leaders and opinion-formers (from the Irish Dominican monthly 'Doctrine and Life', May, 1962)
https://twitter.com/scary_biscuits/status/1072235446674051072
https://twitter.com/scary_biscuits/status/1072235446674051072
Interesting dialogue here
3 boys Ernie knew from Trinity College asked what he ''thought of those damn Sinn Féiners'' and he was then asked if he wanted to help them defend Trinity College against the Shinners - to which Ernie agreed but said he needed to go home first
On the way home then he bumped into another student he knew, this time the student asked
''Why? What is Trinity to you?’
‘I said I would go back there to defend it.’
‘But it’s not your university. Remember you’ll have to shoot down Irishmen, your own countrymen. You bear them no hatred. If you go in there you cannot leave; and, mark my words, you’ll be sorry ever afterward. Think it over.’'
3 boys Ernie knew from Trinity College asked what he ''thought of those damn Sinn Féiners'' and he was then asked if he wanted to help them defend Trinity College against the Shinners - to which Ernie agreed but said he needed to go home first
On the way home then he bumped into another student he knew, this time the student asked
''Why? What is Trinity to you?’
‘I said I would go back there to defend it.’
‘But it’s not your university. Remember you’ll have to shoot down Irishmen, your own countrymen. You bear them no hatred. If you go in there you cannot leave; and, mark my words, you’ll be sorry ever afterward. Think it over.’'
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Ernie noting the moment himself and others seem to shift to feeling that those in the GPO were right
''The men down there were right, that I felt sure of. They had a purpose which I did not share. But no one had a right to Ireland except the Irish. In the city Irishmen were fighting British troops against long odds. I was going to help them in some way.''
''The men down there were right, that I felt sure of. They had a purpose which I did not share. But no one had a right to Ireland except the Irish. In the city Irishmen were fighting British troops against long odds. I was going to help them in some way.''
Archiving Irish Diversity Stuff (AIDS)
Ernie noting the moment himself and others seem to shift to feeling that those in the GPO were right ''The men down there were right, that I felt sure of. They had a purpose which I did not share. But no one had a right to Ireland except the Irish. In the…
Next few pages then is Ernie and some young fella he knew stealing a gun from his father and trying to help but they didnt really do anything as it was their first time with a gun and just shoot randomly at things lol