The St Patrick's Day Parade vs Irish Freedom

Guest writer Sandy Boyer with his take on decision to allow the PSNI to march in New York's Patrick's Day parade.

When the Police Service of Northern Ireland (PSNI) marched up Fifth Avenue in New York’s St. Patrick’s Day Parade it should have been crystal clear, if it wasn’t already, that this parade is incompatible with any serious effort to support Irish freedom.

The parade organizers have spent decades actively opposing Irish freedom:


• They had Eamonn McCann and a group of civil rights activists arrested for trying to bring a banner supporting civil rights in Northern Ireland into the parade.
• They have repeatedly banned portraits of Bobby Sands and the other nine men who died on the 1981 hunger strike.
• When the parade was supposed to be honoring Joe Doherty, a member of the IRA who was imprisoned in New York’s Metropolitan Correctional Center, a parade organizer ripped a poster of him from his sister’s arms. His supporters were forbidden to chant his name on the way up the avenue.

The Parade Committee’s determination to discriminate against Lesbian and Gay organizations has also divided supporters of Irish freedom from virtually every potential source of new support at just the time when we may need it the most.

This year New York’s new liberal mayor Bill di Blasio drew headlines because, unlike his immediate predecessors, he refused to march in the parade. The media scarcely noticed that
di Blasio was only making an existing boycott by public officials complete. The New York State Governor, Comptroller and Attorney General were already refusing to march. So were the New York City Comptroller, Public Advocate and the Speaker of the City Council.

When pressure from the LGBT community forced Guinness to cancel its sponsorship, the Parade Committee was more isolated than ever before. It hurt them where it hurts the most – in the bank account. Now there is intense pressure on Ford, the parade’s last corporate sponsor, to pull out as well.

There are many people who are deeply committed to Irish freedom but still march in the parade while they curse Parade Committee under their breath.

Now they have a stark choice.

The easy way will be to stick with the sinking ship and hope against hope that the Parade Committee will somehow reform itself. Unfortunately that would also make it more difficult to reach out beyond the very small corps who of people who are already willing to work for a free and independent Ireland.

The LBGT community, for example, could be a source of new allies. They showed their power when Guiness pulled out of the parade. The historic Stonewall Inn where the gay liberation movement was born, was threatening to pour kegs of Guinness down the sewer on St. Patrick’s Day to launch a national boycott. That was public relations disaster the company couldn’t afford.

The Guinness protest drew widespread attention from the mainstream media. When a few of us showed up at the parade to protest the PSNI, no one noticed.

There are LGBT leaders who would be willing to help build support for Irish political prisoners. But that will be far more difficult for them as long as the Irish community is seen to be supporting this homophobic parade.

Some of the same public officials who are boycotting the parade could be useful sources of support.

For example, both New York State Comptroller Thomas DiNapoli, who refuses to march in the parade, and Daniel Dromm, an openly Gay member of the New York City Council, supported Martin Corey when he was imprisoned without charge or trial. DiNapoli raised his plight with Secretary of State for Northern Ireland Theresa Villiers when she came looking for investment from the state pension fund. Dromm wrote to Villiers to demand Corey’s release.

The attitude toward the parade is symptomatic of a larger problem. Many in the Irish-American community welcome solidarity but don’t want to give it in return. This applies not just to the LBGT movement, but to African-Americans, Latinos, and even the immigrant rights movement.

Some of those working for undocumented Irish immigrants even indulge in the fantasy that the Irish will get some sort of special deal that leaves all the other immigrants out. The reality of American politics is that immigration reform is driven by the Latinos not the Irish, because Latinos are a steadily growing voting bloc politicians believe is up for grabs. The best strategy for the undocumented Irish would be to take a very public stand with “the dreamers,” the young Latino immigrants who publicly risk deportation to demand comprehensive immigration reform for everyone.

If we want to build a larger coalition for Irish freedom the problem, as always, is where to start.

In the best of all possible worlds Irish organizations would publicly denounce the parade and threaten not to march next year unless the Parade Committee agrees to let Lesbian and Gay organizations march on the same basis as everyone else. That would have an immense effect and might even force positive change in the parade.

For those unwilling to risk such a bold and potentially unpopular step, there is always the St. Pat’s for All Parade dedicated to “treating all the children of the nation equally.” Every year it draws not only Lesbian and Gay organizations, but Latinos, Asians, African-Americans, labor and religious groups and a who’s who of New York City politicians starting with the mayor.

There is nothing to stop AOH (Ancient Order of Hibernians) Divisions, the Irish American Labor Coalition, the Friends of Irish Freedom, the National Irish Freedom Committee and similar organizations from marching as well.

They would be taking a very public stand for equality. It would also be at least a small first step toward winning new support for Irish freedom.

7 comments:

  1. if the pigs of the garda sioch-croney are allowed march let the psni pigs march away too. athnionn ciarog ciarog eile.

    also, is there anyone protesting the NDAA at these st patricks day charades. why arnt u protesting this if u really are interested in rights. irish americans (gay and straight) need to get their heads out of their arses and stand up for their own once great republic.

    "There are LGBT leaders who would be willing to help build support for Irish political prisoners. But that will be far more difficult for them as long as the Irish community is seen to be supporting this homophobic parade."

    i guess the irish political prisoners will just have to get over not having the support of the American LGBT leaders.(I swear im not laughing)

    what a load of green gay blarney.
    When u guys start protestin the NDAA id love to see how much of the pagan global media will be pushing ur agenda then. none is the figure that comes into my mind.

    as for pouring guinness down the sewers, i hope that catches on, this country is a colossal drunken drugged up mess now and i would actually be delighted if people tried to adress our national disease for a change. balls to the st patrick's day charade, there is more to this culture (supposedly) than this pile of goonish fakery.

    kiss me, im irish. kiss my fuc*in arse. love grouch.

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  2. I could be wrong but the only banner allowed at the St Patricks days march is the one at the very front of the parade " Keep England out of Ireland "-

    Every one is allowed at the march- but they are not allowed to carry their own banners- unless Republicans think there is a more important banner than the only one allowed -does sandy even know about the one banner rule at the New York march-

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  3. Of course Martin Corey was returned to jail for breaching his early release licence - tried & convicted of IRA activity, released early under the Good Friday Agreement and then took up anti peace process dissident IRA activity.. Which is why he early release licence was revoked. Not quite the same as being interned without trial or charge.

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    1. You're wrong, fact check your info.
      Martin Corey was being held under mi5 directive- using supposed "secret evidence". He was never charged with any crime.

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  4. Kilsally says,

    "and then took up anti peace process dissident IRA activity.."

    What kind of ... anti peace process dissident IRA activity?

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  5. Kilsally,
    I could be wrong but i think they had no evidence against Martin Corey that's why there was a furore. As for the St Patrick's day parade, fuck it. I don't see what good that parade does in relation to the agitation campaign. Just a bunch of American peelers and firemen playing pipes and drums most of them couldn't find Ireland on a map.

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  6. Michaelhenry -

    Every contingent in the St Patrick's Day Parade is allowed to march with two banners - the name of their organization and "England Out of Ireland."

    The Irish Lesbian and Gay organization applied to march with a banner with their name on it.

    The members of the Parade Committee were only able to keep them out by swearing under oath that it is not an Irish parade but a Catholic parade.

    Sandy Boyer

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