Gerry Adams: Arrested by Northern Ireland's past

Kevin Rooney looks at the arrest of Gerry Adams. It originally featured in spiked on 2 May 2014 and is reproduced by TPQ with permission. Kevin Rooney is a writer based in London.


Northern Irish politicians have allowed the ghosts of war to rule the present.

It was 11 in December 1972 when Jean McConville was taken from her home down the road from where I lived in West Belfast. It was not until 1999 that the Provisional IRA admitted responsibility for her killing and informed the authorities where the body was buried.

You would hardly know it from the current media coverage of McConville’s killing, following the arrest of Sinn Féin leader Gerry Adams in connection with it this week, but McConville’s disappearance was not the stand-out event of 1972. There was a lot going on in West Belfast. Just a few years before McConville disappeared, the British state had sent the Army into Northern Ireland to occupy our streets and quell the growing civil-rights uprising. In 1971, the British had introduced internment without trial for those same civil-rights activists who were defying bans on demonstrations. And in the same year as McConville’s disappearance, on Bloody Sunday, the Army shot dead 14 unarmed people who had taken to the streets with thousands of others to protest against internment. And there was more. About 500 people died on all sides in the Irish war in 1972 and, in the weeks running up to McConville’s disappearance, 11 people were shot dead by British paratroops in the streets around Ballymurphy where I lived. There were also numerous republicans and Catholic civilians assassinated by British soldiers acting on information from touts (informants). Indeed, the IRA killed McConville because they believed she was a tout.

I would apologise for the quick history lesson were it not for the fact that Adams’ arrest seems to have prompted a rather more selective retelling of that period, with journalists and commentators presenting this event as a uniquely brutal and heinous crime carried out by cold-blooded murderers. It was not; it was part of a war.

The reason you will not hear anyone else present this wider context is that in Northern Ireland today a social and political history of the Irish war has been replaced by a victims’ history of that war. We now rarely talk about the fundamental conflict at the heart of this long war – the struggle of Irish nationalists for a united Ireland against the British state determined to maintain the union with Britain. So fundamental was this political principle that people on both sides were willing to kill and be killed for it. Both the IRA and the British Army continued to fight for many years knowing full well that innocents would die, that normal peacetime values would be perverted, and that things never tolerated in peacetime would be justified by both sides. The IRA stated clearly that informers were legitimate targets; in 1981, the then UK prime minister, Margaret Thatcher, allowed 10 men to die on hunger strike rather than concede the principle that they were political prisoners.

But today, few are prepared to provide the context, or to explain the wartime backdrop against which the killings and the bombings took place. Instead, we talk about the legacy of pain and hurt left by individual deaths. We talk of the need for closure and catharsis, and of the rights of victims. Therapeutic politics has usurped politics proper, and anyone daring to suggest we should leave the past behind and ‘move on’ is lambasted by Northern Ireland’s victims’ commissioner. Our political news programmes, like Today and Newsnight, replace political actors with family members and the spokespeople for victims’ groups. And when politicians do appear, they talk about victims’ rights rather than politics.

But the victim culture embraced by all shades of political opinion presents problems for all. Sinn Féin has virtually transformed itself into the party of victims in recent years; it must often have felt that this approach had finally given nationalists the equality they failed to achieve through an armed struggle. After all, if all suffering is equal, then the nationalist community can certainly claim its fair share of grief.
 
However, as Gerry Adams languishes in a police cell, he should reflect on the way that he and his party have been hoist by their own petard. He was only too happy to turn the complex political struggles of the past into a tale of victims and victimisers when it benefited him; now this strategy appears to have bitten him.

The British and Irish governments clearly want to move on and are prepared to issue limited apologies and make symbolic gestures and compromises. But the constant dredging up of the past is preventing the progress they seek. The next 10 years in Northern Ireland look set to be dominated by backward-looking commemorations and investigations into past crimes that are likely to be bitter and divisive.

I am not interested in re-fighting the war in Ireland through the lens of the victims. No one listening to the children of Jean McConville telling their story can feel anything other than pity and sympathy. It was a terrible tragedy and it wrecked their lives. But it does not follow that those who suffered during this period of history should get to block progress and keep us in the past. Victim culture is essentially undemocratic. This was demonstrated recently when a campaign by one victim’s family resulted in two Sinn Féin politicians being barred from holding office because of their past IRA activity.

While it might be necessary to accept that we may not see a united Ireland in our lifetimes, we can at least ensure that we do not spend the next 10 years obsessing over each tragic act from a long, drawn-out conflict. Revelling in this mawkish and divisive raking over of the past will do no one in Ireland any good – least of all the victims. We should instead learn the lessons of the war and work together to create a progressive and less divided political future.

8 comments:

  1. Kevin

    How about I break your legs and we call it quits? That wouldn't exactly be fair, I mean you'd be left with two broken legs and I can just go about my business like nothing happened? You wouldn't want to make me feel awkward or anything? Sf is a political personality and you strike me as a devout party member floating the idea on behalf of SF --just like when PWilson floated the idea of decommissioning IRA weapons. SF is a benefactor of the conflict and peace process - a great many ordinary people are not and they are now a bain on SF's progress not least because SF want the Conflict to go away before more of its bigwigs are exposed as informers or are arrested like Adams was. That's one way for the Brits to avoid accountability -make it in SF's interests to demonize or berate victims. You are pretty transparent.

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  2. Think youve been in london to long...they told where the body was buried.jog on.

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  3. Maybe I didn’t drink enough whiskey before reading this but if I am mistaken it wouldn’t be the first time.
    How Rooney managed to make Gerry a victim of the past and bemoan about how a war is now been replaced with a “victim’s history” makes no sense, I should have guessed as the header says it all.

    Is this not just another case of Idol worship where every victim is somehow much lesser in Rooney’s imaginary broader context?

    “Deputy Gerry Adams: [...] I return to the issue of victims. I will conclude on this matter. Irish Republicans have acknowledged many times the hurt caused during the war. I would welcome if Teachta Martin said “This is Sinn Féin” but he uses sleveen, sleekit, weasel words such as “It appears to be Sinn Féin”, “As far as I can see”, “It appears to me”, and “As far as I have been able to ascertain”. Let me be very clear about this; all the victims deserve justice – every single one, particularly the victims of the Irish Republican Army. I say that as a republican because I cannot rail against injustices inflicted by the British or others if I do not take the same consistent position in terms of those who were bereaved by people whose legitimacy I recognised. Both the Taoiseach and the leader of Fianna Fáil recognised the legitimacy of the IRA cause, but in another decade. Somewhere along the line they became revisionist on the issue. I wish to be very clear that, first, it is the right thing to do morally; second, it is the right thing to do for the peace process and; third, I understand because I am from that community. That is where I come from. [...]”

    Is Rooney contradicting Adams or was his article penned as Adams languished in comfort.

    I wonder is Adams sincere when he says the victims deserve justice probably as long as he is in the clear.

    Move on and forget about the past the Sinn Fein mantra.

    Adams goes on to deny that Sinn Fein is behind the recent threats made against the people involved in the BC project and I suppose the Provos were not on display at the wonder wall.

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  4. Maybe what Kevin is saying is that the victim agenda is overwhelmingly anti republican, What dismayed me the most is republicans in their hatred of Adams, justified as it may be, is lending a perception of legitimacy in the British anti republican propaganda.
    I have said before and i will say it again the execution of touts was necessary, and i know s.f was/is riddled with touts but in 1972 when selfless volunteers were engaged in street battles with one of the most ruthless armies in the world and fighting them to a standstill how could you tolerate a known tout in your midst.
    Everything on this site goes back to s.f. If we are going to, as has been suggested by Sean Bres etc, build an alternative republican movement, we have to forget about s.f. S.f committed treachery, they got away with it , we have to move on, build a true movement, what we can never do is sink to their level, engage with the r.u.c and allow anti republican slurs to go unchallenged.
    It is an insult to the memory of fallen volunteers if we allow the establishment to blacken the deeds of brave men by labeling them as bloodlusty men. Who invaded who here? Are we going to allow them to have a media circus that demonises republicans just so it sheds a black mark on Adams? Anybody without an agenda/wage knows what he's like, fuck him, the history of our struggle is far more important than him. Are we going to join in with misinterpretation of history just to politically hurt Adams?
    History will show Adams for what he is. it Is imperative we keep true republicanism alive.

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  5. David Higgins

    Excellent post. Victimhood has become the new battleground because there is nowhere else to vent frustration and anger. There is also no mechanism to deal with the past which Gerry Adams desperately want's to evaporate so he can hand over a party named SF to whiter than white Mary Lou. That's what the 30 years seems to have been all about. Seanna Walsh still hasn't copped on. Pat Sheehan was on Nolan last night saying Robinson has never condemned UVF attacks on Polish people. Turns out he had actually the day before. Are these people getting paid? No wonder people are miffed!

    There's not much point lamenting what Adams and Marty have done. They are undoubtedly long term Brit agents and have been protected whilst succeeding in their mission to bring northern RCs back to 1921 so they can this time accept Stormont and play ball in N. Ireland.

    The cold reality is the likes of De Valera got away with executions and internment and Adams and co. have gotten away with their little phase of self interest and Judas. Irish history is repetitive.

    Best to concentrate on moving away from the gravitational pull of the SF political black hole and concentrate on building up your republican alternative. When the paedo facilitator steps aside I'm sure Mary Lou will find she should have learned the names of the hunger-strikers after all. That is going to be fun to watch.

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  6. David , I seen you make this point a few times and I tried to let it go but …here goes.
    Adams is the one who blackened the Volunteers names by his endorsement of anti-Republican state apparatus that criminalises them, and others who would follow in that tradition. Anti-Treaty groups are assailed from every direction, so in Adams case, I would make him an exception from traditional moral rules,otherwise this normalisation phase will proceed unchallenged. This is surely the bigger danger?

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  7. Daithi,
    Republican values can take second place to no man. Adams isn't as big a danger in the wider perspective as a lot on this site like to make out, he will go down as just another in a long list of Irish traitors and collaborators.
    The normalisation phase can only go unchallenged if we leave it unchallenged. There is a bigger picture here if we allow Adams and s.f to drag the whole republican community down to his level of running to the peelers, then republicanism might not recover. Republicanism is on it's knees but we've been on our knees before, we've been betrayed before, we recovered before and we will recover again. By one way or another we must always stay true to our principles in the hope we reach our destination. What we can't do in my opinion is is sacrifice our moral structure in the pursuit of one sociopath.

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  8. Kevin.. If it had of been an American or a foreign language student who had penned your piece, they could be forgiven for making mistakes such as...

    the then UK prime minister, Margaret Thatcher, allowed 10 men to die on hunger strike rather than concede the principle that they were political prisoners

    Then you make statements like this.....

    "the struggle of Irish nationalists for a united Ireland against the British state determined to maintain the union with Britain. So fundamental was this political principle that people on both sides were willing to kill and be killed for it"

    PSF are the one's who gave up on probably the most important principle of Irish Republicanism. PSF signed away their right to national self determination when they signed off on the GFA . No one else.

    However, as Gerry Adams languishes in a police cell,.he should reflect on the way that he and his party have been hoist by their own petar

    Kevin, slighty OTT saying Gerry Adams languished in a cell. Gerry Adams took up the kind offer from the PSNI for a chat (with free B&B). And then in all likelyhood relfected, "Have I snookered myself somewhere along the way". .

    The next 10 years in Northern Ireland look set to be dominated by backward-looking commemorations and investigations into past crimes that are likely to be bitter and divisive


    Backwark-looking commemorations? What wrong with whoever having a celebration of rememberence about whatever? A very big part of the reason investigations into the past are bitter and divisive is down to the faliure of the PSNI to bring to book former members of the RUC, UDR etc. The PSNI only seem to investigate Republicans or Loyalists who have been 'in active' for the past 30yrs and arrest them for something they may have done 40yrs ago. Either everyone guilty of pre '98 conflict related whatever goes down for two years or no one goes to prison. It has to be one or the other. But cherry picking can't continue.


    This was demonstrated recently when a campaign by one victim’s family resulted in two Sinn Féin politicians being barred from holding office because of their past IRA activity.

    What about former combatants labeled as criminals (because of loads of paperwork PSF signed off on) who can't get a job today?

    Kevin, It's more loaded than Spiked..

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