The two part series tells how Irish Americans, over a quarter century, defied opposition, indeed vilification by the British, Irish and American governments, to deliver vital political backing and publicity for the Irish Republican Army struggle, and millions of dollars for prisoners’ families. Director Kevin Brannigan and Producer Jamie Goldrick of Up and Away Media, won the coveted award for telling a story that had been all but hidden.
Line-Up
Early on, viewers see Michael Flannery, the Tipperary IRA Veteran of the Black and Tan, and Civil Wars, who fifty years later helped found Irish Northern Aid or Noraid, when money was desperately needed by the families of those arrested or interned.
Viewers glimpse the forces lined up against Noraid. British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher, shrilly condemns Noraid support. She is echoed by Irish Prime Ministers Charles Haughey, Liam Cosgrove and even American President Ronald Reagan. Former New York Governor Hugh Carey, one of the “Four Horseman” who along with Ted Kennedy, Daniel Patrick Moynihan and Tip O’Neill aligned with John Hume and Irish officials against Sinn Fein, bitterly attacks Michael Flannery as Grand Marshal leading the 1983 New York St. Patrick’s Day Parade,( one of the largest ever held despite boycotts.)
Hostile press is exemplified by a 1985 Irish Independent editorial, expressing outrage that Americans would want to see the north firsthand, or hear Irish Republican leaders banned from broadcast airways, and denied visas to the United States.
News coverage, termed Irish Republican Army Volunteers, “sectarian terrorists” or “mindless criminals” whose American supporters must be “misguided” or “misty-eyed”. British officials even blamed Irish Americans, not British injustice, for the Irish conflict, or incidents like the brutal Internment Day 1984 attack on peaceful demonstrators including 130 Noraid tour members, watched by millions, during American network coverage of the Olympics.
Top British spy Denis Donaldson would be sent to wreck Noraid from within, while an FBI official admits getting frequent demands for action from the White House at Britain’s behest.
Joined
Against this array Irish Americans, some born in Ireland and others generations removed, joined together simply because they saw Irish men and women in a desperate struggle against British rule, and would not stand idly by. For them, tirades by Thatcher, or her various allies, were accolades, to be repeated aloud at rallies with cheers and laughter. It was truly Noraid: Irish America And The IRA, because as long as Noraid members were willing to take a stand, Congressmen, labor leaders, civil rights lawyers, Hibernians and other Irish organizations were willing to stand with them.
Motives
Brannigan and Goldrick tell this remarkable story by mixing historic archival film with first hand interviews of Noraid members. As the words of the 1916 Easter Proclamation, “supported by her exiled children in America” are highlighted, John McDonagh explains how Irish Americans were part of every struggle for freedom in Ireland, since the early 1800s. John himself played a major role in a Times Square display, planned as a Christmas message to Irish political prisoners, which unexpectedly became an international news story, courtesy of hysterical British tabloids.
Brigid Brannigan, from South Armagh and Fr. Patrick Maloney from Limerick, were two of the Irish born members who joined Noraid when conflict broke out and carried the organization during its early years, headquartered in a small Bronx office with two phones, taking on the unlimited resources of the British.
Kathleen Savage, and Michael Shanley met on the 1985 fact-finding visit, which so outraged the Irish Independent. Kathleen defied Royal Ulster Constabulary commands to surrender her camera, while Michael was arrested for shouting “British troops out of Ireland” in a chance encounter with a British royal in New York.
He describes his emotional trip to Manhattan on the day of Bobby Sands’ funeral, followed by a television news clip, “They are massing by the thousands outside the British Consulate outraged by the death of Bobby Sands.”
Chris Byrne’s song “Fenians” captured the spirit of Noraid, and the former New York City Policeman described how the New York City Emerald Society Pipe Band came to march in honor of the Hunger Strikers in Bundoran County Donegal, despite Gardai complaints, in what became “the band’s finest hour”.
IRA Arms Questions
This documentary goes right at questions of whether Noraid monies went to finance arms for the IRA.
The producers managed to get groundbreaking interviews with three men, Gabriel Megahey, John Crawley and Patrick Nee, who make no apologies for helping arm IRA Volunteers during the Troubles, and served years of imprisonment for doing so.
They each made the point, categorically, that not only were Noraid monies not used for arms purchases, but it would have been foolhardy to become involved with a public organization like Noraid.
Breakthrough
The program traces how Noraid was key to the decade long fight to put the Irish conflict on the American Presidential agenda, with a Noraid leader positioned to ask candidate Bill Clinton to pledge a visa for Sinn Fein President Gerry Adams during the historic Irish American Presidential Forum of 1992. Clinton’s Irish pledges followed by his election victory opened the door for the American involvement that followed.
That breakthrough can be traced directly to the H-Blocks and ultimately the Hunger Strikers, whose inspiration transformed Noraid. In 1978 two Irish Republicans came to New York with a message from H-Block prison leader Brendan Hughes, that the Blanketmen needed American publicity and political pressure to win their fight against brutal British attempts to break them.
A key part of the reorganization and campaign which followed, were Blanketmen, Ciaran Nugent, Fra McCann, Joe Maguire and Seamus Delaney coming illegally, for rallies organized by Noraid across the US, making the H-Blocks an American issue. Viewers see film of one Noraid rally outside New York’s Lincoln Center, where 15,000 stood with siblings of Bobby Sands, Patsy O’Hara, Ray McCreesh and Joe McDonnell to humiliate Britain’s then Prince Charles.
The daily rallies across America during the 1981 Hunger Strike contributed to the victory over criminalization. They also convinced New York Assemblyman John Dearie we could make Ireland a Democratic Presidential issue using Irish candidate’s forums.
The influx of new supporters led to bringing hundreds of Americans like Kathleen Savage and Michael Shanley to see the six counties for the first time. When the Thatcher government tried to quell Noraid support by an Exclusion Order forbidding me entry to the six counties, Sinn Fein decided the ban must be challenged. The televised scenes of the murderous RUC attack on unarmed Internment Day demonstrators shocked millions by showing the true face of British rule.
There followed political battles around the MacBride Principles and Irish Political Deportees that time would not permit to be included in the two hour program.
Ultimately with Clinton’s pledges and election victory, many of those who had condemned Noraid and Sinn Fein now came around.
Noraid and its historic contributions against overwhelming opposition seemed all but whitewashed out of history. Now Kevin Brannigan and Jamie Goldrick have told that story, with a skill and authenticity that won Noraid: Irish America and the IRA the prestigious Royal Television Society award as Best Factual Series. It also won them plaudits from former Noraid members, who never expected credit but are thankful to have their story told.




It was an enthralling documentary.
ReplyDeleteGood piece Martin.
Love & respect to everybody across the globe who fights American imperialism ( especially the innocent in Guantanomo / Cuba concentration camp )
ReplyDeleteThe recent machine gunning of drowning sailors off the Venezuelan coast was reminiscent of what German sea captains did to numerous allied ( civilian & military crew ) during W W 2 . The German captains were prosecuted & sometimes executed ; the arrogant Yanks ( in a repeat of their genocide in Vietnam ) got away away scot free .
Has any Noraid member criticised American imperialism or is it seen as unpatriotic ( many off their offspring are busy murdering Muslims in the Middle East ) ? Nine eleven clipped Noraid wings .
# 2025 Galvin was happy to be photographed with Reps Josh Gottheime & Mike Lawler for the announcement of the " Bunker Buster Act " . How many Iranians / Palestinians are dead as a result ? Choose your heroes / buds carefully . I can smell childrens blood .
ReplyDeleteAs TPQ has been informed it never happened, you will need to produce the photo at Bunker Buster Act.
DeleteIf this is fabricated for the purpose of smearing, you will no longer feature on the site.
Ron Rua,
ReplyDeletePost WW II US government foreign policies, once upon a time formulated largely from within, nowadays dictated from Tel Aviv, have resulted in a most shameful record of atrocities worldwide. That is very sadly evident.
But to understand the Irish Northern Aid Committee, one should take the committee's oft-stated mission statement simply at face value. It existed to provide support for Irish prisoners of war and their families.
The people who founded the Committee and who populated its ranks throughout the years represented a very small subset of the Irish American diaspora.
Their voice was amplified at highly visible public rallies, through lobbying efforts, alliances with similarly minded groups, the long running publication of The Irish People newspaper and through tireless media appearances of its capable Publicity Director, Martin Galvin.
As the war came to an end, and the last of the prisoners were released, the Committee wound down. During that period, it's headquarters had already moved and downsized.
The founders and very many former members are gone now. May they rest in peace. What's left of the Committee are its few surviving members, who might periodically get together, as some recently did at NYC's St. Patrick's Day Parade. On such occasions, someone will retrieve a furled up Committee banner from a dusty corner of a closet.
Some of this smaller subset of a small subset would have attended antiwar demonstrations over the years and would frequent pro-Palestinian demonstrations presently.
The American public is generally an apathetic one. Regardless of what views one may have on immigration, one might reasonably argue that the more diverse a population is the less cohesive it will be. The US government greatly benefits from this.
The recent manifestation of "No Kings" protests is an interesting development. While there are go leor reasons to protest Trump, where were these people when Genocide Joe was president? They were nowhere to be seen. It is here that you should look for Irish Americans to castigate. It would be a target-rich environment, full of self described liberal Democrats who supported "humanitarian interventions" and lionized such loathsome people as Madeline Albright, Bill and Hilary Clinton and Barack Obama.
What happened on September 11th, 2001 had absolutely no effect on the Irish Northern Aid Committee or what it had supported.
The September 11th attacks might possibly have dissuaded those who had considered supporting "The Real IRA", but wouldn't have the fallout from the Omagh bombing weighed much more heavily, some three years earlier, in 1998?