Anthony McIntyre ☠ Missing these weekly vigils leaves a bad taste in the mouth.
I was not available for the previous two due to other matters kicking in that needed attending to. If only the Israelis would miss a day of child murder.
While we gather, the Eurovision Song Contest is taking place in Vienna. The organisers have not banned the genocidal state from participation, coming up with all sorts of jabberwocky about an artistic space where unity is promoted and from which an image of a better world might be projected, conveniently choosing to ignore that Israel is using the competition to song wash its genocidal image.
Ireland along with Spain, Iceland, Slovenia, and the Netherlands make up the group of five societies boycotting the event in opposition to Israeli genocide in Gaza. While thirty five countries will be taking part, it is the lowest number of entrants since the 2004 expansion. While Iceland and the Netherlands are reported to be screening the event, Ireland along with Slovenia and Spain are broadcasting alternative shows. In the case of RTE, it has opted to put out old Father Ted episodes. Certainly more than most other national broadcasters are doing but it would have been more pointed and imaginative to have broadcast history shows about the 1938 Nazi march into Austria in pursuit of Hitler's Anschluss project which aimed at creating a Greater Germany. It would have been poignant and a reminder of what horrors can follow from inviting those who perpetrate genocide. Austrians made the German Nazis welcome in 1938 while today the country makes Israeli Nazis welcome. Lesser Germany and Lesser Israel, seem to be concepts alien to the Austrian political and cultural psyche which favours greatness.
While we gather, the Eurovision Song Contest is taking place in Vienna. The organisers have not banned the genocidal state from participation, coming up with all sorts of jabberwocky about an artistic space where unity is promoted and from which an image of a better world might be projected, conveniently choosing to ignore that Israel is using the competition to song wash its genocidal image.
Ireland along with Spain, Iceland, Slovenia, and the Netherlands make up the group of five societies boycotting the event in opposition to Israeli genocide in Gaza. While thirty five countries will be taking part, it is the lowest number of entrants since the 2004 expansion. While Iceland and the Netherlands are reported to be screening the event, Ireland along with Slovenia and Spain are broadcasting alternative shows. In the case of RTE, it has opted to put out old Father Ted episodes. Certainly more than most other national broadcasters are doing but it would have been more pointed and imaginative to have broadcast history shows about the 1938 Nazi march into Austria in pursuit of Hitler's Anschluss project which aimed at creating a Greater Germany. It would have been poignant and a reminder of what horrors can follow from inviting those who perpetrate genocide. Austrians made the German Nazis welcome in 1938 while today the country makes Israeli Nazis welcome. Lesser Germany and Lesser Israel, seem to be concepts alien to the Austrian political and cultural psyche which favours greatness.
RTE's decision is nevertheless to be welcomed but the institution remains a strange beast. Last night it opened its early evening news slot with a report about its top earners where the station juggled with the interchangeability or crossover between presenter and producer. The semantic hairsplitting around producing or presenting might be of interest to the number crunchers in RTE or to the type that like to train spot or plane watch, but it is hardly the most newsworthy item on the public agenda.
RTE's coverage of the genocide in Gaza is considered by many to have has fallen short of the mark. Earlier this week I accompanied our very own Siobhan to Dundalk courthouse where she had been summoned for refusing to pay her licence fee.
Inside the pre-hearing consultation room she made the case most strongly that she was vehemently opposed to the broadcaster's coverage of the Israeli genocide in Gaza. When people are prepared to stand up and take a hit for their beliefs it serves to remind us of just how many people, to quote the biologist Jerry Coyne, are wedded not to what is true but to what makes them comfortable.
Which brings me to the Independent Writers Union of which I am a member. RTE, despite its failings, has shown more fortitude, than the Union. It at least is prepared to participate in a cultural boycott of genocidal Israel. The IWU declined to do any such thing a few weeks ago at its AGM, the reasoning being that it is not political. That leaves us as scribblers to look haughtily over the top of our glasses at our fellow writers in Gaza and the rest of the Occupied Territories and proclaim:
most sorry old bean that you are being murdered, your prisoners raped and now facing the noose, your children massacred, your education system destroyed, your intellectuals, writers and surgeons maimed to stem their creativity, your health system obliterated, your land stolen because your tormentors are the chosen people and you are children of a lesser god. But we, the Irish Writers Union, as a body of scribes can't do anything, because protecting our institution from allegations of being political must take precedence over protecting you from genocide.
And when we offer them that as an explanation for our commitment to nothingness, let's not feign surprise when they look at us through disbelieving and disdainful eyes and respond in three terse words: Irish Wafflers Union.
This week our esteemed colleague. Siobhan, through a single act of civil obedience, did more to challenge the barbarism of Israel than the Irish Writers Union. A playwright, I don't imagine she will sign up for membership of a union too institutionally and non-politically timorous to write the wrong.





















