Thursday, April 12, 2012

Celtic Corner - April 2012

The Rising and Holy Week



The week leading up to Easter Sunday is a preeminent one for Christians all over the world. In Ireland, it has long been associated with the prayers, rituals and particular services that herald the most important Sunday in the Christian calendar.

As Easter arrives this year, the week also acts as an unofficial beginning of the spring, Easter Sunday being the season’s unofficial flowering.

There was more than praying and looking forward to the improving weather in Ireland 96 years ago this week.

While most Irish people were going about their normal preparations during what Holy Week , some others were contemplating a war. The Irish Volunteers and Irish Citizen Army we putting together final preparations for a fight that most of them knew they could not win, at least in the short run. The plan was to strike for Irish freedom at an hour when the British Empire was locked in a do-or-die struggle with the rival empires of continental Europe.

The idea was to seize strategic locations around the county, most especially in Dublin, and to hold out in the hope of a more general uprising of the population, aid from Germany, Irish America, indeed any source that took the view that Ireland had a right to her freedom no less so than any nation.

For those of a more religious persuasion, and there were more than a few in the leadership ranks of the Irish Republican Brotherhood in particular, there had to have been a sense that the planned insurrection was equivalent to a resurrection of the entire Irish people, the living and the “dead generations” as the Proclamation would state.

Holy Week in 1916 was off to a bad start from an Irish nationalist perspective. And it started badly in New York where U.S. agents raided the office of an Irish American agent and uncovered details of Irish American efforts to foster and aid a rising.

The week proceeded badly for the Irish leadership after the New York seizure. The Aud, a ship carrying guns from Germany was scuttled in Cork Harbor on Good Friday after being intercepted by a British patrol vessel. Subsequently, the situation grew more confused. With the arrest of Irish Leaders, Roger Casement and Austin Stack in addition to the loss of the arms, the military council of the IRB was advised against an immediate armed rising.

Planned maneuvers by volunteers on Easter Sunday itself were cancelled by Eoin MacNeill after he learned of the loss of the Aud and the arrests of the key leaders. This decision has a particular effect outside Dublin and would result in the capital being the focal point for virtually all that would follow in Easter Week.

For those who would face the wrath of the world’s greatest military power, Easter Sunday would be a day of more than the usual reflection. For sure, many were aware that they would not survive, though they doubtless hoped and prayed. It’s unlikely that too many in the Irish ranks were thinking in terms of some “blood sacrifice,” the label that has been pinned hard to Padraic Pearse’s name in recent times.

The essence of the human condition is hope. It comes before despair. The men and women of 1916 hoped, and hoped hard.

As we all know, the events that followed Holy Week would be anything but holy in nature though with the passing of time, the Easter Rising would be elevated to the status of something sacred in the great Irish narrative.

Nevertheless, there has been varying and often colliding interpretations of the Rising over the intervening 96 years though most recently there have been signs of more of a balance being achieved in how the events of Easter 1916 are interpreted and remembered.

It can take the passing of 96 years to achieve such, or perhaps 100 hundred years. But regardless, we remember anew each and every year the Easter of the war they dared call great.

This great event, the 1916 Rising is celebrated in Newark every Easter Sunday with a procession from Military Park to St. Patrick’s Cathedral where there is an Irish Mass Celebration.

A breakfast follows at McGoverns Tavern.

Cáisc Shona Dhuit

Happy Easter

Your Corres Secretary

Frank Darcy