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   Mickey Devine


The 1981 Hunger Strike
  Intro to 1981 Hunger Strike
  1 March 1981
  Francis Hughes Joins
  Bobby Stands for MP
  Bobby's Campaign for MP
  Bobby Sands MP
  Pressured To End The "Stailc"
  Last Days of Bobby Sands
  Bobby Sands Joins Connelly
  100,000 follow Bobby
  Francis Hughes faces death
  Francis: Death on Hunger Strike
  Francis Hughes' Funeral
  Raymond and Patsy
  Two Lives and Two Deaths
  The fight for Joe McDonnell's life
  Three More Join
  Joe McDonnell Dies
  RUC and Brits Riot
  Martin Hurson's Death
  The Rocky Road To Cappagh
  Kieran and Kevin's last days
  Kieran Doherty Dies
  The Mothers
  Thomas McElwee
  Owen Carron wins Bobby's Seat
  Micky Devine
  The end of the strike


The 1980 Hunger Strike
  The Start of the Strike
  Twenty-two More Join
  Treachery and Deceit
  Despair and Confusion


The Blanket Protest
  Conveyor Belt to H-Blocks
  The Blanket Protest
  The No-Wash Protest
  The Protest Gets Dirty
  Blanketmen Fight Back
  The "Craic"
  Brutality and Resistance
  A Long Tradition
  The 1970s: Part I
  The 1970s: Part II
  The Blanketmen Prepare


Previous Hunger Strikes
   Frank Stagg
   Michael Gaughen
   The 1970's Strikes
   The 1940's Strikes
   The 1920's Strikes


Documents from that era
   The Diary of Bobby Sands
   The five demands
   "Ten Men Dead"
   Statements from the '80 strike
   Start of the 1981 strike
   During of the 1981 strike
   End of the 1981 strike
   From the H-Block committee
   POWs Letter to RACs




Pictures from that era
   Scenes from the funerals
   Posters
   Memorials
   Murals
   Flyers

 

Life Springs From Death
The 25th Anniversary of the
1981 Hunger Strike






South Armagh remembers with pride the

25th Anniversary of the 1981 Hunger Strike

and honours all those who have hungered for justice in the cause of
freedom

Raymond McCreesh mural unveiled in Camlough by Raymond's former comrades Dan McGuinness and Paddy Quinn who were arrested and imprisoned with him.

Despite the constant rain and a blustery wind that dogged their steps on the road from Newry to Camlough thousands of republicans marched on Sunday 21 May, 2006 to remember IRA Volunteer Raymond McCreesh who died in 1981 after 61 days on hunger strike. Read more....

Jimmy Canning of Forkhill at the Bodenstown march

30,000 people know who the victors were in 1981

by Des Wilson

Tens of thousands gathered in Casement Park on Sunday 13 August, 2006 to remember with pride the men who died on hunger strike in Ireland in the 1970s and 1981

The public demonstration for the anniversary of the hunger strikers was a powerful evidence of people's determination, and of their dignity.

The 1981 hunger strikes were a continuation of a long and sad series of actions by otherwise powerless people against tyrannical government. There were many hunger strikes by Irish people before 1981 and now prisoners were making a bid to ensure they would never be necessary again.

There was a clash of beliefs as well as of politics. For Irish people the only dignified and proper thing to do in face of a hunger strike is to give in to it and negotiate a settlement. That belief has come to us from thousands of years of Irish civilisation. For the London administration, which had military power in Ireland but no tradition of dignified beliefs, the opposite was true, they believed the only thing to do in face of a hunger strike was to defy it and refuse to negotiate anything. A militarily powerful administration without such a moral sense faced a group of militarily powerless prisoners whose moral sense was rooted in thousands of years history of how honourable human beings should behave towards each other.

The militarists lost. Sunday's Commemoration showed it.

Could you imagine between 20 and 30,000 people massing on a single afternoon to uphold any cause suggested to them by the London administration?
Could you imagine such a multitude of people massing on a single afternoon to uphold those churches, universities, press and politicians who pushed the hunger strikes to such a tragic end?

Of course not.

If the London and Dublin administrations which control the Ireland's northeast – without a single vote from any of the people living there – had any political wisdom (we never talk of moral principle in administrations) they would see where people's consciences are and what people's intellects believe. Then they would act accordingly, but they don't.
At Sunday's Commemoration there were children in prams whose parents might not even have been born themselves at the time of the 1981 strikes, there were youngsters whose parents might still find it hard even yet to talk about them, there were middleaged and older people, and the very mix of ages and conditions would make a decent administration think about who won those battles and at what a cost.
There were two pictures in our minds which may well have blotted out the speeches and even the pageantry – one was the picture of a table in Westminster with a woman at the top, surrounded by men who were yes-men.

Men who said “yes” to Thatcher because they were afraid of her.
The other picture was that of helpless prisoners on whom Thatcher was determined to wreak her own brand of vengeance. We had the same two pictures in our minds in 1981 and who would have dared to say which was the picture of winners in such a struggle? Who would have thought ten powerless men in prison would have defeated two dozen men and a powerful woman at a cabinet table in Westminster? A dozen men terrified by one woman, ten men afraid of nothing. Who indeed should win?
The 20 to 30,000 people gathered in Casement Park on a Sunday afternoon gave their answer to that question.

And as always the thoughts of dignified people were reverent towards the past, determined towards the future.

We must control our own lives, and so we shall. Even if a certain political arrangement is imposed upon us by military force, we must first discipline it and then control it, then change it.

Rational politics must control the city halls, the council offices, the police, the civil service. Rational economics must direct future prosperity for all our people.
And all the young people will be given full opportunity for development through decent education, none of them recruited as the hooligan arm of the police.
We do not need to prove that London has behaved abominably in Ireland by corrupting our institutions and presenting us with the most backward economy and political system in Europe. We just need to keep on reminding people of it, and plan for the better future. If we can bring all decent people together on the main issues this will strengthen us immensely. If not, then at least we can treat each other's differences with respect.
Now is the time for courageous planning, for foresight, for exchange of ideas, for respect for each other.

Can we be as courageous creating our future as those people were who were willing to die for it?




Much of this work is taken from the Irish Northern Aid website commorating the 20th anniversary of the Hunger Strike

 
 


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