*Sinead O'Connor and the Chieftains - The Foggy Dew

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=13MQFCfCYdQ&feature=related*

The Easter Rising 1916 (real footage of aftermath)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Cew_ZLgi3Cc

------------------------------------------------------------------------------------



To commemorate the 97th anniversary of the 1916 Easter uprising remind our
readers of Ted GrantÂ’s 1966 article Connolly and the 1916 Easter
Uprising<http://www.marxist.com/connolly-1916-easter-uprising.htm> and
another he wrote with Alan Woods in 2001,James Connolly and the Easter
Rising <http://www.marxist.com/james-connolly-easter-rising.htm>. The
socialist and internationalist principles of James Connolly are more
relevant today than ever before.


-------------------------------------

http://www.marxist.com/connolly-1916-easter-uprising.htm

Connolly and the 1916 Easter
Uprising<http://www.marxist.com/connolly-1916-easter-uprising.htm>
Written by Ted GrantSaturday, 14 April 2001
[image: Print]<http://www.marxist.com/connolly-1916-easter-uprising/print.htm#>
It is impossible to understand the Easter Rising without understanding the
ideas of its leader, James Connolly, who considered himself a Marxist and
based himself on the ideas of Internationalism and the class struggle.
(Written by Ted Grant in 1966 on the 50th anniversary of the uprising.)

On 17th April 1916 the Irish Citizen Army, together with the Irish
Volunteers, rose up in arms against the might of the British Empire to
strike a blow for Irish freedom and for the setting up of an Irish
Republic. Their blow for freedom was to reverberate round the world, and
preceded the first Russian Revolution by almost a year.

The background to the rebellion was the centuries of national oppression
suffered by the Irish people in the interests of British landlordism and
capitalism. In this they had the support of the Irish landlords and
capitalists, of the Catholic hierarchy, who were linked by ties of interest
to the Imperialists, and joined with them in fear of the Irish workers and
peasants.

It is impossible to understand the Easter Rising without understanding the
ideas of its leader, James Connolly, who considered himself a Marxist and
based himself on the ideas of Internationalism and the class struggle. Like
MacLean in Britain, Lenin and Trotsky, Liebknecht and Luxemburg and other
Internationalists, Connolly regarded with horror the betrayal by the
leaders of the Labour movement in all countries in supporting the
Imperialist War. Dealing with the betrayal of the Second International,
Connolly declared in his paper The Workers Republic: "If these men must
die, would it not be better to die in their own country fighting for
freedom for their class, and for the abolition of war, than to go forth to
strange countries and die slaughtering and slaughtered by their brothers
that tyrants and profiteers might live?" Protesting against the support by
the British TUC of the war, Connolly wrote: "Time was when the unanimous
voice of that Congress declared that the working class had no enemy except
the capitalist class - that of its own country at the head of the list!"

Connolly stood for national freedom as a step towards the Irish Socialist
Republic. But while the Stalinists and reformists today - 50 years after
1916 still mumble in politically incoherent terms about the need for the
"national revolution against imperialism", Connolly was particularly clear
about the class question that was at the basis of the Irish question.
Without being in direct contact with Lenin and Trotsky he had a similar
position. "The cause of Labour is the cause of Ireland, and the cause of
Ireland is the cause of Labour", he wrote. "They cannot be dissevered.
Ireland seeks freedom. Labour seeks that an Ireland free should be the sole
mistress of her own destiny, supreme owner of all material things within
and upon her soil".

Connolly had no illusions in the capitalists of any country, least of all
Ireland. On International capitalism he wrote: "If, then, we see a small
section of the possessing class prepared to launch into war, to shed oceans
of blood and spend millions of treasure, in order to maintain intact a
small portion of their privileges, how can we expect the entire propertied
class to abstain from using the same weapons, and to submit peacefully when
called upon to yield up forever all their privileges?"

And on the Irish capitalists, "Therefore the stronger I am in my affection
for national tradition, literature, language, and sympathies, the more
firmly rooted I am in my opposition to that capitalist class which in its
soulless lust for power and gold would bray the nations as in a mortar".
And again, "We are out for Ireland for the Irish. But who are the Irish?
Not the rack-renting, slum-owning landlord; not the sweating, profit
grinding capitalist; not the sleek and oily lawyer; not the prostitute
pressmen - the hired liars of the enemy. Not these are the Irish upon whom
the future depends. Not these, but the Irish working class, the only secure
foundation upon which a free nation can be reared."

Writing on the need for an Irish insurrection to expel British imperialism
he wrote in relation to the World War: "Starting thus, Ireland may yet set
the torch to a European conflagration that will not burn out until the last
throne and the last capitalist bond and debenture will be shrivelled on the
funeral pyre of the last War lord."

As an answer to the demand for conscription which had been imposed in
Britain and which was supported by the Irish capitalists for Ireland too,
where the employers were exerting pressure to force Irish workers to
volunteer, Connolly wrote: "We want and must have economic conscription in
Ireland for Ireland. Not the conscription of men by hunger to compel them
to fight for the power that denies them the right to govern their own
country, but the conscription by an Irish nation of all the resources of
the nation - its land, its railways, its canals, its workshops, its docks,
its mines, its mountains, its rivers and streams, its factories and
machinery, its horses, its cattle, and its men and women, all co-operating
together under one common direction that gather under one common direction
that Ireland may live and bear upon her fruitful bosom the greatest number
of the freest people she has ever known."

He looked at the employers who were opposing conscription too from a
critical class point of view: "if here and there we find an occasional
employer who fought us in 1913 (the Great Dublin lock-out in which the
employers tried to break union organisation, but were defeated in this
object by the solidarity of the Irish workers and their British comrades
too) agreeing with our national policy in 1915 it is not because he has
become converted, or is ashamed of the unjust use of his powers, but simply
that he does not see in economic conscription the profit he fancied he saw
in denying to his followers the right to organise in their own way in 1913."

Answering objections to the firm working class point of view which he
expounded he declared: "Do we find fault with the employer for following
his own interests? We do not. But neither are we under any illusion as to
his motives. In the same manner we take our stand with our own class,
nakedly upon our class interests, but believing that these interests are
the highest interests of the race."

It is in this light that the uprising of 1916 must be viewed. As a
consequence of the struggles of the past Connolly who was the General
Secretary of the Irish Transport and General Workers Union had organised
the Citizens Army for the purpose of defence against capitalist and police
attack and for preparing for struggle against British imperialism. The
Citizens Army was almost purely working class in composition: dockers,
transport workers, building workers, printers and other sections of the
Dublin workers being its rank and file.

It was with this force and in alliance with the more middle class Irish
volunteers that Connolly prepared for the uprising. He had no illusions
about its immediate success. According to William O'Brien, on the day of
the insurrection Connolly said to him: "We are going out to be
slaughtered." He said "Is there no chance of success?" and Connolly replied
"None whatsoever."

Connolly understood that the tradition and the example created would be
immortal and would lay the basis for future freedom and a future Irish
Socialist Republic. In that lay his greatness. What a difference from the
craven traitors of the German Socialist and Communist and Trade Union
leaders who despite having three million armed workers supporting them, and
with the sympathy and support of the overwhelming majority of the German
working class (ready to fight and die, capitulated to Hitler without firing
a shot.

Having said this, it is necessary to see not only the greatness of
Connolly, sprung from the Irish workers, one of the greatest sons of the
English speaking working class, and the effect of the uprising in preparing
for the expulsion, at least in the Southern part of Ireland of the direct
domination of British imperialism, but also the faults of both.

There was no attempt to call a general strike and thus paralyse the British
Army. There was no real organisation or preparation of the armed struggle.
No propaganda was conducted among the British troops to gain their sympathy
and support. The leaders of the middle class Irish Volunteers were split.
One of the leaders Eoin MacNeill countermanding orders for "mobilisation"
and for "manoeuvres" and in the confusion only part of the Volunteers,
joined with the Irish Citizens Army in the insurrection. Thus at the last
minute the insurrection was betrayed by the vacillation of the middle class
leaders, as they have betrayed many times in Irish history and in the
history of other countries.

The British occupying troops suppressed the insurrection and then savagely
executed its leaders, including the leader of the insurrection James
Connolly, who was already badly wounded.

Connolly was murdered, but in the last analysis, British imperialism really
suffered defeat.

Nowadays all sections of Irish society in the 26 counties hypocritically
give support to the "brave and undying heroism of Connolly." The Irish
capitalists pretend to honour him. Connolly would have split contemptuously
in their faces. He fought them, ever since he attained manhood, in the
interests of the Irish workers and of International Socialism. But his most
withered contempt would have been reserved for those in the Labour
movement, including the leaders of the Labour Party and of the so-called
Communist Parties, and of the various sects claiming to speak in the name
of Irish Labour, who fifty years after Easter 1916, have not understood
that unity of the Irish workers North and South can only be obtained by
conducting the struggle on a class basis for an Irish Socialist Republic,
in indissoluble unity with the British workers in their struggle for a
British democratic Socialist Republic.

April 1966.

-----------------

James Connolly and the Easter
Rising<http://www.marxist.com/james-connolly-easter-rising.htm>
Written by Alan Woods and Ted GrantSaturday, 14 April 2001
[image: 
Print]<http://www.marxist.com/james-connolly-easter-rising/print.htm>[image:
E-mail]<http://www.marxist.com/component/option,com_mailto/link,962632ddada315b7d39ed82a0d82f36935bda8fb/tmpl,component/>
 This Easter marks the 85th anniversary of the 1916 Easter Rising in Dublin
(Ireland) against British imperialist rule. The outstanding leader of that
movement was James Connolly. There have been many attempts to portray him
simply as an Irish nationalist. But Connolly was, first and foremost, a
militant workers' leader and a Marxist. He alone in the annals of the
British and Irish Labour Movement succeeded in developing the ideas of
Marxism.

Born in 1868 into a poor family in Edinburgh, James Connolly was a genuine
proletarian. His working life commenced at the age of ten. All his life he
lived and breathed the world of the working class, shared in its trials and
tribulations, suffered from its defeats and exulted in its victories.
Connolly was a self-educated man who became a brilliant speaker and writer.
He alone in the annals of the British and Irish Labour Movement succeeded
in developing the ideas of Marxism.

On the basis of a careful study of the writings of Marx and Engels, he
developed an independent standpoint and made an original contribution. Even
more remarkably, he did this without the benefit of direct contact with the
other outstanding Marxist thinkers of the time: Lenin, Trotsky or Luxemburg.

>From the first, Connolly had to contend with the same problems that
blighted the existence of the rest of his class: dire and unrelieved
poverty, which at times made it all but impossible for him to feed his
family. But nothing could deter him from his chosen path. With unceasing
vigour and absolute single-mindedness, Connolly fought for socialism. The
programme of the Irish Socialist Republican Party, written by Connolly, was
not a nationalist but a socialist programme based upon:

"Establishment of AN IRISH SOCIALIST REPUBLIC based on the public ownership
by the Irish people of the land, and instruments of production,
distribution and exchange. Agriculture to be administered as a public
function, under boards of management elected by the agricultural population
and responsible to them and to the nation at large. All other forms of
labour necessary to the well-being of the community to be conducted on the
same principles."

Connolly was, first and foremost, a militant workers' leader. The Irish
Transport and General Workers' Union (ITGWU), under the leadership of
Larkin and Connolly, led the stormy wave of class struggle that shook
Ireland to its foundations in the years before 1914. Rarely have these
Islands seen such a level of bitter class conflict. This affected not only
Dublin but also Belfast, where Connolly succeeded in uniting Catholic and
Protestant workers in struggle against the employers. In October 1911 he
led the famous Belfast Textile workers strike and organised the workers of
that sector - predominately low-paid and very exploited women.

The wave of strikes was countered by the employers in the notorious Dublin
lockout of 1913. Here we saw the real face of the Irish bourgeoisie:
grasping, repressive, reactionary. The Dublin bosses, organised by William
Martin Murphy, the chairman of the Employers' Federation and owner of the
Irish Independent newspaper, set out to crush the workers and their
organisations. The ITGWU replied by blacking Murphy's newspapers, and he
retaliated by locking out all ITGWU members.

The issue of class unity runs like a red thread through all the writings
and speeches of Connolly: "Perhaps they will see that the landlord who
grinds his peasants on a Connemara estate, and the landlord who rack-rents
them in a Cowgate slum, are brethren in fact and deed. Perhaps they will
realise that the Irish worker who starves in an Irish cabin and the Scots
worker who is poisoned in an Edinburgh garret are brothers with one hope
and destiny." (C.D. Greaves, James Connolly, p. 61.)

Throughout the lockout, Larkin and Connolly repeatedly appealed to the
class solidarity of the British workers. They addressed mass rallies in
England, Scotland and Wales, which were also the scene of big class battles
in the years before the war. The appeal of the Irish workers did not fall
on deaf ears. Their cause was enthusiastically supported by the rank and
file of the British movement, although the right wing Labour leaders were
preparing to ditch the Irish workers as soon as the opportunity presented
itself. Despite the solidarity and sympathy of the workers of Britain, the
trade union leaders refused to organise solidarity strikes, the only way
that victory could have been achieved. In the end, the workers were starved
back to work. Bitterly, Connolly noted:

"And so we Irish workers must again go down to Hell, bow our backs to the
last of the slave drivers, let our hearts be seared by the iron of his
hatred and instead of the sacramental wafer of brotherhood and common
sacrifice, eat the dust of defeat and betrayal. Dublin is isolated." (p. 23)

*The Citizen's Army*

In the years preceding World War One, the British ruling class was facing
revolutionary developments in Ireland and in Britain. In order to head off
the danger of revolution, they resorted to the "Orange card". Lord Carson
organised and armed the hooligans of the Belfast slums in the Ulster
Volunteers, pledged to resist Irish Home Rule by force. When the Liberal
government in London contemplated using the British army in Ireland, they
were met with the "mutiny at the Curragh". Connolly remained firm in the
face of the sectarian madness. He organised a Labour demonstration under
the auspices of the ITGWU, "the only union that allows no bigotry in its
ranks." In answer to the sectarians and religious bigots, he declared class
war, issuing his famous manifesto: "To the Linen Slaves of Belfast".

In order to protect themselves against the brutal attacks of police and
hired thugs of the employers, the workers set up their own defence force:
the Irish Citizens' Army (ICA). This was the first time in these Islands
that workers had organised themselves on an armed basis to defend
themselves against the common enemy: the bosses and the scabs. The latter,
it should be remembered, were much more numerous than at the present time,
as a result of the widespread conditions of poverty and despair. The two
main leaders were Connolly (himself an ex-soldier) and Captain Jack J.
White DSO - a Protestant Ulsterman. But Connolly saw the ICA not only as a
defence force, but as a revolutionary army, dedicated to the overthrow of
capitalism and imperialism. He wrote:

"An armed organisation of the Irish working class is a phenomenon in
Ireland. Hitherto, the workers of Ireland have fought as parts of the
armies led by their masters, never as a member of any army officered,
trained, and inspired by men of their own class. Now, with arms in their
hands, they propose to steer their own course, to carve their own future."
(Workers Republic, 30 October 1915)

As we see from these lines, Connolly envisaged the ICA in class terms, as
an organisation organically linked to the mass organisations of the
proletariat. It was funded out of the subscriptions of the members of the
union, and its activities were organised from Liberty Hall, the
headquarters of the ITGWU in Dublin. The Citizens Army drilled and paraded
openly on the streets of Dublin for several years before 1916. Here was no
secret organisation engaged in the methods of individual terrorism, but a
genuine workers' militia: the first workers' Red Army in Europe.

Unfortunately, the movement in the direction of revolution in Ireland was
rudely cut across by the outbreak of the First World War. In August 1914,
despite all the resolutions passed by the congresses of the Socialist
International, every one of the leaderships of the Social Democratic
Parties betrayed the cause of socialist internationalism and voted for the
War. The only honourable exceptions were the Russians, the Serbs - and the
Irish. Right from the start, Connolly adopted an unswerving
internationalist stance, which was, in all fundamentals, identical with the
position adopted by Lenin.

Commenting on the betrayal of the leaders of the Socialist International,
he wrote in Forward (15 August, 1914):

"What then becomes of all our resolutions; all our protests of
fraternisation; all our threats of general strikes; all our carefully built
machinery of internationalism; all our hopes for the future?"

And he reached the same conclusion as Lenin. In answer to the kind of
pacifism that was the hallmark of Labour Lefts such as Ramsay MacDonald (at
that time) and the leaders of the ILP, he wrote:

"A great continental uprising of the working class would stop the war; a
universal protest at public meetings would not save a single life from
being wantonly slaughtered."

Connolly was not just a socialist, not just a revolutionary: he was an
internationalist to the marrow of his bones.

*The Easter Rising*

>From the start of the War, Connolly was virtually isolated.
Internationally, he had no contact. Outside of Ireland, the Labour Movement
seemed to be as silent as the grave. True, there were symptoms of a revival
in Britain, with the Glasgow rent strike of 1915. But Connolly feared that
the workers of Britain would move too late. The idea of an uprising had
clearly been taking shape in Connolly's mind. The threat that Britain would
introduce conscription into Ireland was the main issue that concentrated
the mind, not only of Connolly, but also of the petit bourgeois
nationalists of the Irish Volunteers. Connolly therefore pressed them to
enter a militant alliance with Labour for an armed uprising against British
imperialism. In the event, the leaders of the Volunteers withdrew at the
last movement, leaving the Rising in the lurch.

Was Connolly right to move when he did? The question is a difficult one.
The conditions were frankly unfavourable. Although there were strikes in
Ireland right up to the outbreak of the Rising, the Irish working class had
been exhausted and weakened by the exertions of the lockout. There were
rumours that the British authorities were planning to arrest the leading
Irish revolutionaries. Connolly finally decided to throw everything into
the balance. He drew the conclusion that it was better to strike first. He
aimed to strike a blow that would break the ice and show the way, even at
the cost of his own life. To fight and lose was preferable than to accept
and capitulate. When Connolly marched out of Liberty Hall for the last time
that fateful morning, he whispered to a comrade: "We are going out to be
slaughtered." When the latter asked him: "Is there no chance of success?"
he replied: "None whatever."

Connolly was undoubtedly a giant. His actions were those of a genuine
revolutionary, unlike the craven conduct of the Labour leaders who backed
the imperialist slaughter - with the enthusiastic support of the Irish
bourgeois nationalists. Yet he also made some mistakes. There is no point
in denying it, although some people wish to make Connolly into a saint -
while simultaneously ditching or distorting his ideas. There were serious
weaknesses in the Rising itself. No attempt was made to call a general
strike. On Monday 24, 1916, the Dublin trams were still running, and most
people went about their business. No appeal was made to the British
soldiers.

Only 1,500 members of the Dublin Volunteers and ICA answered the call to
rise. The nationalists had already split between the Redmondites - the
Parliamentary Irish Group - who backed the War, and the left wing. However,
on the eve of the Rising, the leader of the Volunteers, Eoin MacNeil
publicly instructed all members to refuse to come out. As so many times
before and since, the nationalist bourgeoisie betrayed the cause of Ireland.

The behaviour of the nationalist leaders came as no surprise to Connolly,
who always approached the national liberation struggle from a class point
of view. He never had any trust in the bourgeois and petit bourgeois
Republicans, and tirelessly worked to build an independent movement of the
working class as the only guarantee for the re conquest of Ireland. Since
his death there have been many attempts to erase his real identity as a
revolutionary socialist and present him as just one more nationalist. This
is utterly false. One week before the Rising he warned the Citizens Army:
"The odds against us are a thousand to one. But if we should win, hold onto
your rifles because the Volunteers may have a different goal. Remember, we
are not only for political liberty, but for economic liberty as well."

>From a military point of view the Rising was doomed in advance - although
if the Volunteers had not stabbed it in the back, the Uprising could have
had far greater success. As it was, the British used artillery to batter
the GPO (the rebel centre) into submission. By Thursday night, after four
days of heroic resistance against the most frightful odds, the rebels were
compelled to sign an unconditional surrender.

Although the Rising itself ended in failure, it left behind a tradition of
struggle that had far-reaching consequences. It was this that probably
Connolly had in mind. In particular the savagery of the British army, which
shot all the leaders of the Rising in cold blood after a farcical drumhead
trial, caused a wave of revulsion throughout all Ireland. James Connolly,
who was badly wounded and unable to stand, was shot strapped to a chair.
But the British had miscalculated. The gunshots that ended the life of this
great martyr of the working class aroused a new generation of fighters
eager to revenge Ireland's wrongs.

The Easter Rising was like a tocsin bell, the echoes of which rang
throughout Europe. After two years of imperialist slaughter, at last the
ice was broken! A courageous word had been spoken, and could be heard above
the din of the bombs and cannon-fire. Lenin received the news of the
uprising enthusiastically. This was understandable, given his position. The
War posed tremendous difficulties for the Marxist internationalists. Lenin
was isolated with a small group of supporters. On all sides there was
capitulation and betrayal. The class struggle was temporarily in abeyance.
The Labour leaders were participating in coalition governments with the
social-patriots. The events in Dublin completely cut across this. That is
why Lenin was so enthusiastic about the uprising. But he also pointed out:

"The misfortune of the Irish is that they have risen prematurely when the
European revolt of the proletariat has not yet matured. Capitalism is not
so harmoniously built that the various springs of rebellion can of
themselves merge at one effort without reverses and defeats."

Had the Rising occurred a couple of years later, it would not have been
isolated. It would have had powerful reserves in the shape of the mass
revolutionary movement that swept through Europe after the October
Revolution in 1917. But Connolly was not to know this.

*Importance of leadership*

Some sorry ex-Marxists criticised the Easter Rising from a right wing
standpoint, such as Plekhanov. In an article in Nashe Slovo dated 4 July
1916, Trotsky denounced Plekhanov's remarks about the Rising as "wretched
and shameful" and added: "the experience of the Irish national uprising is
over....the historical role of the Irish proletariat is just beginning."

Unfortunately, this prediction was falsified by history. The tragedy of the
Irish working class was that, unlike Lenin, Connolly did not create a
revolutionary Marxist party, armed with theory, that would have carried on
his work after his death. This was his biggest mistake, and one which had
the most tragic consequences. In the same way that the murder of Rosa
Luxemburg and Karl Liebknecht later beheaded the German revolution, so the
killing of Connolly removed any chance of the Irish working class leading
the revolutionary movement against British imperialism. This was a heavy
price to pay!

Connolly had created the Irish Labour Party, with a solid base in the trade
unions and the working class. In effect, it was the workers of the Irish
Citizens Army who had led the Easter Rising, not the petit bourgeois
Volunteers. In fact, Sinn Fein played NO role in the uprising, while the
Irish bourgeois nationalists openly betrayed it.

Yet, when Connolly was removed from the picture, it was the bourgeois and
petit bourgeois nationalists who took advantage of the situation to seize
control of the movement. Tragically, the leaders of the Irish Labour Party,
lacking Connolly's grounding in Marxism, proved to be hopelessly inadequate
to the tasks posed by history. Instead of maintaining Connolly's fight for
an independent class policy, they tail ended the nationalists, standing
down in their favour in the general election after the War.

Under the leadership of the bourgeois and petit bourgeois nationalists, the
movement was side-tracked into a guerrilla struggle, and then betrayed.
Fearful of the prospect of revolution, the rotten Irish bourgeoisie reached
an agreement with London to divide the living body of Ireland. All
Connolly's warnings about the treacherous role of the bourgeoisie were
confirmed by the terrible events surrounding partition. The legacy of this
betrayal is still with us today.

For the last 85 years, the Irish bourgeois and petit bourgeois nationalists
have demonstrated their complete incapacity for solving the tasks of the
Irish national liberation struggle. In 1922, the bourgeois leaders signed
the partition of Ireland. This problem cannot be solved on a capitalist
basis. For the last 30 years the Provisional IRA have been trying to solve
the problem by a senseless campaign of bombing and shooting. These tactics
of individual terrorism have absolutely nothing in common with the methods
of Connolly and the Citizens Army, which were always based on class
politics and organically linked to the proletariat and the mass workers
organisations.

What have these methods achieved after 30 years? Over three thousand
deaths; the destruction of a whole generation of Irish youth; the splitting
of the population of the North into two hostile camps; a terrible legacy of
sectarian bitterness. And with what result? Has the border question been
solved? Let us speak clearly: After three decades of so-called armed
struggle, the cause of Irish reunification is further away today than at
any other time. Ignominiously, the leaders of the Provisionals have
capitulated for the sake of a few paltry ministerial portfolios. Nothing
has been solved for either Catholics or Protestants.

This is the terrible legacy of decades of individual terrorism and the
total lack of any class or socialist perspective. True, there was a serious
division in the past between Catholics and Protestants in Northern Ireland.
But now in place of division we have a yawning abyss. Yet none of this
would have been necessary if Connolly's ideas and methods had prevailed.

In his lifetime, Connolly always fought for the unity of the working class
above all national and religious lines. By concentrating on class issues,
he succeeded in uniting the Catholic and Protestant workers in the struggle
against their common enemy - the employing class. That is the only way to
get out of the present mess. The only way to solve what remains of
Ireland's national problem is as a by-product of the revolutionary struggle
for socialism. That was true in Connolly's day. And it remains true today.
There can be no reunification of Ireland while the working class remains
divided along sectarian lines.

The socialist revolution in the North is inextricably linked to the
perspective of socialist revolution in the South - and in Britain. In other
words, it can only be solved with a proletarian and internationalist
policy. There is still a ray of hope in the North of Ireland. Despite
everything, the fundamental organisations of the working class - the trade
unions - remain united. They are probably the only real non-sectarian mass
organisations that still exist. This is the base upon which we can build!
That would undoubtedly be the message of James Connolly, were he alive at
this time.

Eighty five years later, it is necessary to cut through all the fog of
historical fantasy and nationalist mystification that surrounds the events
of Easter Week, and see the key role of the proletariat. What a great
opportunity was missed with the death of James Connolly! But the new
generation must take the lesson to heart. Connolly failed because he did
not create - as Lenin created - the necessary instrument with which to
change society: a revolutionary party and a revolutionary leadership!

Today we pledge ourselves to defend the heritage of this great Marxist,
fighter, and martyr of the working class. We must rescue the ideas of
Connolly which have been stolen and distorted beyond recognition by people
who have nothing to do with Connolly, socialism or the working class. We
must continue the fight for Connolly's ideas - the only ideas that can
guarantee the ultimate victory. We must create the necessary revolutionary
organisation, soundly based on the programme, policy and methods of
Marxism. And we must understand that such an organisation must be firmly
based in the only soil in which it can grow and flourish: the trade unions
and the mass organisations of Labour in Ireland, North and South, as well
as on the other side of the Irish Sea.

The Easter Rising was a glorious harbinger of what is still to come. The
job was left unfinished in 1916. The task now falls upon our shoulders.
Armed with the ideas of Marx, Engels, Lenin, Trotsky - and Connolly - we
shall not fail!


[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



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