The Irish Times - Thursday, August 23, 2012

Kenny admits Lenin error

MARY MINIHAN

THE TAOISEACH has admitted he made a mistake in his oration at the annual Béal 
na Blá commemoration when he said Michael Collins brought Vladimir Lenin to 
Ireland.

In his address last Sunday, Enda Kenny described Collins as an “outstanding 
organiser who brought Lenin himself to Ireland to see how the National Loan 
worked”.

The “republican loan” or “Dáil bonds” scheme was launched in 1919, two years 
after the Bolshevik revolution in Russia.

A spokesman for Mr Kenny yesterday said an error had survived the speech 
drafting process.

“The script contained an inaccurate reference which was not picked up in 
advance. It mistakenly stated Lenin came to Ireland but should have stated it 
brought Lenin’s attention to Ireland to see how the National Loan worked.”

Mr Kenny has previously been described as the “chief architect” of all his 
speeches.

Some users of social media sites highlighted the inaccuracy at the beginning of 
this week. Irish Times columnist Vincent Browne noted it in his column in 
yesterday’s newspaper, saying Mr Kenny had made an “extraordinary claim” since 
Lenin was never in Ireland.

An academic expert on Lenin, Limerick-born Dr James Ryan, who is a postdoctoral 
fellow at the University of Warwick in England, confirmed that the leader of 
the Soviet Union wrote about Ireland but never visited. “He was never in 
Ireland. I’m about as certain as I can be that the furthest west he got was 
London and when he came to power, he didn’t leave Russia,” Dr Ryan said. “Lenin 
wrote about Ireland quite a bit. He followed events such as the 1913 lockout 
and the 1916 Rising.”

However, Lenin was said to have spoken English with an Irish accent, according 
to James Connolly’s son Roddy Connolly, who met Lenin in Petrograd in 1920 and 
heard his “Rathmines” accent – perhaps as a result of a language tutor from 
that Dublin neighbourhood.

When Mr Kenny delivered his Dáil speech attacking the Vatican’s role in 
covering up clerical child sex abuse cases in July 2011, a Government 
spokeswoman said: “The Taoiseach is the chief architect of all his speeches, 
with the assistance of a number of people in his office.”
_______________________________________________
pen-l mailing list
[email protected]
https://lists.csuchico.edu/mailman/listinfo/pen-l

Reply via email to