Gerry Adams' Easter Speech 2010, Milltown Cemetery, Belfast.
A chairde,
Tá mé lán sásta seasamh anseo libh inniu ar Domhnach na Cásca seo le smaoineadh
ar ár gcomrádaithe a chuaigh romhainn agus a caint faoi an todhcaí.
Is cuimhin linn an méid a thug ár laochrai cróga ar son saoirse na tire seo, an
méid a chaill siad.
Cuidíonn seo linn nuair a bhíonn fadhbanna againn nó nuair a bhíonn muid
traochta.
I want to welcome you all here today.
Easter Sunday is a special day. Especially
here in Belfast.
It is a day to remember, to honour, and to celebrate all those republicans of
our generation and other generations who gave their lives in the struggle for
Irish freedom and justice.
Belfast republicans are proud of our patriot dead; we are proud of their
families; we are proud of our struggle and we are proud of our history.
Belfast is where the United Irish men and women committed to ending the
connection with Britain.
This is the city where James Connolly organised the working men and women, and
particularly the women against sweat shop exploitation.
In 1916 he went from the Falls Road to join with the Irish Volunteers, the Irish Citizen Army, Cumann na mBan and Na Fianna to take on the might of the British Empire.
This is the city where Sean MacDiarmada joined the Irish Republican Brotherhood.
This is the city where Countess Markievicz founded Na Fianna hÉireann.
This is the city visited often by Padraig Pearse and the leaders of the 1916
Rising as they worked with County Antrim gaeilgeoirí and home rulers
before going on to become republicans.
This is the city of Maire Drumm and of other brave Sinn Féin activists.
The city of Mairead Farrell and Dorothy Maguire and
all the other patriotic women of our time.
Sa chathair seo a lásadh splanc na saoirse. Tá sé beo, briomhar ann go foill.
This is the city of Bobby Sands and Joe McDonnell and Ciaran Doherty and all
their brave freedom fighting comrades of the Irish Republican Army.
We honour them all.
In particular we honour those who lie in these republican plots and in this
cemetery.
They are not just heroes and heroines. They are our friends, our comrades, our
neighbours, our family members.
Like the men and women of 1916 they knew the dangers they faced; the military
capacity of the British state, and the subservience of sections of the Irish
political establishment and media.
But they were determined to bring about change.
To end centuries of British involvement in Ireland and to construct a
republic in which citizens would be treated fairly and equitably.
That goal is not yet achieved.
Ireland is still partitioned. Economic recession north and south means that
nearly half a million citizens are out of work.
But the Irish government, as we saw again this week, continues to bail out its friends and cronies in the banking system and the golden circle of property developers and speculators.
NAMA gets precedence over citizens while our public services are slashed and poverty and emigration increases.
There is no more urgent time than this to promote our republican politics of
equality and respect and dignity.
Tá muintir na fiche sé chontae feargach, tuigeann muid sin.
Tá muid feargach fosta mar is pháirthí muidinne a bhfuil lonnaithe I measc na ndaoine, sna phobail ar fud na tire seo.
There is no better time to be demanding that citizens have the right to a home;
to a safe environment; to good quality education and health care; and to a job.
There is no better time than this to campaign for a
united
Ireland.
Republican Belfast and this generation of Irish republicans is stronger, more
experienced and better supported than at any other time in the history of our
city.
And Irish reunification and republican politics have never been more clearly in
demand to advance and defend peoples’ rights.
I believed that when I joined the Republican struggle in the 1960s.
I believe it today.
Over 40 years ago, in the summer of 1969, progressive citizens of Belfast made
a stand against the Orange state and in support of the beleaguered people of
Derry. I was there.
I was also in Ballymurphy in 1970 when citizens there engaged in one of the
first acts of mass resistance since partition.
And in all the time since then many ordinary people made extraordinary
sacrifices and displayed great courage in pursuit of freedom and justice and
Irish unity.
I am proud to have been part of all that.
During this phase of the struggle some of us had to leave our families and
homes, go on the run, adapt many ruses, go under false names.
We relied totally on the support of the people to protect
us.
And we, in turn, protected the people as best we could.
We did not divulge their names, their roles, their
actions.
That is still my position. That was the bond of comradeship and loyalty which
was forged between us.
And let no one think that I will bend to the demands
of anti-republican elements or their allies in a hostile section of the media
on this issue.
I am also very conscious of the human cost of the war and the great hurt
inflicted by republicans.
I have acknowledged this and my regret for this many times. And I do so again today.
There are victims and citizens who want to know the truth about what happened
to loved ones during the conflict.
That is their right. I cannot demand truth for victims of British terrorism, collusion or unionist error without supporting the same right for victims of republican actions.
That is why Sinn Féin supports the establishment of an effective
independent and international truth recovery process.
I certainly would be prepared to be part of such a
process and I would encourage others to participate.
I am glad the war is over.
Any post conflict phase – any transition is bound to be difficult.
For all survivors, victims, former combatants.
The war should never be glamourised or repeated.
But neither should the republican involvement in it –
the Army’s involvement, the involvement our patriot dead – be permitted by us
to be criminalised or retrospectively delegitimised.
This is bigger than me. This is about us as a republican community, especially
in this city of Belfast.
This is about our integrity and the just nature of our cause.
That is why the Irish Republican Army – Oglaigh na hEireann- was known as the peoples army.
I am proud of that Army and my association with it.
I am not a militarist and I never have been but without the IRA the nationalist people of this state would still be on our knees.
We would still be second class citizens.
So bear in mind that this relentless campaign against me is not really
about me at all. It’s about trying to defeat the struggle.
Tá muid cleachtaithe leis na h’ionsaithe seo. Níl rud nua é. Ach I gcónai seas
muid an fhód na cúise le chéile.
During the war the might of British militarism and its unionist allies in the
death squads could not defeat the republican people of this city.
The millions spent on black propaganda, the lies and smears and
disinformation and the efforts to criminalise our struggle all failed.
Republicans stayed focussed and strong and united.
We stuck with our republican principles.
We perservered. We strategised and planned.
And the peoples army – the IRA - was an
undefeated army when it took brave decisions to support the Sinn Féin peace
strategy and to create the present opportunities for a new future.
This society, the citizens of this island would not be in the new place, a
better place particularly here in the North, but for the dedication and
determination of republicans.
So this campaign against me, against us, by the Irish News and Sunday Times, Tribune and others is not new.
They did it during the hunger strikes; they did when I first stood for
election and in every election since; they did when I was involved in talks
with John Hume; they did it constantly throughout the negotiations and the
peace process.
It is about stopping our development.
So our immediate focus as republican activists is to mobilise and win the
biggest republican vote in the Westminster election next month.
Building political strength and winning more and more people over to Irish
republicanism is the best way to ensure the full implementation of the Good Friday and St. Andrews Agreement and in
particular of their all-Ireland elements.
The key to this is leadership.
And Sinn Fein has a tried, experienced and trusted leadership. In early March we demonstrated that by concluding an
agreement at Hillsborough with the DUP.
We did this by making the two governments and the DUP face up to their
political responsibilities.
Under this Agreement powers on policing and justice will be transferred next
week.
There will also be the transfer of powers from London to Belfast to deal with
the issue of parades.
More powers moving from England to Ireland.
Irish language rights will also be delivered on and there is additional
funding for the language.
Tá níos mó le déanamh againn ach tá Sinn Féin go h’iomlán dírithe cearta na
nGael a chuir chun tosaigh in achan rud a dhéanann muid.
This Agreement is a staging post.
More change is necessary but it is proof that change
is possible and that the process is ongoing.
And that change is also evident every day in the efforts of our activists
across this island to get investment in public services, in education and
roads and rural communities.
In our defence of the elderly, our efforts to secure jobs, and houses and environmental improvements and much more.
Sinn Féin is doing all this by standing up to the governments.
By standing up for the rights of citizens.
And by making clear to the unionist parties that while we are a partner in
government we are no push over.
We want to work with unionists.
This party is more active on grassroots issues in working class unionist areas of this city than at any time in my lifetime.
We take seriously our republican heritage which embraces the radical
Presbyterian tradition of the United Irish Society.
And we are serious also about wanting to make friends with unionists based on
tolerance, respect and equality.
This great, proud party believes that a free, independent and United Ireland
makes political and economic sense.
We have embarked on a national and international campaign to bring this about.
We determined and resolute and confident of success.
This years Ard Fheis cleared the way for everyone who wants to, to join Sinn
Féin on your own terms.
So I am appealing to everyone here to become a Shinner and to take a stand for freedom, peace and justice.
Join Sinn Féin and build a new Ireland, an Ireland the signatories of 1916 and
those republicans we remember today, would
be proud of.
Join with us in the fight for jobs, for peace, for equality, for unity.
Join with us we make peace with former enemies, and as we seek to achieve our
primary goal of Irish unity and freedom.
And finally my friends let us send a message of solidarity to the people of Gaza.
Let us send a message to the Israeli government.
Stop the war against Palestine. Build the peace.
Bígí linn.
ends