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Ireland's greatest revolutionary May 11, 2007 | Page 10
SHAUN HARKIN tells the story of the Irish Marxist and revolutionary James Connolly.
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JAMES CONNOLLY was executed by a British firing squad on May 12, 1916, in Dublin City along with other leaders of what became known as the Irish Easter Rising. At his court martial trial, Connolly described the aim of the action: "We went out to break the connection between this country and the British Empire, and to establish an Irish Republic."
Today, Ireland's political establishment canonizes Connolly as a great "Irish patriot." And yes, Connolly certainly did believe in Ireland's right to self-determination.
However, the Republic of Ireland's elites--basking in the new riches of the U.S.-modeled "Celtic Tiger" economy--would feel ill at ease in Connolly's company. As he prophetically warned:
James Connolly's masterpiece as a writer was Labour in Irish History, an account of conditions and working-class struggle in Ireland. A collection of his writings can be found in James Connolly: Selected Writings. Many of these articles are available at the James Connolly Internet Archive.
For biographies of Connolly, look for The Life and Times of James Connolly, by C. Desmond Greaves; The Politics of James Connolly, by Kieran Allen; and John Newsinger's Rebel City: Larkin, Connolly and the Dublin Labour Movement.
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Lacking formal education, Connolly nevertheless equipped himself with a wide knowledge of history and Marxist theory to become a socialist propagandist and working-class intellectual of the first order.
Victimized for his political activity in Scotland, Connolly moved to Ireland, where he began organizing the Dublin Socialist Club in 1896, quickly transforming it into the Irish Socialist Republican Party (ISRP). The ISRP produced the first regular socialist paper in Ireland, the Workers' Republic, ran candidates in local elections and represented Ireland in the Second International alliance of socialist organizations.
The party rose to prominence through a spectacular campaign to ruin Queen Victoria's Diamond Jubilee visit in 1897. Activists made a large black coffin, inscribed with the words "British Empire." On Connolly's suggestion, marchers threw the coffin in Dublin's River Liffey and shouted, "Here goes the British Empire. To hell with the British Empire!" Connolly was arrested, and the protesters were baton-charged off the streets by police, but the world had learned that Dublin was "disloyal."
At the same time, according to biographer C. Desmond Greaves, "[E]ducational work was intensified, and indoor lectures on the Communist Manifesto and 'revolutionary socialism' proceeded to their logical culmination on March 12, when Connolly lectured on the Paris Commune."
Connolly's unique contribution to Marxism comes from his assertion that the struggle for national liberation and socialism were inseparable.
Socialists in the colonies, he argued, should lead the struggle for national liberation. Such a revolt in the colonies, he argued, could speed up the process of revolution in economically advanced countries because denying access to markets "precipitates economic crises there, and so gives an impulse to revolutionary thought."
Connolly broke from the conventional elitist notion that socialists in impoverished colonies had to "hold off" the struggle for workers' power until capitalism was fully developed there.
At the same time, he challenged the idea that revolution should be left to secret nationalist conspiratorial groups:
Connolly worked with advanced Irish Nationalists, but also challenged their strategy of appealing for the "unity" of the Irish people, arguing instead that only working-class struggle could fully end British rule. The Irish rich, Connolly argued, "have a thousand economic strings in the shape of investments binding them to English capitalism, as against every historical attachment drawing them towards Irish patriotism; only the Irish working class remain as the incorruptible inheritors of the fight for Irish freedom."
Connolly adamantly opposed Loyalist ideas among Protestant workers, but fought to create a space where Catholic and Protestant workers could unite on the basis of class politics. He was sharply aware of why Protestant workers accepted sectarian ideas, but argued:
On the question of the partition of Ireland into two separate states, Connolly, though he did not live to see it, was again remarkably perceptive. He argued it would "mean a carnival of reaction both North and South, would set back the wheels of progress, and destroy the oncoming unity of the Irish labor movement, and would paralyze all advanced movements, whilst it endured."
In fact, after partition took place in 1921, the ruling elites used Orangeism in the North and nationalism in the South to cement conservative pro-business politics and institutionalize sectarian divisions between Protestant and Catholic workers. Today, Rev. Ian Paisley, the Loyalist bigot who is set to become Northern Ireland's "first minister" embodies the "carnival of reaction" Connolly warned about.
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Connolly returned to Ireland a committed revolutionary syndicalist. He believed in building "One Big Union" and that "[e]very fresh shop or factory organized under the control of industrial unions is a fort wrenched from the control of the capitalist class, and manned with the soldiers of the Revolution to be held by them for the workers."
Connolly put his ideas into practice as an organizer for the Irish Transport and General Workers Union (ITGWU). Along with James Larkin, he led one of Ireland's hardest-fought labor struggles, known as the Great Dublin Lockout of 1913-14.
Unfortunately, despite a heroic effort, the ITGWU went down to a brutal defeat. This tragedy was followed by another in 1914--when the international socialist movement collapsed into support for the warring imperial powers in the First World War.
"The signal for war ought to have been the signal of rebellion," Connolly wrote. "[W]hen the bugle sounded the first note of actual war, their notes should have been taken as the tocsin for social revolution."
Faced with the defeat of the Irish labor movement and the collapse of socialist parties internationally, Connolly could have easily succumbed to demoralization.
Instead, he held on to an internationalist spirit, and attempted to act by striking a blow against the British Empire. This desperate context is how Connolly's role in the 1916 Rising should be understood. He hoped revolt in Ireland could act as a catalyst to encourage the reemergence of European socialist opposition to the war:
The Easter Rising was isolated and defeated. Though the rebels succeeded in taking over key locations in Dublin and declaring an Irish Republic, the rebellion was suppressed after six days of fighting. Its leaders, including Connolly, were captured, put on trial and executed.
But Connolly was correct in thinking that the crisis of the war could be channeled into revolt. In 1917, 10,000 workers rallied in Dublin to show their support for the Russian Revolution, and that year marked the beginning of a radical upsurge in Ireland that lasted until 1923.
James Connolly was an exceptional working-class fighter and anti-imperialist--and his ideas and actions continue to be a source of inspiration today.
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