‘Scotland and the Easter Rising’ edited by Glasgow
University Professor of English Literature Willy Maley and doctoral candidate
Kirsty Lusk to be published later this month, reveal the connections between
Scotland and the six-day armed uprising. Central to the book is the story of
James Connolly, born in the Cowgate area of Edinburgh to Irish immigrant
parents, who was Commandant General of the Republican forces during Easter Week
1916 and was a signatory to the Proclamation of the Irish Republic. When the
Rising eventually failed Connolly, who was seriously injured in the fighting,
was rounded up with others and executed by a British firing squad.
Margaret Skinnider, suffragette, born in Coatbridge,
Lanarkshire, is another republican sympathiser who features heavily in the
book. She served as a scout, dispatch-rider, sniper and raider in the Rising. Skinnider
was the only female combatant injured in action during the battle. Skinnider,
a 23-year-old Scottish teacher, became convinced of the need for Irish
independence during childhood holidays. Skinnider hid bomb detonators beneath
her hat as she travelled by ferry to Dublin in 1915 and once there became
involved in preparations for the Rising.
Lusk notes: “Skinnider had joined a rifle club in Glasgow,
one of many set up, ironically, to train women in case they were required to
defend Britain, and she proved herself a better shot than any of the boys when
taken to a local shooting gallery. Skinnider took a spot in the rafters of the
Royal College of Surgeons to fight as a sniper against the British soldiers
placed at the Shelbourne Hotel. ‘More than once I saw the man I aimed at fall,’
she recounts.”
Maley remarks in the article “I believe that the Easter
Rising still has important lessons to teach us...”
Indeed, it does…lessons on what not
to do in the advance of socialist ideas.
The late Ian Bell in his article asked why Connolly was absent from
debates leading up to the 2014 Scottish independence referendum. He certainly
wasn’t forgotten by Socialist Courier blog-posts as a search of our archives
would demonstrate and was cited when we pointed out the futility of
nationalism.
No comments:
Post a Comment