|
Chicago
Hunger Strike Commemoration Committee

Testimonial Dinner in Memory of the 1981
Hunger Strike
August 12th, 2006 - Chicago, IL
Click here for Photos (coming
soon)
Chairman's address
Statements from POWs
On Saturday August 12, 2006 the Chicago Hunger Strike
Commemoration Committee, a diverse group of Irish Republicans from the
Midwest and across America, gathered in Chicago to respectfully commemorate
the 25th anniversary of the 1981 Long Kesh Hunger Strike; and to remember
that today’s Irish Republican Political Prisoners still struggle for the
same rights that Bobby Sands and his nine comrades died for in a British
prison on hunger strike in 1981.
Three Irish Republican organizations, including the Concerned Group for
Republican Prisoners, the Chicago cumann of the Irish Freedom Committee and
the Irish Republican Socialist Committees of North America, participated in
the Chicago Hunger Strike Commemoration Committee Testimonial Dinner event
as a united front effort to acknowledge the different political backgrounds
that the Long Kesh Hunger Strikers came from.
Guests came from all over the US including Maine, Rhode Island, New York,
New Mexico and Minnesota to participate and to lend support to the
dependants and families of today’s Irish Republican political prisoners. One
IFC Member arriving from New York City brought a stunning display of framed
POW-made framed hankies to the event– many of which will soon be available
on the CHSCC website-- with all proceeds to be donated to the dependants of
Irish Republican POWs.
Veteran Chicago Republican Frank O’Neill, rallying from a sudden illness,
made a surprise appearance at the dinner and while declining to speak at the
podium, regaled his many well-wishers and long time friends with his
notorious self-deprecating humor and undying revolutionary spirit. New
friends left the event with the awareness of the major role that Frank has
played in keeping the flame of Irish Republicanism alive in Chicago.
Seoirse McLaughlin, founder and chairman of the New York H-Block/Armagh
Committee, gave a powerful and emotional speech recalling his work as a
spokesperson and prisoners’ rights activist during the Blanket protests and
the Hunger Strike. George spoke of the role of memory and history, and the
need to restore immediacy to collective memories that perhaps no-one is
listening to any more. He spoke about the Five Demands, which he traveled
the United States and Ireland endlessly repeating and pressuring for, and
asked the question how a man could sacrifice his own life to gain such basic
rights for his comrades. He said that the ten who died were connected to a
history that came before them, that their identity was Irish and political,
not criminal.
“Today is a sad day.... a day we talk with the dead and we cry out to let
them know we have not forgotten them. The short lives they had ended in what
now seems like a rushed dream. A flurry of activity, and inactivity, failed
efforts, and great hopes. New possibility, and old impossibility,
unshakeable faith, and cynical resignation. The ten men who died, and their
comrades who suffered physically and mentally in Long Kesh and Armagh jails,
had a rare thing inside of them, a severe and binding sense of purpose, of
intent, of identity, individually and collectively…. Today we celebrate this
desire for freedom and the courage that it spurs, the commitment it creates,
the passion it fuels. For Ireland, many have died, and many have been
exiled, tortured, abandoned, and defiled. But the desire for Irish freedom
has not gone away.”
Seoirse’s speech can be downloaded
here.
Many guests praised the beautiful journal pressed for the event, with
testaments and greetings from event supporters across the United States.
Statements from POWs in Ireland and Britain, reprinted here, were also
included in the journal. An action sheet was also passed to each person at
the event calling for continued phone calls to US Senators to oppose the
US/UK Extradition Treaty, slated for new hearings on September 7th.
Leonard Peltier, an American Lakota Indian POW, also included a full page
message of solidarity, explaining how he joined the H-Block hunger strikers
in 1981, and went without food for nearly 40 days in his American prison
cell; he did so in support the H-Block Hunger Strikers.
Well known Chicago balladeer and a long time I supporter of Irish Freedom,
Joe Monahan, entertained the crowd for several hours with rebel ballads and
tributes to the hunger strikers. The evening closed with a very successful
raffle for handcrafted POW artwork, made by Irish Republican POWs for the
event in Chicago, with all proceeds going to the assistance of their
families and loved ones.
Please remember the dependants of today’s Irish Republican POWs – support
the ongoing fight for Political Status!
|