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Author Topic: Sen Sabhat  (Read 726 times)

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Offline John Grace

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Sen Sabhat
« on: July 29, 2012, 02:40:06 PM »
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  • Whilst designed to make fun of the late Seán Sabhat, the person who compiled this shows how Seán Sabhat was Catholic. Seán Sabhat is an example to us all.  

    Yesterday I had a cup of coffee next door to the house he was born in. Sabhat was a true Irish patriot. This is a verse of a song somebody added about him.The Father Fahey mentioned here is of course Fr Denis Fahey, a "pure Saint".

    Quote
    He went to Mass on Sunday and he paid his Easter Dues;
    And Father Fahey taught him about money and the Jєωs;
    In defending faith and fatherland on the border and at home;
    Maria Duce’s finest was Seán Sabhat of Garryowen.

    And after Benediction as the sun was going down;
    The pious confreres gathered with Seán Sabhat in Limerick Town;
    They went around the cinemas, ‘observing’ courting pairs;
    In protecting Ireland’s purity, Sabhat added action to his prayers.


    Offline John Grace

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    Sen Sabhat
    « Reply #1 on: July 29, 2012, 02:46:55 PM »
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  • Lament for Sean South


    The Funeral of Sean South


    Offline John Grace

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    Sen Sabhat
    « Reply #2 on: July 29, 2012, 03:16:16 PM »
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  • http://theministerspen.blogspot.ie/2011/02/sean-south.html
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    WEDNESDAY, 9 FEBRUARY 2011

    Sean South
    Rev David Frazer is a Church of Ireland minister and a member of Sinn Fein.  Back on 1 January he posted on his Facebook wall the Wolfe Tones singing the republican song Sean South.  He also posted the comment: 'In memory of Sean South and Fergal O'Hanlon and all those who laid down their lives in the cause of Irish freedom.'

    For the benefit of those who may not know, it may be useful to recall exactly who Sean South was and the type of man that David Frazer was eulogising.

    On 1 January 1957 fourteen IRA men mounted an attack on Brookeborough police station in county Fermanagh.  They were well armed but the attack failed and two of the IRA men were killed, Sean South and Fergal O'Hanlon.  Their bodies were taken across the border into the Republic and there followed what J Bowyer Bell describes as 'a week of all but national mourning'.

    Vast crowds lined the route of South's funeral cortege to Dublin and many local authorities passed resolutions of sympathy with the families of the two dead IRA terrorists.  At midnight on 4 January, twenty thousand people including the mayor, waited in Limerick for the hearse and the next day fifty thousand people attended the funeral.  The song Sean South appeared in the Irish Catholic, a weekly Roman Catholic paper, within a week of his death.  Sean South became the most famous IRA figure of the 1956-62 campaign and as Dr Pat Walsh comments:
    South was the very embodiment of the Catholic-nationalist ideal, a Gaelic scholar, a fervent Catholic, a nationalist writer, an officer in the FCA (the part time section of the Free State Army) and IRA volunteer.  [Irish Republicanism and Socialism  p 42]
    The Belfast Telegraph (8 January 1957) reported that two local authorities in Eire, Dublin City Council and South Tipperary County Council, passed votes of sympathy with relatives of the two dead terrorists.  In Dublin Con Lehane, speaking in Gaelic, proposed: 'That we salute the memory of Sean South and Fergal O'Hanlon, who gave their lives for Irish Freedom.'

    Sean South was deeply religious, a former member of the Legion of Mary and Maria Duce (Mary our Leader), an ultra-right wing Roman Catholic organisation led by Fr Denis Fahey of the Holy Ghost Order in Dublin.  South established the Limerick branch of Maria Duce and between August 1954 and January 1956 he published a whole series of articles promoting Maria Duce teaching in the Gaelic League monthly newspaper Rosc.

    Fr Denis Fahey was closely involved with Fr Edward Cahill's An Rioghacht study group and wrote a number of books including The Rulers of Russia (1938) in which he argued that communism was a conspiracy organised by Judaism and Fɾҽҽmαsσɳɾყ.  Following the death of Cahill in 1941, An Rioghacht became more moderate and so in 1945 Fahey founded the organisation Maria Duce, whch was stridently anti-Protestant and anti-Semitic.

    The position of Maria Duce was set out by its secretary J P Ryan, in a statement in the Irish Times of 7 March 1950.  In this he stated, 'What then must be the attitude of Catholic States, sych as Spain and Ireland, towards Protestantism and non-Catholic sects in general?  The ideal (as outlined in the Syllabus of Pius XI, Ubi Arcano and Quas Primas of Pius XI) is that the Catholic State ... should not only not connive at the proselytism of non-Catholic sects, but should suppress them as inimical to the common good.  Such intolerance of error is the privilege of truth.'

    We know then that Sean South was an IRA terrorist but he was also a member of an extremist society, Maria Duce, that was both anti-Protestant and anti-Semitic.  Republicans who commemorate Sean South try to ignore such things as his anti-Semitism but the evidence is irrefutable and it gives the lie to those who portray Irish republicanism as progressive.

    We also know that he was an Irish language enthusiast who used the journal of the Gaelic League to promote the extremist ideas of Maria Duce.  The Gaelic League was supposed to be a purely a cultural organisation but it opened the pages of its journal to the extremism of Sean South and Maria Duce.

    This is the anti-Semitic IRA terrorist who is eulogised by Rev David Frazer and by Sinn Fein.  This year the annual South - O'Hanlon commemoration at Roslea on 1 January, which is organised by Sinn Fein, was addressed by Sean Lynch, a Sinn Fein candidate in the forthcoming Assembly elections.

    Offline John Grace

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    Sen Sabhat
    « Reply #3 on: July 29, 2012, 03:18:05 PM »
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  • http://theministerspen.blogspot.ie/2011/02/more-on-sean-south.html
    Quote
    TUESDAY, 22 FEBRUARY 2011

    More on Sean South

    On 9 February I posted about Sean South, who was killed during an IRA attack on Brookeborough RUC station in January 1957 and who is eulogised and commemorated every year by Sinn Fein.

    I have just received  a copy of an article about Sean South that was written by Sean Gannon and appeared in the Winter 2010 edition of The Old Limerick Journal.  The article is entitled 'Schools of Corruption:' The Contexts for Sean South's Antisemitism.

    The atricle, which has been thoroughly researched and docuмented, exposes the extremism of Sean South and also the sources that contibuted to that extremism.  I have reproduced below the first and last paragraphs.

    Sean South's elevation to the Republican pantheon after his death during an IRA raid on Brookeborough RUC station in January 1957, coupled with his well-docuмented reputation as a kind and courteous individual, 'in manner and bearing always a gentleman,' a 'shy, gentle-natured, even-tempered' young man who 'never raised his voice, never got angry or annoyed [and] never complained' perhaps explains what appears to be a reluctance on the part of recent biogrpahers to engage with one of the most troubling aspects of his ideology - his antipathy towards Jєωs.  This antipathy can only be properly understood by examining it through the context of South's involvement with extermist organisations of the 1940s and 1950s, most notably Maria Duce.

    Sean South's antisemitism was therefore shaped by the same 'emotive and militant cocktail of language, history and religion' that, according to Barry Flynn, led him to Brookeborough in 1957.  In pursuing the 'three loves in his life; the Irish language, Irish history and the Catholic Church,' he aligned himself with extremist fringes of each, organisations such as Ailtiri na hAiseirghe, Maria Duce and the IRA which became for him the 'schools of corruption' through which he was instructed in contemporary antisemitic philosophy.
    Sean Gannon records Sean South's involvement with Maria Duce and also  his association with Ailtiri na hAiseirghe (Architects of the Resurgence), which he describes as 'a proto-fascist Gaelic revivalist political organisation formed in May 1942 by Gearoid O'Cuinneagain, a Dublin-based tax consultant and prime mover in a number of Irish pro-Axis groups.'  I will return to this organisation in a further post.

    Some folk criticised my earlier post on Sean South and subsequent posts about Sean Russell and suggested that I was motivated by unionist prejudice  However that criticism cannot be levelled at Sean Gannon or the publishers of The Old Limerick Journal.  I welcome this article which helps to open up an era that Sinn Fein would prefer to forget.