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Conference tallis::celt

Title:Celt Notefile
Moderator:TALLIS::DARCY
Created:Wed Feb 19 1986
Last Modified:Tue Jun 03 1997
Last Successful Update:Fri Jun 06 1997
Number of topics:1632
Total number of notes:20523

1339.0. "When Ireland Starved" by KOALA::HOLOHAN () Thu Mar 03 1994 14:52

	 NEW YORK (Reuter) - Harrowing scenes of the famine that
devastated Ireland in the last century and caused an exodus to
every corner of the globe are depicted in a video documentary
made to commemorate the disaster and raise awareness of world
hunger.
	 The video, ``When Ireland Starved,'' made by Radharc Films
of Dublin and first shown on Irish television, has now been
released in the United States and Canada by Celtic Video.
	 ``The film is not just to commemorate the dead, it's also to
raise consciousness about the starving now in other countries.
We hope it will help people to make a connection with what's
happening now,'' said Celtic Video's Martin Somers.
	 The four-part documentary is being shown on public
television here during March and Somers said he hoped it would
also act as a catalyst for plans next year to commemorate the
150th anniversary of the Irish famine.
	 Drawing extensively on historical documents and reports, the
film examines the scale of the deaths and the impact of the
tragedy that cut Ireland's population in half -- from 8 millon
to 4 million in the 10 years from 1845 to 1855.
	 The film says that while the potato crop failure caused the
deaths of 1.5 million people and the exodus of 2.5 million more,
the scale of the disaster was contributed to by centuries of
repressive laws that reduced the population to abject poverty
and dependence on the crop.
	 ``When the famime struck Ireland in the middle of the last
century, unlike the rest of Europe, the Irish were still caught
in the grip of colonial structures and lay impoverished and
acutely vulnerable to the catastrophe,'' said Somers.
	 The filmmakers, led by director Joe Dunn, approached the
subject as they would the filming of a famine now.
	 ``We got background, visited the locations and got
comments,'' said narrator Peter Kelly. Quotes from political and
social leaders of the time are read over historical
illustrations.
	 ``We also wanted to look at why it happened,'' Kelly said.
	 The film highlights laws that curbed native wool, glass and
other industries so that Irish industry would not be competitive
with industry in the rest of the British Empire.
	 In addition, a century of penal laws, repealed just 20 years
before the famine, barred Catholics from the army, navy, law and
commerce. Education was almost impossible and none could vote or
purchase land. In 1660 about 10 percent of the land was owned by
English planters; by 1780 they owned 95 percent.
	 ``The word genocide has been used, but it is too strong a
term. What happened in the Irish potato famine was not the
deliberate destruction of a race; it was caused by the inability
of a system founded on colonial conceptions of state assistance
to adjust itself to catastrophe,'' wrote Brendan Kennelly of
Dublin's Trinity College.
	 Persecution of minorities was common in the 19th century,
the film notes, but what happened in Ireland was unique in two
ways: a majority was persecuted and it continued for a century
longer than elsewhere.
	 The British government, believing nothing should interfere
with private enterprise, blocked attempts to change its laws and
opposed charity for the hungry. It introduced public works
programs, such as road-building, that paid meager wages. But the
poor were too weak to build roads and so continued to die.
	 Yet the country was prodwcing enough food to feed 16 million
people, the film notes. ``It is starvation because although
there is an abundance ... those who want cannot get in the midst
of plenty because they do not possess the small sum of money
necessary to buy a supply of food,'' it quotes the Duke of
Wellington as saying.
	 But food continued to be shipped abroad, sparking riots at
some ports, and as the government blamed mismanagement by
landlords it had originally sent to Ireland and landlords blamed
government laws, death stalked the land.
	 Reporters from the Illustrated London News, whose drawings
are used extensively in the film, conveyed the horror to the
outside world.
	 So many people died in Cork that hinged coffins were
introduced so they could be used again for more victims. For
others there were not even coffins -- just burial mounds on the
beaches.
	 Film researcher Eleanor Cunney described the scene in
Mayo: ``I'd seen many famine graves on this trip, each with its
own litany of tragic tales. Most of the plots were carefully
tended and marked. But this place was different. It needed no
markings being an enormous hill of sand and stones that could be
seen for miles. And the bones; bones everywhere attesting to its
purpose.''
	 Gerald Keegan, a schoolteacher who survived the famine,
wrote in his diary that the devastation he saw reminded him of
the suffering of the Jews in the Book of Exodus: ``I have
acquired a deeper understanding of the Israelites' long and
painful march from their captivity in Egypt to a Promised Land.
I have but to look at what is taking place in my country ...
there is nothing to compare with this march, this exodus.''
	 As news of the disaster spread, America sent 114 ships with
20,000 tons of provisions; Baron Lionel de Rothschild raised
400,000 pounds sterling in Britain; Quakers and New York's Jews
sent aid.
	 Others seemed inured to the tragedy. In a chilling
commentary, the film quotes The Times of London as saying of the
famine: ``Soon a Celt will be as rare on the banks of the Liffey
as a red man on the banks of the Hudson. It was all for the
advancement of civilization.''

T.RTitleUserPersonal
Name
DateLines
1339.1ADISSW::SMYTHThu Mar 03 1994 18:5911
    Mark,
    
    While I'm sure this is a fine piece of documentary film-making, I have
    to question your motives in posting this. Another stick to beat HMG
    with I suppose. As somebody who was born and raised in Mayo and whose
    great-great-grandparents survived the Famine I don't particularly feel
    the need to accost the current inhabitants of the UK for the sorrows
    caused by their somewhat misguided forebearers. The last thing Ireland
    needs right now is to dig up this particular ghost of the past.
    
    Joe.
1339.2NOVA::EASTLANDI'm the NEA, NEH, NPRThu Mar 03 1994 19:184
    
    I wonder how many new notes Holohan can start? I think we need one on
    Cromwellian atrocities.
    
1339.3CTHQ::LEARYIt'sBeenALongTimeComing...Thu Mar 03 1994 19:4115
    Last 2,
    
    Gentlemen,
    While I agree that the past should not be brought up to drive a wedge
    into new beginnings, this is the CELT file and even though I'm new,
    I believe this notesfile does contain plenty of topics on Celtic
    history. This topic is interesting to me as long it is kept in its
    context as suggested. 
    
    Some of my ancestors came to America during the famine and I'd love
    to hear appropriate comments.
    
    Thanks,
    Mike
     
1339.4NOVA::EASTLANDI'm the NEA, NEH, NPRFri Mar 04 1994 00:274
    
    Yeah, I agree. I'm also sure you wouldn't like it warped by the agenda
    of a mental 8 year old.
    
1339.5Joe, more British than the British themselves.KOALA::HOLOHANFri Mar 04 1994 09:2223
 re. .1

 Joe,
  Heaven help us, an historical documentary.  What will
 the Fenian B*st*rds come up with next.  God knows it's
 better for people to remain ignorant, rather than
 upset them with information that might not make
 HMG look nice.  The last thing Ireland needs right
 now, is more people like you willing to bury your
 heads so far up, so that you don't upset the British
 government.
  Gee Joe, maybe we should censor the movie.
 If you don't like it Joe, then don't watch it.
  For God's sake Joe, I was born in London, and it
 doesn't upset me to post this information.


 re. .4 Eastland.
  Are you still upset about being a prime example of
  Australopithicus?

 
1339.6ADISSW::SMYTHFri Mar 04 1994 09:549
    Mark,
    
    your last diatribe was pretty predictable. If it had'nt come from you it
    might have upset me. You may think you're a friend of Ireland, but your
    type, cosily distanced from the reality of the situation, can say what
    you like and not have to suffer the conseqeunces. Armchair terrorists
    are no friends of Ireland.
    
    Joe.   
1339.7NEWOA::GIDDINGS_DThe third world starts hereFri Mar 04 1994 10:1814
> God knows it's
> better for people to remain ignorant, rather than
> upset them with information that might not make
> HMG look nice.

Actually this information is taught in schools (or at least at the school I
attended in Belfast), along with subjects like Cromwell and the plantation.
And you're right, it doesn't reflect well on the government of that time.
But just in case you hadn't noticed, this is 1994.

BTW, do they teach the history of Vietnam and the genocide of the American
Indians in US schools?   

Dave
1339.8KOALA::HOLOHANFri Mar 04 1994 11:0419
 re. .6
 Joe,
   Take a deep breath, and think real hard.  I'd like
 to know how posting information about an historical
 documentary makes someone an "armchair terrorists"?
 
   What makes someone a "friend of Ireland"?  Are the
 folks who work at Amnesty International, and 
 Helsinki watch, not friends of Ireland, because they
 say "bad things" about Britain?

 re. .7
   I can't speak for Vietnam as I was in school when
 it was happening, so it wasn't history yet.  I do
 believe that an effort is underway to teach a true
 history of the genocide of Native Americans.

                             Mark
1339.9NOVA::EASTLANDI'm the NEA, NEH, NPRFri Mar 04 1994 11:096
    
    Very little you write upsets me, Mark, as I regard you as a hate-filled
    rabble rouser, though you have been improving over the last year or so
    under our tutelage, or at least you have learned what not to say in
    notes. 
    
1339.10ADISSW::SMYTHFri Mar 04 1994 14:4316
    re .8 
    
    Mark,
    
    It's not posting info about this documentary that makes me think this
    of you, but your refusal to condemn IRA acts of violence (terrorism) 
    directed at innocents, such as Warrington etc. 
    
    By the way I would urge all and sundry to see this documentary, as
    Radharc ("View" in Irish) have made many excellent documentaries of
    Irish interest. The Famine is something that is very real to rural
    Ireland, if from nothing else but the many graveyards dating from that
    period. It is also why the Irish are among the most numerous civilian
    aid-workers in the Third World.
    
    Joe.
1339.11On PBS?POLAR::RUSHTONտ�Fri Mar 04 1994 16:298
    Mark,
    
    Do you know when it is to be broadcast on PBS?  I have had a keen
    interest in this subject as my ancestors left Skibbereen in 1848
    because of the ravages of the Famine, and now in Canada I have an
    addition connection via Grosse �le.
    
    Pat
1339.12KOALA::HOLOHANMon Mar 07 1994 08:5316
 re. .10

 Joe,
   I believe that all acts of violence, whether by the
 British Army, the SAS, the British courts, the UDA,
 the RUC, the UVF, the UFF, the INLA, the IRA, the
 U.S. Army etc, etc, etc etc are wrong. Terrorism,
 whether sponsored by the British state, the Irish
 Republican Army, the American Revolutionary Army of
 1776, the French resistance movement, etc. etc. etc.
 or anyone else is wrong.

                Happy?  Did I miss anyone?
               
                      Mark
1339.13ADISSW::SMYTHMon Mar 07 1994 09:485
    re .12
    
    Now what makes makes me think that you're sincere...
    
    Joe.
1339.14NOVA::EASTLANDI'm the NEA, NEH, NPRMon Mar 07 1994 10:015
    
    The usual lamebrained defence at work - of course the British army
    isn't doing the killing. And thugs that shoot Warrington cops are just
    thugs. 
    
1339.15PLAYER::BROWNLInformation Super do what?Mon Mar 07 1994 12:127
    RE: .12
    
    So Mark, to help my thick British brain (rescued by the Irish in me
    from total moronity), do you condemn the Warrington Bombing as a
    cowardly act? Yes or No?
    
    Laurie.
1339.16again; anyone know the dates & timesCTHQ::COADYMon Mar 07 1994 16:0910
    
    
    Leaving current politics out of it, I believe that the famine played a
    major role in Ireland and how its structured today, as well as the
    impact of Irish people in other countries - as a result of leaving.
    
    I'm very interested in seeing this TV series and I'd be grateful if
    anyone knows the date and times of transmission and post it here.
    
    thanks.
1339.17NOVA::EASTLANDI'm the NEA, NEH, NPRMon Mar 07 1994 16:286
    
    
    Leaving current politics out of it
    
    > Not done in ::CELT!!!
    
1339.18ADISSW::SMYTHMon Mar 07 1994 18:447
    Well for one thing the Famine shaped Irish agriculture to the present day. 
    With the clearing of the land, the introduction of intensive sheep and 
    cattle rearing was made feasible on a large scale. In fact, this very 
    reason was why (some) landlords were not too put out by the plight of the 
    peasants.
    
    Joe.
1339.19KERNEL::BARTHURTue Mar 08 1994 06:1713
    The same thing happened in Scotland of course after the Jacobite
    rebellion in 1746. The highland clearances brought about the formation
    of Nova Scotia (New scotland) and a town there called Dunedin
    (Edinburgh). The clearances were all about getting the people off the
    land and putting sheep on there instead.
    This of course was carried out by the English government masqerading as
    the British government after the union of parliaments in 1707.
    
    However, that was 200+ years ago and although is not forgotten or
    forgiven it seems to me that the only place which not only dwells on
    the past but actually lives within it, is N. Ireland.
    
    Bill
1339.20VYGER::RENNISONMOne hundred and eeiigghhttyyyyyTue Mar 08 1994 07:408
re.-1

Not 100% true Bill.  Many of the landlords were Scots who were quite happy 
to take the money and run.



Mark
1339.21A parcel O rogues !IRNBRU::EDDIEEddie McInally, FIS, Ayr. 823-3537Tue Mar 08 1994 07:5111
    Re :-.1
    
    Those Scottish landlords were "bought and sold for English Gold...
    What a parcel O' rogues in a Nation"
    
    Many of these landlords took "English gold" as bribes for their votes
    for the Union in the Scottish parliament. England had realised that
    they could make massive profits from Scotland and they are still making
    these profits today.
    
    Eddie.
1339.22TALLIS::DARCYAlpha Migration ToolsTue Mar 08 1994 10:084
    I've heard several arguments that the hearty Irish meals that
    one gets today are a response to the time of the famine, when
    food was less plentiful.  And I recollect some science show
    on PBS which stated that the Irish consume the most calories.
1339.23KERNEL::BARTHURTue Mar 08 1994 10:127
    
    I'm afraid you are wrong Mark and Eddie is correct!
    Apart from being bought and sold for English gold as Burns put it, the
    land was given to the landlords in the first place for political
    favours.
    
    Bill
1339.24Scots were responsibleTROOA::MCRAMMarshall Cram DTN 631-7162Tue Mar 08 1994 17:2819
    
    Most the highlands was clan land for centuries and was not given for
    favours, at least not by any British or English government.  (The
    favours would have to the Scottish kings, mostly centuries before).  
    
    Many of clan chiefs started behaving as landlords and selling the land to
    Lowland or english landlords, land they held in trust for whole clans.
    Others started their own clearances.    
    
    Many of the clearances were carried under upperclass highland Scots.  
    The British government didn't have to get involved.  They were happy, 
    though, to recruit Highland regiments and get rid the young male 
    population. 
    
    It might be nice to blame this on the English government, but it just
    ain't true.
    
    Marshall 
    
1339.25PLAYER::BROWNLInformation Super do what?Wed Mar 09 1994 04:136
    RE: .15
    
    It's nice to have some constancy. I see Holohan is ignoring the
    question again. Mark, do you *really* expect to be taken seriously?
    
    Laurie.
1339.26baloneyKERNEL::BARTHURWed Mar 09 1994 05:1512
    
    re.24
    
    we'll have to agree to disagree then Marshall.
    The Duke of Cumberland and his redcoats (English and government troops)
    made the highlanders pay a terrible price for their rebellion in 1746.
    Shortly afterwards the clearances began. But just to put your mind at
    ease i'll dig out the historical reference books so that you can be in
    no doubt about who the perpetrators were.
    
    Bill
    
1339.27Don't like casting up the past, but it's historyKIRKTN::CDOUDIEI would do anything for love..Wed Mar 09 1994 12:589
    
    Not "Butcher Cumberland".....can't be the same man !!!!
    
    The Glencoe Massacre a few years earlier was along the same lines as
    well.......something to do with a certain clan debating whether to sign
    allegiance to the English throne.
    
    We could go on all day about the attrocities the English have done to
    the Scots over the years.......and right up to the present goverment.