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		Irish Affinity for Palestinians Runs Deep  
				By James J 
				Zogby 
		Al-Jazeerah, CCUN, May 
		28, 2019  
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		It is always gratifying to see the strength of Irish solidarity with 
		the people of Palestine. This was brought home again last week during a 
		visit to Ireland. While Eurovision was in Tel Aviv, a coalition of Irish 
		Senators, non-governmental groups, and entertainers held a 
		counter-concert "Palestine: You're A Vision" – to demonstrate Irish 
		"solidarity with the oppressed Palestinian people living under 
		occupation, under siege, or in exile." And while in Dublin, we met with 
		political leaders preparing for the final parliamentary vote, later this 
		summer, on a bill to ban products originating in Israeli settlements 
		from being sold in Ireland. The bill, which has broad public and 
		political support, has passed several rounds in the Senate and an early 
		vote in the lower chamber. Should the bill pass a final vote and become 
		law, Ireland will be the first EU country to take a concrete stand 
		against illegal Israeli settlements – just as the Irish were the first 
		in Europe to lead the way against Apartheid in South Africa.   
  
		This Irish affinity for the injustices visited upon the Palestinian 
		people runs deep in their history and culture. For example, there's 
		documentary evidence that in the 1920's Irish Republican movement wrote 
		in one of their manifestos of their solidarity with the Arabs in 
		Palestine, seeing their struggles against the British Empire as one and 
		the same fight as their own. Later, in 1970's, the Palestine Liberation 
		Organization developed close ties with the Irish Republicans. And, 
		during the 1980's the PLO office in Dublin was headed by an Irish 
		national – the only PLO office not run by a Palestinian. 
  The 
		connections weren't just political. For the Irish, it was born of an 
		affinity for victims of colonial oppression – the result of their own 
		history as victims of British colonialism. In Ireland this history is 
		ever-present. There are reminders of its terrible past around every 
		corner. Whether it's the imposing steeples of the Anglican Church of 
		Ireland, brought by the colonizers and imposed on Irish soil, or the 
		monuments to the famine of the 1840's during which over one million 
		Irish perished from starvation and another million and one-half were 
		forced to emigrate because they were denied the right to eat the 
		abundant product of their own land, which was intended for export to 
		Britain. We saw one particularly touching plaque that hangs in the home 
		of the Lord Mayor of Dublin. It is in honor of the Choctaw Indian Nation 
		of North America, themselves victims of cruel settler colonialism, who 
		collected funds during the Irish famine to aid its victims. 
  This 
		Irish history with colonial rule goes back centuries. Last Sunday, my 
		wife and I were walking on Lower New Street in Kilkenny, a small city 
		south of Dublin, when we came across the remnants of an ancient tower 
		and the ruins of a high stone wall. On closer examination we found 
		signage indicating that this was Talbot's Tower and part of the miles of 
		25-foot-high walls that surrounded the original Anglo-Norman colonial 
		settlement that became Kilkenny. The sign noted that wall had originally 
		been built in the 13th century. One paragraph toward the end of the 
		description of the wall's history deserves to be quoted in full:  
		 "Whilst the main purpose of the city walls was to protect the 
		colonists living inside from attack, they were also used to collect 
		taxes. People living outside the city walls who wished to sell their 
		goods in the marketplace had to pay a toll as they went through any of 
		the seven city gates. The walls were also a statement of Anglo-Norman 
		power and authority over the native Irish, who were kept under constant 
		surveillance from the nine towers on the city walls, one of which was 
		Talbot's Tower." 
  Not only its insidious purposes, spelled out so 
		clearly on the sign, but the size of the wall and very look of its 
		ominous tower, are so strikingly similar to the Israeli Wall that 
		"separates" Palestinians, not just from Israelis settlements, but from 
		their own lands.  
  The Irish from the island's southern and 
		northwestern counties won independence from British rule and nearly one 
		hundred years ago the Republic of Ireland came into being. But even with 
		independence, they never forgot their history or their ability to 
		demonstrate empathy for others who remain oppressed. 
  At the end 
		of a recent visit to Kilmainham Gaol, the notorious site where the 
		British imprisoned thousands of Irish who were accused of crimes against 
		the empire and where they executed the leaders who signed the 
		proclamation of the "Irish Republic," one of our tour guides made 
		reference to the struggles of the Palestinians and expressed the hope 
		that one day they too would enjoy freedom. 
  The Irish story is 
		not yet over. The Good Friday Agreement (GFA) created a path forward to 
		peace for the northern counties that remained connected to the 
		British-led United Kingdom. But that agreement is now in danger as a 
		result of Britain's push to exit the European Union. 
  One of the 
		by-products of the GFA has been an erasure of the border between 
		Northern Ireland and the Republic of Ireland. Goods and people move 
		freely across the now non-existent borderline. Should Britain leave the 
		EU, north and south may very well be separated once again causing grave 
		damage to the economies of both. But while the Irish are justifiably 
		preoccupied with dangers of Brexit, their vision continues to extend 
		beyond their island to encompass not only the Palestinians, but the 
		plight of refugees from other lands desperate to escape poverty. They 
		too remind many Irish of their own history and of their many family 
		members who were forced into exile seeking a better life. 
  Each 
		time I visit Ireland, I marvel at this compassionate island and am 
		humbled by its people and their commitment to justice. 
		*** 
		
		 
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