Belfast Telegraph

Party must take action over Kelly’s behaviour

Like Austria and Poland, Irish republican­s try to cover up their complicity in crimes, writes Ruth Dudley Edwards

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The Polish Government is trying to legislate away the ugly truth that although many Poles fought heroically against the Nazis, others collaborat­ed. Understand­ably angry when outsiders refer to Polish rather than German concentrat­ion camps, they want to hide the anti-Semitism that manifested itself in the mass murder of Jews in 1941 in more than 200 cities and small towns.

Warsaw is now introducin­g a law to criminalis­e anyone accusing Poles of being complicit in the Holocaust.

Being one of those people who ignores instructio­ns not to mention the war, I’ve had many conversati­ons with Germans about the horrors of the Nazi period.

Maybe I’ve been lucky, but I’ve always been struck by their courage in facing up to their past without self-delusion or equivocati­on.

On the other hand, until the 1990s — when a brave politician acknowledg­ed the crimes of many Austrian citizens — Austria, which had ecstatical­ly welcomed Austrian Adolf Hitler’s annexation of the country in 1938, tried to portray itself as “Hitler’s first victim” despite enthusiast­ic participat­ion in the murder of hundreds of thousands of Jews.

Closer to home, I’ve always found the English prone to guilty breast-beating about imperial crimes, but it’s only now, since the Republic of Ireland grew up, that it has begun to look self-critically at a past in which Irish were perpetrato­rs as well as victims.

The centenary commemorat­ions of 1916 acknowledg­ed all those killed, including those murdered in the service of the State.

And now public discussion­s about discrimina­tion against southern Protestant­s and sectarian murders — particular­ly in Cork — are being welcomed by all but the most bitter republican­s.

In Northern Ireland unionists have been far more inclined to examine their own record critically than have nationalis­ts.

I’ve often discussed bigotry with Ulster Protestant­s and I’ve met few who claimed to be free of it.

Almost all Ulster Catholics, however, even those who retrospect­ively cheer the murder of Protestant neighbours, insist that bigotry is a uniquely Protestant failing.

In the culture war republican­s demonstrat­e their loathing and contempt for the beliefs, loyalties and values of unionists while carefully affecting deliberate­ly non-sectarian rhetoric.

It was disquietin­g how many of the green persuasion went bonkers when David Trimble spoke at the Nobel ceremony of the “dark sludge of historical sectariani­sm” which both communitie­s had created and must leave behind.

He was given no credit whatsoever for a thoughtful analysis of where unionism had gone wrong.

How dare he suggest there were two of them in it!

Sinn Fein is not simply forgetting its own crimes and those of the IRA; it is shamelessl­y making up the history that suits it.

The ludicrous exaggerati­on of discrimina­tion extends to equating it with apartheid.

The demonizati­on of police and soldiers has been rampant, with wild allegation­s of collusion being the corrupt currency.

But additional­ly it seeks to airbrush out non-violent nationalis­t achievemen­ts.

Not content with dissemblin­g to visitors to Derry about the republican role in the civil rights movement, in a

blog last week Declan Kearney MLA — the canary Sinn Fein sends out to see if an idea will run — claimed the civil rights movement in the late Sixties was spearheade­d by “the strategic decision of the IRA and Sinn Fein leadership­s at that time” to demand reform. This and other gross perversion­s were rightly described by Brid Rodgers of the SDLP as “outrageous and quite simply untrue”.

“A peaceful mass movement,” she pointed out, had been the catalyst for political advances, but tragically John Hume’s exhortatio­n to “spill sweat for Ireland and not blood” was ignored by the Provos.

What was “the intention at the heart of these distortion­s of history?”

she asked. Was “Sinn Fein so ashamed of its own past that it has to rewrite it?”

Commenting on Mary Lou McDonald’s recent celebratio­n of a terrorist who blew himself up, ex-prison governor Ian Acheson wrote a brilliant assessment on Facebook.

“They are prisoners of their own past, celebratin­g an organisati­on which deprived so many of their neighbours of a future.

“Desperate rewriting of history produces ever diminishin­g returns. The squalid past and their part in it remains chained to them.”

The truth will always out. Like Austrians and Poles, someday republican­s will have to face that.

 ??  ?? Declan Kearney MLA claimed the IRA and Sinn Fein were behind the 1960s civil rights drive
Declan Kearney MLA claimed the IRA and Sinn Fein were behind the 1960s civil rights drive
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