OPINIONS ON THIS BLOG ARE PROTECTED BY FIRST AMENDMENT RIGHTS IN THE U.S. CONSTITUTION. 'That Congress shall make no law abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press, or the right of the people peaceably to assemble and consult for their common good, and to petition the government for a redress of grievances.'' The author was the 14th Ohio Congressional District public policy spokesman of President Reagan's official grassroots lobbying organization during his Presidency.
Tuesday, August 24, 2021
The Truth behind the Irish Famine a book review
THE TRUTH BEHIND THE IRISH FAMINE (3rd Edition)
by
Jerry Mulvihill
a book review by J.C. Sullivan
Author Frank Delaney once wrote "To have come from Ireland,
no matter how long ago, is to be of Ireland in some part
forever.” The Great Hunger (An Gorta Mor) is part of our Irish
history. With firsthand oral and written accounts of those
years, Jerry Mulvihill's third edition of The Truth Behind the
Irish Famine infuses an authentic history of heartbreaking life
and death.
When I offered to review this book, I was unaware of the
immensity of Mulvihill's research and work. His epic is a
labor of love and I opine it has now become the primer and
most comprehensive narrative of the Irish Famine.
His research spans from ancient Ireland through post-famine
years. In addition to numerous paintings and sketches not
previously seen in the first two editions, the first-person oral
and handwritten accounts of those years will stir your emotions.
The author includes the observation of Englishmen in Ireland
as early as 1783 with German Travel Writer Karl Gottlob Kuttner’s
first-hand commentary: "As soon as certain Englishmen set foot in
Ireland they obtain an air of importance that often contrasts quite
ludicrously with the actual situation and circumstances at home.
Full of base national prejudices they look at everything through
tinted glasses, onstruct deficiencies and shortcomings where they
find none and then admire their own perspicacity. Bursting
with the idea of the real and true greatness of their own
country, they think themselves as superior to each Irish
individual as sees England as superior to Ireland"
The attitude toward and treatment of the Irish only worsened
as the famine did. In 1843, Charles Trevelyan who later
became the English Relief Officer during the famine, claimed
that assistance to the Irish was unwarranted as the famine was
a "judgement of God" for the "perverse and turbulent
character" of the Irish people.
The Irish people, farmers with no crop and animal stock
confiscated, were then expected to pay exorbitant rents.
When unable to pay rent, families were evicted and their
dwelling places destroyed.
Josephine Butler, a social reformer, wrote in 1846 "Sick and
aged, little children and women with child were thrust forth
into the snows of winter. And to prevent their return their
cabins were levelled to the ground and burned the few
remaining tenants were forbidden to receive the outcast ... the
majority rendered penniless by the famine, wandered
aimlessly about the roads or bogs till they found refuge in the
workhouse or the grave. "
With the widespread land evictions came widespread criticism.
In deense of the English, Lord Broughman made a speech on
March 28, 1846 in the House of Lord stating that a landlord's
right to do as he pleases was meant to teach and strong-arm
tenants so as assure "that they have no power to oppose or
resist." By 1847, eviction in Ireland became synonymous
with extermination, according to Sidney Osborne, an English
cleric, philanthropist, and writer.
Jerry Mulvihill's anthology of historical writings and
speeches meticulously illustrate and eloquently voices how
Irish families were destroyed by the famine, of how their
spirits were meant to be broken, of how suffering often ended
in death, and of how these stories are very much a part of who
we are.
It is difficult to read and learn about the anguish our
forefathers suffered at the hands of oppressors, yet it is our
history and should be known among us. The collection of
thoughts and feelings of famine writers and artists expressed
within Mulvihill's work is powerful and can shake you to
your marrow as well as increasingly awaken your identity.
Mulvihill has dedicated himself to preserving our history and
raising our consciousness. He wrote: "The Irish people who
passed away during the famine have a story that needs to be
told and fully understood. It is of the utmost importance that
their suffering was not in vain. May they humble and remind
us how fortunate we are today. Let them awaken us to the
suffering that still exists within entire populations. They will
never be forgotten."
For inquiries visit www.jerrymulvihill.com.
Sullivan, internationally-published, writes from Northfield Village, Ohio.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)