Fergus O'Hare
Fergus O'Hare (aka Fergus Ó hÍr) was involved in the civil rights movement in Northern Ireland as a member of People's Democracy in the late 1960s and early 1970s. Later he became a founding member and executive member of the Northern Resistance Movement, which continued to campaign for civil rights in Northern Ireland.
With the introduction of internment without trial in 1971, O'Hare helped set up and became chairperson of the Political Hostages Release Committee: a group which organised a mass campaign against internment throughout the early 1970s. When internment was phased out in the mid-1970s, and with the decision of the British Government to end special category status for prisoners, O'Hare[1] became involved with the campaign to "defend political status" for the prisoners. He became a member of the Relative's Action Committee and of the National H-Block Armagh Committee[2] which helped organise the struggle in support of the hunger strikers in the early 1980s.
In 1981 he was elected as member of Belfast City Council,[3] defeating Gerry Fitt[4] who was a Westminster MP as well as a Belfast councillor.
The election of O'Hare, and of other candidates who stood in support of the H-Block prisoners during this period, occurred within the context of an ongoing debate within the H-Block movement and within Sinn Féin with regard to the use of elections as a tactic for building support for the prisoners' campaign, and for the campaign for social and democratic rights in Ireland. Sinn Féin at this time had a policy of boycotting elections. On the National H Block Armagh Committee, O'Hare and others such as Bernadette Devlin McAliskey argued that participation in elections should be used as a tactic in the campaign. During this debate, McAliskey, supported by People's Democracy and others, stood as a candidate in support of the prisoners, in the election for the European Parliament in 1979, winning more than 30,000 votes. When Frank Maguire, a Westminster MP, died in 1981, People's Democracy and Bernadette Devlin McAliskey argued that a candidate should stand in the by-election to demonstrate the high level of support that existed for the prisoners. The outcome of this debate was that hunger-striker Bobby Sands was put forward as a candidate and elected to the Westminster parliament. After Sands' death, his election agent Owen Carron of Sinn Féin won the seat.
The substantial vote for Bernadette McAliskey in the 1979 European elections, the success of pro-H-Block candidates in the 1981 Council Elections, especially Fergus O'Hare "unceremoniously dumping Gerry Fitt from the seat he had occupied for twenty three years",[5] the Westminster election victories of Bobby Sands and Owen Carron and the election of hunger-striker Kieran Doherty and republican prisoner Paddy Agnew in the Irish general election in June 1981, demonstrated the high level of support for the H-block prisoners, despite the assertions to the contrary by the British Government and others. These election results also helped resolve the debate within Sinn Féin in favour of using elections as part of the republican struggle. Later, in June 1983 Gerry Adams of Sinn Féin won a Westminster seat from Gerry Fitt and Sinn Féin went on to continued electoral success becoming the largest nationalist party elected to the 2007 Northern Ireland Assembly.
Ironically, those who led the argument that elections should be used to further the republican project in Ireland were subsequently sidelined electorally by a resurgent Sinn Féin, so that in the Assembly elections in 1982, O'Hare and the other People's Democracy candidates fared badly,:[6] their vote largely going to Sinn Féin candidates.Belfast West Belfast North
In the 1990s, O'Hare became involved in the Irish language movement and in 1991 he helped set up and became the first head teacher of Meánscoil Feirste (later known as Coláiste Feirste): the first Irish language secondary school in northern Ireland). He served as a member of Comhairle na Gaelscolaíochta and Iontaobhas na Gaelscolaíochta; organisations set up after the Good Friday Agreement to help promote Irish language schools in Northern Ireland.
Later, he was involved with the establishment of Raidió Fáilte: the first legal Irish language radio station in Northern Ireland, of which he became manager in 2006. The station continues to broadcast in Irish in the Belfast area and throughout the world on www.raidiofailte.com
In the early 1980s, Fergus O'Hare wrote a column in Fortnight, a Belfast-based politics and arts review magazine and for An Gael the magazine of the New York Irish Arts Centre. He published a history of the 1907 Belfast dockers and carters strike[7] led by James Larkin, 'The divine gospel of discontent'.[8][9] In 2007 he published a book in Irish on Irish flora, Mórbhealaí & Cúlbhealaí.[10]
References
- ↑ Morrison Danny (ed) Hunger Strike 2006 Brandon, Co Kerry p100/101
- ↑ Clarke Liam Broadening the Battlefield 1987 Gill & Macmillan Dublin p106-108
- ↑ Economic & Social Research Council; Elections, Northern Ireland Elections; The Local Government Elections 1973–1981: Belfast Area G. http://www.ark.ac.uk/elections/73-81lgbelfast.htm
- ↑ Murphy M.A. Gerry Fitt Political Chameleon 2007 Mercier Press, Cork. p300
- ↑ Adams Gerry Before the Dawn 1996 Brandon, Co Kerry p299
- ↑ Elliot S & Flackes WD Northern Ireland A Political Directory 1968–1999 1999 Blackstaff Press, Belfast p394
- ↑ Bardon J Belfast An illustrated History 1982 Blackstaff Press, Belfast Select Bibliography p315 F O'Hare The Divine Gospel of Discontent Story of the Belfast Dockers and Carters Strike 1907 (Connolly Bookshop) 1982
- ↑ Tom Hartley Written in Stone The History of Belfast City Cemetery 2006 The Brehon Press, Belfast. Cited as a source p256
- ↑ Gray John City in Revolt 1985 Blackstaff Press, Belfast 2nd Ed 2007 p xix p 213
- ↑ Ó hÍr Fergus, Mórbhealaí & Cúlbhealaí 2007 Coiscéim, Dublin