Easter Statement 2001
IRSP International Department, Western Hemisphere Division

Once more republican socialists stand before these graves, as they have
years gone by, to commemorate those who gave their lives for the freedom of
Ireland and of the Irish working class.  Again, your comrades in North
America join with you in solidarity, rededicating ourselves before these
graves to continue to do all that is within our power to advance support
for the Irish Republican Socialist Movement within North America and
throughout the world.

We are especially mindful that this year is the 20th anniversary of the
1981 hunger strike, which claimed the lives of three of our comrades and
the seven IRA volunteers with whom they had joined in struggle.  INLA
volunteers Patsy O Hara, Kevin Lynch, and Michael Devine, with their IRA
allies, suffered what must be among the most horrible ways in which to die.
In doing so, they declared to the world, in a manner no honest person could
repudiate, that they were not criminals but soldiers of their people,
dedicated to a battle against injustice and exploitation.

It is, therefore, all the more galling that we again have INLA volunteers,
as well as members of the three IRA groupings, sitting in Maghaberry and
Magilligan, stripped of the political status.  That same political status
the ten martyrs of 1981 gave their lives to secure and that so many women
and men sacrificed for in 1980 and the years before.  This is the bitter
fruit born of that stunted bush known as the Good Friday Agreement.  Those
who claimed the right to speak for all the nationalist and republican
people of the occupied six counties, when they had no such right, have
brought Ireland peace . . . but it is the peace of the grave they have
brought.

The war for national liberation may be over, but in its place stands the
class war.  None are better suited to fight this than the Irish Republican
Socialist Movement.  It is a war that must of necessity free the six
counties from British occupation, just as it must free the 26 counties from
the partitionist, neo-colonial regime which administer them in the service
of
the world's imperialists.  In Ireland the national liberation struggle is
an indivisible aspect of the fight for the liberation of working class.  It
is a war which can free the working class people of the Protestant
community in the six counties from the reactionary ideology of loyalism as
well, so that the entire working class of Ireland can stand together in
demanding what is rightfully theirs.  They will rightfully demand the
collective ownership of all Ireland's wealth and the political power to
administer that wealth in the interests of all working people.

The class war is also a war that must, of its very nature, free the working
people of Ireland from exploitation, free the women of Ireland from the
scourge of sexism, free ethnic and sexual minorities from continued abuse
and inequality.  In short, it will erase from Irish society all vestiges of
oppression and injustice.  It is not a fight that can be left to the
volunteers of the INLA.  Rather it must be undertaken by the broad masses
of working people on the island of Ireland.  It is a fight that must and
will take place in the factories and offices, the fields and the fisheries,
midst the forges and the forests, as well as in the hearts and minds of
every member of the working class of Ireland.

We have already seen what negotiations with the British imperialists and
Dublin lackeys brings.  We have ample examples of what the outcome is when
a revolutionary party turns to reformism, such as in the case of the
Workers Party.  We know the sort of 'assistance' that can be lent by that
leading imperialist entity, the United States of America, and we want no
part of that. This movement must remain revolutionary or it will be
nothing.  There is no room for compromise in the class war; there is only
victory or defeat, socialism or barbarism.

We, your comrades in North America, continue to believe that the IRSP
offers the best leadership possible for that struggle.  Not because the
party is poised to claim fantastic results in the upcoming elections, but
because it is the organically arising party of the Irish working class.

Before these graves of our martyrs, we re-dedicate ourselves to the Irish
class war and to the Irish Republican Socialist Movement.  Though we are
three, or even six thousand miles away, know that we are with you in
solidarity and in comradeship.  Our martyrs have died, but their memories
will live on in the hearts of Irish working people.

Peter Urban
North American Coordinator, Irish Republican Socialist Committees/
International Department, Irish Republican Socialist Party

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