What a great movie
Obligatory
Great story about revolution that made me think a lot about what’s going on in Palestine, with the IRA hitting military targets and the Brits doing violence against civilians as retaliation. It makes sense that the brother who joined the free state was the one who protected the landlord earlier in the film. He’s all like “if we don’t defend the free state then the British will come back” and it’s like motherfucker you swore an oath to the king! You are the fucking British now
Good film yeah, I especially liked the bit with the revolutionary judge. It did feel a little where they show how the revolutionaries overreach and some refuse to compromise - Loach is a Trot and it’s pretty on brand for him to insist on framin the problems of a revolution on the revolutionaries themselves, even to the point of arguing if was foolish to rebel in the first place, which I felt like was insinuated at the end.
It made that a question earlier when Cilian Murphy was about to kill the kid who ratted and he says something like I don’t know if I like the Ireland that we’re fighting for but then he makes his decision and sticks with it
Banshees of Inishirin was very “what’s the point of fighting” in retrospect.
I’m pretty sure Ireland only legalised abortion a few years ago. They were a country of the most hardcore Catholics, I have no idea how feasible socialist revolution would’ve been, but I don’t think Loach is wrong to point out there may have been some problems with retaining the support of the people
Fuck I wrote a whole thing and then lost it. Russia was majorly Orthodox at October, how the heck did they do a socialist revolution? More than that Ireland has always had a complicated relationship between the Catholics and the diocese. The pope funded the army of the Orangists that crushed Ireland. During '98 and '03 the church condemned the risings, and yet priests like father Murphy literally led their parishioners into battle in defiance. The workers didn’t exactly love it when the church refused to let the children of workers get food aid from British trade unionists during the Dublin Lockout cause it would “spread protestantism”.
Greece had a huge communist partisan movement, how could that have happened in a country that was so Orthodox? They didn’t legalize abortion until 1986. Some clergymen joined the communists or stayed out of politics, otherwise what did the workers and peasants of that Orthodox country do? They fought for communism while not letting their faith be controlled by the clergy or a section of it.
It is such an anti materialist thing to note. Communist countries have a mixed history with abortion access even well AFTER their revolutions. More than that you are looking at an outcome and using it to explain the cause. Ireland was controlled by the church and Fianna Fail and Fine Gael from the 30s until this century. Progress was not only halted but reversed in places. But more than that socialist movements arise for a variety of reasons and not every aspect is widely accepted. Some communist nations never had good access to abortion
The larger reason things didn’t work in ireland is that the IRA had nothing to offer workers, even though those workers had little love for the Free State. They fought a guerrilla war, there was no land to give back or factories to hold. I can’t find the quote but at the end of the war one of the IRA leaders said they lost because they didn’t offer labor anything tangible.
Even then Ireland had soviets formed and they didn’t fail because they where some backwards “hardcore Catholics” they got crushed by the state. We saw something similar in Russia, churches that collaborated with the white armies or that horded their bejeweled cathedrals while their parish starved faced reprisals from their parishioners which was made possible because they had a successful army aligned with the peasants and labor. In Ireland the army was too scattered to protect them. Plus during the War of Independence its not like many clergymen didn’t support the IRA on some level.
This article is great for the missteps and how during the civil war you had a strong labor movement in need of action and a national liberation army that was being compared to the Bolsheviks and the Jacobins that needed popular support and how those missed their chance to really unite again. https://www.socialistparty.ie/2022/06/war-against-bolshevism-the-irish-civil-war-1922-23/
and
ah what could’ve been. regardless it was in the Catholic majority areas of the occupied counties that the socialist Provisional IRA found its base.
Thanks for the interesting reply. as I said I don’t actually know anything about Ireland, I was only saying that Loach wasn’t wrong to show that real difficulties existed. although (from faded memory) the implication in the film is that it’s the poor country folk who the nationalists fear losing support from in the face of socialist aims. But I agree that there is no absolute reason that socialism couldn’t have been entwined with the nationalist cause, except perhaps that it seems like a lot of the nationalists weren’t interested in socialism themselves, although I don’t know enough about Ireland to know how strong the different factions were.
What’s sad is we can never know how committed or opposed many figures would’ve been to socialism or social democracy. On both sides major figures like Collins and Cathal Brugha died tragically in the Civil War. We can guess based on their statements how much of the original Sinn Fein Programme they would’ve thrown out in time, but many of the arguments are based on a reflexive “no they never would be dirty commies” when the implication of even socdem stuff is mentioned.
The socialist movement also had to make itself part of the national revolution, it couldn’t lead it or separate itself from it. Lenin himself strongly agrees with that assessment for ireland specifically. That was part of what Connolly meant when he said the Union Jack could be removed but without real revolution Ireland would remain imprisoned. The militant nationalist movement, despite its varied beliefs, was beneficial to the labor movement and both shared the mortal enemy of not the British but the Irish reformists.
the British managed to get parts of Sinn Fein to buy into a form of Home Rule and sell it to the population. The exact thing Connolly warns about years prior, that reformist nationalists and less nationalist inclined labor party members would fall for.
From my understanding both the pro and anti treaty factions of Sinn Fein ended up splitting into some pretty fucking conservative movements. Eamon De Valera was the radical here, the other side were fascists.
And look what Valera did as soon as he couldn’t use the IRA any more? He tossed it aside and made Fianna Fail. Love that line in Patriot’s Game"
Yeah, I’m generally a fan of Loach but his British Trot side does come out occasionally, like how Land and Freedom shits all over the International Brigades and Soviet support for the Republicans in general.