Scotland reports
James Connolly: A rebel ‘till the end'
On 24 August, FRFI held a meeting in the Govanhill Neighbourhood Centre, Glasgow to celebrate the life and work of the Edinburgh-born, Irish Marxist James Connolly, revolutionary socialist and a leader of the Easter Rising of 1916. The well attended meeting highlighted the importance of James Connolly’s contribution to the anti-imperialist, trade union and socialist struggles of his day and the lessons for our own.
A lively discussion followed the introductory talk. Points were raised about links between the Irish rebellion and the class struggle on the Clydeside around the time of the First World War and the continuing refusal of the British labour movement to split with imperialism to this day through its funding of the Labour party. The role of
Connolly’s life was one of total commitment to the oppressed, from the worker exploited by the boss and the landlord, the peasant starved off his land, women workers (‘the slave of the slave’), the Irish nation and all others crushed by colonialism. Over ninety years on from his execution at the hands of the British army, the life and ideas of James Connolly remain as vital as ever.
An introduction to the life of James Connolly
How do you get from fighting for free speech in Dundee in 1889 to being shot in
Hasn’t it been a full life Lillie? And isn’t this a good end?
(Last conversation between James Connolly and Lillie Connolly, cited Nevin D, James Connolly, A Full Life: Dublin 2005 p. 667)
James Connolly’s life was indeed a full and good life in the moral sense, a life of determined study, relentless organisation and decisive action. Yet what are we to make of another comment made at the time of the Easter Rising of 1916:
The Socialists will never understand why I am here…They will all forget I am an Irishman
(…unattributed, cited Reed D, Ireland: The Key To The British Revolution
In that remark, in that statement, we are presented with the central question which faces all progressives in the era of imperialism. Understanding that categorical remark is the purpose of this introduction. This is an attempt to salvage the reputation of a socialism which appeared for Connolly to have repudiated the anti-imperialist struggle.
As Bernadette McAliskey said in her contribution to the recent Celebration of Resistance event in
I recommend this comrades. When you’re landed with the responsibility of preparing these introductions there is a natural evasion, a hesitation, a doubt as to susceptibility of the subject to quick analysis and summation but then you are suddenly exposed to the abundance of all the already existing material on Connolly. And become aware of how rewarding it is to read that material.
As one of our comrades David Yaffe frequently points out, many, many questions confronting us have already been answered by earlier writers and we make no apology for the many references to these works.
In C Desmond Greaves biography of Connolly we come across these observations in the introduction:
Connolly entered political life just in time to witness the disappearance of the world in which he had been brought up...The hitherto accepted pillars of society, the landlord and the industrialist, gave way before the investor...
(Greaves C D, The Life and Times of James Connolly London 1960 p.27)
James Connolly joined the Socialist League in
An indignation meeting held immediately afterwards does not appear to have been interfered with. The police were trying their strength...a few weeks later the magistrates climbed down...Meetings were resumed in the High Street.
(Greaves C D, op cit p.25)
In Donal Nevin’s biography, James Connolly, A Full Life, he has found an interesting picture of the young man, written by John Leslie of the Scottish Socialist Federation, the form of branches of the Social Democratic Federation in
I noticed the young man as a very interested and constant attendant at the open air meetings. Once when a very sustained and virulent personal attack was being made upon me and when I was almost succumbing to it, Connolly sprung upon the stool and to say the least of it, retrieved the situation. I never forgot it. The following week, he joined our organisation and it is needless to say what an acquisition he was...
(Nevin D, op cit p.33)
Connolly was also coming into active politics just as the period of the 1890’s known as the “New Unionism” was beginning. Connolly actually had to postpone his wedding, like a certain Ernesto Che Guevara, due to the commitments of struggle! He and his brother John were the organisers of a proposed strike for reduced hours. The halls of the SSF in
A possible distinction that can be made is the emerging difference between the organisation and militancy of different sections of the working class. Between the unskilled and skilled workers. C Desmond Greaves makes the point that:
The heart of Scottish socialism was
(Greaves C D, op cit p.28-29)
And it was to this
“The old guard wanted no action at all” (Greaves, op cit p. 36)
What we are trying to draw out here is a brief but important account of two sectors of the working class moving in opposite directions. A further wee example here of the perfidy of this trade union body: Connolly’s brother had been dismissed by the city council for speaking at the Edinburgh May Day demonstration. While the Trades Council did complain, they eventually gave up any fight and John Connolly stayed sacked. The Trades Council would have represented thousands of workers in various trade unions and a threatening sign from them would have saved John’s job but again “The old guard wanted no action at all”!
In one of his first articles for “Justice” James Connolly shows that he was alive to what was going on:
The population of
Connolly was plainly not interested then in trade union respectability and covering up injustice for the sake of “unity” in the labour movement. He denounced Glasgow Trades Council as happy to be associated with the Co-operative Society even though it paid less than union rates. Anything to keep the divie up! Divide and rule he fought against as well, exposing an attempt to split the workers according to nationality. The Master Bottlemakers’ Association had refused to meet strikers because there were foreigners amongst their number. Connolly railed against this racism:
It was all very well to employ a foreigner at starvation wages and so cut down the wages of the native - but to treat with the foreigner…Why it was preposterous!
(ibid p. 40)
And what of
Perhaps they will learn how foolish it is to denounce tyranny in
(Nevin D, op cit p. 39)
Coming third with 14% of the vote, Connolly’s analysis of the limits of the electoral contests is appropriate to today, he denounced the lack of difference between “the Liberal Tweedledee and the Tory Tweedledum” (Greaves C D, op cit p. 51).
In the year of 1894, Connolly had also been expressing views about the class character of the nationalist movement in
As an Irishman who has always taken a keen interest in the advanced movements in
(Nevin D, op cit p. 38)
His comrade, John Leslie, who had brought Connolly into the socialist movement 5 years before, had delivered a series of lectures in 1893 which were eventually published in pamphlet form as The Present Position of the Irish Question. Nevin gives full coverage to its arguments and it is undoubtedly the case that Connolly, having served in the British Army for 7 years during the Land League agitation combined his experience there with the powerful thesis of Leslie’s that
Connolly never wavered from this argument and eventually was to advance it in arms directly against British rule in the Easter Rising of 1916. Thousands of pages have been written, millions of words have been spoken on this subject, on the relationship between national struggle and class struggle, between nationalism and socialism. Is it really that difficult, who has a problem with it? Is it a practical question? Or a matter of abstract theory or debate? A distraction, a diversion from class struggle, from socialism? Reading Connolly, of his life, of his commitment and action for the working class, there can be no doubt that he advanced in absolute clarity- in word and deed- the combined struggle of that class in
We are out for
The cause of labour is the cause of
(Connolly, Selected Writings,
Clearly our comrade had not abandoned socialism or the working class, although there are many who would like to see it that way! As David Reed has argued in Ireland: The Key To The British Revolution, Connolly was anticipating the lack of support from the “Socialists” of the time and in this he was again right. All the major organisations of the European left rejected the Rising of 1916. Some on the spurious grounds that it had nothing to do with socialist or working class struggle, some on the grounds of its timing, some because it was an armed campaign.
The Scottish ILP weekly Forward uttered the empty abstraction, ‘a man can be a nationalist or an internationalist’…Socialist Review, journal of the ILP, announced in September 1916, ‘In no degree do we approve of the Sinn Fein rebellion. We do not approve of armed rebellion at all, any more than any other form of militarism or war’ (Reed D, op cit p. 59) .
In C Desmond Greaves’ account he suggests that a useful way of tackling Connolly’s life and works is to consider that his political life corresponded almost exactly to the period of the Second International, that is from 1889 to 1916. What does this mean, what was the Second International and why was it over by 1914?
We have to go back to the beginnings of the communist movement from 1848 with the publication of the Communist Manifesto in that year and the study and work of Marx and Engels on
The masses are for the Irish. The organisations and the labour aristocracy in general, follow
(Marx K and Engels F, Ireland and the Irish Question (MEOI),
He had earlier exclaimed in 1867:
…the
(MEOI p. 155. Cited Reed D, p.13)
These revolutionary developments, caused by imperialism, were undermined by imperialism.
Likewise with the issue of wars, of course the parties of the Second International opposed them. Resolution after resolution proved this. Yet by 1914 with the outbreak of the First World War those organisations had all run for their national flags. Having denounced nationalism as chauvinism and reactionary and divisive, here they were now on the recruiting platforms with the soldier and the priest and the trade unionist. Connolly challenged those who had derided Irish nationalism and who were now calling for the defence of their “nation”. Now it was he who properly asserted the unity of the working class and called for action to sabotage imperialist war.
Should the working classes of Europe, rather than slaughter each other for the benefit of kings and financiers, proceed tomorrow to erect barriers all over Europe, to break up bridges and destroy the transport service that war might be abolished, we should be perfectly justified in following such a glorious example, and contributing to the final dethronement of the vulture classes that rule and rob the world.
(Greaves D, op cit p. 284)
It was not to be and Connolly made the decision that “
There is one, and only one, kind of real internationalism, and that is- working whole-heartedly for the development of the revolutionary movement and the revolutionary struggle in one’s own country, and supporting (by propaganda, sympathy and material aid) this struggle, this and only this, line, in every country without exception.
(James Connolly, Collected Works, Dublin 1987 Volume 1 pp. xiv)
James Connolly embodied this principle to the end. Long Live James Connolly!
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