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Over Three Decades On The Death Of Bobby Sands Still Resonates

Posted: 05/05/2012 00:00

"I am standing on the threshold of another trembling world. May God have mercy on my soul."

With these words, written 31 years ago, Bobby Sands began the hunger strike which culminated in his death after 66 days on May 5 1981.

It was followed by the deaths of nine others who made the same sacrifice: Francis Hughes, Patsy O'Hara, Raymond McCreesh, Joe McDonnell, Martun Hurson, Kevin Lynch, Kieran Doherty, Thomas McElwee and Michael Devine.

Just over three decades on it is perhaps difficult to appreciate the significance of the sacrifice made by Sands and his comrades, which even if you disagree with the aims for which they gave their lives remains a monumental testament to the power of the human spirit.

By the time of his death in 1981 the 'troubles' in the Six Counties in the North of Ireland had been raging since the late 1960s, when the Provisional IRA emerged from the failure of successive British governments to reform the sectarian and gerrymandered province, in which the minority Catholic/Nationalist population were regarded as second class citizens, denied the same political and civil rights as their protestant/unionist counterparts.

Young, otherwise ordinary working class Catholics such as Bobby Sands were forced to make a choice between acceptance of a status quo under which they and their families were persecuted, intimidated, and forced out of their homes by loyalist mobs backed up by a bigoted police force, or resistance.

Sands chose the path of resistance and was arrested and imprisoned twice as a result. Upon his second arrest in 1976 he was interrogated, tortured, and sentenced to 14 years in prison in a trial presided over by three judges with no jury. During his first period of incarceration - 1972 to 1976 - Sands had used his time well, immersing himself in books and study groups with his comrades to learn about the history of the Irish liberation struggle, national liberation and anti-colonial struggles throughout the developing world, literature, and the Irish language.

The removal of the political status of the prisoners had begun in 1976 under the then Labour government led by James Callaghan. This was timed to tie in with the construction of the new purpose built Maze Prison just outside Belfast, where both Republican and Loyalist prisoners were to be transferred from the existing Long Kesh Prison Camp nearby and other detention facilities across the province. Margaret Thatcher and the Tories, replacing Callaghan's Labour government in 1979, were determined to continue the policy of criminalization of Republican prisoners as part of a new offensive against Irish Republicanism in general.

As determined as Sands and his comrades were to see their hunger strike through to the end, Thatcher was equally determined not to budge one inch from the policy of criminalisation. This continued even after Sands was elected as a British Member of Parliament in the midst of his hunger strike in a local by-election, and even in the face of growing international condemnation over the British government's unwillingness to compromise.

The prisoners had five demands:

1. The right not to wear a prison uniform;
2. The right not to do prison work;
3. The right of free association with other prisoners, and to organise educational and recreational pursuits;
4. The right to one visit, one letter and one parcel per week;
5. Full restoration of remission lost through the protest

The enormity of what Bobby Sands and his comrades who died along with him on hunger strike achieved was reflected in its global impact. Upon Sands's death, opposition MPs in the Indian Parliament observed a minute's silence. Protest marches were held against the British government and in tribute to Sands and his comrades.

Following their example, Nelson Mandela led a hunger by prisoners on Robben Island to improve their own conditions. In Tehran the name of the street in which the British Embassy was located was changed to Bobby Sands Street, forcing it to relocate its entrance to avoid the embarrassment of Bobby Sands Street appearing on the letterhead of its stationery and official documents. Cuban President Fidel Castro spoke about Sands and his comrades during one of his speeches.

"Next to this example, what were the three days of Christ on Calvary as a symbol of human sacrifice down through the centuries?"

Even Margaret Thatcher, the main adversary of Sands and his comrades, was moved to say years later that

"It was possible to admire the courage of Sands and the other hunger strikers who died."

But perhaps the most significant and powerful tribute came in the form of a letter from Palestinian prisoners incarcerated in the Israeli desert prison of Nafha. The letter was smuggled out and reached the Falls Road in West Belfast in July 1981. It reads:

"To the families of the martyrs oppressed by the British ruling class. To the families of Bobby Sands and his martyred comrades.

"We, revolutionaries of the Palestinian people who are under the terrorist rule of Zionism, write you this letter from the desert prison of Nafha.

"We extend our salutes and solidarity with you in the confrontation against the oppressive terrorist rule enforced upon the Irish people by the British ruling elite.

"We salute the heroic struggle of Bobby Sands and his comrades, for they have sacrificed the most valuable possession of any human being. They gave their lives for freedom.

"From here in Nafha prison, where savage snakes and desert sands penetrate our cells, from here under the yoke of Zionist occupation, we stand alongside you. From behind our cell bars, we support you, your people and your revolutionaries who have chosen to confront death.

"Since the Zionist occupation, our people have been living under the worst conditions. Our militants who have chosen the road of liberty and chosen to defend our land, people and dignity, have been suffering for many years. In the prisons, we are confronting Zionist oppression and their systematic application of torture. Sunlight does not enter our cell. Basic necessities are not provided. Yet we confront the Zionist hangmen, the enemies of life.

"Many of our militant comrades have been martyred under torture by the fascists allowing them to bleed to death. Others have been martyred because Israeli prison administrators do not provide needed medical care.

"The noble and just hunger strike is not in vain. In our struggle against the occupation of our homeland, for freedom from the new Nazis, it stands as a clear symbol of the historical challenge against the terrorists. Our people in Palestine and in the Zionist prisons are struggling as your people are struggling against the British monopolies and we will both continue until victory.

"On behalf of the prisoners of Nafha, we support your struggle and cause of freedom against English domination, against Zionism and against fascism in the world."

With 2000 Palestinians currently on hunger strike in Israeli prisons, hundreds of them in Nafha, Bobby Sands and the other nine who died on hunger strike over 30 years ago continue to provide inspiration to political prisoners everywhere.

 

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02:04 AM on 05/06/2012
To glorify sands and his ilk is sick. This Sc** were criminals, not saints fighting a just cause.These same animals, while in jail, threatened the lives of the prison officers' families and frquently played up for the staff. I was a prison officer during this time and they were out and out animals. They were criminals and were not political prisoners. They were not in prison because of political beliefs, but for criminal acts. The MAJORITY in northern Ireland wanted to remain british so due to the rule of democracy the british government sent in troops to protect those people, just the same as with the Falklands.
11:24 PM on 05/06/2012
You are polluted by your bigotry and humbled by your ignorance. Few men or women could impose such torture onto themselves until death took them. They are heroes and freedom fighters. The prison officers who tortured and humiliated them were rightly threatened. They were legitimate targets in a war that waged for the rights of an oppressed people. Whether the families of prison officers were also threatened is highly doubtful.
02:54 AM on 05/07/2012
If you think he is a hero then you are sick. I suppose Hitler and stalin are heros to you as well?
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Seaniebhoy
06:43 PM on 05/07/2012
So let me ask you...where di you attach those electrodes? How long can you make a man stand on his toes against a wall? What did you find worked better a flashlight or a trunchon?
07:56 AM on 05/08/2012
Your too much of a thicko to respond to. What are you on? magic musrooms?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Connie Concepcion
Subverter of paradigms.
01:47 AM on 05/06/2012
To those who denigrate Bobby Sands and what he stood for: Do you think he really had a choice? Everything else was tried to no avail. The hunger strike was the last act of resistance against a brutal regime that had been in Ireland for over 800 years. Eight centuries of war, oppression, displacement, genocide, land grabs, and cultural theft. Do you really that Bobby Sands, who saw what the English government was doing to rhe Irish people everyday, had a choice? If you think he did, then you haven't been preying attention.
07:55 AM on 05/08/2012
Trie every thing.Did he stand for parliament? or any other office, or did he just wave banners?
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Connie Concepcion
Subverter of paradigms.
05:38 PM on 05/19/2012
Bobby Sands died as an MP for Tyrone and Fermanagh. He was known for his community work in the Twinbrook area. So he did far more than stand on corners and wave banners. Try reading some history and paying attention before you make your next ignorant comment.
ThinkCreeps
Seriously, it's time.
12:15 AM on 05/06/2012
It does indeed, and it still shows the power of non-violent protest.
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Seaniebhoy
06:51 PM on 05/07/2012
Most non-violent protests in Ireland are met with violence...The NICRA marches of the 60's proved that.
02:44 PM on 05/05/2012
Political belief should not exempt activists from criminal law.

Thatcher was perfectly right to stick to that principle.
01:21 PM on 05/05/2012
Bobby Sands, may have gained more by staying alive.
By peaceful means of course.
Now we will never know.
wes
01:16 PM on 05/05/2012
with indisciminate bombings and shootings Bobby Sands IRA were hardly saints. Israel was founded as a direct result of the holocaust and anti jewish riots in Iraq Libya Egypt and Poland in which jews were killed. Israel still faces a threat to its existance
ThinkCreeps
Seriously, it's time.
12:10 AM on 05/06/2012
The King David Hotel bombing ring any bells? A bit indiscriminate perhaps?

Palestinian militia tend not to be the nicest of chaps. Just as the provos weren't good news for the day-to-day peace and tranquility of their own districts.
12:48 PM on 05/05/2012
I resisted oppression in NI but I didnt do it by joining a band of murderous b******* like the IRA. I think the real heroes are the people who tried to compromise and find peace against enormous intimidation by such as the above 'heroes'. Dont fporget blobby had a CHOICE his victims didn't.
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Roy Fowler
I try....I really do!
09:04 AM on 05/05/2012
How dare the writer speak of IRA cold blooded killers, murderers of men, women and children and "Nelson Mandela" in the same breath!

ALL people of NI have and always had 100% rights before the law and within the sytstem. The state NEVER made anyone of any colour, race or religion, sit at the back of a bus, or withold from them freedon of movement, worship, travel or the right to vote.

As has been proven in that once trouble part of this nation; "Jaw, jaw is better than war, war".
In the end, the killers from within were forced to realise they were but a tiny, tiny minority with no real support for their "pie in the sky" dreams; they were NEVER trying to gain the same freedoms that the minority had, they were never trying to fight to be allowed to walk the streets without fear and in the end, they never had all of world demanding change from a brutal and barbaric sysytem where the majority had no voice and no vote.
09:52 AM on 05/05/2012
Because the South African fight against Apartheid was all love and roses.
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Roy Fowler
I try....I really do!
12:11 PM on 05/05/2012
I was simply stating that you cannot compare or link the struggles of the black african population against the minority whites who held total power to that of a small band of murderers with guns who felt "they knew best" for a whole country. And we all know that the ANC had to fight and kill for the rights all people of NI always take for granted.
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Edgar H
Keep the Press free!
03:52 PM on 05/05/2012
You are wrong to suggest that everyone in the north of Ireland enjoyed 100% of rights under the State. The Unionist State as manipulated by the British at the end of the war for Irish Indenpendece left the so called 'loyalist' population in a position of primacy over the mainly Catholic indigenous people. Local boundaries were then engineered to ensure, as in the case of Derry that 33% of the population governed the remaining 66%. This was called 'Gerrymandering'. The distribution of jobs, housing and services was equally manipulated.

I would ask you to look at the chronological acts of violence from the the mid 60's onwards. You will note that whilst the IRA was silent, it was the UVF (loyalists) who were bombing and murdering people going abouut their lawful business. The first RUC Officer shot dead, was shot dead on the Shankill Road - Con Victor Arbuckle (11.10.69). Gunner Curtis was the first British soldier killed by the PIRA on 06.02.71.

The shame of the north of Ireland was that the people of the UK gave them no thought, instead you looked at S. Africa. Bobby Sands and many others would not have been in a British prison had it not been for the lack of concern of our Britsh neighbours over the previous 50 years. Perhaps, had we been thousands of miles from your shores you would have stood in solidarity with us. But as we were less than 20, we were an embarassment.
ThinkCreeps
Seriously, it's time.
12:01 AM on 05/06/2012
The majority population of the six counties of Ulster forming Northern Ireland was protestant in the 1920s, and had been for about 200 years, since the highland clearances. This issue was unavoidable when the rest of majority catholic Ireland won independence in a very nasty war.

Sending the army to quell protestant rioting in 1969 provided the ideal opportunity to reform the IRA in the six counties.

The IRA, funded by drug supply and other crime committed against the nationalist population, and with substantial US-based backing amongst the self-declared Oirish, taught the British Army a great deal about counterinsurgency, but did little to endear the nationalist cause to the population of the UK as a whole. Death rates in Northern Ireland in the UK forces in the early 1970s broadly matched those today in Afghanistan. The IRA engaged in an eventually effective political campaign alongside, and realized in September 2001 that financial support for a terrorist campaign in the US was over, putting an end to the conflict.