This is a report on the Foundation of the State Conference in UCD which I attended earlier in this month. It was published in the library Staff Update. I may as well get a blog post out of it.
Foundation
of the Irish State Conference, 2-3 December
My
great-grandmother stopped speaking to her own son because he married a Free
Stater. My father, when he was a boy, sabotaged the public address system at an
event where De Valera was speaking (and got a hiding from Kevin Boland for
doing so—or so he said).
I don’t
mention these snippets of family history because they are unusual, but rather
the opposite. Many of us have similar stories in our background; grandparents
and great-grandparents who were heavily invested in the struggle for
independence or one or other side of the Civil War.
It seems
such a shame, then, that the centenary of these events has aroused so little
public or media interest. It’s true that Covid occupied a large swathe of that
period—although, since that meant we all had a lot more time on our hands, that
hardly seems a good enough explanation.
Happily,
UCD has been an exception to this lack of attention, and this month the
Foundation of State conference provided one of the highlights of the Decade of
Commemorations.
I attended
both days of this two-day conference, and I’m happy to report that it was a
triumph—a truly satisfying, many-sided, almost exhaustive examination of the
Irish Free State’s foundation. The presence all the way through of
sign-language interpreters was particularly admirable, as was the inclusion of
a whole session completely in the Irish language.
The first
day was held in the O’Reilly Hall, which looked very impressive with an
enormous Christmas tree in the corner. (The Finnish ambassador to Ireland Raili
Lahnalampi, who spoke at one point on the parallels with Finnish independence,
joked that we must have put it there to make her feel welcome, since spruce is
so widespread in her country. She also put the bloodiness and divisiveness of
our own Civil War into perspective—thirty-nine thousand people died in
the four-month Finnish Civil War in 1918). The second day was held in the
Fitzgerald Chamber in the Student Centre.
The
conference was opened by the Taoiseach Micheál Martin. The Taoiseach is a
history graduate, and his personal interest in the subject was obvious. He gave
an excellent speech in which he asked wgy the 6th of December—the
date the Constitution of the Irish Free State was ratified and came into effect
in 1922, and indeed the date the Anglo-Irish Treaty came into effect the year
before—has never been a focus of celebration, either for the country in general
or for any single political tradition within in. The answer, he said, was that
nobody was particularly happy with the circumstances of independence, even the
strongest supporters of the Treaty. He suggested, however, that there was much
to celebrate in the foundation of the Irish State—for instance, the foundation
of the Garda Síochana and the public legitimacy they enjoyed, the preservation
of democracy, and the fact that extreme left- or right-wing movements never
gained traction here as they did in much of Europe.
Speaker
after speaker over both days emphasized the difficulties involved in setting up
the new state. Bláthna Ruane, of the School of Law, in answering a question as
to why Ireland preserved the Common Law tradition in framing its new legal
system, said it was a “no-brainer”; there was simply no time to do anything
else. John Fitzgerald emphasized the importance of advice from the British
Treasury in the Free State’s economic survival.
Many
speakers emphasized the achievements of the new State. Joseph Brady of the
School of Geography praised Marino, which was the first local authority housing
estate in the country, as still the best example of public housing in Ireland.
(In my view, Dr. Brady’s was the most interesting of all the talks.) Of course,
not all was rosy in new Ireland. Mary Daly’s contribution was a sobering
reminder of how very far 1920’s Ireland was from a welfare state.
On the
other hand, all three speakers in the Irish language sessions emphasized the
huge achievement that had been made in saving the native tongue from
extinction. Regina UÍ Chollatáin, chair, said she had no doubt that compulsory
Irish in school had played a crucial role in this.
The
conference ended in a fascinating and lively discussion between Diarmuid
Ferriter, Marie Coleman, and Brigid Laffan. The importance of archives for
commemorations was emphasized.
The
conference wasn’t without its weaknesses. There was, for my money, rather too
much emphasis on fashionable identity politics. On the whole, however, it was a
fitting retrospective of a crucial moment in our history, and I left with a
deeper appreciation of the huge efforts and sacrifices involved in creating the
new State.