Thursday, 29 August 2013

Léargas Remembering Martin Luther King


LÉARGAS
BY GERRY ADAMS TD

Thursday, August 29, 2013


Atlanta in Georgia is where Martin Luther King was born and where he spent much of his life preaching. In March 2001 I had the good fortune of visiting Atlanta at the invitation of the Ancient Order of Hibernians and Friends of Sinn Féin. I was there to speak at several fundraisers.

It is a city inextricably linked to two of the great struggles in American history: the Civil War and the Civil Rights struggle. In 1864, after a four month siege by the Union armies the city surrendered and it was ordered to be burned to the ground by the union general William Tecumseh Sherman. Only its Churches and hospitals were spared.

In the 1950s and 60s it was at the heart of the Civil Rights struggle. No visit to Atlanta is complete without walking through the Park and Preservation District. Martin Luther King’s home, where he was born in January 1929, is there. So too is the Ebenezer Baptist Church. It is an imposing brown brick building. Inside I had the opportunity to sit quietly and contemplate the efforts of all of those who marched and struggled for equality and civil rights.

This is where Martin Luther King Jr. preached his first sermon at the age of 17 and where he was co-pastor with his father for eight years. In 1957 an organisational meeting of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference was held there and Martin Luther King Jr became its first President. It played a key role in the Civil Rights struggle. It is a building which resonates with the words and deeds of freedom.

A short distance away is the King Centre with its impressive Visitors Centre and the graveside of Martin Luther King Jr.

I tell you all of this because it’s part of my history. Like many of my generation I was hugely influenced by the civil rights movement in the United States. ‘We shall overcome’ was adopted as the slogan for the Irish Civil Rights Association after its formation in 1967 and the courage and heroism of Rosa Parks and others inspired us in our opposition to discrimination in housing and jobs and our demand for the right to vote.

Rosa Parks’ refusal in 1955 to sit at the back of the bus in Montgomery, Alabama; her arrest and the boycott of the bus company was a pivotal moment in that historic struggle. It was also evidence that one person can make a difference.

During one of my first visits to the United States I had the privilege and honour to meet Rosa Parks, a small diminutive woman of tremendous strength of character and determination.

50 years later their efforts have brought about enormous change in American society. This has been most obvious in the election of a black President but intolerance and racism and inequality in employment still exist.

Yesterday – Wednesday August 28th – President Obama spoke at the Lincoln Memorial in Washington where 50 years ago Martin Luther King gave his seminal ‘I have a dream speech’. A quarter of a million people took part in that 1963 March for Jobs and Freedom.

In his historic address that day the civil rights leader reminded his audience that 100 years earlier Abraham Lincoln had signed the Emancipation Proclamation which gave hope to millions of slaves. But ‘the life of the negro is still crippled by the manacles of segregation and the chains of discrimination’. Martin Luther King spelt out his dream, his vision, his aisling for the future. A dream in which no one will be judged by the colour of their skin.

Last weekend tens of thousands of American citizens took to the streets of the US capital to celebrate that momentous event.

But as Martin Luther King III, the eldest son of the assassinated civil rights leader pointed out; This is not the time for nostalgic commemoration, nor is this the time for self-congratulatory celebration. The task is not done. The journey is not complete. We can and we must do more.’

And therein lies the great truth of all struggles for freedom and human and civil rights whether in the United States or Ireland or South Africa  – it is a constant battle for change, for improvement, for redefining our relationships with each other. And it’s about creating the conditions whereby people are empowered to make that change.

Speaking to the First Annual Institute on Non-Violence and Social Change in Montgomery in December 1956 King told his audience that freedom and justice and positive change are not inevitable. He warned that ‘history has proven that social systems have a great last-minute breathing power and the guardians of a status quo are always on hand with their oxygen tents to keep the old order alive.’

These words of warning apply as much today to the island of Ireland as they did 50 years ago. The peace process has brought about many changes. Ireland today is a country in transition. A lot of the old conservative influences have been weakened and progress has been made.

But it is equally clear that there is still huge resistance to change. We still have a lot of work to do to build the republic that is envisioned in the 1916 Proclamation – an Ireland free of division and injustice and fear; an Ireland in which the wealth of the nation is invested creatively and more fairly; an Ireland in which there is equality and justice and freedom.

As we continue our journey forward the words and deeds of Martin Luther King and Rosa Parks and others will continue to inspire us.

In his 1956 speech King concluded his remarks by arguing that we all must have the courage to ‘stand up and protest against injustice wherever we find it.’

He said: ‘There is nothing in all of the world greater than freedom. It is worth paying for; it is worth losing a job; it is worth going to jail for. I would rather be a free pauper than a rich slave. I would rather die in abject poverty with my convictions than live in inordinate riches with the lack of self respect.


SINN FÉIN MOUNTMELLICK – SERVING THE COMMUNITY

Sunday, 25 August 2013

Suffer Little Citizens


Priory Hall residents watch their homes ‘deteriorate beyond repair’
THEJOURNAL.IE 25/8/2013
Almost two years since they were evacuated over fire concerns, Priory Hall residents remain uncertain about their future.
IT IS COMING up to the second anniversary of the evacuation of Priory Hall, a Celtic Tiger development that promised the world to first-time buyers but delivered only a 22-month nightmare.
Sitting idle and empty since 17 October 2011, the Donaghmede complex has now “deteriorated beyond repair”, according to one resident.
“I think with the passage of time, the possibility of anyone going back is zero,” says Graham Usher, spokesperson for the residents’ group. “I don’t think it is going to happen. Families will not be happy to go back to that environment.”
Coincidentally, the week of the second anniversary – beginning 14 October – will also see the 256 residents back in the Supreme Court to hear if Dublin City Council will be obliged to continue paying the cost of their temporary accommodation. (Since 2011, they have been living in various properties in the vicinity. Many are NAMA-owned but full market rates are paid by the council.)
The local authority has already spent more than €3 million dealing with the crisis, including payment for 24-hour security at the premises, new housing arrangements for residents and legal costs. It believes it should no longer be responsible for the housing costs, as was set out in an earlier High Court order.
If the council is successful in its appeal, the residents will have to start paying rent, while their mortgage payments continue to fall due.
The majority have now stopped meeting their mortgage repayments in the hope that it will spark action from their lenders.
To say the resolution process is going slowly is no exaggeration,” says Usher. “The problem is the banks and getting any decision from them.”
There has also been very little mobilisation by politicians.
“The process becomes a convenient excuse for them to do nothing,” according to Usher.
The banks are not making a decision and politicians are unwilling or unable to do anything.
“We are ready to find a solution but are stuck waiting for any kind of engagement. It is hard to pinpoint a best-case scenario without their viewpoint.
“We are at our wits end. The best description of how we are feeling is one of sheer and utter frustration. Everyone around us is moving on with their lives but we are stuck.”
Cabinet Ministers have cited new personal insolvency legislation as a possible solution to the Priory Hall problem but Usher dismisses the idea.
“Under no circumstances will the residents consider that as a solution. Despite the attempts by some to lump us into that category, this is not a mortgage arrears issue,” he explained. “Why should families commit to living on the breadline to satisfy the banks because of a problem we did not create?”
“Priory Hall is the only case in the country where we can pay our mortgages but still lost our homes. It is a unique situation that require a unique solution.”
Dublin City Council has said that it has acted in the best interests of the residents, insisting that it is pursuing the issue through the courts in an attempt to clarify matters.

SINN FÉIN MOUNTMELLICK- SERVING THE COMMUNITY

Friday, 23 August 2013

Labour Party & Fine Gael Protect the Rich Again



August 23rd, 2013 - Pearse Doherty TD
Sinn Féin’s Finance Spokesperson Pearse Doherty TD has said today’s shocking statistics on mortgage arrears show that the banks are “running rings” around the government.
Deputy Doherty said:
“This government has been in power for over two years and under its watch the mortgage crisis has got worse in every way. The numbers in arrears have increased, doubled in fact, and so have repossessions.
“The fact that one in four restructured mortgages is failing shows that the banks have failed to face the reality of the crisis. This shows unwillingness from the banks to engage in a meaningful way. Nearly three years ago the Keane Report proposed split mortgages as a possible solution yet only 309 permanent examples of these mortgages have been created. That is a pathetic response from the banks.
“The last two years have seen the banks’ wish-list being implemented step-by-step. Clearly, the banks are running rings around the government.
The Land and Conveyancing Act's changes have allowed them move straight to repossession as an option, while the revised Code of Conduct allows them adopt a more aggressive approach to borrowers in distress, while the Personal Insolvency Act leaves them with the final say.
“Today’s terrible figures confirm that Sinn Féin’s call for an independent body to be empowered to compel banks into making sustainable and realistic deals with struggling homeowners was the right option. Even at this stage, this body needs to be established and given the power to face down belligerent banks. Severe penalties must be imposed on uncooperative banks.
The Central Bank needs to specify immediately when its targets for the implementation of sustainable arrangements will come into force and what those targets will be.  As things stand they are unable to even say if the banks have met their Quarter 2 targets of simply offering 20% of struggling homeowners a deal.
“It is clearer each quarter as these figures mount that the banks are running rings around the government on mortgages and that Minister Noonan’s and the Central Bank’s cave-in to them is not working for ordinary citizens.”

Sinn Féin Mountmellick - Serving The Community