Aftermath - when the boys came home

Sunday 7 September 2008

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from The Guardian, Tuesday November 10, 1998

Republic honours forgotten war heroes

Republic honours forgotten heroesStephen Bates on Belgian memorial to Irish who died for Britain on Western front

IT HAS taken 80 years and the Northern Irish peace process to do it, but tomorrow in a quiet corner of western Belgium the Irish Republic will finally remember tens of thousands of men who fought and died for Britain in the first world war.

In a ceremony to be attended by the Queen and the king and queen of the Belgians, the Irish president, Mary McAleese, will inaugurate a peace memorial in the form of a celtic tower.

It will be the republic's first official recognition that men from the south of Ireland took part in the war. For many years their contribution was written out of history, overshadowed by the struggle for independence from Britain at the same time. Ireland is only now coming to terms with its role in both world wars, although in the second world war the republic was officially neutral. Maurice Biggar, first secretary at the Irish embassy in Belgium, said: "This is a profound and significant event. Even five years ago it would not have been possible."

In a gesture heavy with symbolism, the 100ft high round tower was built by citizens from each side of the border using stones from each of the 32 counties.

One of the moving spirits, Paddy Harte, a veteran former Fine Gael member of the dail, said: ''I have always thought the southern Irishmen who fought in the war have been forgotten and treated like pariahs. It was wrong for the South not to recognise their contribution.

"We are saying particularly to the North that these men also fought and wore the khaki uniform. And to the South, that they never had the chance to come back and prove their Irishness."

The tower is at Messines, now known as Mesen in Flanders, a few miles outside Ypres, where divisions from both southern Ireland and Ulster fought side by side for the only time in the war during the opening stages of the battle of Passchendaele.

About 30,000 from what became the republic are thought to have died on the western front, compared with the 1,300 killed on both sides in the Easter rising and the 3,000 said to have died in the civil war. Some of the Irishmen who fought subsequently joined the IRA to fight the British, such as Tom Barry whose guerrilla campaign later won him fame.

The number killed from the South is also higher than the 20,000 Ulstermen killed in the war although Ulster Protestants have always used the sacrifice of their men, particularly on the Somme, as evidence of loyalty to Britain.

The tower's supporters are quoting the words of Willie Redmond, a nationalist MP killed on the western front, who claimed that if Irishmen could fight and die together, they could also live together.

Redmond wrote to the novelist Sir Arthur Conan Doyle: "it would be a fine memorial to the men who have died so splendidly if we could over their graves build a bridge between North and South." His death caused a byelection at East Clare which saw the hard-line nationalist and future taoiseach, Eamon de Valera, elected to Parliament.

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