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Violent protests in Dublin after woman and children injured in knife attack

Conil

Well-known member
Apr 12, 2013
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Appears the attacker is from Algeria

Crowd chanting anti-immigrant slogans clashes with police hours after stabbing incident outside school


Buses and trams have been torched and a shop looted during riots in Dublin city centre after a stabbing attack outside a school left three children injured.

Police and politicians called for calm amid warnings against misinformation as violence escalated from a demonstration that began on Thursday afternoon at the scene of the incident.

There were clashes with riot police as some demonstrators let off flares and fireworks, while others grabbed chairs and stools from outside bars and restaurants.

A police cordon was set up around the Irish parliament building, Leinster House, and officers from the Garda Mounted Support Unit were in nearby Grafton Street.

More than 400 Irish police officers were involved in the height of the response. In a video statement on social media, Ch Supt Patrick McMenamin said some members of the police force had been attacked and assaulted.

However, he said no serious injuries had been reported by gardaí or members of the public. Gardaí remained on patrol in the city centre, he said, adding: “Dublin city centre is now calm and returning to normal.”

The Irish justice minister, Helen McEntee, labelled the scenes “intolerable” and said a “thuggish and manipulative element must not be allowed to use an appalling tragedy to wreak havoc”.

The garda commissioner, Drew Harris, said a “complete lunatic faction driven by far-right ideology” was behind the disorder.

The violence broke out after three young children and a woman were attacked in Parnell Square East in the north of the city centre. Police detained a man in his 50s, who was also being treated for injuries, and said they were not seeking other suspects.

The incident happened at about 1.30pm on Thursday outside a school, Gaelscoil Choláiste Mhuire. Police said a five-year-old girl, a woman in her 30s and a man in his 50s sustained serious injuries. The girl was receiving emergency medical treatment. A five-year-old boy and a six-year-old girl were treated for less severe injuries. The boy was discharged from hospital.

Supt Liam Geraghty appealed to anyone with information about the incident, including mobile phone footage of the attack and its aftermath, to come forward. He praised the bystanders who intervened in what he said was a traumatic and dangerous incident.

Earlier on Thursday, Supt Liam Geraghty said officers were keeping an open mind in terms of the investigation but were “satisfied there is no terrorist link”.

However, at an evening press conference Harris said: “I have never ruled out any possible motive for this attack … all lines of inquiry are open to determine the motive.”

Harris said it was too early to ascribe a motive. “An individual has been arrested, we’re not seeking anyone else in respect of this incident itself at this moment in time but the investigation will obviously unfold,” he said.

On Thursday night a helicopter hovered overhead as police in riot gear used shields and batons to clear a crowd down O’Connell Street, Dublin’s main thoroughfare. At the other end, by O’Connell Bridge, flames rose from the remains of a bus and a car.
People smashed store windows and set off fireworks, turning the night air acrid. Loud bangs echoed across the city. When asked why they were there, members of the crowd threatened journalists and claimed the media were not telling the truth about immigration.

Harris called for “calm heads” and warned against misinformation as he condemned the “disgraceful scenes” in Dublin. He said a “complete lunatic faction driven by far-right ideology” was behind the disorder and a number of garda vehicles had been damaged.
“It’s our responsibility to make sure that we police the streets, and part of that is we ask people to act responsibly and not to listen to the misinformation and rumour that is circulating on social media,” he said. “The facts are being established, but the facts are still not clear on a lot of the rumour and the innuendo is being spread for malevolent purposes.”

McEntee said: “The horrific attack today in Dublin city centre was an appalling crime that has shocked us all. However, the scenes we are witnessing this evening in our city centre cannot and will not be tolerated. A thuggish and manipulative element must not be allowed to use an appalling tragedy to wreak havoc.”

Gaelscoil Choláiste Mhuire is an Irish-medium primary school with 172 pupils based in a four-storey Georgian building on Parnell Square, a busy thoroughfare in Dublin’s north inner city.
The attack reportedly happened as pupils emerged from the school. Bystanders disarmed a man and pinned him to the ground, with several kicking him, one witness, Siobhan Kearney, told RTÉ. “People were trying to attack the man. So me and an American lady formed a ring around him saying we’d wait on the garda.”

Another man safeguarded a knife for police to retrieve, Kearney said. “Two children and the woman were taken back into the school where they were coming from. It was absolutely bedlam.”
The Irish president, Michael D Higgins, expressed his sympathies for the children injured in the attack. “All of our thoughts are with each of the children and their families affected by today’s horrific attack,” he said. “We are particularly thinking of the five-year-old girl and the member of staff caring for her who are both in serious condition in hospital.”
He added: “This appalling incident is a matter for the Gardaí and that it would be used or abused by groups with an agenda that attacks the principle of social inclusion is reprehensible and deserves condemnation by all those who believe in the rule of law and democracy.”

 
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mandrill

monkey
Aug 23, 2001
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AFAIK, this was an isolated incident from an Algerian man who had been found to be a genuine refugee.

The Irish chief of police has denounced the rioters as "extremist thugs". Numerous cops have been injured and beaten. Police cars have been burned. Essentially the knife attack used as an excuse for a grotesque night of violence and looting by neo nazi vandals.
 
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mandrill

monkey
Aug 23, 2001
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Well it was a brown 50 yr Algerian who injured 5 white women and children?? It was all due to the Irish open border policy. Why is it always the far-rights who are blamed for everything, when it was a 50 yr old Algerian refugee who did the stabbing, in the first place??
First of all, Ireland does not have an "open border policy".

Second of all, the attack was not political and I suspect the Algerian guy had a psychotic episode.

Third of all, the Algerian didn't storm immigrant aid centres, terrorize immigrant schools, burn police cars, beat cops and burn down buildings in the city centre.

That shit was all done by white people, right?

And you know?...... It's not just me who's saying this. The Irish chief of police said exactly the same shit as I am saying.
 

shapeup1

Well-known member
Jul 6, 2002
1,799
153
63
Canada
Ireland has a long history of antisemitism. Very few Jews left, maybe 3000. 0.06% of the population.

Antisemitic Ireland needs to shake off the imbecility

Not a few of Ireland's gallant heroes were vulgar antisemites and Nazi collaborators


There’s something wrong with Ireland.

For several years now, the nouveau-riche political class that dominates the republic has been something of an embarrassment. The scandals and the cronyism, the gross domestic product data masking a tax-haven economy with hundreds of thousands of people scraping by below the poverty line, the pathological unseriousness.

It’s all a bit much, but ever since the bloody Simchat Torah pogrom of Oct. 7, which drew Israel into a last-straw determination to smash the Hamas terror infrastructure in Gaza entirely, Ireland has become the unbearable, hectoring, sanctimonious bore of the entire 27-nation European Union.

Three weeks ago, Irish Prime Minister Leo Varadkar kicked things off by asserting that Israel’s military operations in Gaza constituted “something approaching revenge.” On Sunday, Varadkar told Ireland’s national broadcaster RTE that the EU is applying “double standards” in the case of Vladimir Putin’s war of conquest in Ukraine, compared to Israel’s Operation Swords of Iron in Gaza.

Between these two histrionic bookends, the Irish legislature came 16 votes away from approving a motion to expel Israeli ambassador Dana Erlich, and 10 votes away from approving a motion to haul Israel before the International Criminal Court. Along the way, the several political parties in the Irish legislature have appeared to compete with one another for the most outlandish thing that can be said about Gaza’s ongoing misery.

On Monday, Varadkar was called upon to assure People Before Profit Teachta Dála (member of Parliament) Paul Murphy that U.S. planes were not stopping at Shannon Airport carrying weapons bound for Israel. Murphy had insisted that any Israel-bound aircraft at Shannon had to be formally inspected. “Israel is carrying out a genocide against the Palestinian people in Gaza. Its number one supporter and military backer is the U.S. … by allowing Shannon Airport to be used by the U.S. military while it is aiding and abetting genocide, Ireland is complicit.”

Ireland’s official position on the Hamas-Israel war is that its “root cause” is the blockade Israel maintains around the Gaza Strip in order to prevent the entry of munitions and war materiel. Varadkar leads a narrow Fine Gael, Fianna Fáil and Green Party coalition, but Mary Lou McDonald’s Sinn Féin party, which spent most of its life as the political wing of the Irish Republican Army, is tied with Fianna Fáil for the largest share of TDs.

Ireland is a comical EU outlier on the matter of Israel for a variety of reasons. Irish politicians generally like to claim that it’s because of Ireland’s history of dispossession, occupation and resistance to colonialism — three subaltern virtues fashionably attributable nowadays to the Palestinians.

In a recent interview with the Guardian, the retired Irish diplomat Niall Holohan put it this way: “We feel we have been victimized over the centuries. It’s part of our psyche — underneath it all we side with the underdog.”

But there’s something else in the Irish psyche that’s impolite to mention in the comfy Dublin pubs and bistros of Portobello, Ranelagh and Rathmines. Not a few of Ireland’s gallant and celebrated champions of the underdog, its heroes of Irish freedom, were vulgar antisemites and Nazi collaborators.

Mary Lou McDonald assumed the reins of Sinn Féin in 2018 from an older, harder leadership that was deeply integrated with the Provisional wing of the IRA in Northern Ireland. She first came to public notice as a social justice activist in Dublin 20 years ago, right around the time she spoke at a commemoration for Sean Russell, a 1930s-era IRA chief of staff who spent time in Nazi Germany training in the use of explosives.

Russell died of a perforated ulcer in a Nazi submarine that was returning him to Ireland to lay the groundwork for an IRA sabotage campaign to assist a planned Nazi invasion of the Six Counties in British-controlled Ulster.

It has been commonplace for Irish pseuds to boast that the Irish could not be antisemites, that unlike any other country in Europe, Ireland’s Jews have never known persecution. This was true only until the 20th century. And in recent years, Irish Jews are commonly baited, harassed and badgered every time there is some eruption in Israel involving Palestinian “resistance.”

Just one awkward thing buried in the Irish psyche is the Limerick Pogrom of 1904, a series of incitements led by a renegade Redemptorist priest that resulted in mob assaults on Jewish businesses and the beatings of several Limerick Jews. The republican pamphleteer Arthur Griffith approved, calling Jews “usurers and parasites.” Griffiths was one of the founders of Sinn Féin, in 1905, and he served as Sinn Féin’s president in 1911.

There was always a deep division in the Irish nationalist movement between Irish republicans who felt an affinity with the Jews owing to a shared history of dispossession and exile, and Catholic extremists who ranted and raved about Jews. Those Catholic shouters are still abroad, apparently unaware that for half a century, Catholic doctrine has established that antisemitism is a mortal sin.

Irish Jews, too, were active in the struggle for a sovereign Irish republic. In return, the early Zionists drew inspiration from the Irish freedom struggle. Today’s proud Irish “pro-Palestine” shouters would rather forget that the militant Zionist Ze’ev Jabotinsky, founder of the insurrectionary Zionist Irgun organization in British Mandate Palestine, wrote to IRA leader and later Irish president Éamon de Valera asking for advice and guidance. He wanted to learn as much as he could about Ireland’s guerrilla war against the British. De Valera invited Jabotinsky to Ireland, where he stayed for several weeks, mostly taking counsel from IRA leader Robbie Briscoe, himself a Jew.

Jabotinsky returned to the Holy Land determined to form “a physical force movement in Palestine on exactly the same lines as Fianna Eireann and the IRA.”

The Irish political class needs to show a great deal more humility and a great deal less sanctimony and imbecility on the Israeli-Palestinian predicament. It’s fair enough to empathize with the Palestinians, even to see something in the Palestinian struggle for statehood that harkens to Ireland’s long journey. But for all the similarities, there is a difference, even between the IRA at its worst and savage moments in the 1980s, and Hamas, in its routine conduct and standpoints.

The IRA never vowed to slaughter every British loyalist on the island of Ireland and hunt every Englishman to the ends of the Earth, to the ends of time. That’s what Hamas has in mind for the Jews.

The Irish should remember that.

 

Not getting younger

Well-known member
Jun 29, 2022
4,485
2,407
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Second of all, the attack was not political and I suspect the Algerian guy had a psychotic episode.
But a white kid mows down 4 immigrants in London Ontario and it’s a politically motivated terrorist attack.

Only difference I see that actually matters is the public’s response.
 

HungSowel

Well-known member
Mar 3, 2017
3,046
1,955
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I miss the good old days when the Brits owned Ireland and the only illegals were the Irish.
 

Frankfooter

dangling member
Apr 10, 2015
98,589
26,385
113
Ireland has a long history of antisemitism. Very few Jews left, maybe 3000. 0.06% of the population.

Antisemitic Ireland needs to shake off the imbecility

Not a few of Ireland's gallant heroes were vulgar antisemites and Nazi collaborators


There’s something wrong with Ireland.

For several years now, the nouveau-riche political class that dominates the republic has been something of an embarrassment. The scandals and the cronyism, the gross domestic product data masking a tax-haven economy with hundreds of thousands of people scraping by below the poverty line, the pathological unseriousness.

It’s all a bit much, but ever since the bloody Simchat Torah pogrom of Oct. 7, which drew Israel into a last-straw determination to smash the Hamas terror infrastructure in Gaza entirely, Ireland has become the unbearable, hectoring, sanctimonious bore of the entire 27-nation European Union.

Three weeks ago, Irish Prime Minister Leo Varadkar kicked things off by asserting that Israel’s military operations in Gaza constituted “something approaching revenge.” On Sunday, Varadkar told Ireland’s national broadcaster RTE that the EU is applying “double standards” in the case of Vladimir Putin’s war of conquest in Ukraine, compared to Israel’s Operation Swords of Iron in Gaza.

Between these two histrionic bookends, the Irish legislature came 16 votes away from approving a motion to expel Israeli ambassador Dana Erlich, and 10 votes away from approving a motion to haul Israel before the International Criminal Court. Along the way, the several political parties in the Irish legislature have appeared to compete with one another for the most outlandish thing that can be said about Gaza’s ongoing misery.

On Monday, Varadkar was called upon to assure People Before Profit Teachta Dála (member of Parliament) Paul Murphy that U.S. planes were not stopping at Shannon Airport carrying weapons bound for Israel. Murphy had insisted that any Israel-bound aircraft at Shannon had to be formally inspected. “Israel is carrying out a genocide against the Palestinian people in Gaza. Its number one supporter and military backer is the U.S. … by allowing Shannon Airport to be used by the U.S. military while it is aiding and abetting genocide, Ireland is complicit.”

Ireland’s official position on the Hamas-Israel war is that its “root cause” is the blockade Israel maintains around the Gaza Strip in order to prevent the entry of munitions and war materiel. Varadkar leads a narrow Fine Gael, Fianna Fáil and Green Party coalition, but Mary Lou McDonald’s Sinn Féin party, which spent most of its life as the political wing of the Irish Republican Army, is tied with Fianna Fáil for the largest share of TDs.

Ireland is a comical EU outlier on the matter of Israel for a variety of reasons. Irish politicians generally like to claim that it’s because of Ireland’s history of dispossession, occupation and resistance to colonialism — three subaltern virtues fashionably attributable nowadays to the Palestinians.

In a recent interview with the Guardian, the retired Irish diplomat Niall Holohan put it this way: “We feel we have been victimized over the centuries. It’s part of our psyche — underneath it all we side with the underdog.”

But there’s something else in the Irish psyche that’s impolite to mention in the comfy Dublin pubs and bistros of Portobello, Ranelagh and Rathmines. Not a few of Ireland’s gallant and celebrated champions of the underdog, its heroes of Irish freedom, were vulgar antisemites and Nazi collaborators.

Mary Lou McDonald assumed the reins of Sinn Féin in 2018 from an older, harder leadership that was deeply integrated with the Provisional wing of the IRA in Northern Ireland. She first came to public notice as a social justice activist in Dublin 20 years ago, right around the time she spoke at a commemoration for Sean Russell, a 1930s-era IRA chief of staff who spent time in Nazi Germany training in the use of explosives.

Russell died of a perforated ulcer in a Nazi submarine that was returning him to Ireland to lay the groundwork for an IRA sabotage campaign to assist a planned Nazi invasion of the Six Counties in British-controlled Ulster.

It has been commonplace for Irish pseuds to boast that the Irish could not be antisemites, that unlike any other country in Europe, Ireland’s Jews have never known persecution. This was true only until the 20th century. And in recent years, Irish Jews are commonly baited, harassed and badgered every time there is some eruption in Israel involving Palestinian “resistance.”

Just one awkward thing buried in the Irish psyche is the Limerick Pogrom of 1904, a series of incitements led by a renegade Redemptorist priest that resulted in mob assaults on Jewish businesses and the beatings of several Limerick Jews. The republican pamphleteer Arthur Griffith approved, calling Jews “usurers and parasites.” Griffiths was one of the founders of Sinn Féin, in 1905, and he served as Sinn Féin’s president in 1911.

There was always a deep division in the Irish nationalist movement between Irish republicans who felt an affinity with the Jews owing to a shared history of dispossession and exile, and Catholic extremists who ranted and raved about Jews. Those Catholic shouters are still abroad, apparently unaware that for half a century, Catholic doctrine has established that antisemitism is a mortal sin.

Irish Jews, too, were active in the struggle for a sovereign Irish republic. In return, the early Zionists drew inspiration from the Irish freedom struggle. Today’s proud Irish “pro-Palestine” shouters would rather forget that the militant Zionist Ze’ev Jabotinsky, founder of the insurrectionary Zionist Irgun organization in British Mandate Palestine, wrote to IRA leader and later Irish president Éamon de Valera asking for advice and guidance. He wanted to learn as much as he could about Ireland’s guerrilla war against the British. De Valera invited Jabotinsky to Ireland, where he stayed for several weeks, mostly taking counsel from IRA leader Robbie Briscoe, himself a Jew.

Jabotinsky returned to the Holy Land determined to form “a physical force movement in Palestine on exactly the same lines as Fianna Eireann and the IRA.”

The Irish political class needs to show a great deal more humility and a great deal less sanctimony and imbecility on the Israeli-Palestinian predicament. It’s fair enough to empathize with the Palestinians, even to see something in the Palestinian struggle for statehood that harkens to Ireland’s long journey. But for all the similarities, there is a difference, even between the IRA at its worst and savage moments in the 1980s, and Hamas, in its routine conduct and standpoints.

The IRA never vowed to slaughter every British loyalist on the island of Ireland and hunt every Englishman to the ends of the Earth, to the ends of time. That’s what Hamas has in mind for the Jews.

The Irish should remember that.

This was likely a mob of antisemitic, anti immigrant, right wingers.

"There is a group of people, thugs, criminals, who are using this appalling attack to sow division," Justice Minister Helen McEntee told reporters.

"They are disgraceful scenes. We have a complete lunatic, hooligan faction driven by far right ideology engaged in serious violence," Police Commissioner Drew Harris told reporters after deploying 400 officers to restore public order.
 
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mandrill

monkey
Aug 23, 2001
82,009
111,842
113
Yes, but what you're saying is all just speculation. I'm the first to admit that I don't know very much about Ireland, but in the tweets I read, they said that Ireland has a lax border system, very similar to Biden's southern border problem in the US!! In other words, this Algerian man shouldn't have been in Ireland, in the first place. He entered Ireland illegally!!
Biden does not have a "lax" border system and neither does Ireland. Both countries have solid immigration laws and lots of enforcement.

But the USA - like Canada - is also a signatory to the UNCHR and is obligated to provide asylum hearings to asylum claimants. In fact, ALL western countries signed on for this. Those well-known lefty woketards Winston Churchill (Tory) and DD Eisenhower (GOP) set it up.

Now the USA and Canada can remove themselves from the UNCHR any time they want. But no rightie government has ever done so. Why is that?.......

Because they get so much mileage out of race-baiting asylum seekers for their racist base that they would actually LOSE VOTES if they actually blocked asylum seekers from entering.

Now what's your source that the crazy Algerian knife guy was illegal???
 
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mandrill

monkey
Aug 23, 2001
82,009
111,842
113
Ireland has a long history of antisemitism. Very few Jews left, maybe 3000. 0.06% of the population.

Antisemitic Ireland needs to shake off the imbecility

Not a few of Ireland's gallant heroes were vulgar antisemites and Nazi collaborators


There’s something wrong with Ireland.

For several years now, the nouveau-riche political class that dominates the republic has been something of an embarrassment. The scandals and the cronyism, the gross domestic product data masking a tax-haven economy with hundreds of thousands of people scraping by below the poverty line, the pathological unseriousness.

It’s all a bit much, but ever since the bloody Simchat Torah pogrom of Oct. 7, which drew Israel into a last-straw determination to smash the Hamas terror infrastructure in Gaza entirely, Ireland has become the unbearable, hectoring, sanctimonious bore of the entire 27-nation European Union.

Three weeks ago, Irish Prime Minister Leo Varadkar kicked things off by asserting that Israel’s military operations in Gaza constituted “something approaching revenge.” On Sunday, Varadkar told Ireland’s national broadcaster RTE that the EU is applying “double standards” in the case of Vladimir Putin’s war of conquest in Ukraine, compared to Israel’s Operation Swords of Iron in Gaza.

Between these two histrionic bookends, the Irish legislature came 16 votes away from approving a motion to expel Israeli ambassador Dana Erlich, and 10 votes away from approving a motion to haul Israel before the International Criminal Court. Along the way, the several political parties in the Irish legislature have appeared to compete with one another for the most outlandish thing that can be said about Gaza’s ongoing misery.

On Monday, Varadkar was called upon to assure People Before Profit Teachta Dála (member of Parliament) Paul Murphy that U.S. planes were not stopping at Shannon Airport carrying weapons bound for Israel. Murphy had insisted that any Israel-bound aircraft at Shannon had to be formally inspected. “Israel is carrying out a genocide against the Palestinian people in Gaza. Its number one supporter and military backer is the U.S. … by allowing Shannon Airport to be used by the U.S. military while it is aiding and abetting genocide, Ireland is complicit.”

Ireland’s official position on the Hamas-Israel war is that its “root cause” is the blockade Israel maintains around the Gaza Strip in order to prevent the entry of munitions and war materiel. Varadkar leads a narrow Fine Gael, Fianna Fáil and Green Party coalition, but Mary Lou McDonald’s Sinn Féin party, which spent most of its life as the political wing of the Irish Republican Army, is tied with Fianna Fáil for the largest share of TDs.

Ireland is a comical EU outlier on the matter of Israel for a variety of reasons. Irish politicians generally like to claim that it’s because of Ireland’s history of dispossession, occupation and resistance to colonialism — three subaltern virtues fashionably attributable nowadays to the Palestinians.

In a recent interview with the Guardian, the retired Irish diplomat Niall Holohan put it this way: “We feel we have been victimized over the centuries. It’s part of our psyche — underneath it all we side with the underdog.”

But there’s something else in the Irish psyche that’s impolite to mention in the comfy Dublin pubs and bistros of Portobello, Ranelagh and Rathmines. Not a few of Ireland’s gallant and celebrated champions of the underdog, its heroes of Irish freedom, were vulgar antisemites and Nazi collaborators.

Mary Lou McDonald assumed the reins of Sinn Féin in 2018 from an older, harder leadership that was deeply integrated with the Provisional wing of the IRA in Northern Ireland. She first came to public notice as a social justice activist in Dublin 20 years ago, right around the time she spoke at a commemoration for Sean Russell, a 1930s-era IRA chief of staff who spent time in Nazi Germany training in the use of explosives.

Russell died of a perforated ulcer in a Nazi submarine that was returning him to Ireland to lay the groundwork for an IRA sabotage campaign to assist a planned Nazi invasion of the Six Counties in British-controlled Ulster.

It has been commonplace for Irish pseuds to boast that the Irish could not be antisemites, that unlike any other country in Europe, Ireland’s Jews have never known persecution. This was true only until the 20th century. And in recent years, Irish Jews are commonly baited, harassed and badgered every time there is some eruption in Israel involving Palestinian “resistance.”

Just one awkward thing buried in the Irish psyche is the Limerick Pogrom of 1904, a series of incitements led by a renegade Redemptorist priest that resulted in mob assaults on Jewish businesses and the beatings of several Limerick Jews. The republican pamphleteer Arthur Griffith approved, calling Jews “usurers and parasites.” Griffiths was one of the founders of Sinn Féin, in 1905, and he served as Sinn Féin’s president in 1911.

There was always a deep division in the Irish nationalist movement between Irish republicans who felt an affinity with the Jews owing to a shared history of dispossession and exile, and Catholic extremists who ranted and raved about Jews. Those Catholic shouters are still abroad, apparently unaware that for half a century, Catholic doctrine has established that antisemitism is a mortal sin.

Irish Jews, too, were active in the struggle for a sovereign Irish republic. In return, the early Zionists drew inspiration from the Irish freedom struggle. Today’s proud Irish “pro-Palestine” shouters would rather forget that the militant Zionist Ze’ev Jabotinsky, founder of the insurrectionary Zionist Irgun organization in British Mandate Palestine, wrote to IRA leader and later Irish president Éamon de Valera asking for advice and guidance. He wanted to learn as much as he could about Ireland’s guerrilla war against the British. De Valera invited Jabotinsky to Ireland, where he stayed for several weeks, mostly taking counsel from IRA leader Robbie Briscoe, himself a Jew.

Jabotinsky returned to the Holy Land determined to form “a physical force movement in Palestine on exactly the same lines as Fianna Eireann and the IRA.”

The Irish political class needs to show a great deal more humility and a great deal less sanctimony and imbecility on the Israeli-Palestinian predicament. It’s fair enough to empathize with the Palestinians, even to see something in the Palestinian struggle for statehood that harkens to Ireland’s long journey. But for all the similarities, there is a difference, even between the IRA at its worst and savage moments in the 1980s, and Hamas, in its routine conduct and standpoints.

The IRA never vowed to slaughter every British loyalist on the island of Ireland and hunt every Englishman to the ends of the Earth, to the ends of time. That’s what Hamas has in mind for the Jews.

The Irish should remember that.

Britain actually has a history of working class mob violence and anti Semitism. You just have to look for the stories because they're brushed to the side.
 
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