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In some respects the amnesia which once characterised Irish memory of the Great War
has been bookended by two plays, O'Casey's "The Silver Tassie" and "Observe the Sons of Ulster Marching
Towards the Somme" by Frank McGuinness. The former, inter alia, highlighted the inconvenient truth of working
class Irish participation in World War 1. The rapidly developing nationalist narrative of the late 1920s did
not permit of any such recognition, hence the rejection of the play by Yeats and the Abbey Theatre.
The play ran counter to the nation's foundation mythology. It acknowledged a phenomenon whose memory was required
to be quietly erased from the Irish collective unconscious. So successful was this process that, a generation later
we didn't even know that we didn't know. "We were never told" was the mantra of Frank McGuinness, when he came
to write his drama about the slaughter of the men of the 36th Ulster Division on 1 July 1916 on the Somme.
The play (premiered by a very different Abbey to the one which had rejected the Tassie) contributed enormously to the
process of re-integrating Great War memory into the Irish psyche.
In some respects this collection of RTÉ archive material is a microcosm of that Irish psyche.
RTÉ (in the shape of 2RN) dates from the year prior to the Silver Tassie controversy. Its archive reflects
Irish preoccupations. Its omissions point towards our blind spots. On the debit side is the fact that,
as a repository of oral history the RTÉ catalogue includes barely thirty first-hand Irish witnesses of the First World War. On the merit side is the fact that it includes all of thirty
first-hand witnesses of the Great War in a time of calculated and culpable amnesia.
Bronze and silver stars go to the likes of Jim Fahy, Cathal O'Shannon and Joe Little for their efforts to
explore the silhouetted history of Ireland and the Great War. The gold medal goes to radio producer Kieran
Sheedy who interviewed more than twenty veterans in his compilation of "The Irish Brigades in the First World
War". His field tapes constitute more than half of the mechanically recorded oral history of the period. For a
writer of two books on the subject they were an invaluable resource, just as they are when reproduced on
this website.
There are a couple of noteworthy and pleasant revelations in this collection.
One is former Northern Correspondent Jim Dougal's news report in 1976 on the return of octogenarian former
members of the 36th Ulster Division to the Somme. But the single most beguiling and unexpected surprise was
Peter Kennerley's 1966 TV documentary "And in the Morning". Here septuagenarian southerners relive and remember
their Great War experiences. What is almost astonishing about the programme is the date of its production.
As a child in the Ireland of 1966 I, and most others, were focused on an entirely different 50th anniversary
celebration that year. Thanks to the work of the likes of Paddy Harte, Glen Barr, Kevin Myers, Tom Hartley and
Tom Burke of the Royal Dublin Fusiliers Association (and numerous others), there is an excellent chance that
the 100th anniversaries of the Easter Rising and the carnage of the Somme will both be appropriately and
prominently commemorated in 2016.
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