On August 1, 1915, Dublin - school teacher and Irish language activist Patrick Pierce will give an exciting speech at Jeremiah O'Donovan Rosa's Graveyard in the Grasse cemetery
During the speech, Mr. Pearse paid tribute to Odonovan Rossa's indomitable phenomenism and the "dead generation" fighting for Irish freedom. He said Irish vision "not just freedom, Gaelic", freedom as well as Gaelic.
Pat Cooke of UCD explains the importance of Pearse's speech at Jeremiah Au Donovan Rossa Cemetery.
Pierce insisted, "The seeds sown by young people aged 65 and 67 are ripe today."
"They think they settled down Ireland, I think they bought half of us and threatened half the other, I think they had foreseen everything and offered everything - our Finnish Is dead, and while Ireland has these graves, Ireland is not free and never will not be peaceful.
[Editor 's Note: This is an article by Century Ireland, which is an online newspaper once every two weeks. According to the news report of the time, it is written from the point of view of a reporter 100 years ago.
Article 3.1 of the "Irish Constitution" states that "Unified Ireland is only achievable by peaceful consent of the vast majority of people democratically expressed in the two jurisdictions of the island I will. This clause was implemented as part of replacing the old clauses 2 and 3 which had been directly requesting to make the entire island the territory of the state after the Good Friday Agreement was implemented in 1999. The Northern Ireland Act of 1998 is the rule of the UK Parliament that requires Northern Ireland to stay in the UK unless the vast majority of Northern Ireland votes for a unified Ireland. It states that Secretary of State for Northern Ireland "expresses the hope that Northern Ireland will no longer be part of the UK and will form part of it if it seems to exercise power at any time" .
This article has three objectives. The primary objective is to introduce the influence of the United States on the peace process of Northern Ireland. Although the US's interest in Northern Ireland has been pointed out to be small, important Irish-American figures and Irish nationalists are prepared to actively participate in the Northern Ireland issue of Clinton White House. The explanation of the influence of the United States shows how the United States contributed greatly to the origin, evolution, and lifespan of this process, and how it is more complicated from the viewpoint of participation and sensitivity to labor unionism It shows whether it has become. The second goal is to streamline the participation of the United States, especially considering the profit of the president at a never-higher level. Some people think Clinton has a real interest in this issue, but he can also put it in the broader foreign policy objectives.
This article has three objectives. First, I will introduce the story of US participation in peace process in Northern Ireland. Second, I am trying to explain why the involvement of the United States, especially the degree and extent of President Bill Clinton's participation is so high. Some people argue that part of Clinton 's participation in the peace process may be put into connection with wider Clinton' s foreign policy and diplomacy and domestic economy. The third objective is to insist that the influence of US participation may be reduced mainly for various reasons within Northern Ireland.