On August 1, 1915, at the funeral of Jeremy O'Donovan Rosa, in a serious speech by Patrick Pierce, "Irish is not free and never rests." This speech evokes the feelings of the Republic of Ireland and is an important element of the leader. Until the Easter of 1916
Odonovan Rossa is a founding member of the Irish Republic Brotherhood (commonly known as Fenian) and passed away on New York at the age of 84 on June 29, 1915. Another Fenian leader, John Devoy, called Dublin's Tom Clark and asked what to do. Clark replied: "Please go home now." Clark and Thomas McDonay started planning a huge funeral to show support for Irish independence.
At the time, Clark chose Patrick Perth as the most important speaker, he was a lawyer and teacher and made a speech at the cemetery. At that time, the Republican leaders were not afraid to be imprisoned in a critical moment of preparing for the rise and did not claim to cause inflammation. When asked how far the pierce should go to him, Clark answered: "It is as hot as hell and it is a hurricane." [1]
When arriving in Dublin, the body of Rossa, along with the guards of Irish applicants, was brought to the boardwalk and carried on the evening before the altar. Then they took honorary guard again at Dublin City Hall until the funeral. Thousands of volunteers visited the Grasseven Cemetery along the mausoleum.
After the funeral, Pearse published his speech. He spoke on behalf of "a new generation that was baptized in the Finnish faith" and urged people in Ireland to unite and realize Irish freedom. And he said, "We only know the definition of freedom: it is the definition of tone, that is the definition of Mitchell, the definition of Rossa" (ie the Republic of Ireland). The tone of the speech clearly shows that it will force to establish the Republic of Ireland soon. At the end of the speech, the challenge of 'defender in this field' was challenged:
They think that they settled down Ireland. They think that they bought half of us and intimidated the other half. They thought they had foreseen everything, I think they offered everything, but fools, fools, fools! - They made us the dead of our Fenians and Ireland has these tombs.
Rosa's funeral and piercing speech mobilized Republicans and created conditions for the rise. Eight months later, on April 24, 1916 Pierce stood on the porch of the Dublin Post Office and read the Republic Declaration. Easter uprise was short lived but it caused events that led to the formation of the Irish free state in 1922.
Today, Pearse's funeral speech is considered one of the most important speech in the history of Ireland in the 20th century. The manuscript of this speech is currently being held at the pierced museum in Ras Faham, Dublin.
Jeremiah Odanowan Rosa, New York's old leader, died in August 1915 This is an opportunity to showcase a great demonstration. His body was sent to Ireland buried in the Grassewen Cemetery and volunteers took charge of the arrangement. A huge crowd was lined in a graveyard. Pearse makes a dramatic funeral speech and calls Republicans and ends with the phrase "Ireland is not free and never will be peaceful". In early April, Pearse ordered an Irish volunteer to start a "parade and exercise" for three days on Easter Sunday. As a director of the volunteer organization, he has the right to do so. The idea is that IRB members within the organization know that these are orders to begin to rise, and people like McNeil and British authorities will see it on the surface.
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" .