Máirtín Ó Cadhain | |
Pseudonym: | Aonghus Óg Breallianmaitharsatuanógcadhanmaolpote D. Ó Gallchobhair Do na Fíréin Micil Ó Moingmheara M.Ó.C[1] |
Birth Date: | 20 January 1906 |
Birth Place: | Spiddal, County Galway, Ireland |
Death Place: | Dublin, Ireland |
Occupation: | Novelist, short story writer, journalist, school teacher |
Nationality: | Irish |
Relatives: | Seán Ó Cadhain (father) Bríd Nic Conaola[2] (mother) |
Language: | Irish (Connacht Irish) |
Resting Place: | Mount Jerome Cemetery |
Period: | 1932–1970 |
Genre: | Fiction, politics, linguistics, experimental prose |
Subject: | Irish Republicanism, modern Irish prose |
Movement: | Modernism, social radicalism |
Notableworks: | Irish: [[Cré na Cille]] Irish: An Braon Broghach Irish: Athnuachan |
Spouse: | Máirín Ní Rodaigh |
Signature: | Máirtín_Ó_Cadhain_Signature.png |
Máirtín Ó Cadhain (in Irish pronounced as /ˈmˠaːɾˠtʲiːnʲ oː ˈkəinʲ/; 20 January 1906 – 18 October 1970) was one of the most prominent Irish language writers of the twentieth century. Perhaps best known for his 1949 novel Irish: [[Cré na Cille]], ÓCadhain played a key role in reintroducing literary modernism into modern literature in Irish, where it had been dormant since the 1916 execution of Patrick Pearse. Politically, ÓCadhain was an Irish republican and anti-clerical Marxist, who promoted the Irish: Athghabháil na hÉireann ("Re-Conquest of Ireland"), (meaning both decolonization and re-Gaelicisation). ÓCadhain was also a member of the post-Civil War Irish Republican Army and was interned by the Irish Army in the Curragh Camp with Brendan Behan and many other IRA members during the Emergency.
Born in Connemara, he became a schoolteacher but was dismissed due to his Irish Republican Army (IRA) membership. In the 1930s, he served as an IRA recruiting officer, enlisting fellow writer Brendan Behan.[3] During this period, he also participated in the land campaign of native speakers, which led to the establishment of the Ráth Cairn neo-Gaeltacht in County Meath. Subsequently, he was arrested and interned during the Emergency (the second world war period in Ireland) on the Curragh Camp in County Kildare, due to his continued involvement in the IRA.
Ó Cadhain's politics were Irish republicanism mixed with Marxism and radical politics, and then tempered with a rhetorical anti-clericalism. In his writings, however, concerning the revival of the Irish language, ÓCadhain was very practical about the Catholic Church in Ireland but demanded commitment to the language revival from Roman Catholic priests. It was his view that, as the Church was there anyway, it would be better if the clergy were more willing to address their faithful in the Irish language.
As a writer, ÓCadhain is acknowledged to be a major part of the revival of modernist literature in the Irish, where it had been largely dormant since the execution of Patrick Pearse in 1916. ÓCadhain created a literary language for his writing out of the Irish: [[Conamara Theas]] and Irish: [[Cois Fharraige]] dialects of Connacht Irish, but he was often accused of an unnecessarily dialectal usage in grammar and orthography even in contexts where a realistic depiction of the Connemara vernacular wasn't called for. He was also happy to experiment with borrowings from other dialects, Classical Irish and even Scottish Gaelic. Consequently, much of what ÓCadhain wrote is, like the poetry of fellow linguistic experimentalist Liam S. Gógan, reputedly very hard to understand for a non-native speaker.
He was a prolific writer of short stories. His collections of short stories include Irish: Cois Caoláire, Irish: An Braon Broghach, Irish: Idir Shúgradh agus Dháiríre, Irish: An tSraith Dhá Tógáil, Irish: An tSraith Tógtha and Irish: An tSraith ar Lár. He also wrote three novels, of which only Irish: Cré na Cille was published during his lifetime. The other two, Irish: Athnuachan and Barbed Wire, appeared in print only recently. He translated Charles Kickham's novel Sally Kavanagh into Irish as Irish: Saile Chaomhánach, nó na hUaigheanna Folmha. He also wrote several political or linguo-political pamphlets. His political views can most easily be discerned in a small book about the development of Irish nationalism and radicalism[4] since Theobald Wolfe Tone, Irish: Tone Inné agus Inniu; and in the beginning of the sixties, he wrote – partly in Irish, partly in English – a comprehensive survey of the social status and actual use of the language in the west of Ireland, published as Irish: An Ghaeilge Bheo – Destined to Pass. In August 1969, he delivered a speech (published as Irish: Gluaiseacht na Gaeilge: Gluaiseacht ar Strae) in which he spoke of the role Irish speakers should take in 'Irish: athghabháil na hÉireann', or the 'reconquest of Ireland' as James Connolly first coined the term.
He and Diarmaid ÓSúilleabháin were considered the two most innovative Irish language authors to emerge in the 1960s.[5] ÓCadhain had frequent difficulties getting his work edited, but unpublished writings have appeared at least every two years since the publication of Irish: Athnuachan in the mid-nineties.
In 1956, aged 50 years of age, he was appointed as a lecturer in the Department of Irish in Trinity College Dublin despite not having a degree or other typical academic credentials. He was appointed associate professor of Irish and Head of department fourteen years later in 1969. In 1970 he was appointed as Chair (full professor) and was made a fellow of the university before his death that same year.[6]
A lecture hall in Trinity College Dublin is named after ÓCadhain.[7] There is also a bronze bust of him in the Irish department of the university.
Ó Cadhain's interest in Irish republicanism grew after he started reading Irish: [[An Phoblacht]], a republican newspaper with strong links to the Irish Republican Army that publishes articles in both English and Irish. While living in Camus, County Galway (an Irish-speaking Gaeltacht village) he resided with Seosamh Mac Mathúna, who had been a member of the IRA since 1918. His time with Mac Mathúna further brought him down the path of republicanism and eventually, Mac Mathúna brought ÓCadhain into the IRA. As a member, he championed a Marxist analysis of Ireland and was a particular advocate for Irish: Athghabháil na hÉireann (English: "The Reconquest of Ireland"), a concept of James Connolly's that suggests the Irish language could only be saved by socialism, as the English language is a tool of the capitalists.[8] [9]
In 1932, ÓCadhain along with MacMathúna and Críostóir Mac Aonghusa (a local teacher, activist and county councillor) founded Irish: Cumann na Gaedhealtachta (The Gaeltacht Association), a pressure group to lobby on behalf of those living in Ireland's Gaeltacht areas. He formed a similar group in 1936 called Irish: Muinntir na Gaedhealtachta (the Gaeltacht People). One of the successes of these groups was the establishment of the Ráth Chairn Gaeltacht, in which a new Irish-speaking community was created in County Meath. ÓCadhain had argued the only way by which Irish language speakers could thrive was if efforts to promote the language were coupled with giving Irish speakers good land to work, so as to give them an opportunity at economic success as well.
By 1936, ÓCadhain had been working as a school teacher in Carnmore, County Galway for four years, when he was dismissed from his post by the Roman Catholic Bishop of Galway for his republican beliefs, which were deemed to be "subversive". He had recently attended a commemoration in Bodenstown to honour his idol Wolfe Tone, which had been banned by the government. He subsequently moved to Dublin, where he acted as a recruiter for the IRA, at which he was quite successful. In April 1938, he was appointed to the IRA's Army Council and became their secretary. By 1939, he was "on the run" from the Irish authorities and by September of the year had been arrested and imprisoned until December. ÓCadhain's stint with the Army Council was short-lived however; he resigned in protest of the S-Plan, a sabotage campaign against the British state during the second world war, on the grounds that any attempt to "liberate" Northern Ireland politically was meaningless unless the people were also "economically liberated".[8]
In 1940, he gave an oration at the funeral of his friend Tony Darcy, who had died on hunger strike in Mountjoy Prison seeking political prisoner status. Following the funeral he was once again arrested and imprisoned, this time to spend four years with hundreds of other IRA members in the Curragh. ÓCadhain's friend Tomás Bairéad campaigned for his release and they found success on 26 July 1944 when ÓCadhain was allowed to leave. During ÓCadhain's time in the Curragh, he taught many of the other prisoners the Irish language.[10]
Following his time in the Curragh, ÓCadhain pulled back from politics to focus on his writing. For a long period he became bitter about Irish republicanism, but by the 1960s once again identified with its outlook. At the onset of the Troubles in Northern Ireland, he welcomed resistance to British rule as well as the idea of an armed struggle, and once again stated his Marxist outlook on the situation; "capitalism must go as well as the Border".
During the 1960s, he once again threw himself into campaigning on behalf of the Irish language, this time with the group Irish: Misneach ("Courage"). The group resisted efforts by reform groups to no longer make it compulsory for a student to pass an Irish examination to receive a Leaving Certificate, as well as a requirement that those seeking employment in the public sector needed to be able to speak Irish. Irish: Misneach used civil disobedience tactics influenced by Saunders Lewis, the Welsh language advocate and founder of Plaid Cymru.[11]
Ó Cadhain was a key figure in the 1969 civil rights movement, Irish: [[Gluaiseacht Chearta Sibhialta na Gaeltachta]].
He died on 18 October 1970 in Dublin and was buried in Mount Jerome Cemetery.