This is true. A friend’s fourteen year old son was asked to write an essay about a hero by his Religion teacher. Presumably this type of task allows the young mind to think through notions of good, evil and personal responsibility.  When asked who his subect would be Seamus Og replied “Michael Collins”. The teacher’s reply wasn’t “would it not break your poor father’s heart to name the military leader of the Irish counter-revolution as your hero?”  Nor even “don’t you think his capitulation to British imperialism weighs in the balance against him?” She scolded the youth that Collins couldn’t be his hero because he was a “murderer” and before the boy could retort “well miss, a lot of people might think that executing the spies of an occupying power during a war of liberation is morally unproblematical” the teacher was offering her own suggestions. Go on. Guess who they were.

Yes. Nelson Mandela, Martin Luther KIng and F#####g BONO!  Now for the record, before Weekly Whiner writes an article calling me an apologist for apartheid and Jim Crow, I have strong views against both of them but that is not the point of this piece.  (I also have strong views against Bono and one of the few comforts in running this site is that at least once a day someone somewhere searching for the words “Bono wanker” comes to it.)

I gave two bits of advice to the angry father. One was to give the boy a thrashing for picking Collins in the first place. The other was to write a letter to the school governors insisting that a teacher with such conformist attitudes to history and who young people chose as significant figures should not be allowed anywhere near a classroom.  For want of a better phrase there is a deadening liberal complacency in the way that the past is discussed both in classrooms and in the media. Anytime the BBC wants to have a feelgood montage about the world Nelson Mandela is in there. King’s image is shorthand for “racism is bad -ok”.  There are only about seven non footballers who fourteen year olds do not have thrust down their throats every day as worthy of being called a “hero”. So when a boy has the gumption to pick someone not on the approved list is cut dead like that it reveals just how narrow the educators’ horizons have become. It also tells you a lot about the pyschology of much of Belfast’s professional classes in post-settlement Ireland that they want to disown their pioneers.

7 responses to “Wrong and right sorts of hero”

  1. “She scolded the youth that Collins couldn’t be his hero because he was a “murderer” and before the boy could retort “well miss, a lot of people might think that executing the spies of an occupying power during a war of liberation is morally unproblematical” the teacher was offering her own suggestions.”

    Lol, sounds like the teacher had never heard of Mkhonto We Sizwe.

    Like

  2. I’m always pleased to help out where I can, (I think my problem is that I just care too much.)

    Bono is a wanker.

    This, I hope, will increase your hit rate.

    I’m happy to post this several times a day. A win-win situation, you get the extra hits, I get to publicly call Bono a wanker .

    I recently had one of those problematic moments – my youngest child said “who the fuck is that wanker”. I don’t condone such talk from a nine year old, nor do not know where she gets it from. I, of course, copped out and said “It’s Bono, but please don’t swear, it’s ugly”. She said , in return “What the fuck, then,do you expect me to say?”

    Kids, eh?

    Like

  3. Bono, a hero? Well he’s written some good tunes but then delusions of grandeur took over along with ‘Sir’ Bob Geldof. Ireland’s produced some wonderful political and cultural figures but that doesn’t excuse those two. Even purgatory with Daniel O’Donnel would be preferrable to a minute spent with that pillock Bono.

    Like

  4. Surely the revolution that took place on Irish Counters was when the Republic taxed plastic bags?

    Like

  5. For many years the 26 County state refused to commemorate the Rising on similar grounds. This was allied with attempts to justify the Redmondite support of the Empire during WW1.
    Truly bizzare to find oneself regarded as a subversive for being a supporter of the founding event of the state.
    There is a lot of buried history as well. Garrett Fitzgerald was unaware until recently that his mother supported the Republican side during the Civil War.
    Bono and Geldoff played a role in demobilising the mass rallies which greeted the G8 summits. I think they were fading anyway but still.

    Like

  6. In History at school, in what is now called ‘year 9’ I think, our teachers flouted the “thou shalt teach nothing that happened since 1918, and nothing about Ireland, ahem, ‘The Troubles’ at all, ever” rule, and we watched the Michael Griffith documentary “Hang Out Your Brightest Colours: The Life and Death of Michael Collins”, which was banned by ITV and at that point had only been shown on BBC Wales.

    Our Religous Studies teacher, on the other hand, was sacked for hitting one of his pupils.

    Like

  7. […] Eye (e.g. the criticisms of Ken “Leninspart” Livingstone) and Liam MacUaid (try this absolutely fantastic article). Probably the most famous satire on the left comes from the Pythons (what doesn’t?) in their […]

    Like

Leave a reply to Andy Bowden Cancel reply

Trending