“Rebels” is the story of the men and women who saw in England’s War Ireland’s Opportunity and who planned, debated and carried out the Easter Rising of 1916. It depicts the Rising as more complex, more ambiguous and even more tragic than works and sites focusing merely on the rising in Dublin. It shows a conspiracy, and I use that in a non-pejorative sense, extending across Ireland and even to the ministries in Berlin.
The plan was for military forces across Ireland supplied weapons and ammunition by Germany to rise in so many areas that the British would be unable to divert enough men from the Western Front to suppress the rebellion, leaving them no choice but to grant Ireland its independence. As occurred in a long line of Irish rebellions the pieces did not fall into place. The 20,000 rifles the Germans had captured from the Russians were scuttled, the Rising was delayed from Easter then cancelled, but still a remnant in Dublin, seeing a failed rising as better than none at all, rose on Easter Monday. Resented by many in Dublin and throughout Ireland, their positions were gradually forced to surrender and their leaders shot by their British captors. Over time the reckless Rebels of 1916 would become the patriots whose brash, quixotic rebellion would be the catalyst that would spur the birth of an independent Ireland.
The characters are many and well developed. Sir Roger Casement, the Irish humanitarian, knocked on all available doors in search of German aid to Ireland’s cause, ultimately securing a shipment of the ill-fated Russian rifles. Patrick Pearse, the headmaster of St. Enda’s Irish-speaking school, thought Ireland’s freedom could only be won through a blood sacrifice. Joseph Plunkett, the tubercular poet who left his sick bed to answer the call to General Post Office, died by firing squad, but only after marrying his fiancée, Grace Gifford, the night before in Kilmainham Gaol. James Connolly, the Marxist trade unionist, saw all capitalists as enemies but especially those of the British empire who had enslaved Ireland. Tom Clarke, the tobacconist, had been a member of the underground Irish Republican Brotherhood since 1878. Eamon deValera, the New York born mathematics teacher, would escape execution, probably because of his U.S. citizenship. Countess Markievicz, the upper class convert to socialism, Irish nationalism and Catholicism took her place at St. Stephen’s Green but was denied her chance to die for Ireland due to her gender and social standing. Their tales are tragically brutal and comically civilized. Among the latter are the Volunteers who commandeered a tram at gun-point, and then paid their fare and the truce to permit the superintendent of St. Stephen’s Green to feed the ducks.
Although I had read about the Rising before, I gained a much deeper understanding of the nuances of goals and means, motives and loyalties and savage fighting amidst intense religious fervor. I recommend “Rebels” to anyone with an interest in the Easter Rising or who plans to tour in Ireland as this seminal event in the long road to Irish freedom.