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Moral compass lost in quest for truth about Cromwell

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  • Moral compass lost in quest for truth about Cromwell

    Irish Independent, Ireland

    Moral compass lost in quest for truth about Cromwell

    An attempt to ameliorate judgement of Cromwell runs the risk of
    sparking genuine outrage, writes Marc Coleman

    By Marc Coleman
    Sunday September 21 2008

    Cromwell - An Honourable Enemy

    Tom Reilly

    Phoenix Press, ??¬13.99

    Cromwell's campaigns in Ireland annihilated one fifth of Ireland's
    population, by both direct killing and by the famine and disease that
    accompanied the mass evictions of Catholics from their lands. Although
    the moral gravity is less than the Holocaust -- the most premeditated
    genocide in history -- the calculated prejudice and lasting human
    trauma of Cromwell's campaign mean writing about it ought to be done
    by only the most serious, well-trained and morally guided of
    historians.

    Tom Reilly is no David Irving. He doesn't deny the facts of Cromwell's
    campaign. But neither is he -- judging by the biography on his book's
    cover -- a trained historian. Good historians are story-tellers, not
    Devil's advocates and had Reilly stuck to his story, he might have
    written something worth reading. Like a someone telling a victim of
    child abuse that they should try to understand the motives of their
    abuser, there is something deeply disturbing about Reilly's book. Its
    very title Cromwell, An Honourable Enemy is a sweeping statement that
    the incomplete facts gathered in the remainder of the book fail to
    validate.

    The key phrase in Reilly's argument is "the context of his
    times". It's an approach to history that has been used before, often
    by tyrants seeking to justify their actions: Stalin's purges together
    with mass killings of Armenians in the Ottoman Empire were used by
    Hitler to convince himself and his acolytes into the most vicious
    campaign of genocide in human history. In this country, the IRA
    justified its bombing of civilians and campaigns against Protestants
    living in border areas by pointing to British atrocities past and
    present, including those of Cromwell. The UDA justified its actions by
    pointing to the IRA. Reilly doesn't justify Cromwell's actions. But,
    although he intends to do the very opposite, his attempts to qualify
    and ameliorate judgement on Cromwell run the risk of inciting genuine
    outrage.

    They are also out of date. Since the Nuremberg Trials, we have
    accepted the idea of an absolute moral imperative on government, that
    genocide is wrong and that tyrants cannot excuse their actions by
    pointing to relative circumstance or the "context of the times", as
    Reilly puts it: Radovan Karadzic's trial in the Hague is the principle
    being put into action in our time.

    Reilly refers to massacres of Protestants by Catholic generals in the
    German town of Magdeburg in 1631 and the massacre of Protestants in
    Ulster 10 years later as reasons why -- although they had nothing to
    do with either event -- the massacre of the citizens of Drogheda
    should be seen "in context'. Doubtless, Karadzic may have traced a
    line from his ghoulish actions in Srebrenica back to Turkish
    atrocities against Serbs half a millennium ago.

    Reilly is on just as dubious ground in assessing Cromwell the man. The
    image of Cromwell as a champion of democracy does not survive any
    analysis of how Cromwell suppressed the Leveller and Digger movements
    -- a group of his own supporters who were hanged for believing in one
    man one vote and in genuine religious toleration. This receives no
    significant attention in Reilly's book.

    It also fails to grasp the extent to which Cromwell's actions in
    Ireland were driven by economic motives. In circumstances that in some
    ways parallel those prevailing when Hitler came to power, Cromwell
    inherited a country financially exhausted by war and the economic
    profligacy of his predecessor and a population demoralised by
    defeat. The Irish were a weak minority that Cromwell could exploit to
    the full.

    As scapegoats, his campaigns satiated frustration at England's failure
    to engage against continental Catholic powers in the Thirty Years
    War. By portraying the Irish -- who were merely fighting for their own
    land and freedom of religion -- as "traitors", Cromwell was then able
    to harness political support for a campaign of conquest that would pay
    in land what Cromwell could not pay his generals and investors back in
    coin. The destruction of Irish culture and the death of at least
    200,000 people were the result. Pathetically, Reilly's book makes no
    effort to measure the enormous cost to the future of Ireland arising
    from Cromwell's actions. So far as he is concerned, Ireland is a
    stepping stone for Cromwell to ascend to glory.

    He is also blind to Cromwell's duplicity. As it pumped out pamphlets
    depicting the Irish rebels as wicked barbarians for English
    consumption, Cromwell's propaganda machine was issuing proclamations
    of a very different nature in Ireland, telling the Irish that he would
    protect them against any "wrong or violence toward country people or
    persons unless they be actually in arms or office with the
    enemy". Like Elizabeth, Cromwell denied knowledge of the worst
    atrocities committed by his generals in Ireland. But the atrocities
    committed under his nose in Drogheda, together with his inaction
    against generals guilty of mass killings and evictions, testify to the
    ultimate truth of Cromwell's intentions and actions. Reilly's
    interpretation of Cromwell's motives here is gullible beyond belief.

    As an exercise in devil's advocacy, the book might yet be worthwhile
    if it were not so hard to read. Bizarre sentences like this one --
    where he interrupts a narrative on Cromwell's advance on Drogheda to
    tell us that the town "houses a modern commercial establishment that
    is representative of international twentieth century cuisine: a
    McDonald's fast food outlet" -- are a case in point. The book is
    devoid of maps or pictures to bring the campaigns and characters to
    life. The chapters are badly structured and mainly focused on a
    discussion of Cromwell's actions in Drogheda, Wexford and, finally,
    Clonmel where -- with no proper concluding chapter -- the book
    abruptly ends. And while a historian is entitled to opinions,
    Reilly's views on Catholicism are, for those of us who subscribe to
    that faith, somewhat patronising. "Imaginative superstition and
    na?Ã?¯ve wholesale gullibility, concerning both supernatural and divine
    matters have been replaced by scientific solutions." From one so
    easily taken in by Cromwellian hagiography, the charge of gullibility
    is almost laughable.

    In one respect, he has a point, but it's not the point he thinks:
    Cromwell was not "honourable" as he claims (massacring tens of
    thousands of innocent people never is). But neither was he the only
    perpetrator of these deeds. What Reilly might have done -- and some
    historian should -- is to extend backwards an analysis of genocide in
    Ireland to include the actions of Elizabethan campaigners, such as
    Blount, Mountjoy and Drake (who slaughtered the inhabitants of Rathlin
    Island regardless of age and gender). In doing what he did, Cromwell
    was going down a well-trodden path.

    Those who fail to learn the lessons of history will repeat it. As the
    Iraq war shows, political leaders with economic agendas can misinform
    public opinion to pursue wars that cause large-scale civilian
    death. In doing so, they create the "context" for their enemies use to
    justify future atrocities. And so the bloody cycle of world history
    goes on. In an age of rising global tension, we need pseudo-history
    and moral relativism of this nature like a hole in the head.

    Perhaps Reilly is worried that telling the truth -- the moral as well
    as the factual truth -- about Cromwell will fan flames of
    Anglophobia. The opposite is true: Attempts to suppress the truth are
    far more likely to do that. Truth and unrequited recognition of wrongs
    done are the only firm bases for peace and reconciliation. The idea
    that hating Cromwell amounts to hatred of the English is equally
    untrue. So much did the English hate Cromwell that after his death
    they threw his corpse on a dump. Once the chore of reading it was
    over, that's what I did with this book.

    - Marc Coleman
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