https://www.newarab.com/opinion/stand-palestinians-sinn-fein-must-not-silence-us

After being terminated from Sinn Féin without explanation, Farrah Koutteineh explores the Irish party’s evolution from a revolutionary one that stood with Palestine to one that prioritises election results over Palestinian voices.

Three weeks ago a letter was sent to my home in Belfast addressed from the Sinn Féin Headquarters in Dublin. A letter stating that my membership of the party had been terminated indefinitely, without any reason as to why this was happening.

I immediately contacted the head of my local Sinn Féin branch, and another Sinn Féin paid member of staff, asking as to why I was sent this letter. Both of them responded instantly in shock saying it ‘must have been a mistake’ and that they would look into it for me.

A few days afterwards they contacted me stating that the letter was not a mistake but they ‘wish me well’. Upon asking for what reason my membership had been terminated, I was ignored, and the reason as to why left shrouded in secrecy.

I believe my input in a Sinn Féin meeting on Palestine partnered with the party’s deceptive stance on Palestine had a role to play in my ejection from the party.

“When I started to scratch beneath the surface of Sinn Féin’s stagnant performative activism, it then made sense to me why the Party’s leadership would want someone like myself thrown out of the party”

A week prior to receiving this letter, I was invited to my first ‘Palestine Working Group’ meeting. A meeting of a Sinn Féin-led and structured group that was left inactive, and that I was the only Palestinian member of.

This meeting had been called last minute to discuss what the Party should do to mark the 75th anniversary of the Nakba, the start of the ongoing colonisation, ethnic cleansing and dispossession of the Palestinian people.

A few performative actions were suggested, such as getting Sinn Féin representatives in the Irish Parliament to hold paper Palestine flags, whilst someone else suggested that Sinn Féin representatives in the North do the same.

The anniversary’s timing is ‘convenient’ as the local elections in the North are just three days after Nakba Day. They believed it would perhaps get them a few more votes amongst their base of supporters who are very sympathetic to the Palestinian cause.

I then made my contribution to the meeting, as the only Palestinian member, suggesting that the most important thing Sinn Féin could do outside of performative actions, would be to update their own party policy on Palestine.

As it stands Sinn Féin’s current party policy supports a ‘two-state solution’ – a so-called ‘solution’ that is void in a settler colonial reality. A stance that is also arguably contradictory when the party campaigns for an end of the British-imposed partition in Ireland but then somehow supports the partition of Palestine.

I suggested they update this policy by denouncing the two-state solution and specifically use words such as ‘decolonisation’. My suggestion was shouted down by the Sinn Féin International Officer who was chairing the meeting, followed by an unsolicited and ill-informed rant on Palestinian politics, with offensive orientalist undertones.

I was then lectured that ‘Palestinians are disorganised’, and that they need to be ‘more organised in order to be taken credibly’. When I tried to interject, as I believe Palestinians are both politically organised and unified in their defiance to Israeli oppression, the chair, a paid member of Sinn Féin staff, then cut me off saying my time to speak was over. He then proceeded to tell me ‘Palestinians need to get their house in order’ before Sinn Féin would update its two-state solution policy.

At first observation I found this whole interaction very bizarre, considering for example, its party representatives would have no qualms in making public statements in support of Palestine, down to even Sinn Féin’s President, Mary Lou McDonald’s twitter profile picture being a photo of Palestine’s flag.

However when I started to scratch beneath the surface of Sinn Féin’s stagnant performative activism, it then made sense to me why the Party’s leadership would want someone like myself thrown out of the party.

It has been reported that Sinn Féin elected officials, most notably West Belfast MLA, Pat Sheehan, have hosted several meetings with far-right Israeli political party, Likud, the party of current Israeli leader, Benjamin Netanyahu, over the past few years.

Facing much criticism from the party’s supporters sympathetic to Palestine, MLA Pat Sheehan’s first response was not to apologise, but instead defend these meetings in a public statement stating that ‘dialogue is essential’.

Just this past weekend alone we witnessed Israeli Occupation Forces bomb a Palestinian children’s special needs home, murder over 33 Palestinians, and saw 5 year old Tamim Dawood die from a panic-induced heart attack from the intense Israeli bombing of Gaza.

“No matter how revolutionary the root of a political party may be, no party is exempt from being pacified into a counter-revolutionary structure used to contain and control a once revolutionary movement”

Just a month ago both party leaders, McDonald and O’Neill, welcomed US President Biden to Ireland, despite them both claiming to support Palestinian human rights, they rolled out the red carpet, choosing to blissfully ignore Biden’s annual $3.8 billion military aid package to Israel, and his infamous quote on how ‘If there were no Israel, we’d have to invent one’.

This seemed to have even caused controversy amongst elected Sinn Féin officials. Upon Biden’s visit into Irish Parliament, whilst McDonald was blushing over Biden, Sinn Féin TD Chris Andrews turned his back to Biden and wore a Palestine football jersey in protest of Biden’s support for Israel.

Sinn Féin, like several political parties who were once rooted in former national liberation movements, seem to be modifying themselves into mainstream politics, ditching its moral stances in hopes of getting elected in the South by appealing to its middle classes, modifying itself to such an extent it is no longer clear what it stands for.

Sinn Féin, the de facto political wing of the Irish Republican Army during the Troubles, began in 1905 as a socialist “party of the people”. But since it has come to power, it has only ever voted in favour of austerity, of landlords (which its own elected officials are themselves), and worsening the lives of working class communities across the North of Ireland.

The Sinn Féin stronghold of West Belfast is just one example of the party modifying its socialist party roots. According to a 2018 UN report, West Belfast has the second highest rate of child poverty across the whole of Britain.

A party that cannot even stay loyal with the values of the struggle it claims to represent, that initially resisted British imperialism and occupation but now chooses to attend King Charles Coronation the day after the anniversary of the death of Irish hunger striker Bobby Sands, is evidence enough of a revolutionary party that has been pacified, that has been debilitated, and that has fallen.

No matter how revolutionary the root of a political party may be, no party is exempt from being pacified into a counter-revolutionary structure used to contain and control a once revolutionary movement.

Yet another political elite doing well for themselves at the expense of the people they are supposed to represent. From the ANC, to the Palestinian Authority, to Sinn Féin.

by borschbandit

13 comments
  1. Yip but this is the internet. We need this in a paragraph.

    Israel knows too much about genocide………. again.

  2. Thank you for bringing attention to this. I was unaware of this person’s experience. It is very concerning that an actual Palestinian has been treated this way by Sinn Féin. As an Irish republican voter with an inclination towards SF, it alarms me.

  3. Who cares, don’t get it with people and Palestine.
    Blows my mind people protesting in the UK and Ireland about Palestine and crap in America.
    Protest about any amount of thingS going on over here if that’s what you want to do, get a grip.
    Is anyone in America or Palestine protesting for us? NO

  4. This story was posted on this sub at the time but they didn’t want to know. Same way they didn’t want to know about the threads I posted about SF going to the Whitehouse this year. 

    They ll go out marching every week for Palestine even though their own leadership are going to be dining with the number 1 backer the Israelis have. The Americans support every action the Israelis have taken as far as I can see.  They ll not see any irony in that because gerry and Mary lou say so. 

    I guess when you’ve been that brainwashed with propaganda and have been indoctrinated from a young age you just believe in the cult I guess.

  5. >Sinn Féin, like several political parties who were once rooted in former national liberation movements, seem to be modifying themselves into mainstream politics, ditching its moral stances in hopes of getting elected in the South by appealing to its middle classes

    While not what the author intended, this piece made a good case that maybe SF can now be taken seriously as a party of government. 

  6. Im usually a shinner voter, this is alarming and I would like answers.

  7. Sinn Fein are extremely aggressive in terms of doing anything it takes to further themselves. They will gladly ruin the living standards of those in nationalist areas where a lot of people vote for them, just to boost statistics that make them appear to have fulfilled their mandate. If you don’t benefit them or tow their party line, they don’t give a shit about you, whether you’re nationalist republican, Palestinian or whatever and will gladly throw you under the bus.

  8. A political party caught changing what they say to meet a narrative come election time? Almost like political parties jump on a cause just to get attention and votes while not really giving a flying fuck. This has never happened in the whole of recorded human history, I’m genuinely aghast.

  9. Very good article.

    I have spoken with many Sinn Féin members who are furious over the party’s abandonment of Palestine recently and I think it will cost them.

    It’s a terrible look and I honestly think they’re becoming FF lite.

  10. The Palestinian ambassador to Ireland seems perfectly happy with Sinn Féin’s stance on Palestine and I’d take that over one random Palestinian.

    Expulsion from the party does not happen overnight, and is a drawn out process involving suspension firstly. It’s unheard of for a member to be expelled over a civil difference of opinion at a cumann meeting.

    Party policy isn’t changed at cumann level, however, individual cumainn can forward motions to the Ard Fheis which if passed will result in policy change. There has been no motion in recent years to change the two state policy, and reality would suggest that such a policy change would be incredibly unlikely, not to mention unhelpful.

    As regards talking to people, talking to your opponents/enemies has been shown to be a lot more productive than talking to yourself.

    Also, why is this article being dragged out of obscurity at this particular time?

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