• Skip to main content
  • Skip to secondary menu
  • Skip to primary sidebar
  • Skip to footer
Irish America

Irish America

Ad example
  • Menu
        • About Us
        • Hall of Fame
        • Hall of Fame at the Dunbrody
        • Business 100
        • Sign up for our newsletter!

        • Health and Life Sciences 50
        • In This Issue
        • Supplements
        • Wall Street 50
        • Columns
          • Books
          • First Word
          • Hibernia
          • Letters
          • Photo Album
          • Quote Unquote
          • Slainte
          • Those we Lost
          • What are you like?
          • Wild Irish Women
          • Window on The Past
          • You've Got Mail:
        • Highlights
          • Top Stories
          • Music
          • History
          • Sports
          • Politics
          • Travel
  • Home
  • Who we are
  • In This Issue
  • Hall of Fame
  • The Lists
  • Magazine Archive
  • Magazine
  • Contact

John Lewis (1940-2020) R. I. P.A Personal Reflection by Christine Kinealy

July 23, 2020 by helpdesk1


In 2014, I had the honour to be part of a “pilgrimage” to Ireland organized by the Faith and Politics Institute in Washington, D.C.. Congressman John Lewis was part of the pilgrimage, as were Governor Martin O’Malley of Maryland and Senator Mazie Hirono of Hawaii. Congressman Lewis, a veteran of the American Civil Rights Movement, came to Ireland to “share his experiences, and to learn from the experiences of those involved in reconciliation in Ireland.” As part of this journey, the group visited Dublin, Derry and Belfast.

Congressman John Lewis with Tánaiste Eamon Gilmore in front of the sculpture of Frederick Douglass following the lecture at the Iveagh House.

In Dublin, Congressman Lewis delivered the fourth Iveagh House commemorative lecture in which he explored the relationship between Frederick Douglass and Daniel O’Connell, who had met in September 1845 in this city. Douglass, then aged 27, was a self-educated “fugitive slave”; O’Connell, aged 70, was the “Liberator” of his people and the leading transatlantic abolitionist. It was an encounter that Douglass never forgot. Congressman Lewis spoke of O’Connell’s commitment to non-violence, and the impression this made on Douglass. He then traced the same commitment to non-violence to Gandhi, to Martin Luther King Jr, and to his own adherence to civil disobedience – regardless of the oppression and provocations offered.  In the audience were descendants of both Douglass and O’Connell.

Statute of Frederick Douglass at age 27 created by acclaimed sculptor Andrew Edwards is now housed at Ireland’s Great Hunger Museum at Quinnipiac University in Hamden, Connecticut.

Next, the group travelled to Derry where we were to meet with the Irish Civil Rights leader and Nobel Laureate, John Hume. During the journey, as the historian in the group, Congressmen Lewis sought me out to ask about Ireland’s colonial history, in particular, the background to the “Troubles,” and the status of the current Peace Process  His questions and comments displayed his trademark compassion and thoughtfulness. Like Douglass, he believed that oppression needed to be resisted wherever it existed. 

Following a moving ceremony in the First Derry Presbyterian Church, Congressman Lewis and John Hume led us in walk across the Peace Bridge. The bridge, which was built in 2011, connects Ebrington Square (formerly the army parade ground, located in the historically Protestant Waterside area) with the rest of the city centre. For part of the walk, these two giants of civil rights held hands.

Congressman John Lewis walks arm-in-arm across the Peace Bridge in Derry, Ireland with the Irish Nobel Peace Prize winner John Hume in 2014.

In Belfast, Congressman Lewis was sent on a tour of the city while the rest of us gathered under the Frederick Douglass mural. With the help of the then Mayor of Belfast, Mairtin O Muilleoir, the Congressman was being added to the mural. When he was brought to join us, the paint was hardly dry.

John Lewis will be missed by all who strive for social justice, human rights, inclusivity and equality. Like other black abolitionists who preceded him, notably his hero Frederick Douglass, John gave a voice to the voiceless and a dignity to their struggle.  Just as Frederick told people to “Agitate, agitate, agitate,” John Lewis was famous for urging people to make “Good trouble.”  We have lost an icon, but the struggle continues.

Mural of John Lewis painted in 2014 on the “Solidarity Wall” on the Falls Road in West Belfast, Ireland.

Ar dheis Dé go raibh a anam – may his soul be at the right hand of God.


Congressman Richard Neal

“John Lewis spent his entire life working to make America a better and more just place. Serving alongside him in the House of Representatives and on @WaysMeansCmte has been the honor of my life.

Journalist Judy Woodruff

“He defined what it meant to be courageous and was truly one of the greatest people I have ever known.”

Vice President Joe Biden

“I know of no man with more courage than John Lewis. He was a giant walking among us. When I saw him, I couldn’t help but think one thing: ‘I haven’t done enough.’ May his life and legacy inspire every one of us to strive for justice, equality, and what is right.”


To cheers and applause, the casket of longtime congressman and civil rights leader Rep. John Lewis is carried across the Edmund Pettus Bridge on a horse-drawn caisson in Selma, Alabama. https://t.co/QcpKciVHL3 pic.twitter.com/16yOITUcPW

— ABC News (@ABC) July 26, 2020

Christine Kinealy’s new book book Black Abolitionists in Ireland was published in 2020 by Routledge. It examines ten abolitionists – nine men and one woman –who visited Ireland between 1791 and 1860.

Christine is the Director of Ireland’s Great Hunger Institute at Quinnipiac University, and is the author of many books and articles on famines in Ireland.  

Filed Under: blog

Primary Sidebar

Featured Video

Featured Podcast

http://2020.irishamerica.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/10/16610234-44100-2-ad3f60e9154b7-1.mp3

Today in History

January 21, 1919

The Irish War of Independence begins. On January 21st, 1919, a group of IRA members acting independently shot and killed two Royal Irish Constabulary officers traveling with explosives through Soloheadbeg, Co. Tipperary. In response to the attack, the British Government declared the area a Special Military Area under its Defense of the Realm Act. Though the 21st is commonly acknowledged as the start of the war, the newly organized Irish Dail (which had also held its first session on the same day as the attack) and President Éamon de Valera did not formally recognize the war with the British until over two years later, on March 11th 1921.

In This Issue

First Word: Dreamers “Our focus is to create ladders of opportunity to help people get to the middle class through the construction trades. That's really why you do it.” – Sean McGarvey ℘℘℘…

News: An Irish Garden Blooms Spring bloomed in the world-famous Mount Congreve Gardens this Valentine’s Day. That’s when the inaugural Crocus Festival started, celebrating the simple beauty of the flower. Thousands of crocus bulbs were…

Footer

  • Facebook
  • Instagram
  • Twitter

Sign in to receive our monthly newsletter.

Recent

  • CNN’s Donie O’Sullivan Braved an Angry Mob to Cover the Chaos
  • Irish American Partnership Celebrates Women’s Leadership
  • First Nurse In The U.S. To Receive The COVID Vaccine Gets The Second Dose
  • Tipperary Football Team Win Munster Final after 85-Year Wait
  • NEWS FROM IRELAND: The U.S. Election, Brexit, and Handling the Pandemic

Search

Tags

2018 Business 100 2019 Healthcare 50 Arts Arts & Literature Best and Brightest Best of Culture Dublin Easter Rising Edythe Preet Entertainment Events Film & Television Food & Drink Hall of Fame Health Healthcare Healthcare and Life Sciences 50 Hibernia History Interviews Irish America Hall of Fame Irish Eye on Hollywood Literature Maggie Holland Music News News from Ireland New York City Northern Ireland Patricia Harty Politics Slainte: Irish Recipes Sports Theater The Irish in America Today in History Tom Deignan Top 50 Power Women Top 100 Top Irish Americans Travel Wall Street Wall Street 50 Writers and Poets

Copyright © 2021 · IrishAmerica Child Theme on Genesis Framework · WordPress · Log in