Easter Message from the Fenian Tradition – 2025

This Easter, as we stand upon the sacred soil of our beloved Éire, let us remember not just the rising of Christ, but the rising of a nation — undaunted, unbowed, ever yearning for the light of freedom. For Easter is not merely a feast of the soul — it is a resurrection of our spirit, a call to awaken the blood of our ancestors that flows like fire through our veins.

Ireland is not a name — it is a destiny. Not a piece of land — but a living soul, Ériu herself, radiant in sorrow and strength, whispering through the wind in our glens and crashing with fury against our Atlantic shores. She has known conqueror and plunderer, the Saxon boot, the Norman blade, and now the masked hand of foreign legislation that seeks to shape her in a form not her own. Yet still she endures.

Ní bheidh ár leithéidí arís ann” — Our like will not be seen again.

From the dawn of our history, Ireland was never meant to be anything but Gaelic. Her warriors bore spears tipped with courage, their shields painted with honour, their voices echoing the maxim of the Fianna: “Glaine ár gcroí, neart ár ngéag, agus beart de réir ár mbriathar” — Purity of heart, strength in arms, and truth on our lips. That is the sacred code of our people.

Let us invoke the spirit of Cúchulainn, of Fionn mac Cumhaill, of Gráinne Mhaol and the Red Branch Knights. Let us call upon the gallant blood that once filled the valleys of Glenmalure, echoed through the foggy dew of 1916, and lives still in the hearts of those who dare to call themselves Gael. For we are not Anglo-Irish, or Euro-Irish, or post-Irish. We are Gael, and Éirinn is our eternal mother.

The 1916 Rising was no folly. It was strategy through sacrifice. A spark that lit a fire so bright it blinded the British Empire. Pearse knew it. Connolly died for it. Clarke, Plunkett, Ceannt, and MacDonagh, MacDiarmada walked proudly into martyrdom, not in despair, but in triumph. Their blood soaked into the soil and fed the roots of a new Ireland. Shall we let that sacrifice be wasted?
No, we say. A thousand times, no.

An Ghaeilge i gcroílár ár n-anam” — Irish is the heart of our soul.

Let it be heard again in our homes, our songs, our prayers. Speak it, even if but a few words a day. Say slán instead of goodbye, go raibh maith agat instead of thanks. In each word lives a thousand years of memory. Do not let our native tongue wither into nostalgia. It is our sword and our psalm.

To truly honour our patriots, we must become them in action. Support the Irish arts — attend the céilí, play the bodhrán, learn the sean-nós. Dance as our foremothers danced beneath the moonlight, with joy defiant of sorrow. Read our history — not from colonised textbooks but from the voices of our bards, rebels, and poets.

Walk the fields where heroes fell. Visit the graves of our martyrs, not in silence but in song. Hold commemorations, not just once a year but in the rhythm of our lives. Let the flame of memory be eternal.

But remembrance alone is not enough. We must build an Ireland worthy of their memory.

Support Irish businesses. Buy local. Create jobs. Pick up rubbish from our roads. Plant native trees. Craft with your hands. Speak with pride. Let every street, home, and school be a fortress of culture, a stand against the tide of global sameness that threatens to turn Éirinn into a hollow name.

Be strong in your voice against those who wish to unmake Ireland in the image of the outsider. No foreign power — be it the crown of Westminster or the technocracy of Brussels — should dictate the soul of this nation. Hyde was right: “We must de-Anglicise Ireland” — and today, we must also de-Europeanise her. Laws should be forged in Dáil Éireann, not handed down from distant bureaucrats who neither know nor love this land.

We do not need permission to be free.

A 32-county Republic is not a dream — it is a right. The six counties of Ulster are not “abroad,” they are Éire. Our citizens there must have voting rights in a national referendum, not some colonial "border poll." The voice of Éirinn Uile must ring with unity.

Let us forge a Dáil na Náisiún Gaelach — a Parliament of the Gaelic Nation, unbroken by partition, undiluted by foreign influence. We do not need approval from England or Brussels to stand tall. We need only the will of our people, and the spirit of our past.

Help your fellow Irish person first. Before you send charity abroad, feed the hungry child in Donegal. Before you fund foreign causes, lift the broken-hearted in Limerick. Charity, like freedom, begins at home.

Build links with the diaspora. They are not gone — they are scattered seeds. Their love for Éirinn still burns in Boston, Sydney, and Buenos Aires. Bring them home in heart, in voice, in purpose. They, too, are part of the Gael.

Let us teach our youth that they are heirs to something sacred. Not just a nation, but a legacy of courage and creativity. That to be Irish is to lead — in humility, in wisdom, in poetry, in fight.

Let us cultivate strength not only in our limbs but in our minds. An Ireland of artisans and philosophers, of farmers and engineers, of musicians and warriors. Let our schools teach Irish dancing as much as mathematics, our streets echo with the tin whistle and the roar of the sliotar on the hurling pitch.

This is our duty. To create a living, breathing, beautiful, distinctly Irish Ireland.

Let no one rewrite our story. Let no flag be hoisted above our own. Let no tongue silence the Irish voice. Let no foreign directive bind the hands of Dáil Éireann.

Éirinn abú!

This Easter, renew your pledge — not in whispered hope but in roaring truth. Say it aloud:

I pledge my heart to Éirinn, my hands to her soil, my mind to her future. I shall serve her in word and in deed, in honour and in truth. I shall be Gael.

Let this be the generation that ends apology and begins pride. That ends dependence and begins destiny.

Ériu calls. Will you answer?

Ar aghaidh linn le chéile — Éire Gaelach go deo!

Tomás MacCormaic

Article originally published on: Sunday 20th April 2025

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