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Hume's ideals about peaceful nationalism will remain relevant long after his death.

Ireland's peacemaker, John Hume (1937-2020)

The former SDLP leader has died aged 83.

ALTHOUGH JOHN HUME was awarded numerous lofty accolades during his life, no number of titles will compare to the lasting legacy he leaves Ireland on his passing.

A man who always put his devotion to what was right above what was best for himself, Hume’s life’s work was given its ultimate return in the Good Friday Agreement he signed 22 years ago. 

Hume had a multitude of qualities that allowed him be a singularly resolute peacemaker during The Troubles but his selflessness was surely the one that shines above all others.

That very same agreement that brought peace to the island arguably cost the party he founded electorally in the years since he stepped back from public life.

This very nobility was clear even in his retirement and in 2010 he was named as Ireland’s Greatest person in a nationwide poll.

Hume was born in Derry in 1937 and like many of his generation his Catholic faith was at the core of his upbringing.

He studied for the priesthood in Maynooth but ultimately returned to his native city to become a teacher after graduating with a degree in French and History.

His career began as an organiser. He founded the first Northern Irish Credit Union and became president of the Irish League of Credit Unions (ILCU) while in his twenties.

Throughout the 1960s Hume became a central figure in the city’s Civil Rights Movement as he and others sought fairness in franchise, jobs and housing.

It was a fraught time in which the movement faced violence from the State and militants from various factions became increasingly active.

Hume was literally at the front of tense marches that marked the period and can be seen in a documentary released last year facing paratroopers in the week before Bloody Sunday.

He did not take part in the march on Bloody Sunday itself, fearing the worst after the events of the previous week and advising against it going ahead.

Galway Film Fleadh / YouTube

Hume was first elected as an independent nationalist candidate for the Foyle constituency in 1969 before founding the Social Democratic and Labour Party (SDLP) a couple of years later.

As violence exploded in Northern Ireland throughout the 1970s, Hume remained committed to politics and was elected leader of the SDLP and to the European Parliament at the end of the decade.

He was elected as an MP in 1983, a position he held until 2005.

As efforts intensified to find peace in Northern Ireland throughout the 1980s, Hume continued to denounce violence while also beginning dialogue with Gerry Adams, then the leader of Sinn Féin.

The longtime moderate nationalist was criticised by politicians and commentators from both sides of the border for his engagement with Adams, but the Hume-Adams talks as they became known are now seen as a vital step in the peace process.

In the 199os, Hume was the preeminent voice of nationalism in the north and he participated in various peace efforts that sought to find a resolution to the conflict.

When the Provisional IRA called a ceasefire in 1994 and again in 1996, Sinn Féin were allowed to enter the talks process, as were loyalists who had also called a ceasefire.

The ultimate result of these renewed efforts was the Good Friday Agreement, which was secured following a tortuous process at which Hume was at the centre.

When the agreement was passed by a huge majority in the Republic of Ireland, it was opposed by Ian Paisley’s DUP and was passed by a smaller majority in Northern Ireland’s referendum.

It was Hume who took perhaps the largest responsibility in selling the deal, famously appearing with the UUP’s David Trimble on stage with U2′s Bono.

In 1998, he and Trimble were jointly awarded the Nobel Peace Prize for their efforts in securing peace in Ireland.

[image alt="Concert Bono/Trimble/Hume" src="http://cdn.thejournal.ie/media/2018/08/concert-bonotrimblehume-2-630x456.jpg" width="630" height="456" title="" class="alignleft" /end]

When the SDLP entered into power-sharing government with the UUP in 1999, Hume left it to his longtime deputy Seamus Mallon to lead the party in Stormont.

Mallon became Deputy First Minister with Trimble as First Minister and it began the process of Hume retiring from frontline politics.

He stepped down as leader of his party in 2001 and announced his retirement from politics three years later.

Hume’s retreat from public life was due to a struggle with dementia, something his wife of 58 years spoke publicly about.

Upon his 80th birthday in 2017, Hume received praise from all around the globe.

President Michael D Higgins called him the “moral architect of an inclusive peace process”, and “a man of courage, a committed European and a dedicated and visionary peacemaker”.

Former US President Bill Clinton called him “the Irish conflict’s Martin Luther King”.

As well as the Noble Peace Prize, Hume was also awarded the Ghandi Peace Prize from the Indian Government and a Knighthood from Pope Benedict XVI.

SDLP AND NODEL PRIZE WINNER JOHN HUME.PIC PHOTOCALL IRELAND!

Ulster Hume John Hume at Stormont in 2001. Paul Faith / PA Images Paul Faith / PA Images / PA Images

But while Hume’s legacy may appear to be rooted in the past, it is not a stretch to say that his ideals may well influence the future.

At a point in time when a united Ireland is being talked about more seriously than at any point in recent memory, Hume’s belief that it can only be achieved by convincing others of its benefits is perhaps more relevant than ever before.

Hume was convinced that peaceful unity is about more than the border and these principles could be to be crucial if Ireland does indeed begin the path of reuniting north and south.

For those who pursue this ambition, Hume’s own words may well prove prescient:

“Ireland is not a romantic dream; it is not a flag; it is 4.5 million people divided into two powerful traditions. The solution will be found not on the basis of victory for either, but on the basis of agreement and a partnership between both. The real division of Ireland is not a line drawn on the map but in the minds and hearts of its people.”

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24 Comments
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    Mute Joseph O'Regan
    Favourite Joseph O'Regan
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    May 2nd 2014, 7:33 AM

    The problem is simple this Government are not interested in SMEs, they want he multinationals in here sell Ireland on the Slave market. University Graduates working for 20K a year, need I say more.
    This Government have pulled the plug on the middle class and are sucking the life out of the people by selling off Irish Water to the Multinationals. To add insult to injury they really believe that the people living in this country are so stupid that we will swallow this.

    59
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    Mute Niall H
    Favourite Niall H
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    May 2nd 2014, 7:27 AM

    Sounds like a quango to me

    58
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    Mute Robbie Redmond
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    May 2nd 2014, 7:34 AM

    You have to pay ordinary workers à décent wage in order to stimulate demand and then Sme’s flourish. You cant have it both ways

    32
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    Mute Orla Casey
    Favourite Orla Casey
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    May 2nd 2014, 7:36 AM

    Loan threshold is too low at €25k given the effort involved, loop of being rejected by bank definitely off putting. Should be reviewed earlier than October if not working

    31
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    Mute Huey
    Favourite Huey
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    May 2nd 2014, 7:36 AM

    Why not link this fund to the mentor scheme or a product development fund in association with 3rd level institutions ?
    So sme’s and startups get the support and guidance they need so the spend can be quantified and monitored.
    Or Use the fund to build or convert empty warehouses into enterprise centres with retired business people installed to advise,not council workers

    30
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    Mute Jimbo
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    May 2nd 2014, 12:00 PM

    No need top link it to 3rd level institutions. What we need is a scheme exactly like the US SBIR funding designed to foster new innovation. It has been hugely successful. The EU attempted to emulated it, but because they don’t understand the first thing about innovation they completely screwed up the implementation.

    Innovators don’t need mentorship and advice. If they’re involved in innovation in the first place they are by definition are in unknown territory. They need untied financial support to get their ideas to a point where the uncertainty can be quantified and venture capitalists can step in.

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    Mute David Thomas
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    May 2nd 2014, 7:40 AM

    Because most of the people with the brains and drive to start small businesses have left the country, perhaps?

    24
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    Mute Andrew Mac Mahon
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    May 2nd 2014, 7:56 AM

    Maybe it’s because even if they support an SME, the regular person on the street can’t afford to buy anything in it cause the government are still taking all our money in taxes!!!

    20
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    Mute Colm Moylette
    Favourite Colm Moylette
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    May 2nd 2014, 8:36 AM

    Exactly…SME owners don’t need to apply to a quango for loans.

    What they do need is a domestic economy containing a confident working and middle class unburdened by excessive taxation and debt to sell their products and services to

    15
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    Mute Stephen Harkin
    Favourite Stephen Harkin
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    May 2nd 2014, 7:53 AM

    @ Niall H
    They are not a quango, they used to be called First Step and were an angel investment company up until 2012.
    I used them on 2 occasions to get started up and expand my company in the height of recession and were a pleasure to deal with.
    I think the problem is that when people hear there’s 9 mil in funds available, they assume they HAVE to use it. Ultimately, it still has to be a viable business to lend to in the company’s eyes..
    I agree 25k max loan is a little on the low end, but when every bank laughs at your application because you have no track record, then 25k turns out to be a lot, you learn to use it wisely.

    19
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    Mute Niall H
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    May 2nd 2014, 8:20 AM

    Cool, just thought it sounded like one the way so little of the funding was being used and then the stepping down of people at the top etc. wonder how much the pension is for working with this quango that’s not a quango as you say?

    13
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    Mute Bill Dee
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    May 2nd 2014, 9:55 AM

    Maybe the fact that pure useless Richard Bruton is the jobs minister has something to do with it.

    Mr Spoof ‘that’s not measurable’ Bruton has presided over the exploitation of Irish workers to the extent that they have little or no disposable income because of low wages, massive taxes, high costs.

    But Bruton is OK on e200,000 plus expenses plus massive pension plus stupid slap my face grin !

    11
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    Mute johngahan
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    May 2nd 2014, 9:00 AM

    Lack of commercially viable SMEs is a big factor.

    Just because you set up a company making turf scented candles or online nappy recycling, doesn’t mean any lender should just give you money to be seen to do so. The business has to have a potential future. A large contingent of the SME’s who complain they can’t get credit is for sound reason.

    7
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    Mute Robespierre
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    May 2nd 2014, 8:41 AM

    I am starting a business at the moment. They do want to support something that fits into Ireland international pitch if its a domestic business.

    It also needs to be a good idea, well researched with a plan that is credible. They also need the relevant entrepreneur to be credible as an individual.

    Look at Dragon’s den – while it is entertainment rather than real TV, the entrepreneurial businesspeople stand out from those with ideas that may have nowhere to go.

    5
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    Mute Shakka1244
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    May 2nd 2014, 11:01 AM

    It’s because the only thing the government is efficient at organising is more ways to tax the people. Nothing else matters to them.

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    Mute Patrick J. O'Rourke
    Favourite Patrick J. O'Rourke
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    May 2nd 2014, 11:44 AM

    Crazy scheme that is not applicable to small business in the real world and is full of needless costs in the application process. They need some input from people actually running small businesses to come up with something that will offer help to those who fall foul of the banks’ blanket quiet policies on lending. Micro businesses or self employed will not get bank loans especially if in manufacturing. They will be told to not bother applying. That means they have to pay accountants to produce accounts and all the other requirements to be officially turned down. That costs. As usual with all these schemes the accountants are the only ones who gain anything from it. If people have a great product and big order book but cannot access cashflow loans then they will go North or to England where they are welcomed. I’ve witnessed that and the lost jobs. It’s all pure incompetence by those people who design these schemes. When small businesses and self employed have just paid all their tax to save bondholders and keep the banks in business and their employees in jobs, watching such great potential leave the country with no plans to come back sickens me. It’s treason.

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    Mute Padraig McHale
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    May 2nd 2014, 5:31 PM

    New SMEs don’t need a loan – they need equity investment and that’s why this scheme doesn’t work. It would be easy to design something if there was a will and a little imagination.

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    Mute Dermot Mc Loughlin
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    May 2nd 2014, 1:55 PM

    Why isn’t this government support for SMEs working?

    Because FG.

    1
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