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President Higgins on Castro 'Next time he’ll require more than one line to reflect reality'

Was President Higgins’ Castro tribute appropriate, asks Barry McLoughlin.

WHEN IT COMES to writing about the recently deceased, we Irish seem to adopt the approach, if you have nothing good to say, say nothing. But is this the way to properly mark the passing of someone, either loved or loathed? What should go into an obituary and why?

This dilemma was best exemplified when President Higgins described Castro as a “Giant among global leaders”. He took a view, shared by Canadian PM Justin Trudeau, that Castro’s life and achievements were to be praised, not vilified.

Castro, according to President Higgins, “guided the country through a remarkable process of social and political change, advocating a development path that was unique and determined independently.”

Further on, his only explicit nod to oppression was the following line: “The economic and social reforms introduced were at the price of a restriction of civil society, which brought its critics.” It was this line that caught the attention of the political class. Fianna Fáil thought the statement should have been “more balanced”.

An independent senator attacked “a complimentary statement about a man that many Irish people would find repugnant.” The President had to send out his spokesman to clarify his remarks.

What was wrong with that statement?

Like any communication, you need to know your audience before you start writing and be clear on what your objective is.

President Higgins clearly admired Castro from a political point of view. But he is President of Ireland.

In his statement of 10 paragraphs, just one line covered darker areas like human rights abuses.

Was this objective the right one for our Head of State?

Cuba Canada Canada Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, center, attends a ceremony at the Jose Marti Monument n Havana, Cuba, Tuesday, Nov. 15, 2016. Ramon Espinosa Ramon Espinosa

This was a question those close to Justin Trudeau pondered at the same time.

The cack-handed wording and rationale of Trudeau’s statement, (“While a controversial figure, both Mr Castro’s supporters and detractors recognised his tremendous dedication and love for the Cuban people who had a deep and lasting affection for ‘el Comandante’”) lead to a twitter storm of #TrudeauEulogies.

Pol Pot, Hitler, Stalin, Darth Vader and others were all given positive eulogies in a similar style by a gleeful Twitterati. Trudeau, according to The New York Times: “generated the kind of social media blowback to which the telegenic…..Prime Minister is rarely subjected.”

Trudeau had good personal reasons to call Castro a “Remarkable Leader”. Trudeau’s father was a friend of Castro. Castro had served as an honorary pallbearer at his funeral. And allowing that to dominate his thinking when drafting the statement was the problem.

Speaking ill of the dead

In Ireland, we place great emphasis on respecting the newly dead, whatever their sins.

We have an entire literary genre of tension-filled funeral dramas. Think of anything John B Keane wrote. De Valera famously offered his condolences to the Germans after the war on the death of Hitler.

This was despite the emergence of details of the concentration camps and the fact that he would have invaded us in a heartbeat if it suited. So, should we look hard at this reflex to blindly honour the dead in our obituaries and statements?

Can our leaders write statements that are accurate and objective?

Ann Roe, obituaries editor with The Economist, has spoken about writing an obituary “from their (the deceased’s) point of view”. This means looking at the good and the bad sides. Below is the first paragraph of an obituary she wrote in 2011.

“When he gave interviews to foreign journalists, which he did rarely, he had a way of looking down at his hands. This, and his soft, slightly raspy voice, and his gentle eyes, as well as the fact that he allowed no instantaneous translation, helped conceal what he was saying: that it was the duty of all Muslims to kill unbelievers, especially Americans.”

The man with the soft voice was Osama Bin Laden. The Economist received criticism for this obituary, which included references to how he was with his children and how he liked to relax. If we are to see an obituary or eulogy as an honest statement, it needs to show both sides.

Trudeau’s statement was that of a son mourning his late father’s friend, not of Canadian PM speaking on behalf of his country. Neither Canada’s statement nor Ireland’s mentioned the Cuban Missile Crisis.

Never criticising dead public figures

We are not a people inclined to criticise our dead public figures. President Higgins reflected that in his statement, albeit to the point of giving enough to the politically ambitious to query his tone and force a clarification.

Perhaps the next time he drafts such a statement, he’ll require more than one line to reflect the reality of any political or human life, failure, moral ambiguity and moments of weakness. And he need not be blunt.

There’s a wealth of phrases that say one thing but mean another. The Times of London used the phrase “a bon viveur” to indicate alcoholism. “Survived by his mother” was a code for homosexuality. “Did not suffer fools” really meant a domineering tyrant. And “devoted to his wife” suggested that the deceased rutted around town like an old goat, such was his devotion.

With two wives, numerous affairs and 11 children by 4 different women, that one might have suited Castro perfectly.

Barry McLoughlin is a Senior Training Consultant with The Communications Clinic. He advises clients on communications and media strategy. He has worked with the Communications Clinic since 2011 and previously worked as a solicitor for a number of years.

President Higgins criticised for praising ‘brutal dictator’ Castro>

President Higgins expresses his “great sadness” upon hearing of Fidel Castro’s death>

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38 Comments
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    Mute Jake Orb
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    Dec 4th 2016, 8:10 AM

    Whether anyone agrees or not, fair play to Higgins for speaking his mind and not pandering to the national and international lick arse brigades

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    Mute Captain kirk
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    Dec 4th 2016, 8:25 AM

    We’re not paying him to speak his mind

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    Mute Colm Nolan
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    Dec 4th 2016, 8:11 AM

    Interestingly enough the gushing and effusive tributes paid at the death of Ronald Reagan by Irish politicians garnered no such attention.
    Where was the clamour ? The demand for context and nuance?

    I personally think Higgins’ remarks were among the most considered and relevant I heard upon the passing of Fidel Castro .

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    Mute Coles
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    Dec 4th 2016, 8:19 AM

    Fair play to Higgins for expressing the views of the vast majority of Irish people.

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    Mute Charlie Wrex
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    Dec 4th 2016, 8:20 AM

    Vast majority? lol. Good one.

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    Mute Captain kirk
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    Dec 4th 2016, 8:26 AM

    So the vast majority of Irish people are in favor of a brutal dictator who suppressed democracy for 50 years?

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    Mute Avina Laaf
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    Dec 4th 2016, 8:43 AM

    @Coles:
    The vast majority of your circle of frends maybe….

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    Mute Chris Kirk
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    Dec 4th 2016, 9:08 AM

    @Captain kirk: What probably started off with a plan to change Cuba and to end the US mafia led corruption, over time became a Soviet guided dictatorship of Castro’s own making.

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    Mute Patrick James Walsh
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    Dec 4th 2016, 12:24 PM

    @Coles: not my president

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    Mute Coles
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    Dec 4th 2016, 12:44 PM

    @Patrick James Walsh: Oh? What are you going to do about it?

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    Mute Coles
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    Dec 4th 2016, 12:46 PM

    And what part of the President’s comments do people have difficulty with? Anyone who actually read the President’s comments (and also had a clue about history) would realise that they were fair and balanced.

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    Mute Avina Laaf
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    Dec 4th 2016, 8:03 AM

    There’s no doubting Castro’s commitment to ‘the cause’ or to the fact that he was genuinely loved by many of his people. Unfortunately there’s also no doubting that political opposition was suppressed – sometimes brutally – for decades, and many Cubans lived (and still live) in abject poverty. There’s a reason why thousands of ordinary Cubans have fled to the US on makeshift rafts over the years, but nobody ever flees from the US to Cuba.

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    Mute Coles
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    Dec 4th 2016, 8:17 AM

    Also worth noting that Cuba is the only country in the world from which the US grants automatic naturalisation for anyone who reaches the States. Why is that?

    If the US had offered the same deal to Irish people you would have seen a lot of makeshift rafts being peddled across the Atlantic too.

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    Mute Avina Laaf
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    Dec 4th 2016, 8:41 AM

    @Coles:
    Not many of them would have been heading for Cuba though

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    Mute Robbie #23
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    Dec 4th 2016, 8:55 AM

    Take out the words Cuba and Cubans and replaced them with Ireland and Irish. Yep that us in a nutshell.

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    Mute Benson Hallahan
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    Dec 4th 2016, 12:25 PM

    It’s strange how we see Cubans heading to the US as fleeing a brutal dictator. But when it’s Africans coming to Europe we see them as economic migrants

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    Mute Sean Higgins
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    Dec 4th 2016, 9:12 AM

    I am glad our President said what he said. We have a tendency in this Country to seek approval from those overseas and stick to the politically correct line when commenting on anything so not to offend the powers that be. While I have no problem listening to informed analysis by those with a deep understanding of the Cuban issue I am bored by those who wait in the wings for something they see as controversial to be stated before immersing to give their ‘expert’ opinion.

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    Mute Valthebear
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    Dec 4th 2016, 9:52 AM

    Time to elect a president next time out who will act as our nation’s figurehead and not promote their personal politics. We have had enough emoting and politics from Michael D (and his missus) along with the last two incumbents. Hopefully next resident in the Aras will restore some decorum to the position.

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    Mute Liam Dempsey
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    Dec 4th 2016, 12:56 PM

    We should be happy to have such a knowledgeable president.

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    Mute Niall O Neill
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    Dec 4th 2016, 8:39 AM

    I’m sure the Times used “bon viveur”, not “bon vivour”- whatever that is.

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    Mute Guybrush Threepwood
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    Dec 4th 2016, 9:57 AM

    I couldn’t get passed the first two lines. This McLoughlin seems to be so detached from reality that his reason for Higgins praising Castro was the ol’ statement that we Irish don’t like speaking ill of the dead.

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    Mute Malvolio32
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    Dec 4th 2016, 10:25 AM

    I’m kinda confused. The headline reads like it’s a quote from Pres Higgins but I don’t see any reference to it in the article. Did he say this or not?

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    Mute GOOПΞɌΛDΛM
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    Dec 4th 2016, 12:57 PM

    It’s a toe-curling embarrassment that our president issued such a fawning eulogy over a mass-murdering, dictator. The same guy who described Pinochet’s regime as immoral and deeply offensive. It shows what an ideologue he is. Fine to be a mass-murdering, dictator – as long as you’re a socialist one.

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    Mute Alois Irlmaier
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    Dec 4th 2016, 6:10 PM

    @GOOПΞɌΛDΛM: I think you find that Castro replace worse as Cuba was riddled with the mafia at one point and many of these ended up in Miami.
    https://www.theguardian.com/world/2007/jun/27/usa.cuba

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    Mute MackPilon
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    Dec 4th 2016, 12:09 PM

    The best quote I have seen on this event is where someone said ” I would like to die peacefully in my bed like Castro, unlike his victims who died in terror “

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    Mute Upowthat Burke
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    Dec 4th 2016, 12:40 PM

    CUBA A PARISE ISLAND WITH NO GREEDY BANKERS OR EXTREEM RIGHT WING POLITICIANS ….CASTRO LIVES VIVA THE REVELUTION. …BRING IT ON

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    Mute Mick Conroy
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    Dec 4th 2016, 1:51 PM

    Mind you, levels of literacy are supposed to be very good in Cuba……….

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    Mute Avina Laaf
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    Dec 4th 2016, 2:22 PM

    An interesting place to visit undoubtedly, and some amazing people, but if you think it’s ‘paradise island’ you’ve obviously never been there yourself. No amount of shouting will disguise that.

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    Mute Alois Irlmaier
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    Dec 4th 2016, 6:07 PM

    @Avina Laaf: But wasn’t that not because of US sanctions?

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    Mute Avina Laaf
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    Dec 4th 2016, 6:39 PM

    @Alois Irlmaier:
    According to Castro yes, but they had free trade with the Soviet Union (mostly support from the Soviet Union in fact). It’s a bit rich to blame socialism’s failures on capitalism’s refusal to engage. There were some fantastic things done in Cuba in terms of education and healthcare etc., but there were and are also a lot of problems there.

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    Mute Alois Irlmaier
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    Dec 9th 2016, 2:36 AM

    @Avina Laaf: The main cause is sanctions?

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    Mute Avina Laaf
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    Dec 9th 2016, 2:59 PM

    So what you’re saying is that a socialist country can’t stand alone, it needs trade with capitalist economies for it to succeed?

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    Mute Alois Irlmaier
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    Dec 10th 2016, 3:12 AM

    @Avina Laaf: No, read my Sun 6:04 PM post above, the U.S. is out to get Cuba because of their corruption with pals of the mafia as well as their ego.

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    Mute Alois Irlmaier
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    Dec 4th 2016, 6:04 PM

    Castro did a lot for Cuba, the mafia with US blessing was running it before he became leader. When you remember that Castro took the country off the mafia and the social elite there and that President Kennedy and Sinatra was sleeping with a woman who was a mule for the mafia and that Kennedy might nott have been president without his father who was making deals with the mafia as part of his sons electioneering campaign.
    Then you can see why the US didn’t likeCuba, not because of Communism which was an enemy to the US because the lobbyists and party supporters were business men who feared that health and safety at work as well as better wages being looked for by the Unions would cost them more money. So classing unions as socialist or communist was a way to prevent a loss of profits for them that just added to McCarthyism and reds under the bed paranoia.
    When you know that then you can say the truth as too many follow what the US says blindly and the problem is people follow that view because of what America is protrayed as. Whatever the U.S. government says they agree with and that is the problem. As Castro stood up to the US and saw out 10 Presidents, survived sanctions and still made Cuba do well as in education and Healthcare, all the hatred towards Cuba comes from standing up to the US and that is the problem as he is condemned mainly for this and that is why they mainly blacken his name.
    Some try to make out it was the Cuban missile crisis but the fact is Kennedy started that by putting nukes first in Turkey pointed at the USSR and at that time pointed at Ukraine then as well?
    What fixed that crisis was Kennedy AGREEING to REMOVE the nukes in Turkey first and that is the fact but the US does use a fairy tale history of itself and this causes people to side with the US and what they report as their views.
    The problem with Castro was he stood up to America and he won and that damages the image of the US being strong and that is the main reason Castro gets villified?

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    Mute Jerry Lehane
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    Dec 4th 2016, 9:07 PM

    I kind of like the fact that our President doesn’t go around kicking corpses. It might just be me but I find it far more palatable that he is consistent in how he addresses these things rather than gleefully singing that the big bad witch is dead.

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    Mute Paul Ryan
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    Dec 15th 2016, 7:24 PM

    Politicians make the same mistake Over and Over and Over again in thinking that what they say and what they do reflects the general view.
    Thank god we can rejoice when they
    Go away.

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