Gerry Adams said attempts to suggest he was a racist were without credibility
Reuters
Sinn Fein president Gerry Adams has been criticised for
using the N-word in a tweet about the film Django Unchained, where he
compared the struggle against slavery in the US to the plight of Irish
nationalists. He later removed it after he was branded a racist.
Days before the Northern Ireland Assembly election, the
Irish republican leader tweeted: "Watching Django Unchained – A
Ballymurphy N****r!" It was followed quickly by "Django – an uppity
Fenian!"
Starring Jamie Foxx as Django, Quentin Tarantino's film is
about slavery in America's deep south in the late 1850s, focusing on
slavery, racism, violence and murder.
It appears that Adams was trying to compare Django's
treatment to that of nationalists in the Ballymurphy area of Northern
Ireland, where nine men and one woman were fatally wounded between 9 and
11 August, 1971.
Gerry Adams used the N-worse when comparing the treatment of republicans in Northern Ireland to the film Django Unchained.
TwitterAt least eight of those who died appear to have been shot by soldiers from the British Army's Parachute Regiment. A ninth was shot by a soldier from a different regiment while a tenth was shot by an unidentified sniper. Another man died of heart failure, allegedly after being subjected to a mock execution by soldiers.
Quite what comparison Adams, who currently sits as the
Teachta Dala, or MP, for Louth in Ireland, was trying to draw is
unclear, but he was quickly rounded upon by critics for using the
N-word.
One Twitter user called it disgraceful, while Labour Party councillor Peter O'Brien asked: "So this is acceptable is it?"
Friends of Adams, including journalist and former republican
prisoner Tim Brannigan, who is of African heritage, have criticised
him.
Brannigan told the BBC
he was "shocked" that Adams had used the slur, adding: "Gerry and Sinn
Féin won't need me to tell them just how toxic it is and the sort of
reactions it gets. I don't think that you can equate what was happening
in Belfast in 1965 with slavery."
Attempts to suggest he was a racist were "without credibility", he said in a later statement.
"The fact is that nationalists in the north, including those
from Ballymurphy, were treated in much the same way as African
Americans until we stood up for ourselves," he said.
He added: "If anyone is genuinely offended by my use of the N-word
they misunderstand or misrepresent the context in which it was used. For
this reason I deleted the tweets."
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