探花视频

Thorny fact-checking

Published on
October 17, 2013
Last updated
May 22, 2015

It is surprising that Marianne Elliott thinks that criticism of the late Peter Hart鈥檚 research is 鈥渧ilification鈥 (鈥No word for what we鈥檙e doing鈥, Books, 3 October). 探花视频 has twice reported criticism of the historian鈥檚 work (see here and here), initially in response to my聽and Brian Murphy鈥檚 text Troubled History聽(2008), a 10th anniversary critique of聽Hart鈥檚 The IRA & its Enemies听(1998).

Hart concluded, after discussing the killing of 13 Protestant civilians near Bandon in late April 1922, that 鈥渢he nationalist revolution had also been a sectarian one鈥, and linked this criticism to an assault on IRA behaviour at the聽Kilmichael ambush in聽November 1920. Tom Barry, the commander of the ambush, in particular was accused of executing without reason unarmed British auxiliary prisoners. Hart alleged that聽years afterwards, using 鈥渓ies and evasions鈥, Barry concocted his mid-ambush 鈥渇alse surrender鈥 scenario, according to which IRA volunteers accepting the auxiliaries鈥 surrender were killed.

Both subjects are detailed in Charles Townshend鈥檚 The Republic: the Fight for Irish聽Independence 1918-1923, the subject of Elliott鈥檚 review. Townshend frames his sectarianism discussion around Hart鈥檚 original argument. Surprisingly, as Hart also originated the Kilmichael discussion, he disappears in Townshend鈥檚 Kilmichael narrative, apart from a reference note. I suspect the reason is as follows.

Hart鈥檚 sectarianism discussion may be debated conventionally. It relates, in the main, to the use or (controversially) the misuse of verifiable evidence. Discussion of Hart鈥檚 treatment of Kilmichael, on the other hand, must address uncomfortable facts (for instance, his claim to have interviewed a Kilmichael IRA veteran anonymously six days after the last recorded participant died, and to have interviewed two when just one was reportedly alive). Some historians might find that discussion difficult: I do not. Although my views are referenced by Townshend in the sectarianism discussion, they (and the interviewee issue) are聽absent in relation to Kilmichael.

Hart鈥檚 anomalous use of unverifiable sources and censorship of relevant evidence is聽subject to criticism. Elliott鈥檚 鈥渧ilification鈥 accusation, in itself an interesting phenomenon, is usually a means of avoiding it.

Niall Meehan
Faculty head, journalism and media
Griffith College Dublin

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