In 1936, William Maloney published "The Forged Casement Diaries," establishing the template for a debate that continues to this day. Maloney's case was comprehensive but entirely circumstantial, since no one had seen the actual diaries. The book also seeks to prove Casement wasn't gay, largely by presenting the testimony of a number of people saying "he couldn't have been."
"The Forged Casement Diaries" was financed and directed by the Clan na Gael in America (Maloney was a member) and Casement's political ally in Ireland, Bulmer Hobson. Hobson himself supplied the two main pillars upon which the forgery argument, at that point in time, depended: that Casement had had a romantic relationship with Ada MacNeill -- he hadn't -- and that the homosexual references in his diaries had been transcribed by Casement as evidence against a rubber station chief in the Putumayo -- they hadn't been.
It would be twenty more years before Britain allowed anyone a closer look at the diaries, and in that time Maloney's theories took hold in Ireland and Irish America. Maloney's book, part of a coordinated effort by Republicans to reclaim Casement as an Irish hero, inspired a bitter polemic from William Butler Yeats.
Who is Roger Casement?
Many knew of the slave system in King Leopold’s Congo rubber plantations– but British Consul Roger Casement was the first to make the world take notice. He created the 20th century's first international human rights movement, and was knighted for his work. Two years later, he was hung for treason, after an abortive plot to enlist German aid for Ireland’s Easter Rising. A widely-popular clemency movement had collapsed when Britain secretly circulated private diaries alleged to be Casement’s. Shocking if true, the diaries are still a matter of passionate contention, a century after Casement’s death.
Tuesday, September 6, 2016
William Butler Yeats on the Forgery Controversy
Labels:
Black Diaries,
Bulmer Hobson,
Clan na Gael,
Forgery,
Yeats
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment