Cahir Healy
Charles Everard Healy was an Irish politician. He was a leader of northern nationalists and a self-educated man who made major contributions to Ireland's political, cultural and literary heritage.
Background
Born in Mountcharles in County Donegal, Healy became a journalist working on various local papers. He joined the Irish Republican organisation Sinn Féin at its founding in 1905.Opposition to partition
Healy later became anti-partitionist and campaigned against the inclusion of County Fermanagh and County Tyrone into Northern Ireland as they had Irish nationalist majorities. With the pending Partition of Ireland, Healy worked with the cabinet of the Second Dáil and, in 1922, was a member of Michael Collins' special advisory committee on the north-east of the island. In August 1921 Healy was part of a Fermanagh nationalist delegation that met with Éamon de Valera and made clear their feelings on a Northern Irish parliament: "Fermanagh by a large majority... resolved that it would not submit to the partition parliament in Ulster". In a letter from Lloyd George to de Valera regarding the inclusion of Tyrone and Fermanagh into a new northern state, the British prime minister stated that his government had a very weak case on the issue of "forcing these two counties against their will" into Northern Ireland.Following the 22 May 1922 assassination of William J. Twaddell, Healy was interned for eighteen months along with 300 others under brutal conditions on the prison ship HMS Argenta. Healy is quoted on the reasons for his arrest and internment: "All my life, I have been a man of peace. It is not, therefore, because they feared that I would disturb the peace of Northern Ireland that they dragged me away from my wife and family, but for political reasons. I have been engaged in preparing the case for the inclusion of these areas in the Free State. To get me out of the way, local politicians urged my arrest."
Parliamentary representative
While interned on the Argenta, Healy was elected in the 1922 UK general election to represent Fermanagh and Tyrone as a Nationalist Party MP, with the support of Sinn Féin. Healy was re-elected in 1923 but remained in custody until February 1924 and was prohibited from entering the western part of Fermanagh. In June 1924 Healy pressed the government to compensate the thousands of Northern Ireland citizens that were forced to flee Belfast during serious sectarian violence.Healy was also elected to the Northern Ireland House of Commons in the 1925 Northern Ireland general election but did not take his seat until 1927 due to the nationalist abstentionist policy. In his fight against partition, Healy did not support the use of physical force or abstentionism: "... physical force only consolidates Unionist opinion against us, and result in injury to Catholics as a whole... if abstention is to become a policy... it should be abstention from public boards... as well as refusal to pay rates and taxes. If this policy of civil disobedience is not feasible, then abstention from Stormont is just an insincere gesture." In 1928, Healy and the influential nationalist politician Joe Devlin became founder members of the National League of the North, which was committed to bringing about Irish reunification through consent and parliamentary means. Whenever Healy or Devlin raised issues relating to Northern Ireland, they were routinely ruled out of order. In 1929, with the break-up of the large Fermanagh and Tyrone constituency, Healy switched to sit for the new seat of South Fermanagh. In a 1931 by-election, he was again elected for Fermanagh and Tyrone to the Westminster parliament but stood down again in 1935. In a 24 April 1934 speech to the Northern Ireland parliament, Healy made clear his feelings on the ruling Unionist government and its treatment of Catholics: