Although he lived in Manchester, he was born in Inistioge, County Kilkenny, Ireland, so a local Memorial Committee undertook to erect a memorial plaque in the village on June 28th.
A report of the weekends events, with photographs, links thru to other documents on Brown is available at the website, Ireland and the Spanish Civil War.
http://www.geocities.com/irelandscw/ibvol-GBComm.htm
Ciaran
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Ireland
31.07.2008 10:06
Franky
Whereas memory of the smaller Irish republican contingents is honoured
31.07.2008 18:11
Here's a review of a biography of the man who went from founding the Irish police or "garda" to describing himself as the third most important man in Europe after Hitler and Mussolini.
[Eoin O’Duffy – A Self-Made Hero by Fearghal McGarry, Oxford University Press, 2005, €35/£25]
http://www.indymedia.ie/article/76010 his wiki http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eoin_O'Duffy
Whereas it is true that the Irish mostly have not exorcised the fascistic sympathies of their founding fathers, they are on the way and that can be reflected in popular culture too for a wider non-Irish public. Think of Ken Loach's 2006 "The wind that shakes the barley" with its pair of brothers who find themselves on opposing leftist and fascistic side of the civil war which followed the end of the war of independence. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Wind_That_Shakes_the_Barley
actually
Tasteless
04.08.2008 14:57
Pete