Peter Graham (Marxist)

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Peter Graham
Born1946
Dublin, Ireland
Died
near St Stephen's Green, Dublin, Ireland
Cause of deathGunshot
EmployerCIÉ
Organization(s)Connolly Youth Movement, Irish Workers' Group, People's Democracy (Ireland), Saor Éire (1967–1975)
Known forIrish republicanism

Peter Graham (born 1946) was an Irish republican and Marxist who worked as an electrician.

Graham was a member of various left-wing movements, a founder of the Young Socialists, and some sources identify him as a leader in the militant Saor Éire organisation.

He was murdered in his flat in Dublin in unclear circumstances in 1971.

Early life[edit]

Graham was born in 1946[1] with father Joseph Graham and raised in The Coombe, Dublin.[2]

Graham was born into a Catholic family, but relinquished religion later in life.[2]

Activism[edit]

Graham worked as an electrician for the CIÉ and was a trade union activist in Ireland and London, England.[2]

Briefly a Labour Party member, Graham left in disillusionment and became a Trotskyite joining the Connolly Youth Movement and the Trotskyist Irish Workers Group (IWG) in 1967.[2] After growing dissatisfied with the ideological stance of the IWG, Graham left and started the League for a Worker's Republic.[2][3] He was also the chair of the Young Socialists[3]and a member of the International Marxist Group.[4]

After IWG collapsed, some members started the People's Democracy organisation, with some of them starting the Saor Éire organisation.[2] While sources identify Graham as a member of Saor Éire,[4] This Week magazine rejects that.[2] He organised a meeting bringing Saor Éire and others together in 1968.[2] He was friends with D.R. O’Connor Lysaght, who both broke away from the International Marxist Group.[5]

Death[edit]

On October 25, 1971[6] he was murdered in his own flat on St Stephen's Green, Dublin[5] by rivals in Saor Éire, who accused him of being a police informant.[4] Graham was tortured with a hammer and shot in the neck.[7] He was aged 26 at the time of his death.[5]

While magazine This Week reported that Graham's friends attribute his death to a false accusation of being a police informant and also suggested his death was possibly linked to a gun smuggling operation.[8]

Journalist Charlie Bird spoke at his funeral.[3] Both Charlie Bird and Tariq Ali raised a clenched fist at the cemetery.[2]

The Provisional Irish Republican Army issued a statement thanking him for his support.[2]

References[edit]

  1. ^ Kevin Squires (2021) Peter Graham 50th Anniversary Poster Archived 2023-07-03 at the Wayback Machine , Irish Republican Marxists History Project
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Murder of a socialist Archived 2023-07-03 at the Wayback Machine (12 Nov 1971) This Week (Magazine)
  3. ^ a b c Lee, John (27 September 2009). "US official warning... about Citizen Charlie!". Mail on Sunday. p. 15. ProQuest 329107286.
  4. ^ a b c Smith, Evan; Worley, Matthew, eds. (2021). The British Left and Ireland in the Twentieth Century. Routledge. ISBN 978-1-000-38902-9.[page needed]
  5. ^ a b c Lysaght, Rayner (11 July 2021). "Rayner Lysaght Leading activist and historian in the labour movement and a hugely influential figure in Ireland's left-wing political sphere". Sunday Independent. p. 32. ProQuest 2549992983.
  6. ^ McKittrick, D. (1999). Lost Lives. United Kingdom: Mainstream.
  7. ^ Williams, Paul (2011). "Saor Eire". Badfellas. Penguin UK. ISBN 978-0-14-197029-5. Archived from the original on 2023-06-11. Retrieved 2023-06-11.
  8. ^ Who Killed Peter Graham? Archived 2023-07-03 at the Wayback Machine (12 Nov 1971) This Week (Magazine)