In the early hours of 14 June 1964, a Black Nigerian medical student, Charles Fadipe, was returning home from a night out in central Dublin when he was attacked by a group of at least six white youths. Twenty-two-year-old Fadipe, a medical student at the Royal College of Surgeons in Ireland, was beaten so severely that he spent several weeks in hospital and almost lost his sight in one eye.Footnote 1 The assault on Fadipe was one of numerous attacks against Black and Asian students in Dublin during the mid 1960s. Fadipe's case received special attention because his father, a Nigerian judge, visited him in hospital and soon became incensed by Gardaí inaction. Fadipe's father conducted his own investigation, uncovering twenty-five attacks on Black and Asian students in Dublin during 1963–4.Footnote 2 The attacks caused a minor diplomatic scandal. Nigeria's Dublin embassy lodged a formal complaint with its Irish counterpart, while Nigerian newspapers responded with outrage.Footnote 3
The most revealing aspect of this episode lay less in the assaults themselves but in the defensive reaction of the Irish state, media and public to charges of societal racism. A range of senior politicians, newspaper columnists and religious leaders spoke up to deny the existence of racism in Ireland and proudly assert the nation's ‘historic reputation for tolerance’.Footnote 4 Instinctive denials of racial prejudice, characterised by some U.K. scholars as a ‘no problem here’ attitude, are a common feature of predominantly white societies.Footnote 5 Regions of historically low immigration — including Scotland, Wales, Northern Ireland and rural England — typically have less cause to reflect upon their collective attitude to ethnic and national outsiders, fostering an assumption that a small Black or immigrant population equates to an absence of racism and xenophobia.
Such complacency was similarly witnessed in Ireland, underpinned by two distinctive aspects of the nation's history and sense of collective identity. First, commentators invoked Ireland's self-identification as a postcolonial nation, only recently freed from centuries of British subjugation, as a defence against charges of racism. By this reasoning, Irish people knew what it meant to be oppressed and racialised by a domineering imperial power and, therefore, empathised with other minority peoples. Secondly, both political and religious leaders invoked Ireland's history of missionary and aid programmes to Africa organised by the Catholic Church as proof of the nation's compassion. This ostensibly benevolent service to Black Africans fed the assumption, held by many Irish people, that they were intrinsically opposed to racial prejudice. These aspects of post-independence Irish identity have been well historicised. A wealth of literature exists on Ireland's relationship with Black Africa during decolonisation. In particular, Kevin O'Sullivan has extensively charted how Ireland's own history of colonialism fostered a sense of pride in the country's supposedly innate ‘sympathy with the cause of the developing world’.Footnote 6 Others have written about how Ireland's long-standing Catholic missionary ties fostered a misconceived sense of Irish kinship with Africa, often predicated on paternalistic stereotypes of the continent as savage and uncivilised.Footnote 7 Utilising new primary sources, this article builds upon those arguments and applies them from a new vantage point, exploring how Irish attitudes towards Africa — and by extension, African people — manifested within Ireland. It argues that the country's self-perception as a natural ally of Black nations fostered internal complacency regarding racism, causing negative outcomes for Black residents.
This article unpacks these Irish blind spots towards racism by focusing on two episodes: a late-1950s row regarding alleged anti-Black racism in Cork and the 1960s attacks on overseas students in Dublin. On both occasions, public figures flatly denied the existence of racism, invoking Ireland's collective identity as a historically oppressed and intrinsically compassionate nation. Commentators also deployed racialised tropes surrounding supposed Black character flaws to propagate a victim-blaming narrative. Invoking anxieties surrounding interracial relationships, the police, politicians and religious leaders implied that the oversensitivity of African men, combined with their supposedly reckless, hedonistic lifestyles, were the real causes of hostility. By shifting responsibility onto the students for their own victimisation, senior politicians effectively absolved white Irish people of any blame for racist discrimination.
The article has two purposes. The first is to incorporate conceptions of ethnic difference and diversity into Irish historiography, which has almost completely overlooked populations of colour. While it is easy to dismiss this monochrome understanding of Irish history as a product of the nation's historically small Black population, as this article demonstrates, a significant, visible cohort of Black and Asian migrants lived in Irish cities during the mid twentieth century. Their reception and treatment reveal much about how Irish national identity shaped discourses surrounding race, immigration and the wider world. The article also aims to add an Irish dimension to existing literature on race in predominantly white societies. Scholars from a range of disciplines have increasingly centred the experiences of migrants and minorities in places of historically lower immigration. Such research recognises that racial attitudes and prejudices among people who have fewer everyday encounters with ethnic ‘others’ differ markedly from those in places of greater ethnic diversity. This article argues that the views of white Irish people were also deeply informed by the nation's history.
I
Black and minority-ethnic people have lived in Ireland for several centuries. In a pioneering 2002 article, W. A. Hart traced the presence of hundreds of Black people in eighteenth-century Ireland, estimating that 1,000–3,000 Black individuals lived there between 1750 and 1799.Footnote 8 More recently, Bryan Fanning's 2018 monograph, Migration and the making of Ireland, outlines how a multitude of immigrant communities made Ireland their home over hundreds of years.Footnote 9 Covering the more recent past, Irial Glynn has charted Ireland's gradual uptick in immigration during the early 1990s, a trend that accelerated dramatically by the early 2000s.Footnote 10 While welcome, these texts are exceptions to the norm of Irish historiography. Despite efforts to broaden the range of voices represented in Irish history — particularly those of women — people of colour have been routinely overlooked.Footnote 11 Where race has featured, historians have focused primarily on the racialisation of the Irish. In his book, The eternal Paddy, Michael de Nie chronicles how nineteenth-century British popular culture positioned Irish migrants through a series of derogatory tropes, the stereotypical Irish Catholic ‘Celt’ being caricatured as ‘savage and uncivilized’, as well as drunken, violent and foolhardy.Footnote 12 In a provocative 1995 text, How the Irish became white, Noel Ignatiev outlines his theory that Irish-Americans attained ‘the privileges and burdens of whiteness’ by subjugating African-Americans.Footnote 13 Ignatiev's work has subsequently been criticised for lacking precision on what was actually meant by ‘whiteness’ and overstating the extent to which Irish-Americans were ever ‘non-white’.Footnote 14 There is however very little historical research on Irish attitudes towards people of colour within Ireland, particularly in the twentieth century.
One aspect of Irish race discourse that does have an established historiography regards the country's oldest and historically largest ethnic minority: the Traveller population. Anti-Traveller racism constitutes an ‘organic’, homegrown and pre-existing form of Irish racism which, unlike anti-Black racism, does not rely on stereotypes imported from elsewhere.Footnote 15 The racialisation of Black people and Travellers intersect, with both having been subjected to similar derogatory tropes, being profiled as dirty, deviant, violent and criminal. Throughout the twentieth century, Travellers suffered individual, systemic and institutional discrimination, including name-calling, physical abuse, denial of services and significant health and educational inequalities.Footnote 16 Beginning in the 1960s, the Irish state began attempting to assimilate the Traveller population and eradicate their itinerant way of life.Footnote 17 When assimilation attempts failed, Travellers remained confined to society's margins, subjected to continued racism and exclusion.Footnote 18 As Fanning puts it, Travellers were cast as ‘a deviant sub-group within a homogenously imagined nation’.Footnote 19 Research on anti-Traveller racism continues to burgeon, with a 2022 conference at the University of Galway showcasing the extent and innovation of this ongoing work.Footnote 20 Although this article focuses on anti-Black racism, research on anti-Traveller racism highlights that various forms of racial discrimination have long been ingrained in Irish society. The overlapping treatment of Black migrants and Travellers further undermines the notion of Ireland as exclusively welcoming and tolerant. The article, therefore, complements existing analyses of anti-Traveller racism by highlighting how a group previously overlooked by historians, Black Africans, were also excluded, mistreated and dismissed by mainstream Irish society.
An explanation for the lack of historical enquiry regarding anti-Black racism lies in the belief that Ireland only very recently experienced significant immigration. As mentioned, inward migration only accelerated from the late 1990s, especially during the ‘Celtic Tiger’ years of economic prosperity. According to the 2016 census, 11.6% of the Irish population was born abroad, with thousands more born in Ireland to parents from across the world, encompassing a wide range of religions, cultures and ethnicities.Footnote 21 Rising immigration was accompanied by a growth of populist racism and xenophobia, directed especially at Black asylum seekers.Footnote 22 Anti-immigrant anxieties crystalised around the 2004 citizenship referendum in which almost 80 per cent of the Irish public voted to approve a constitutional amendment denying automatic citizenship rights to children born in Ireland. The referendum's ‘yes’ campaign centred on populist arguments that pregnant non-Irish women — especially Black Africans — were travelling in large numbers to give birth in Ireland and attain citizenship for their children.Footnote 23 Although these claims amounted to little more than political scaremongering, the referendum's success codified a ‘bloodline criteria’ for Irish nationality, reinforcing the synonymisation of Irishness and whiteness.Footnote 24 Yet, recent years have also provided cause for optimism. 2020s Ireland is diverse and multi-ethnic, fostering a generation that embraces a hybridised, multi-faceted version of national identity. Initiatives such as the ‘I am Irish’ N.G.O. — which promotes diversity in Irish society and culture — and the ‘Black & Irish’ podcast series reflect this reassessment of national identity and the rejection of Irishness as exclusively white.Footnote 25 However, the overall picture surrounding attitudes to diversity in Ireland is varied. Recent years have witnessed the emergence of an Irish far right, which has capitalised on anti-immigrant sentiment, particularly regarding asylum seekers, to grow its support and assert a white, nationalist version of Irishness.Footnote 26
These profound societal changes have prompted a wealth of academic literature on race and immigration in modern Ireland. In their 2002 book, Encounters: how racism came to Ireland, Rolston and Shannon describe the ‘veritable moral panic’ that emerged in response to rising immigrant numbers and asylum claims in the early 2000s.Footnote 27 Mary Gilmartin's 2015 monograph, Ireland and migration in the 21st century, explores how traditional images of white Gaelic, Catholic Ireland have been disrupted by persistent immigration, with incoming migrants regularly demonised as a ‘challenge to national integrity’.Footnote 28 More recently, Joseph has utilised critical race theory to highlight how Ireland remains ‘enmeshed in white supremacy and controlled by the normativity of whiteness’, with racial others perpetually excluded as ‘permanent strangers’.Footnote 29 A host of other scholars have researched and continue to write about the intersection of ethnicity and identity in modern Ireland.Footnote 30
This varied body of work represents a vital response to Irish social change. However, its scope remains heavily skewed towards the late twentieth and early twenty-first century, an era described by some commentators as a ‘new Ireland’.Footnote 31 Concentrating solely on the recent past risks implying that these are wholly new issues without historical precedent. As Brannigan writes, there remains a popular assumption that Ireland abruptly ‘became a multi-cultural society’ in the late 1990s, overlooking a much longer history of diversity.Footnote 32 More troublingly, an absence of historical debate risks cementing the fallacy that Irish racism is an uncharacteristic aberration that emerged only recently. The idea that racism simply did not exist in twentieth-century Ireland fuelled state apathy, with the result that legal safeguards for ethnic minorities were non-existent. Ireland's historical attitude towards racism was so lax that despite signing up to the United Nations (U.N.) International Convention on the Elimination of all Forms of Racial Discrimination in 1968, the convention was left ignored and unratified until 2000.Footnote 33 By the mid-1980s, Ireland was one of very few European countries that provided no legal protection against racial discrimination.Footnote 34 Before the late 1990s, any debate regarding racism in Ireland was stymied by a steadfast ‘refusal to acknowledge any problem’.Footnote 35 By neglecting to incorporate the experiences of people of colour, Irish historians have unconsciously reinforced a ‘myth of cultural homogeneity’ and propagated an assumed absence of race discourse.Footnote 36 In response, this article begins exposing and dismantling the misguided complacency that characterised mid-twentieth-century Irish attitudes to external racial outsiders (i.e. those who came from overseas).
Consistent denial of racism was far from unique to Ireland. Other predominantly white societies, particularly in the U.K., have exhibited similar dismissiveness. Due to the relative invisibility of minority communities, white people living in less diverse regions have found it easier to ignore racial tension and discrimination. Writing in 1995, a team of sociologists from the University of Stirling identified this ‘no problem here’ attitude at primary schools in a largely white region of central Scotland. Although minority-ethnic children interviewed by the researchers described clear and overt instances of racism, teachers and support staff were adamant that their school was free from discrimination.Footnote 37 Sarah Hackett similarly observes the ‘no problem here’ defence across statutory agencies in mid-twentieth-century rural England, while Paul Connolly and Michaela Keenan describe the same at primary schools in early-twenty-first-century Northern Ireland.Footnote 38 Such denials have often been rationalised as an inevitable consequence of low immigrant numbers, a generalisation that is problematic in several ways. First, it shifts the blame for racism onto Black people for their mere presence. Secondly, it overlooks the fact that racism in such places is often compounded because victims are isolated, lacking the extensive community support networks found in more diverse areas. Nonetheless, citing low numbers has been a powerful and effective means of dismissing and overlooking racism in predominantly white communities.
The ‘no problem here’ argument often extends beyond mere population size, also being formulated around a more fundamental belief that racism goes against a society's collective character. In Scotland, where national identity is regularly constructed in opposition to Englishness, Davidson and Virdee argue that governing nationalist politicians have disingenuously framed racism as a distinctively English problem, portraying Scots as ‘more egalitarian, more likely to place an emphasis on collectivism’.Footnote 39 Similarly, Parry-Jones observes that the self-identification of the Welsh as welcoming ‘common folk’ has fostered the myth of ‘a nation that is devoid of racial prejudice’.Footnote 40 Irish commentators likewise played upon the nation's reputation for hospitality, mobilising a collective welcoming self-identity to present racism as ‘inexplicable’ and ‘out of character for Irish society’.Footnote 41 Irish race discourse was also specifically influenced by the nation's historical and cultural identity. First, politicians and commentators harnessed Ireland's colonial history to stress their solidarity with other marginalised nations, thus nullifying charges of internal racism. Secondly, religious leaders played upon the Irish Catholic Church's missionary and charity work in the so-called ‘Third World’, citing these endeavours as proof of underlying compassion towards people of colour.
These two prongs of Irish attitudes towards Africa have been extensively theorised by historians. As Stephen Howe argues, Irish politicians and diplomats were so convinced in the 1950s and 1960s of the nation's status as a ‘role-model for anticolonial movements’ that their proclamations eventually became ‘self-aggrandisingly fantastic’.Footnote 42 Kenneth Shonk highlights the paternalism of Ireland's self-appointed role as a model for decolonisation, pointing out its presupposition that African nation-building ‘had to be learned’ from a white European country.Footnote 43 Similarly, Zélie Asava notes how Ireland's missionary and charitable work in Africa caused many Irish overseas workers to see themselves as ‘benevolent masters’, white western saviours of a ‘dependent and underdeveloped’ continent.Footnote 44 In his 2012 book, Ireland, Africa and the end of empire, Kevin O'Sullivan concludes that these strands of Ireland's global identity — its colonial past, its missionary history and its charity initiatives — combined to ‘foster a sense of responsibility and the belief in a special connection between the Irish people and their less well-off counterparts’ in Africa.Footnote 45
But although the historiography of Ireland's relationship with the African continent and its people is well established, such work has predominantly focused on Ireland's external relationships with the wider world. There has been only limited engagement with how Irish perceptions of Africa operated internally, to engender national complacency towards societal racism and to minimise the lived experiences of discrimination and prejudice of Black people within Ireland's borders. Failures to acknowledge racial prejudice had tangible social effects, fostering state apathy and leaving victims lacking protection from the Gardaí and the government.
II
The view that Black and immigrant populations were so small as to be insignificant has also persisted, reinforced by portrayals of Ireland as a nation of emigrants. However, twentieth-century Ireland witnessed the arrival of substantial Jewish, Eastern European, Italian, African, Chinese and South Asian communities.Footnote 46 A more transitory but highly visible presence was overseas students. The majority of these were Black Africans, with others hailing from Asian countries, including Malaysia, India and Hong Kong.Footnote 47 Beginning in the 1940s, a steady stream of overseas students — who were often described using the homogenising terms ‘coloured’ or ‘Afro-Asian’ — ensured that Ireland maintained a consistent, visible minority-ethnic presence, at least in larger urban areas. Although most students returned home after graduating, new enrolments remained steady until the late 1970s. While precise numbers for the Black and Asian student population are difficult to ascertain, there are some indicative estimates. In 1962, Dublin's Overseas Club (a body representing foreign students) reported that over 1,500 ‘Afro-Asian’ students lived in the city, with many more in other college towns.Footnote 48 A 1975 estimate by the Irish Council for Overseas Students (I.C.O.S.) suggested that over 1,000 foreign students, most of whom were African, lived in Ireland.Footnote 49
Those numbers were significant both numerically and proportionally. With a consistent presence of over 1,000, Black and Asian people would have been visible to white Irish society, particularly younger people. African and Asian students attended the same universities, socialised in the same bars and lived in the same neighbourhoods as white people, facilitating everyday cross-ethnic interactions. If the I.C.O.S. figure of just over 1,000 was correct, Black and Asian people also represented around 5 per cent of Ireland's student population by the mid 1970s.Footnote 50 Some were quick to laud this cosmopolitanism as indicative of racial conviviality. The Overseas Club in Dublin, run by the Legion of Mary, operated a student hostel and social club from 1962 to 1977 in Harcourt Terrace, central Dublin (it relocated to Ely Place in 1978).Footnote 51 According to the club's official booklet, the hostel was opened in 1962 by the U.N. secretary general, who hailed Dublin's student community as a ‘model of a harmonious multi-racial society’.Footnote 52
While many overseas students undoubtedly thrived in Ireland, African and Asian students endured numerous challenges including cultural unfamiliarity, social isolation and racist discrimination. Everyday concerns centred around the unfamiliarity of the Irish climate and cuisine, with many overseas students left feeling overwhelmed and, according to a 1958 Irish Times report, experiencing ‘pangs of loneliness’ and homesickness.Footnote 53 Arguably, the very existence of hostels such as the Overseas Club entrenched social segregation. Harcourt Terrace was one of several student lodgings in Ireland that exclusively housed overseas (mostly African) students, reducing the scope for cross-ethnic social interactions. Such hostels were regrettably necessary due to widespread racism amongst Irish student landladies, with multiple newspapers reporting between the 1960s and 1980s that Black and Asian students were regularly refused accommodation.Footnote 54 The situation was so severe that the Irish Times ran a series of investigative articles in 1969 about Dublin's housing ‘colour bar’. Findings from the series, which was entitled ‘No Blacks - sorry’, included that only twenty of Dublin's 1,000 landladies were prepared to accept ‘coloured’ students and that quoted rents were higher for prospective Black tenants than their white counterparts.Footnote 55 During the 1970s and 1980s, Black people in Cork reported similar trouble finding lodgings.Footnote 56 Housing discrimination was typically veiled, difficult to prove beyond doubt and, therefore, easy to deny. In a quintessential example of the ‘no problem here’ attitude, a 1970 editorial in the Sligo Champion defended Dublin landladies, blaming their refusal of digs to Black students not on racism but on Black people's fondness for ‘preparing suppers of exotic foods that smell strangely’.Footnote 57
Discrimination also occurred in other sectors, with numerous reports of Black and Asian people being denied entry to pubs and nightclubs well into the 1980s.Footnote 58 Again, such refusals were often blamed on the behaviour of the students themselves, with the manager of Mooney's pub in Dublin unashamedly telling the Irish Independent in 1975 that ‘some weeks ago some coloured people were guilty of misconduct … we don't refuse coloured people admission during the day, but we have the right to refuse them at night’.Footnote 59 Black migrants were not the only group in Irish society to experience such discrimination. The Traveller population had long been excluded from public venues such as shops, hotels, pubs and dancehalls.Footnote 60 Like Travellers, Black Africans were repeatedly racially profiled as deviant and criminal, with doubts about the moral character and integrity of foreign students crucial to their racialisation and subsequent mistreatment. In 1960s Dublin, Black students were sometimes characterised as part of a deviant criminal underworld. In 1965, the Longford Leader ran a short opinion piece highlighting the dangers of ‘the strange world of coloured students in our capital city’. The author stated that ‘most people picture the coloured student world as apt to play around with drugs, vice and violence’.Footnote 61 The piece emerged in response to the tragic death of a twenty-one-year-old Nigerian woman, Olifunmilio Aina, a student at a Dublin secretarial college. She was last seen in the company of her boyfriend and fellow student, a twenty-five-year-old Nigerian called Augustine Adebiyi, who was subsequently charged with her murder.Footnote 62 The prosecution alleged that that Aina was pregnant and had died after Adebiyi injected her with an unknown substance while attempting to induce an abortion.Footnote 63 Amid extensive media coverage, Adebiyi was eventually acquitted in November 1965.Footnote 64
Another tragic case that captured public attention was the 1963 killing of Hazel Mullen, a sixteen-year-old Dublin girl, by her twenty-three-year-old boyfriend, Shan Mohangi, a South African student of Asian descent. Mohangi was initially convicted of murder and sentenced to death, but his conviction was quashed upon appeal. After a retrial, Mohangi was sentenced to seven years in prison for manslaughter, serving only four before returning to South Africa. The intense press coverage surrounding the Adebiyi and Mohangi trials fuelled a perception of moral degeneracy within Dublin's African student community. The Mohangi case was specifically cited in some reports as a cause of suspicion among landladies and a factor influencing housing discrimination.Footnote 65 Newspapers also periodically reported on African men arrested on drugs charges, such as a 1965 case when a thirty-three-year-old Nigerian man was caught arriving in Dublin from Lagos with up to £20,000 of ‘Indian hemp’.Footnote 66 More tragically, the previous year, Gardaí had raided the Dublin home of twenty-six-year-old Nigerian student, Rafiu Ojikutu, seizing a quantity of ‘purple hearts’, drugs described as recreational stimulants. After accepting that the drugs were his, Ojikutu failed to appear in court and was found dead the following week in an apparent suicide.Footnote 67 Although these killings and drugs charges constituted a small number of cases, their extensive coverage in national newspapers cemented the white Irish public's association of Black student life with criminality. A similar association of young Black people with crime also emerged in 1960s Britain. In There ain't no Black in the Union Jack, Paul Gilroy theorises that Black men served as convenient scapegoats for perceived national decline. Using alarmist anti-immigrant rhetoric, figures such as the Conservative Party's Enoch Powell presented Black migration as an invasion by ‘an alien wedge’, crystalising deep-seated public fears about the collapse of law and order.Footnote 68 Although young Black people constituted a much smaller and less visible population in 1960s Ireland, they were nonetheless vilified, especially by voices in the media, as a threat to traditional moral values and part of a murky criminal underworld.
Black men in Ireland were also constructed as a moral threat through their relationships with white women. The xenophobic trope of immigrant men as sexually insatiable, arriving en masse to predate on local women, has been witnessed across the western world. Black men have been particularly demonised for their supposedly uncontrollable sexuality. As Webster highlights, intermarriage between white English women and Black men was central to the idea that 1960s Britain faced a ‘colour problem’. These anxieties stemmed from much older concerns about miscegenation, with Webster arguing that white women represented the parameters of British national integrity and white racial purity, boundaries that Black men supposedly violated.Footnote 69 Such attitudes were similarly found in Ireland, with a 1974 Irish Times column on racial prejudice in Dublin lamenting that ‘the myth of the sexual athleticism of the Oriental or the concupiscence of the Negro seems to find much credence in Dublin’.Footnote 70
It was not only Black men who were vilified for interracial relationships. In a society where the policing of female sexuality was ubiquitous, white women were often denounced as the instigators of interracial sex. The Irish Times columnist also critiqued the common assumption that no ‘decent’ white Irish woman would court a Black man, ensuring that ‘poor sex-starved men turn to girls who are easier prey’, namely sex workers.Footnote 71 The profiling of working-class white women who dated Black men as licentious sex workers — a profession subjected to ‘vigorously repressive moralism’ by church and state — demonstrates how they were villainised as temptresses who led naïve young Black men astray.Footnote 72 In 1944, a group of Catholic missionary priests had sought to establish a Dublin hostel for African students to shield them from female temptation, writing that ‘the worst type of immoral woman often goes after these coloured boys’, and describing Black men as a magnet for ‘perverted souls’.Footnote 73 Despite the assumption that white partners of Black men were ‘perverts’ and sex workers, most interracial couplings were ordinary romantic relationships. Yet, this did not prevent social and familial opprobrium. According to a 1963 Irish Times interview with a Ugandan student at Trinity College, Dublin, ‘when a coloured boy becomes friendly with a local girl he normally meets strong and undisguised disapproval’ and ‘hostility from her parents’.Footnote 74 Memoirs written by mixed race Irish people similarly suggest that their white mothers were sometimes ostracised from their families, especially once they became pregnant.Footnote 75
Although white women were often censured for interracial sex, Black men were just as likely to be villainised for corrupting white women's chastity. In 1948, a white Dublin man named Patrick Heather took a twenty-two-year-old Nigerian medical student, George Otigbah, to court for the alleged ‘seduction’ of his daughter, Norah.Footnote 76 Ireland had a long history of such cases, which were usually initiated against a woman's pre-marital sexual partner by one of her male relatives. Mary O'Dowd and Maria Luddy have traced 297 ‘seduction’ cases in Irish courts between 1793 and 1925.Footnote 77 Over 95 per cent were found against the defendant, thus apportioning full blame for any sex that took place to the ‘seducer’.Footnote 78 In the 1948 case, George Otigbah confessed to having had sex with Norah Heather — who was described by the Irish Times as a ‘working girl’ — on one occasion but denied ‘seducing’ her. He also denied being the father of Norah's twin babies, who had died soon after birth. The case evoked heavily racialised anxieties surrounding miscegenation and Black sexuality, with Heather's barrister citing their interracial relationship as an aggravating factor. According to the prosecution, ‘it was a slur on a white girl and a blow at the racial pride of a white man that a white girl should be seduced by a person of another colour’. The barrister added that there ‘was something abhorrent that a white girl should be seduced by a coloured man’. Otigbah was dehumanised by the prosecution, being described as a ‘ramping young buck’, rhetoric that also capitalised on the stereotype of uncontrollable Black libido. The presiding judge appeared sympathetic to Otigbah and censured the prosecution barrister for his ‘offensive expressions’, describing these as ‘an appeal to racial prejudice’. Despite the judge expressing ‘regret’ at the use of coarse, racialised language, Otigbah was convicted of seduction and ordered to pay Heather £700, a very large sum of money in 1948.Footnote 79
Interracial couples like George Otigbah and Norah Heather often met at dancehalls, a key site of 1960s Irish youth culture. Many of the attacks perpetrated against Black and Asian students occurred in the vicinity of dancehalls. Men such as Charles Fadipe, the Nigerian student described at the beginning of the article, were attacked by white youths while returning from late-night dances, accompanied by white women. Irish dancehalls had long been a lightning rod for anxieties surrounding sexual promiscuity among Irish youth. As early as the 1920s, these alleged ‘sites of corruption’ were subjected to strict state regulation, with Catholic organisations denouncing dancehall promoters and owners as agents of public sin.Footnote 80 Such moralism continued into the 1960s, with dancehalls often portrayed as sites of sexual immorality and facilitators of youthful delinquency.Footnote 81 The stigma surrounding dancehalls, youth culture and interracial relationships facilitated a victim-blaming narrative around Black students who were subjected to assault. By constructing dancehalls as sites of violence and iniquity, both government and Gardaí were able to dismiss this wave of assaults on African students as stemming from their own questionable morality, thus denying any underlying racial motives.
III
The racialisation of Black and Asian students manifested through numerous violent attacks. African students had been targets for abuse since their arrival in Ireland during the 1940s. As early as 1944, a young Nigerian man, J. F. A. Modebe, wrote to Taoiseach Éamon de Valera — whom he had recently met — to highlight ‘the difficulties of the young members of my unfortunate race who are domiciled here’. Modebe recounted one incident in Drumcondra, where he was pelted with stones by a crowd of white youths. According to Modebe, such attacks occurred ‘fairly frequently’, leading to ‘fighting in public between the white and Black boys’.Footnote 82 Racial tension continued to simmer before reaching an ugly nadir during the mid-1960s series of attacks. Months before the attack on Charles Fadipe, another young Nigerian, Patrick Udenze, suffered eye damage in an attack by two white youths.Footnote 83 A third Nigerian man was assaulted and racially abused by a bus conductor in a dispute over a ticket, reportedly being ordered to ‘get out from this bus you nigger, you Black face’.Footnote 84 Other attacks, which were confirmed by Gardaí, included the beating of Malayan student Anthony Chan by four white youths and an attack with a glass bottle on another African student.Footnote 85 However, as the following examples highlight, the Irish state provided little response to these frequent beatings other than to deny the existence of racial hatred.
The attacks prompted a backlash from the Nigerian media and Dublin's Nigerian embassy. In June 1964, shortly after the attack on Fadipe, the Nigerian ambassador wrote to Ireland's Department of External Affairs to express ‘deep grief and concern over this unhappy trend of events’. The ambassador added that ‘the prospect of many Nigerian students having their eyes damaged or other parts of their bodies dismembered by unprovoked attackers before they leave Ireland is rather frightful’.Footnote 86 This was not the first time that the Nigerian embassy had complained about the treatment of its citizens in Ireland. In an April 1963 letter, written in response to the incident involving a bus conductor, the ambassador wrote that ‘the whole issue was handled with ugly prejudices bordering on the racial’, adding that ‘there have been several other manifestations of racial prejudice on the part of the police’.Footnote 87 That November, the ambassador similarly complained that a garda had witnessed the attack on Patrick Udenze but refused to intervene. The Nigerians clearly saw a racist motive to such inaction, lamenting that ‘a police constable, who is paid to keep the peace, was a witness to such a brutal assault but would not intervene on account of the fact, we cannot help concluding, that the assaulted person was African and the hooligans Irish’.Footnote 88 After the Fadipe case, Nigerian newspapers expressed similar outrage, with the Nigerian Outlook writing that Black students ‘face brutality in Ireland’.Footnote 89 The Morning Post in Lagos expressed anger that Fadipe's attack occurred ‘on a major road under the nose of a policeman’.Footnote 90 The attacks were also reported in the British media, with London's Sunday Telegraph featuring an interview with Fadipe and his father, in which they challenged the Irish government to act. Fadipe's father also claimed that the Nigerian embassy had warned its citizens in Dublin not to venture outside after eight o'clock at night.Footnote 91
The Nigerian embassy, Nigerian newspapers and a British newspaper all, therefore, highlighted the racist victimisation of Dublin students. However, the Irish government took a very different stance. Far from investigating and tackling racial violence, ministers denied its existence. Justice Minister, Charles Haughey, made a forthright public rebuttal in an Evening Herald article which featured an unequivocal headline: ‘No race hate here.’ Haughey dismissed reports of racism as ‘grossly exaggerated’, adding that ‘to describe the situation as a wave of racial violence is ridiculous’. Contending that there had only been three assaults on students rather than the twenty-five claimed by Fadipe's father, Haughey denied any underlying racial motive. Instead, he portrayed the incidents as examples of everyday urban criminality, the mindless ‘acts of thugs and hooligans who would attack white people as readily as others’.Footnote 92 The government was clearly irritated at charges of widespread Irish racism, especially those emanating from the Nigerian press. Frank Aiken, the minister for external affairs, met with the Nigerian ambassador in August 1964 to discuss the attacks. Shortly afterwards, his ministry issued a strongly worded statement declaring the government ‘gravely concerned at the accusations of racial prejudice against the Irish people and against the Irish police in particular on the strength of a few isolated attacks upon overseas students’. Echoing Haughey, the statement attributed any attacks to ‘midnight rowdyism’ stemming from a ‘wave of violence in certain areas of Dublin, late on weekend nights, which usually involves Irish nationals rather than overseas students’.Footnote 93
The framing of these attacks as part of broader ‘rowdyism’ was a common refrain. Ministers such as Aiken and Haughey implied that overseas students were assaulted not due to their ethnicity, but because of their participation in Dublin's nightlife. As Holohan outlines, Ireland's night-time economy featured at the centre of a 1960s moral panic about youthful delinquency amid a perceived rise in territorial gang violence.Footnote 94 Government sources exploited the image of dancehalls as inherently dangerous spaces, internal correspondence portraying the assaults as merely part of general social disorder. One memo suggested that dancehalls were the preserve of ‘rowdies and hooligans’ who were ‘often in a state of intoxication’. It added that ‘persons who frequent such quarters at such times take a certain risk’, concluding that ‘to inflate this into charges that the Irish people in general, or the Gardaí in particular, are actuated by gross colour prejudice is as unwarranted as it is unjust’.Footnote 95 This narrative of generalised delinquency shifted responsibility for the attacks on to Black and Asian students for choosing to attend these unregulated sites of leisure and absolved the perpetrators of any racist motive. Officials sometimes descended into more overt victim-blaming. Another memo, from the Department of the Taoiseach, claimed that during each attack ‘colour hardly entered into the situation but rather the indiscreet behaviour of the student’, firmly inculpating the Black victims rather than the white perpetrators. The author added that, although racism was not currently a problem, the Nigerian embassy's tendency to ‘exaggerate’ the assaults would ‘create prejudice against Nigerians’.Footnote 96 Media commentary similarly blamed students for their own victimisation, with one editorial remarking that ‘Africans have flirted with danger by entering dangerous parts of the city where rows start at the drop of a hat’.Footnote 97
Several Black and Asian victims were accompanied by white Irish women, imbuing criticism of overseas students with moralistic social conservatism.Footnote 98 By the mid 1960s, nightclubs remained subject to moral censure as supposedly unruly spaces where young people were left ‘unsupervised’ to engage in sexual behaviour.Footnote 99 Catholic leaders regularly attempted to control these sites, issuing repeated ‘pronouncements against the evils of night dances’.Footnote 100 The visibility of interracial relationships within dancehalls will only have added to their reputation as places of vice. The fact that numerous Black and Asian men were attacked while courting white Irish women also hints at an element of sexual jealousy. Foreign students generally derived from the upper echelons of their home countries, with their affluence being a source of potential envy from working-class white Dublin men. One correspondent to the Irish Times, which reported extensively on the attacks, bemoaned that ‘coloured students — unlike Irish students — can afford to dress smartly and take girls out in cars’, rendering white jealousy inevitable.Footnote 101 That this was offered as mitigation again highlights a rhetorical exoneration of the white aggressors.
Irish responses to this wave of attacks on Black and Asian students were, therefore, characterised by dismissiveness and denial, shifting the onus onto the victims rather than the perpetrators. Such deflection was typical of the ‘no problem here’ attitude commonly witnessed in predominantly white societies such as Northern Ireland, Scotland, Wales and rural England, among other places. However, as discussed in the remaining analysis, in Ireland these denials were framed around the nation's rhetorical alliance with emerging African states, a perceived affinity predicated on the nation's own colonial past and its ongoing Catholic-led missionary and charity work. These two facets of Ireland's national collective identity were deployed not only to argue that the Irish were not racist, but that they in fact could not be racist.
IV
Amid the political and media commentary surrounding the Dublin attacks, one particularly forthright editorial was written by an Evening Herald columnist, Jack Butterly, in September 1964. Under the headline ‘Colour bar? There is no real problem in Dublin’, Butterly insisted that ‘these incidents have no relation to the skin colour of those involved’, dismissing the assaults as an inevitable consequence of the ‘immoral atmosphere’ that pervaded Dublin nightlife. In this sense, Butterly echoed the moralistic victim-blaming outlined above. More striking, however, was his claim that Ireland had ‘no real problem’ with racism due to its history as an oppressed, colonised nation. Butterly wrote that ‘for 700 years we knew what it was like to be a colonised race of people — to be second-class citizens in our own land’. This history, he claimed, left Irish people well placed to extend friendship to those from ‘countries which only recently emerged from the same overlordship’.Footnote 102 This often misguided sense of empathy with people of African descent was one core feature of Irish race discourse, serving as a key blind spot regarding internal racism.
Solidarity with racial minorities and post-imperial nations was a recurring motif in the evolution of post-independence Irish national identity. After Ireland's 1955 accession to the United Nations, Irish politicians repeatedly expressed a sense of kinship with emerging African nations on the world stage. In his work on Ireland and the British Empire, Howe posits that Ireland projected itself at the U.N. as Europe's only postcolonial nation, leaving it uniquely placed to champion decolonisation in 1950s and early 1960s.Footnote 103 Likewise, O'Sullivan argues that Irish diplomats and politicians quickly embraced a postcolonial national identity, a form of perceived ‘Irish exceptionalism’ that shaped foreign policy towards Africa.Footnote 104 Daly suggests that this misplaced Irish belief in its inherent brotherhood with historically oppressed peoples amounted to diplomatic ‘naïveté’.Footnote 105 Nonetheless, anti-colonialism was certainly a tenet of Ireland's diplomatic identity in the 1950s and 1960s, an image that was cynically deployed during the Dublin student attacks to shield Irish people from charges of internal racism.
Throughout the twentieth century, most of the public believed Ireland to be a hospitable country with a fundamental aversion to racial intolerance. This strong belief in an ‘Ireland of the welcomes’ was intrinsically linked to the country's history.Footnote 106 Steve Garner charts the prevalence of a ‘zero-sum argument’ whereby ‘because the Irish had been victims of colonial exploitation and racialised in this process, they could not be responsible for perpetrating the same forms of discrimination’.Footnote 107 Internal government memos similarly utilised Ireland's history to describe racial prejudice as ‘traditionally abhorrent to the Irish people’.Footnote 108 In August 1964, Frank Aiken described his meeting with the Nigerian ambassador regarding the Dublin attacks as essential ‘for the general furtherance of cordial relations which have so long existed’ between Ireland and Nigeria, as well as other post-imperial countries.Footnote 109 With such rhetoric, Aiken continued to position Ireland at the forefront of a broader informal post-colonial alliance.
During the era of decolonisation, African leaders likewise identified Ireland as a kindred nation. In 1957, for example, Taoiseach de Valera received a letter from Kenneth Kaunda, a member of the Northern Rhodesian African National Congress who would later become Zambia's first president. Kaunda told de Valera of his admiration for ‘the history of Ireland in which of course you have and continue to play an important part is an inspiration to us’, adding that Ireland had helped Black Africans ‘learn that it is possible to break the shackles of colonialism’.Footnote 110 In 1960, the Ghanaian prime minister, Kwame Nkrumah, spoke at a U.N. meeting in Dublin, eulogising Irish independence leaders as instigators of ‘a world movement for freedom’.Footnote 111 Despite paying homage to Irish history, the extent to which Kaunda, Nkrumah and other African leaders genuinely took inspiration from Ireland is contested by historians. According to Shonk, Ireland served as a ‘model to be emulated’ for African nationalists, whom he argues sought to replicate Irish nation-building frameworks after decolonisation.Footnote 112 O'Sullivan, however, is unconvinced, suggesting that African leaders were less knowledgeable or admiring of Ireland's history than Irish politicians and diplomats believed.Footnote 113 However, historians generally agree that — regardless of African leaders’ enthusiasm for emulating the Irish example — Ireland's self-perception as a champion of decolonisation was important to the nation's collective identity, both at home and in international affairs. Irish politicians, diplomats and the public remained proud of what they saw as a moral commitment to self-determination, anti-imperialism and the protection of small independent states.Footnote 114
Perceptions of equivalence between Ireland's independence struggle and those of African nations have continued into the twenty-first century, particularly from more radical elements of the republican movement. As Peter Geoghegan highlights, republicans in Northern Ireland continue to assert a ‘putative identification’ with migrants and ethnic minorities, assuming that anti-racism is a ‘natural’ and immutable characteristic of Irish identity.Footnote 115 Northern Ireland's 1960s civil rights movement was intentionally modelled on African Americans’ fight against racial segregation, with Irish nationalists keen to portray the two as parallel struggles.Footnote 116 Irish solidarity with oppressed Black people abroad found similar expression through the Irish Anti-Apartheid movement (I.A.A.M.), which evolved from humble beginnings in the early 1960s to a national campaign group in the 1970s and 1980s. In early 1970, the I.A.A.M. successfully protested a South African rugby tour to Ireland, attracting widespread public support.Footnote 117 The I.A.A.M's rhetoric closely mirrored that of Irish politicians at the U.N., with the movement's leaders consistently citing Ireland's colonial past as a basis for protesting injustices such as apartheid.Footnote 118 However, we must also recognise the limitations of movements such as the I.A.A.M. regarding the Irish public's overall commitment to racial justice. While it was one thing to offer remote solidarity to people on another continent, as was demonstrated by the dismissiveness surrounding anti-Black racism against students in Dublin, such warm-heartedness did not always extend to Black people within Ireland.
Irish support for decolonisation was similarly expressed from afar and had little relevance to how the country's own African population was treated. More importantly, although Irish diplomats were keen to conflate Ireland's independence struggle with that of African nations, this overlooked the fact that Ireland had secured self-determination partially by leveraging the whiteness of its people. According to Garner, Ireland's self-portrayal as ‘a white, civilised nation-in-waiting’ was crucial in securing home rule, convincing British parliamentarians of the nation's ‘superiority and aptitude for self-rule’, a direct contrast to Black Africa, which remained seen as savage and unfit for self-determination.Footnote 119 Despite putative solidarity with Black nations, Irish nationalist identity was predicated on an exclusionary, white conception of nationhood. In the late nineteenth century, Ireland's burgeoning home rule movement flourished partially through cultivating a distinctive form of cultural nationalism through arenas such as sport, literature, dress, language and music. Institutions such as the Gaelic Athletic Association were constructed to actively distinguish Irish cultural practices from those of Britain, asserting a coherent cultural identity to accompany political nationalism.Footnote 120
Central to this ‘Gaelic revival’ was the notion that the Irish were a discernible ‘race’, one that should be rooted in its own sovereign territory.Footnote 121 This belief in cultural and racial distinctiveness informed Ireland's post-independence nation-building project, culminating in a state crafted around an identity that, according to Gilmartin, excluded ethnic minorities due to its reliance on ‘ethnic belonging’ and ‘historic ties to place’.Footnote 122 Independent Ireland, therefore, emerged with a ‘new-found sense of whiteness’ in which racial specificity was actively asserted and championed.Footnote 123 This perception of Ireland's white distinctiveness sometimes descended into overt racial prejudice. As Brian Hanley outlines, during the revolutionary period, several senior Irish diplomats were openly anti-Semitic, sometimes accusing Jews of hostility to Irish independence.Footnote 124 Notions around the nature of Irish nationhood, therefore, arguably fostered and reinforced ideologies of racial exclusion, with hegemonic whiteness and ethnic distinctiveness firmly rooted in collective understandings of the country's history.Footnote 125
The charge of widespread Irish racism, which emerged in response to the 1960s attacks on foreign students, put politicians and commentators on the defensive. Their minimising rhetoric typified how racism has often been dismissed in predominantly white societies. By foregrounding Ireland's colonial experience, these denials were tailored to Ireland's specific cultural and historical identity as a previously oppressed nation. This narrative of struggle against a common oppressor was seductive, positioning Ireland as early adopters of an anti-colonial mentality that, by the 1950s and 1960s, was gaining significant traction in Africa. However, in their push for independence, Irish nationalists had leveraged whiteness to achieve self-determination much quicker than Black nations. Ireland's collective post-independence identity was predicated on a white exclusivity that championed the cultural distinctiveness of the so-called Irish race, all of which undermined claims of the country's natural aversion to racism.
V
Long-standing Irish missionary and charitable ties to Africa were deployed as further evidence of the nation's inherent benevolence towards Black people. Irish missionary endeavours in Africa had burgeoned during the first half of the twentieth century. By 1966, there were an estimated 1,500 Irish missionaries in Nigeria alone.Footnote 126 Mid-1960s Nigeria hosted between 500 and 800 Irish priests, with Irish clergy overseeing 2,419 primary schools and forty-seven hospitals in the country.Footnote 127 In total, 4,122 Irish Catholic missionary personnel operated across Africa.Footnote 128 As Denis Linehan argues, missionary exploits enhanced Ireland's benevolent Catholic self-identity, and Irish Catholics perceived Ireland as a leading advocate for Black African people.Footnote 129 For a country that, according to Robbie McVeigh and Bill Rolston, was characterised by hegemonic ‘National Catholicism’, the actions of the church engendered broader patriotism.Footnote 130 Beyond the missionary sphere, the church was heavily involved in co-ordinating charitable fundraising for the so-called ‘Third World’. During the Biafran famine in the late 1960s, ‘religious-inspired’ N.G.O.s raised over £1million in donations, an impressive total that, according to O'Sullivan, solidified the public's confidence in the strength of Ireland's ‘natural empathy’ with Black nations.Footnote 131 Charity collection boxes, known colloquially as ‘Black Baby boxes’, were ubiquitous in Irish schools and churches.Footnote 132 Irish missionary and aid initiatives symbolised what would today be described as a ‘white saviour’ complex, with Black people cast as helpless victims.Footnote 133 In the mid twentieth century, however, such paternalistic endeavours were offered as evidence of a fundamental aversion to racial prejudice.
The 1963‒5 Dublin attacks were not the first time that students in Ireland had publicly complained of racist discrimination. In 1957, an African student based in England named L. A. Tuakli wrote a scathing article in The West African Student, the official newsletter of the West African Students’ Union of Great Britain and Ireland (W.A.S.U.). The article — entitled ‘Penny for the Black baby’ in reference to the eponymous charity collection boxes — provided a detailed account of Tuakli's recent visit to Cork, during which he reported experiencing ‘wickedness’ and racial prejudice.Footnote 134 Tuakli raised several grievances, claiming to have been repeatedly pointed at with ‘a menacing finger’ by white residents who ‘whispered something about “the Black man”’.Footnote 135 He also deplored the living conditions afforded to Black students in Cork, a cold, dirty hostel on the outskirts of town, which he denounced as ‘a perfect setting for a convalescent home or T.B. sanatorium’.Footnote 136 The hostel in question, St Xavier's University Hall, was located in the Doughcloyne neighbourhood, around four kilometres from University College Cork (U.C.C.).Footnote 137 Tuakli claimed that white students lived in comparatively luxurious accommodation, located at the heart of the university's campus and complete with swimming pools, laboratories and tennis courts. Tuakli concluded that ‘W.A.S.U. Should Act!’ against the ‘cruel segregation’ facing Black students in Cork.Footnote 138 The author was also hugely critical of the ‘Black baby boxes’ that he encountered across Cork, stating that they ‘seemed to haunt me for the rest of my short stay in the city’.Footnote 139
Tuakli's observations, of course, represent just one subjective snapshot of Cork. As with the 1960s attacks on students, more indicative of Irish attitudes was the reaction that Tuakli's article provoked. The article was forwarded to the taoiseach, whose office requested an investigation into the living conditions of West African students at U.C.C.Footnote 140 The main output from that investigation was a furious memorandum penned by Rev. Canon Bastible, who was Catholic dean of residence at U.C.C. and the man responsible for overseeing the African hostel. Bastible was outraged at charges of ‘segregation’ in Cork's student population and penned a vigorous rebuttal to Tuakli's claims. Rev. Bastible defended the operators of the hall of residence — the African Mission Fathers — claiming that it was run ‘at a considerable loss every year’ in order ‘to make the Hall as comfortable as possible’. Bastible added that ‘the standard of accommodation and food there is much higher than that enjoyed by the average student’.Footnote 141 He also rejected any notion of racism in Cork, dismissing Tuakli's claims of aggressive pointing, writing that ‘this childish complaint really points to an undue sensitivity from which many West Africans suffer’.Footnote 142 In the very act of denying racial prejudice, Bastible utilised a racist trope to undermine a Black voice.
However, his main ire was reserved for Tuakli's criticism of Catholic collection boxes for Africa. Bastible dismissed Tuakli's critique as ‘viciously anti-Catholic’, adding that ‘he doesn't like to be reminded of the fact that Irish men and women not only give money but their whole lives to the service of the Africans’.Footnote 143 In this passage, Bastible epitomised Irish paternalism towards the so-called ‘Third World’, depicting missionary endeavours as inherently altruistic, motivated purely by concern for the material and spiritual welfare of Africans. Irish commitment to missionary and charitable work in Africa was offered by many nationalists as ‘proof of the incompatibility of racism with Irish identity’.Footnote 144 This assumed racial tolerance was closely bound to the nation's Catholic identity, epitomised in a 1970 newspaper column by a Leitrim priest, who proudly wrote that ‘we have no colour problem’ because ‘we're good Christians’.Footnote 145
Fiona Bateman argues that missionaries were an important element not only of Irish Catholicism, but of broader national identity, a source of pride that framed independent Ireland's role in an increasingly globalised world.Footnote 146 Other historians have similarly emphasised the importance of Ireland's missionary heritage in shaping the public conceptions of the Global South, with O'Sullivan arguing that Ireland's missionary past fostered a sense of obligation to provide for people in the developing world.Footnote 147 Ireland's missionary legacy continued to inform its relationship with the Global South during the latter half of the century. Irish N.G.O.s evolved the missionary mantle to drive charitable aid initiatives to Africa, beginning with widespread fundraising efforts during the Biafra crisis in the late 1960s and culminating in the Live Aid concerts of 1985, which were led by Irish musician Bob Geldof. In 1973, the Irish Catholic Church founded Trócaire (Irish for ‘compassion’), its official organ of aid and development to co-ordinate overseas initiatives. Within this growing economy of western aid, which O'Sullivan dubs the ‘globalisation of compassion’, Ireland projected itself as a leading advocate of developing nations.Footnote 148
It was precisely this self-image of Ireland as a ‘champion of the Global South’ that religious leaders such as Bastible — through his reference to Irish ‘service of the Africans’ — utilised to deny anti-Black racism.Footnote 149 However, Catholic aid initiatives to the developing world were underpinned by assumptions of white superiority. Ironically, although Irish nationalism emerged in opposition to British imperialism, Catholic missionary endeavours were predicated on the same colonialist ambition to ‘civilise’ and rescue Black nations from ‘savagery and war’.Footnote 150 Bateman characterises missionary involvement as a form of quasi-imperialism, arguing that missions cultivated a ‘spiritual empire’ which adopted ‘the discourse of a colonising power’ and ‘reinforced stereotypical views of Africa’.Footnote 151 Chief among those were stereotypes of Black Africans as helpless victims and grateful recipients of white charity.
Like the campaign against apartheid in South Africa, paternalistic Catholic charity allowed the Irish public to self-congratulate and ‘offer charity remotely’.Footnote 152 However, this kindness did not extend to Black people within Ireland. Black and mixed race people born in Ireland, many of whom were the children of African students, predominantly grew up in abusive state institutions and suffered debilitating racial prejudice. Sociologist Phil Mullen was born in 1960s Dublin of mixed Black-African and white-Irish parentage. Raised in state institutions, Mullen writes that, growing up in 1960s and 1970s Ireland, Black people were largely pitied as impoverished heathens who required ‘having their souls saved’.Footnote 153 She cites the ubiquity of charity collection boxes, featuring images of forlorn, suffering African children as symbolic of Black passivity and helplessness. Consequently, Mullen and her mixed-race Irish research participants reported feeling othered by these reductive stereotypes, reinforcing their exclusion from a national identity predicated on whiteness. Similarly, pervasive motifs of Irish Catholic paternalism were the main source of ire for L. A. Tuakli who, during his visit to Cork, condemned the image on a collection box showing a ‘a little African girl staring pitifully at me with an outstretched hand, as if begging’.Footnote 154 Tuakli's sentiment was echoed six years later by an African studying in Ireland who, in an interview for an Irish Times feature on Africa, complained that ‘those boxes in which they beg money in the groceries are a constant offence to us: the pictures are often ridiculous — they make us look like Red Indians!’ The student lambasted ‘backward, primitive and uncivilised’ stereotypes, attributing these to ‘curious photographs of helpless Africans in Catholic religious pamphlets’.Footnote 155
Religious leaders such as Bastible, however, saw these overseas interventions as an inherent good, evidence of the church's and the nation's compassion for Black people across the developing world. Through this reductive lens, the work of missionaries and aid workers showcased Ireland's instinctive aversion to racism, at home as well as abroad. As with the country's supposed kinship with independent African nations, this duality exposed a distinctive Irish manifestation of the ‘no problem here’ attitude to racial prejudice. Religious leaders such as Bastible, therefore, dismissed charges of societal racism while simultaneously harnessing racist stereotypes about the passivity and savagery of Black Africans, all of which was couched in paternalistic, quasi-colonialist racial discourse.
VI
Contrary to many depictions, twentieth-century Ireland was more than a society of homogenous whiteness. Prior to the 1990s upsurge in ‘Celtic Tiger’ immigration, Ireland was home to thousands of Black and Asian students who studied, worked and socialised alongside the white Irish population. The overseas student community in the mid twentieth century was a steady, visible presence in college towns and cities, especially Dublin. Many students had children with white Irish women, leaving a substantial mixed race Irish population. Numbers of Black, Asian and mixed race people in mid-twentieth-century Ireland were smaller than in neighbouring Britain, fostering the complacent and inaccurate assumption that there were ‘no coloured people in Ireland’ and, therefore, no racism.Footnote 156 Identifying this ‘no problem here’ attitude in various predominantly white societies, scholars have repeatedly dismantled the assumption that a lack of Black or immigrant communities equated to an absence of racial bigotry or discrimination. In Ireland, recurring mistreatment of minority-ethnic people, such as the Traveller community, similarly undermines any picture of a society devoid of racism. The denial of lodgings to ‘coloured’ students, or their relegation to substandard or remote accommodation, alongside the series of vicious racist attacks in the mid 1960s further highlight Irish racial prejudice. Covert discrimination in nightlife and relationships were likewise inhibitive. However, the response of government ministers, journalists and religious leaders to anti-Black racism was instinctive defensiveness and denial. Allegations of racial hostility clashed with most Irish people's self-identification as welcoming and hospitable. In this sense, Irish denials were much like those witnessed in other small nations, including Wales and Scotland, where racism was constructed as antithetical to national character.
Irish minimisation of racial prejudice was anchored by two distinctive aspects of national history and identity. Politicians and commentators repeatedly cited Ireland's resistance to British imperialism as evidence of a natural empathy towards emerging postcolonial Black nations. Meanwhile, religious leaders painted the nation's history of missionary, aid and development work in Africa as indicative of inherent compassion towards Black people. Both arguments were flawed. Claims of postcolonial solidarity were dubious because Ireland leveraged its white racial identity to help achieve independence ahead of Black nations. Post-independence, Ireland's nation-building project was predicated on the notion of an exclusively white Irish race. Likewise, missionary and aid initiatives in Africa perpetuated and reinforced white supremacist tropes of Black savagery and helplessness. In any case, sympathy towards Black people in Africa was no guarantee of equality for those who lived in Ireland. Close attention to cases like that of Charles Fadipe, and to the complaints of Black students about the difficulties they experienced while living and socialising in Dublin and Cork, challenges scholars to consider how conceptions of history, culture and identity fostered social inclusion and exclusion and conditioned attitudes to national and ethnic outsiders.