Ruairi quinn biography of martin luther
He brought those workers and indeed us on a journey from the pyramids of Egypt to the Renaissance and right through to s America and the.!
Ruairi Quinn: A reflective man loses his way
Ruairi Quinn's autobiography unwittingly shows how the pressures of modern politics and public office determine agenda at variance from initial ambitions
In the penultimate sentence of his 411 page autobiography, Ruairi Quinn writes: "The advocacy of ideas, the mobilisation of support, the pursuit of democratic power and the implementation of change in the path that we must follow".
It is a path that he appears to have wanted to follow at the outset of his career; it is a path he patently did not follow (even on the basis of his own account) in the course of that career.
In , Mr Quinn came over all visionary when he evoked Martin Luther King at a TUI conference in Tralee - but two years later, even the less.
Ruairi Quinn is a well-read, reflective, concerned person and, as such, unusual in Irish politics. He read many of the great works of politics, including Koestler's Darkness at Noon, Tressell's The Ragged Trousered Philanthropists, Donald Sassoon's One Hundred Years of Socialism, as well as works by James Connolly, Marx and Engels.
He was propelled into politics by d