08/07/2013
Tha litir bheag na seachdain aig Ruaraidh MacIllEathain. This week's short letter for learners is introduced by Ruaraidh MacLean.
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An Litir Bheag 426
Duration: 03:26
An Litir Bheag 426
Bha mi ag innse dhuibh mu Sheachdnar Chnòideirt. Bha iad ag iarraidh fearann dhaibh fhèin ann an Cnòideart, air taobh an iar na Gà idhealtachd. Bha iad a’ dol an aghaidh an uachdarain, am Morair Brocket. Bha airgead mòr aig Brocket. Bha e air a bhith na bhall-pà rlamaid Tòraidheach. Bha droch chliù aige, oir bha e taiceil do na Natsaich anns a’ Ghearmailt. Agus bha e na dheagh charaid do dh’Adolf Hitler. Bha e thall sa Ghearmailt airson Co-chruinneachadh mòr Nuremberg anns a’ bhliadhna trithead ’s a h-ochd (1938).
           Deich bliadhna an dèidh Nuremberg, bha Brocket a’ strì anns a’ chùirt an aghaidh Seachdnar Chnòideirt. Bha taic aig na reudairean. Bha an sagart, Mgr Cailean Mac a’ Phearsain, a bhuineadh do dh’Uibhist a Deas, gu math taiceil dhaibh. Bha na reudairean dhen bheachd gun robh iad a’ leantainn ann an cas-cheumannan ghaisgeach ann am Bhatarsaigh, san Eilean Sgitheanach, ann an Leòdhas is à iteachan eile. Anns na h-à iteachan sin, sheas na daoine an còraichean a bhith a’ fuireach air fearann an sinnsirean.
           Agus dè rinn an t-uachdaran? Chuir Seumas MacEanraig faclan ann am beul Bhrocket anns an òran aige The Men of Knoydart: ‘You’re a shower of tartan bolshies, but I’ll soon have you licked, I’ll write to the Court of Session for an interim interdict…’
           ’S e sin a thachair. Bhuannaich Brocket a’ chùis-chùirte. Ach dh’fhàs e sgìth dhen strì. Reic e an oighreachd ann an caogad ’s a dhà (1952).
           Eadar a’ bhliadhna sin agus naochad ’s a naoi (1999), bha Cnòideart ann an là mhan còignear eile – An Coirneal Sir Oliver Crosthwaite-Eyre, Major Nigel Chamberlayne-Macdonald, Philip Rhodes, Reg Brealey agus Stephen Hinchcliffe. Bha sluagh na h-oighreachd a’ dol sìos. Bha leasachadh a dhìth.
           Ann an naoi ceud deug, naochad ’s a naoi (1999), cheannaich buidheann coimhearsnachd, Bunait Chnòideirt, an oighreachd. A-nise, tha barrachd dhaoine òga a' fuireach ann an Cnòideart na bha. Agus tha leasachaidhean eaconamach a’ dol air adhart. Cha do bhuannaich an seachdnar reudairean san strì aca. Ach ’s dòcha gun do rinn iad bunait, air an do thog Bunait Chnòideirt aig a’ cheann thall.The Little Letter 426
I was telling you about The Seven Men of Knoydart. They were wanting land for themselves in Knoydart, in the West Highlands. They were opposing the landlord, Lord Brocket. Brocket was wealthy. He had been a Conservative member of parliament. He had a bad repu-tation because he was supportive of the Nazis in Germany. And he was a good friend of Adolf Hitler. He was over in Germany for the Nuremberg Rally in 1938.
       Ten years after Nuremberg, Brocket was involved in a legal struggle against The Seven Men of Knoydart. The raiders had support. The priest, Fr Colin Macpherson, who belonged to South Uist, was very supportive of them. The raiders reckoned they were following in the footsteps of heroes in Vatersay, Skye, Lewis and other places. In those places, the people stood up for their rights to live on the land of their ancestors.
      And what did the landlord do? Hamish Henderson put words in Brocket’s mouth in his song The Men of Knoydart: ‘You’re a shower of tartan bolshies, but I’ll soon have you licked, I’ll write to the Court of Session for an interim interdict…’
       That’s what happened. Brocket won the court case. But he got fed up of the strife. He sold the estate in 1952.
       Between that year and 1999, Knoydart was in the hands of five other people – Col. Sir Oliver Crosthwaite-Eyre, Major Nigel Chamberlayne-Macdonald, Philip Rhodes, Reg Brealey and Stephen Hinchcliffe. The estate’s population was falling. Development was needed.
       In 1999, a community organisation, the Knoydart Found-ation, bought the estate. Now, more young people live in Knoydart than before. And economic developments are taking place. The seven raiders didn’t win their own struggle. But perhaps they built a foundation, upon which the Knoydart Found-ation eventually built.Broadcast
- Mon 8 Jul 2013 19:00´óÏó´«Ã½ Radio nan Gà idheal
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The Little Letter for Gaelic Learners
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An Litir Bheag
Litirichean do luchd-ionnsachaidh ura. Letters in Gaelic for beginners.