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- PROFILE, Page 62Symbol of The New Ireland
-
- President Mary Robinson has recharged the spirit of her fractious
- nation and helped make it part of a modern Europe
-
- By MARTHA DUFFY
-
-
- When Mary Robinson was a young girl just out of convent
- school, her family sent her off to Paris for a year of finishing
- school. It was there, as an impressionable 17-year-old, that she
- came to an important realization about her native Ireland. Its
- historic insularity did not serve to protect its culture, but
- instead helped keep it in the shadow of the English. "A country
- like France had such a sense of itself that it could never be
- diluted," she recalls. "You don't homogenize a culture, you
- enrich it by diversity of contacts." Only by becoming fully a
- part of Europe, by broadening its contacts rather than
- restricting them, could Ireland come into its own. "My view then
- and now is that there were psychological and cultural reasons
- why Ireland could be liberated by Europe, allowed to refine its
- identity within the context of cultural diversity."
-
- Robinson went on to become one of Ireland's foremost
- international lawyers and a politician known for her secular
- sophistication. Now as the nation's first woman President, she
- has become a symbol of its European aspirations, as reflected
- in its resounding vote of approval last week for the Maastricht
- treaty and integration into the new European Union. But most
- important, given the largely ceremonial nature of her office,
- she has become a symbol of what made that vote possible:
- Ireland's renewed self-confidence and national pride.
-
- It is midday in Phoenix Park, Dublin, site of the
- President's house, or Aras an Uachtarain, as the Irish call it.
- A group of 40 people, most of them fit, elderly, dressed in
- practical tweeds, have gathered in a gracious 19th century
- drawing room filled with pale sunlight. They are members of the
- National Association of Tenants' Organizations, a volunteer
- group, and have been invited by Robinson for a tour and tea.
- After a few minutes, a tall, handsome woman, dressed in a bright
- suit that could be described as benign dress for success, enters
- and, without fanfare, begins her talk.
-
- She is a natural. Speaking in a vibrant alto voice, she
- recalls the mansion's past, the various additions made through
- the centuries, some of them amusingly botched. Seamlessly, she
- shifts to her family's life within its walls, how her three
- children enjoy biking through Phoenix Park, how she came to put
- a light in the family kitchen window -- the Irish symbolic
- welcome home to those who have emigrated. When the session is
- over and the President has slipped away as quietly as she
- arrived, everyone is beaming. A white-haired lady sighs with
- satisfaction and breathes, "Isn't she someone to be proud of?"
-
- This is a good-news story. There aren't very many of them
- in politics these days, but the saga of Mary Robinson is the
- real thing. Irish public life is the stuff of tragedy or bad
- jokes. The country is haunted by the division between north and
- south, by the grim persistence of terrorism, by divisive
- personal issues such as birth control and abortion, and by
- recurrent scandals. Charles Haughey, the Taoiseach (Prime
- Minister) for nine of the past 13 years, was thrown out of
- office in January when one scandal too many surfaced.
-
- As a nonexecutive President, Robinson has little real
- power; her only crucial role is to intervene if she believes
- that any proposed legislation is unconstitutional. But
- immediately upon her election in late 1990, Robinson showed that
- she understood the enduring importance of symbols. From the
- candle in the kitchen window -- once a sign of welcome to the
- "tatiehokers," men who went to Scotland to harvest potatoes --
- she has created a highly visible office, representing her
- countrymen at their best. She is now easily the most popular
- figure in the country, drawing crowds everywhere in her
- ceaseless crisscrossing of the land.
-
- Robinson has virtually created a new office, one with far
- more clout than the retirement sinecure it had become. Though
- she barely squeaked in, her popularity standing in a recent
- poll was around 80%. A lot of it has to do with Irish pride. By
- opening up the presidential mansion to virtually any group that
- wants to come, she has nurtured her countrymen's love for their
- history. By sailing expertly through 25 or 30 public engagements
- a week, she is a highly visible symbol of the national
- character. By visiting Northern Ireland and encouraging travel
- between the two states, she embodies the hope that the deadly
- rancor can be combatted.
-
- Mary Terese Winifred Bourke acquired her commitment to
- social justice from her family. The Bourkes were Roman Catholic
- gentry in the prosperous town of Ballina in County Mayo; both
- parents were doctors. Mary's grandfather, a retired lawyer, took
- her under his wing, describing his old cases and telling her
- how the law should be an instrument for social change and the
- protection of individuals. "Often he'd be in the process of
- opening a new packet of books that he'd ordered by mail. His
- communication was short and pithy, and often I would do a lot
- of the talking."
-
- After her Paris year, Mary went to Trinity College in
- Dublin to study law. All indications are that she had a good
- time there. Her mother had bought a Dublin house for her brainy
- brood (Robinson is the third child and only girl among five) and
- added a governess to keep order. There were plenty of parties,
- but according to her brother Henry, "she always got the balance
- right." After graduation she spent a year at Harvard getting a
- master's degree at the law school. That was a seismic learning
- experience.
-
- It was 1967, just before the Harvard Yard exploded with
- student protest. "There was intense questioning then," she
- recalls. "I had a law degree, but I hadn't really been
- encouraged to think. And Harvard was just facing up to the fact
- that there were inequalities of sex and race." Also, the Harvard
- method of teaching was different, emphasizing discussion and
- examining unresolved ambiguities of the law.
-
- Upon returning to Ireland she married fellow lawyer
- Nicholas Robinson, the son of a Protestant banker and a former
- political cartoonist for the Irish Times. She took on cases of
- sexual and employment disadvantage to women. She fought for
- legalizing birth control and divorce (or "the divorce," as it
- is known locally). For years she was active in the Labour Party,
- serving 20 years in the Senate, but her two attempts to run for
- the more powerful Dail, the lower house of Parliament, ended in
- defeat. She finally broke with the party because she thought it
- was intransigent on the Northern Ireland question. A reunified
- island is perhaps her ultimate goal. In addition, she and her
- husband helped establish the Irish Center for European Law in
- Dublin, a forum that is highly respected throughout the
- Continent. It was a career that could easily have led to a seat
- on the Supreme Court or a major job with the European Community.
-
- The presidency seemed a remote objective for this highly
- successful advocate of human rights and feminist causes. So too
- did her style: she favored severe suits and a nonexistent hairdo
- and kept her sense of humor well under wraps. Her goals were
- serious. "She worked in the belief that legal change could
- provide for social change. In her Senate record and the cases
- she undertook, she was always there for the hard stuff," says
- John Rogers, a former Attorney General and Labour Party
- stalwart.
-
- It took a springy leap of the imagination on the part of
- Rogers and other Labour masterminds to see their former member
- as President. But Labour was tired of its minor role in
- politics. Says Rogers: "The idea was to get a woman of such
- quality -- her strength challenged the status quo."
-
- When Rogers proposed that she run, he recalls that "she
- looked as if she'd been shot." Not for long. After a weekend of
- consulting with her husband, she called back and said, in a
- typical old-Mary locution, "I think we have reason to talk." The
- new Mary emerged quickly. Out went the pinstripe wardrobe. In
- came smart suits, always by Irish designers. A stylist gave her
- a fashionable haircut, and she began to apply some makeup.
- Cynical? Not in her view. "I felt it was a way to project that
- I was serious about the campaign," she says, "and that had its
- own effect. I saw myself less as the bluestocking and more the
- person trying to communicate that we have an office here that
- can represent what is modern about Ireland. I was so keen to get
- that across that I would have done whatever it took."
-
- But Dublin politicians saw her as a troublemaker who would
- use her potent legal skills to cross the boundaries of her job
- and challenge the government. Any such action, they feared,
- would damage the value of her nebulous office. No fracas has
- ever occurred. She showed her grasp of the presidency last
- March in the notorious case in which the government tried to
- stop a 14-year-old rape victim from going abroad for an
- abortion. Robinson spoke out, emphasizing the need for Irish
- society to confront the issue but not dictating the resolution.
- Characteristically, she saw a chance to guide her people by
- citing the human sides of a dilemma that highlights how fast
- even this homogeneous country is changing.
-
- All is not astuteness, however. She is an intellectual,
- yes, and a realist. But as an old colleague notes, she has a
- mulish streak. "She can idealize the causes she's involved in
- just because they are hers," he observes. "All her geese are
- swans." Digging in too hard, even falling prey to fixations, has
- cost her some court decisions in the past. "A stubborn girl is
- our Mary," laughs Rogers.
-
- But the emphatic, headstrong side of the President -- a
- side the Irish would relish -- is rarely seen. She admits that
- she doused the spontaneous side of her nature when she joined
- the bewigged, masculine Irish bar. Even now she is loath to
- provide a glimpse into her exemplary private life. When she
- toured the U.S. last fall, she came across as rather
- straitlaced. An American who talked to her said the unthinkable:
- "She's Nancy Reagan -- only good."
-
- The remark is not only rough, it's wrong. Nancy Reagan's
- gelid smile and fixed gaze are foreign to Robinson, who really
- sparkles when she meets people. She has a thrilling, throaty
- laugh, but quips are not her style. Her brothers and old friends
- insist that she can top tall stories with the best of them --
- and that in a land where the gab is the biggest gift of all.
- Around a dinner table, she and her husband often talk vehemently
- and at once, taking different verbal paths to the same end --
- rather like characters in an opera.
-
- Her trustiest ally is her husband, who functions as a
- candid and unsparing critic. "There are times when he tells me
- what I really don't want to know," she says with a laugh.
- Perhaps more important, he sees himself frankly as a role model
- for other men. "I have no problem about appearing with Mary and
- supporting her," he says. "She is the one of us who holds
- office."
-
- Their friends note that temperamentally, the couple
- balance each other well. Mary is the classic overachiever with
- plenty of ambition and the kind of bottomless stamina that
- successful politicians often have. Nick, observes Irish Senator
- David Norris, has an incisive mind but appreciates ``good food
- and good grog and enjoying life at an easier pace." The
- Robinsons guard the privacy of their children, Tessa, 19,
- William, 18, and Aubrey, 11. When Robinson visited Belfast in
- February, security was tight, but the word leaked to the press.
- Aubrey missed his customary perfect score in current events
- because, alone of his class, he did not know his mother's travel
- plans.
-
- Around Dublin, Robinson is at least as big a celebrity as
- any U2 band member or Sinead O'Connor. Like royalty, she cannot
- go to a convenience store without being recognized and fussed
- over. In fact, the Observer has called her "the thinking man's
- Princess Di." There are still five years to go in her term of
- office and, if she wants, she can run for another seven-year
- stint. If she has her way -- and she is very determined -- she
- will leave her country better off than she found it.
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