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President Michael D Higgins at the wreath laying ceremony. Photographer

Values of the proclamation 'still true today', President Higgins tells 1916 Rising commemoration

The 1916 proclamation was read out in full by Captain Paul Murphy, who learned it off by heart.

HUNDREDS HAVE GATHERED in Dublin city centre to watch a ceremony marking 108 years since the 1916 Rising.

President Michael D Higgins and Taoiseach Leo Varadkar led the annual State commemoration, as Sinn Féin leader Mary Lou McDonald said that the proclamation still resonates over a century later.

Army personnel and the brass and pipe bands lined up outside the GPO building on O’Connell Street for the ceremony, which involved an army flyover and the president laying a wreath honouring those who died.

The 1916 proclamation was read out in full by Captain Paul Murphy, who learned it off by heart.

“(There were) a lot of trips to work reciting it in the car, a lot of moments brushing my teeth in the mirror learning it,” he told the media afterwards.

“It’s a very important day in Irish history and I wanted to give it the deference and the weight it deserved,” he said.

He added: “108 years on from it I’m sure the men that day would be more than privileged to know that it’s still a seminal day in Irish history.

“The proclamation itself, it’s still very relevant, the whole aim of the proclamation is inclusion. The very first line is ‘Irish men and Irish women’.

“For back then, in that time in the world, to point straight to that, and it talks about equal rights for everybody, equal opportunities.

“So the values it stands for are still true today and are still things we’re trying to get to today all around the world.

“For those men to write that and for it still to be as relevant today as it was then is a fair statement.”

President Higgins laid a wreath to commemorate those who died in the 1916 Rising and stood as a minute’s silence was held.

At the end of the ceremony, the flag was raised to full mast, the national anthem was played, and the Air Corps flew overhead.

Among those in attendance were Fine Gael leader and Further Education minister Simon Harris, First Minister of Northern Ireland Michelle O’Neill and Sinn Féin leader Mary Lou McDonald.

Harris was seen speaking to former Irish president Mary McAleese and O’Neill.

McDonald and O’Neill greeted members of the public and posed for photos after the ceremony ended.

“I think Easter is a time of remembrance but it’s also a time of huge hope for people,” she said, adding that she felt “an appetite for change” on days like today.

“On a day like this we remember the brilliant, brave, courageous things that Irish people can do when they have their mind to it and I think that’s the sense of optimism that I’m picking up today.”

Harris, who said when he put this year’s 1916 Easter Rising commemoration in his diary he didn’t expect to be attending it as Fine Gael leader, said it was a “really important” day.

“I remember when the whole decade of centenaries started, there was a lot of debate in Ireland as to how Ireland would handle commemoration – would we do them well? And I must say, I’m really proud,” he told reporters.

Tánaiste Micheal Martin, Transport minister Eamon Ryan, Enterprise minister Simon Coveney and Housing minister Darragh O’Brien were also in attendance.

Ryan said the ceremony was “very moving” and “beautiful”.

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