John McDonagh, a taxi driver and lifelong resident of Middle Village, Queens, was driving his yellow cab in the wee hours on Monday when his cellphone began lighting up with a flurry of text messages from Irish friends saying that Margaret Thatcher had died.
The messages were not mournful.
Some were derogatory, but most basically were some variation of âO.K., whereâs the partyââ said Mr. McDonagh, 58, the longtime host of Radio Free Eireann, an Irish-American talk show on WBAI-FM (99.5).
Mr. McDonagh, speaking from his cab on Monday - not while driving, he emphasized - called Ms. Thatcher an enemy to Irish people âbecause of the destruction she brought to Ireland with her policies â" she always thought of Ireland as a colony and never a country.â
Sentiment against Ms. Thatcher among Irish nationalists hardened in the early 1980s when she stood firm against the demands of Irish Republican prisoners on hunger strikes, including Bobby Sands, who died during his strike. She barely escaped being injured in October 1984, when the Irish Republican Army detonated a bomb in a hotel in Brighton, England, where Mrs. Thatcherâs Conservative Party was holding a meeting.
Mr. McDonagh said he and his fellow activists in New York City had begun planning a celebration party for Ms. Thatcherâs death five years ago.
As soon as he finished his driving shift on Monday afternoon, he said, he would go about organizing the event, to be held Saturday afternoon at Rocky Sullivanâs bar in Red Hook, Brooklyn.
âWe did long-range planning for this,â he said. âThe theme would be, âThe horror of her life and legacy,ââ he said. The proceedings will include live music and the reading of a list of names of Irish people who had died during âthe Troublesâ in Northern Ireland.
The planning included several posters created by a fellow activist and illustrator, Brian Mor OâBaoighill, who died last year. He and Mr. McDonagh worked together at the Irish People Newspaper, which was based in the Bronx before it shut down.
Both men managed to irk Ms. Thatcher in 1983 by paying for a message on an electronic billboard in Times Square that sent Christmas greetings to Irish prisoners.
âIt made world headlines and Thatcher spoke to the American ambassador about it,â Mr. McDonagh recalled, adding that on Saturday, âWeâre inviting everyone to come down and have a drink on Maggie Thatcher.â
Chris Burns, a retired New York City police officer and co-owner of Rocky Sullivanâs, said he would be playing the bagpipes there with other musicians.
âI wouldnât gloat over anyoneâs death,â Mr . Burns said. âBut I donât think there will be any tears shed for her on Saturday.â
âYou could best describe it as a traditional Irish wake,â he said, âand people can interpret that however they want.â