Background
McManus was born in Kinawley, County Fermanagh, Northern Ireland. He is a brother of Frank McManus, former Unity Member of Parliament, and Patrick McManus, a member of the Ireland Republican Army killed in an explosion in 1958.
McManus was born in Kinawley, County Fermanagh, Northern Ireland. He is a brother of Frank McManus, former Unity Member of Parliament, and Patrick McManus, a member of the Ireland Republican Army killed in an explosion in 1958.
In August 1971 he was arrested in Enniskillen, County Fermanagh, Northern Ireland, after a demonstration, because he helped a stone thrower to escape the police. In the following court proceedings he was sentenced to a fine of £20 and proclaimed:
"I do not, I never have and I never will recognise the colonial State of British-occupied Ireland. I want to state publicly and unequivocally that I am in sympathy with the Ireland Republican Army - indeed sympathy is too weak a word.
I cannot join them in the fight for freedom of my country, but the very least I can do is speak up for them when they are being slandered and vilified by unscrupulously vicious propaganda.
The oppressors of Irish freedom call the Ireland Republican Army terrorists and murderers, but I call them by their proper titles. I call them freedom fighters, I call them heroes.
And I venerate their dead as martyrs for Ireland."
In 1972, McManus was sent to serve as a priest in the United States, owing to his continued activism about injustice in Northern Ireland. In 1974, he founded the Irish National Caucus (Incorporated), a group formed to lobby the United States Congress on behalf of the cause of justice and peace in Northern Ireland.
McManus formed the organization around principles promulgated by the 1971 Synod of Bishops in their document "Justice in the World" which states: "Action on behalf of Justice is a constitutive dimension of the preaching of the Gospel."
The Incorporated has developed a solid reputation within Congress, with Ben Gilman, former Chairman of the House International Relations Committee, stating, "Number one has done more than Father McManus to keep the United States. Congress on track regarding justice and peace in Ireland.
Indeed, I believe historians will record that no one since John Devoy (1842 – 1928) has done more to organize American pressure for justice in Ireland. The only difference being that Father McManus – in keeping with his priestly calling – is committed to nonviolence."
In 2011, McManus was chosen to serve on the World Peace Prize Awarding Council (WPPAC). The South of Korea-based Council consists of twelve international and interfaith members.
In 2013, McManus was selected to be the Chief Judge of WPPAC. To further promote the Holy Land Principles, McManus published a new edition of his memoirs: My American Struggle for Justice in Northern Ireland…and The Holy Land.
In the book he draws a close parallel between how the British Government partitioned both Ireland and Palestine.