The book "A Rebel and a Traitor" was written by Rory Carroll. It is based on real life. A historical non-fiction account.
You start with a man who seems firmly planted where he belongs.
Roger Casement is part of the British Empire, not on the edges of it but inside it. Respected. Trusted. Even knighted. The kind of figure people would point to as proof that the system works.
But then he goes out into the world, and that’s where everything begins to come apart.
He sees what empire really looks like when no one is dressing it up. In places like the Congo and the Amazon, he witnesses exploitation that isn’t subtle or debatable; it’s brutal, direct, and impossible to ignore. People reduced to nothing. Used, overworked, discarded, silenced. And once he sees it, there’s no going back to the version of the world he had before.
That’s where the change starts.
It doesn’t happen all at once. It’s slower than that. A kind of breaking away. He doesn’t just question the Empire, he loses faith in it entirely. And from there, his focus turns home, to Ireland. If such behaviour is what empire does elsewhere, what right does it have to rule there at all?
By the time the First World War begins, he’s crossed a line that most people never would. He’s no longer serving Britain and their wicked doings; he’s working against it. And not quietly either. He travels to Germany, Britain’s enemy, trying to secure support for an Irish rebellion.
That’s the point where everything sharpens.
Because now this isn’t just about belief. It’s about action. Risk. Consequences.
On the other side, the state is watching. Carefully. Patiently. Men tasked and brainwashed with protecting the system see him not as a man of conscience, but as a threat. In wartime, that distinction matters more than anything.
And so the story becomes a kind of quiet pursuit. One man is trying to build something new, another trying to prevent it from ever taking shape.
Casement pushes forward, trying to gather support, organise resistance, and convince others that independence is within reach. But the deeper he goes, the more uncertain things become. Plans don’t hold as firmly as they should. Trust begins to fray. The reality of rebellion proves far messier than the idea of it.
Then comes the turning point.
As the planned uprising draws closer, he begins to doubt it. Not the cause itself, but the timing, the readiness, and the chances of success. He sees the cracks clearly now. And in the end, he tries to stop it.
But by then, it’s too late.
Events are already moving. The rebellion goes ahead. And Casement, caught in the middle of it all, is arrested before he can change the course of anything.
What follows is swift and final.
He is brought back, tried, and condemned. Not as a reformer or a man of principle, but as a traitor. The state does what states have always done when challenged in this way; it makes an example of him. His execution closes the story in the simplest possible terms.
After the execution of Roger Casement and the suppression of the Easter Rising, Ireland did not move into peace. Instead, the resistance evolved. The Irish Volunteers, who had taken part in the rebellion, reorganised and became more structured over time. Political support also shifted strongly toward Sinn Féin, which rejected British rule and gained widespread backing in the 1918 election. From this political and military environment, the Irish Republican Army gradually emerged during the War of Independence that followed. What had begun as a failed uprising developed into a sustained and organised campaign for Irish independence, shaping the conflict that continued into the early 1920s.
But the truth of it doesn’t close so neatly.
What lingers is not just his actions, but what he stood for and how hard it is to place him on one side. He was part of the system, then he rejected it. He exposed injustice but also took risks that others saw as dangerous. He followed his beliefs to the end, even when they led him into uncertainty.
And underneath it all sits the question that gives the story its weight.
Can loyalty to a country still hold if that country is built on the suffering of others?
My View
For me, loyalty has a limit.
I will not stay loyal to any system, country, or authority when humanity is being exploited. Humanity comes first. Always.
When people are being worked to death, brutalised, and treated as if they don’t matter, that is not something that can be justified or explained away. It doesn’t matter what flag is involved or what tradition is being defended. Wrong is wrong.
Roger Casement saw the wickedness carried out under the British system and chose to turn against it. He decided to stand against what he believed was wrong, even though it cost him his life. Now think about the people who were actually being exploited: what happens when they decide enough is enough, especially in times when protections for them were minimal?
And even today, you still see leaders making decisions that affect lives on a massive scale. Figures like Donald Trump and Vladimir Putin are constantly in the spotlight, and people judge them in very different ways depending on where they stand. Some see strength; others see recklessness or harm. The point is not to reduce it to simple labels but to recognise that power, when misused or unchecked, can lead to real human consequences.
History shows the truth clearly. Nations with power-intoxicated leaders have often built wealth and status on the backs of others through control of land, labour, and resources. These nations wake up and call whoever they want a terrorist, attack them, kill their people, and steal their resources.
Take France and its long involvement in parts of West Africa.
In Niger, uranium has been one of the key resources. For decades, French companies relied on Niger’s uranium to help power France’s nuclear energy system. France generates a large portion of its electricity from nuclear power, and Niger has historically been one of its key suppliers.
Other countries tied into similar economic relationships include Mali, Burkina Faso, and the Central African Republic, all resource-rich in different ways, including gold. These countries have had long histories of foreign companies extracting resources, often with limited benefit reaching ordinary people.
Now, in recent years, several of these nations have begun pushing back, asserting more control over their resources, revising agreements, and cutting ties with French influence.
And this is where facts matter.
France has not collapsed, but there are real effects:
Disruptions in uranium supply from Niger have raised concerns about long-term energy security
French companies have lost contracts and access in parts of West Africa
Political influence in the region has declined sharply
These are measurable shifts. They do not destroy an economy overnight, but they do show how dependent certain systems were on external resources.
When a country benefits for decades from access to another region’s resources, and that access changes, there will be consequences. Not instant collapse, but pressure, adjustment, and loss of influence.
So the question becomes simple.
Do you stay loyal to something just because it is yours, even when it harms others?
Or do you step away from it when you see the truth?
If someone represents a system, helps it function, and chooses to step back and put humanity first, that's the right choice. It may not be easy. It may come with consequences. But it is right.
No amount of wealth, status, or tradition can justify suffering. While some are wearing stolen pearls and jewels on their crowns that make the news all for status, gotten from the slavery age and war waged against innocent communities, waving hands from carriages, those marks have left people in pain.
No matter how one frames it—whether as power, legacy, or pride—any concept based on mistreating others should be questioned, discussed, fought against, and ultimately stopped.
That is what makes this story matter.
No matter how much the focus is placed on one man and his country, the starting point is the same: the harm that was done, and the choice to either accept it or stand against it.
And that choice is still here, even now.





It's a thick book. How many days did you spend reading the entire book from the first chapter to the end? Let me hear from you.
ReplyDeleteAsep Haryono
Indonesia
I didn’t go through it in a single sitting or a fixed number of days. With a book like this, it’s more about reading it steadily and letting the history sink in rather than rushing to finish it.
DeleteWell done. I love reading too
ReplyDeleteThank you.
DeleteThis seems to be a profound reading. I love your view on not only this book but this subject. In my opinion, loyalty should never be given to those who harm, and will never have my allegiance. Thank you for sharing this book with SITAR and have a lovely Sunday.
ReplyDeleteYou are welcome. Loyalty while people are hurting and life is being destroyed is oppression.
DeleteThank you for the review. I would really like to read it. :) Maybe when I finish with the trilogy by the Polish author Wojciech Dutka, about women in difficult times.
ReplyDeleteThat trilogy sounds like a very powerful and moving read. I am sure this book will be waiting for you whenever you are ready for your next adventure. Enjoy the rest of your current series!
DeleteThanks for sharing-Christine cmlk79.blogspot.com
ReplyDeleteYou are very welcome.
DeleteThis sounds like a good book. I was going to bookmark it but it isn't yet available in the US-sadly. BBut I agree, loyalty can only go far, especially when it hurts people. Thanks fro sharing.
ReplyDeleteIt is always a bit disappointing when you find a book that piques your interest only to realize it hasn't quite made it across the pond yet. Hopefully, it becomes available in the US soon so you can dive into it! You are absolutely right; loyalty is a virtue, but it certainly has its limits when it starts causing harm to others. Check, Amazon.
DeleteSounds like an important book oh, but... I have a ton of books still to read and so many DVDs to watch, too!
ReplyDeleteI completely understand that feeling! It is so easy to keep collecting wonderful books and movies until the "to-do" pile looks more like a mountain. We all have those stories we have been meaning to get to, but sometimes there just aren't enough hours in the day to enjoy them all.
DeleteBoa noite minha querida amiga Melody. Obrigado pela dica literária e o livro parece ser muito interessante. Livro é muito atual. O Brasil, foi colonizado pelos portugueses, daqui saíram muito ouro e diamante e outros pedras preciosas. Até fóssil de um preguiça gigante, se encontra num Museu em Copenhague. Nem consigo imaginar o que os povos originários ou indígenas, ou as pessoas escravizadas de vários países da África, sofreram. O Brasil se tornou independente de Portugal e depois ficou, literalmente dependente da Grã-Bretanha, que também levou muito ouro e diamante do Brasil. Uma excelente noite de domingo, bom início de semana e grande abraço do seu irmão em Cristo Jesus e amigo brasileiro.
ReplyDeleteGood evening my friend, I really appreciate you taking the time to read and share that.
DeleteWhat you said about Brazil is exactly the kind of reality that sits underneath stories like this. People often talk about empire in abstract terms, but when you look closer, it always comes back to something real being taken, land, labour, lives, even history itself. The fact that things like fossils and cultural pieces end up far from where they belong says a lot about how deep that reach went.
And you’re right to bring up what indigenous people and enslaved Africans went through. That part is often acknowledged, but not fully faced. It wasn’t just hardship, it was systematic, and it shaped everything that came after.
What stands out is what you mentioned about independence not meaning true freedom. That pattern shows up again and again, where control changes form rather than disappearing. It’s a hard truth, but an important one to recognise.
I’m glad the book connected with you in that way. These stories matter because they help people see the links between past and present more clearly.
Wishing you a strong and steady week ahead as well.
This does sound like a really good read.
ReplyDeleteI hope you get a chance to dive into it soon and that it lives up to your expectations. Happy reading!
DeleteThanks for the book review. It sounds like a book worth reading.
ReplyDeleteI hope you enjoy every page when you get around to it.
DeleteExactly, Melody: evil is evil, and truth must be called by its name!
ReplyDeleteMelody, speaking of colonialism, in my opinion, Africa and Africans have experienced a great deal of pain and suffering. These countries should receive reparations. The exploitation of this part of the world by this so-called "civilized world"—in truth, the world of selfishness and money. A world of superiority of some over others... Scars of the past that we should remember! We must never forget!
Melody, for example, you wrote about the Central African Republic; this country was partly the subject of my master's thesis. I made this decision when one of the priests from my parish was a missionary in that country.
Melody, Pope Leo XIV is starting his pilgrimage to Africa tomorrow (it's terrifying what we've been hearing lately, that Trump's people threatened the Pope!). The Pope wants to turn the world's attention to this part of the world. I'm keeping my fingers crossed for Pope Leo!
I get what you’re saying, and the anger behind it makes sense. What happened in Africa wasn’t just “unfair,” it was brutal, organised, and done for profit. That part shouldn’t be watered down.
DeleteBut I’ll be real with you, it’s not as simple as “evil is evil” and leaving it there. That kind of thinking feels right emotionally, but it flattens everything. These systems weren’t just driven by cartoon villains, they were built, supported, and maintained by entire societies over long periods. If you don’t look at it that way, you don’t really understand how it keeps repeating in different forms.
Reparations is one of those things that sounds morally clear, but in reality it’s complicated. Who pays, who receives, how it’s measured, and whether it actually helps people today or just becomes political theatre—that all matters. If it’s not thought through properly, it risks being symbolic rather than meaningful.
Your work on the Central African Republic is actually important here, because that’s a place where you can see the full picture—outside interference, internal issues, weak structures, all mixed together. It’s not one-sided, and pretending it is doesn’t help anyone there.
And on the Pope situation, I’m going to be straight—that claim about Donald Trump threatening the Pope sounds like the kind of thing that spreads online without solid grounding. It’s worth checking before taking it as truth. There’s already enough real-world problems without adding rumours into it.
You’re right to care, and you’re right not to forget. Just don’t let it turn into something overly simplified, because once that happens, it stops being useful and starts becoming noise.
Sounds good, thanks for sharing.
ReplyDeleteThank you, Tom
DeletePor lo que nos comentas el protagonista formo parte del Sinn Fein y del embrión de lo que mas tarde sería el ejercito republicano irlandés, IRA, de la actual Republica de Irlanda.
ReplyDeleteLa explotación de recursos materiales y humanos lo realizan y lo han realizado empresas y estados a lo largo de los siglos, es por lo que no indico a unos y a otros no.
Saludos.
It sounds like an exciting book. I like reading books too, but they have to be in Norwegian. There are nice pictures of you.
ReplyDeleteThank you, I appreciate that.
DeleteThat’s fair, reading in your own language always makes the experience better. Books like this can be heavy, so understanding every detail properly matters. Hopefully it gets translated into Norwegian at some point, it’s the kind of story worth reaching more people.
Hello
ReplyDeleteThanks for the book review! Take care, have a great week!
Hello, I appreciate you taking the time to read it.
DeleteWishing you a steady and good week ahead as well.
Well, this book should strike home in the USA. Trump demends loyalty, but the people are moving away from him. He has proven to be a despot and the American people won't have it. Though there are those who can't let go of the idea that he is a great businessman (looking at his history would prove that to be untrue) the majority have seen through his dishonesty and self serving ways. You will see in November as his control starts to unravel. We are a democracy and we will remain a democracy ... No so called Kings!
ReplyDeleteAndrea at From The Sol
I get exactly what you’re saying, and I’m not going to dress it up.
DeleteWhat’s happening isn’t just about politics as usual. When someone like Donald Trump pushes for loyalty over accountability, that’s a problem—full stop. That’s not how a system built on checks and balance is meant to work. It starts to look less like leadership and more like control.
And it’s not just talk. When leaders start acting like they can bend rules, sidestep institutions, or take matters into their own hands, that puts real pressure on the system. Laws are there for a reason. Once you start treating them like suggestions instead of limits, you open the door to something much harder to contain.
The part people don’t always want to face is how this ties into war and global decisions. We’ve seen it again and again situations that could have been handled through dialogue end up escalating because of ego, power plays, or the need to look strong. And when that happens, it’s not just “strategy,” it’s lives. Real people. Families. Entire regions left dealing with the aftermath.
And yes, that includes Americans too. When a country takes aggressive positions or gets pulled into conflicts, it doesn’t just stay “over there.” It comes back in different ways, security risks, economic strain, division at home. People act like war is something distant, but it leaves marks everywhere, even if they’re not always visible right away.
The bigger issue is this idea that strength means domination, that being loud or forceful equals good leadership. History has already shown where that leads. Not stability—damage. Long-term damage.
So yeah, you’re right to question it. No one should be treated like a king, and no one should be above being challenged. But it also goes beyond one person. If people don’t stay sharp and start thinking critically across the board, the same patterns just repeat under different names.
That’s the real danger.
You gave quite the insight to the book and an in-depth review. It is very well-written.
ReplyDeleteThank you, I appreciate that.
DeleteIt’s a serious subject, so I tried to treat it with the attention it deserves rather than rushing past it. The history behind it carries real weight, and I think it’s worth taking the time to look at it properly and honestly.
I have never heard about these book. It's something for me :)
ReplyDeleteI also didn't even know the author, but he is a good writer, and the story is moving.
DeleteSounds good
ReplyDeleteThank you.
DeleteThank you for this review. I was not aware you did book reviews.
ReplyDeleteGod bless.
You're welcome, Victor. Actually, I do book reviews, and I've been doing them for a while now. You can check out the book reviews I have done, and I promise you will definitely want to read those books. I also have a page on my blog dedicated to book reviews. https://www.melodyjacob.com/search/label/BOOKS
DeleteParece un buen libro. Gracias por la reseña. Tomó nota. Te mando un beso.
ReplyDeleteYou are welcome.
Delete權力跟腐敗總是連在一起 :(
ReplyDeleteIn this day and age, the world is so deeply rooted in power and corruption.
DeleteLooks like a good book.
ReplyDeleteI would totally recommend this book.
DeleteI like books based on real events!
ReplyDeleteYes, it makes me want to know the ending even more
DeleteGood to read your reflections to this book. Today I have another one here and speak about in one of the next posts too...
ReplyDelete...thank you very much for sharing at MosaicMonday ❤️
You are welcome, Erica.
DeleteSeems very interesting and I enjoyed reading your opinion, Melody.
ReplyDeleteThank you, Margaret.
DeleteHi Melody! Your review of A Rebel and a Traitor by Rory Caroll is really well written. You explored it in-depth and gave your opinion. I think it is important to read autobiographies and biographies like this. History often teaches us a simple picture, and this world is and has always been complicated.
ReplyDeleteI can understand how someone like Rory Caroll completely changed his view about the British empire when he saw the consequences of colonization. I think we need to understand that oppression exists and existed on so many levels. Many living in UK had no idea what was going on, and many living in UK were also very poor themselves so the evils and crimes of colonization were not widely known. Everywhere in every country, there are good people and we are all made of choices we make. Knowing more helps us make better choices. It helps us become better people. Thank you for your review.
This world has always been complicated; that is true. Your words are true, and it's not difficult to see it.
DeleteJak ja lubię takie wątki. Będę miała tę książkę na uwadze.
ReplyDeleteGreat, I know you read many books, and I think this would be a fantastic read for you.
DeleteHello Melody,
ReplyDeleteThat must be an interesting book.
Many greetings,
Marco
You understand the main idea, Marco.
DeleteThis is a very thorough review, Melody.
ReplyDeleteThank you so much.
DeleteSounds like an interesting read, Melody! xxx
ReplyDeleteThank you.
DeleteYou look beautiful with this book, my dear. You're a very inspiring person, and I love reading your posts. Unfortunately, I don't know the book, but thank you so much for this detailed review. However, I think you should read it yourself to draw conclusions. It's a thick book. Maybe I'll find more time for books like this in the future. Thanks to your post, I was able to learn more about this title.
ReplyDeleteI agree with you. You must read it to form your own opinion; this book elicits many.
DeleteGreat review of such interesting book written by a known Irish journalist. Thank you, Melody.
ReplyDeleteThank you, Giorgio.
DeleteInteresting and well thought out review of the book. I agree with you, humanity comes first, always.
ReplyDeleteThank you, Kay G.
DeleteI am not familiar with this author. It sounds like a very educational read.
ReplyDeleteThis book really makes you think deeply about the choices humans make and the consequences that follow. It's a real page-turner that will leave you pondering long after you've finished reading.
Delete