The crime that still haunts Don Browne took place on a cold, damp evening in February 1985 outside a housing development in a working-class neighborhood of Derry, Northern Ireland. That night, Browne says, he handed over a cache of weapons to fellow members of a Catholic paramilitary unit. The gunmen whom he had supplied pulled up to a row house where Douglas McElhinney, 42, a former officer in the Ulster Defense Regiment—the Northern Ireland branch of the British Army—was visiting a friend. As McElhinney was about to drive away, a member of the hit squad killed him with a sawed-off shotgun.
For his role in the murder, Browne, now 49, was sentenced to life. At the time a member of the Irish National Liberation Army (INLA), a breakaway faction of the Irish Republican Army (IRA), he was sent to Long Kesh Prison outside Belfast. He spent more than 13 years behind bars. Then, in September 1998, he was released under a settlement signed by Britain and the Republic of Ireland: the Good Friday, or Belfast, Agreement, which had been endorsed by Sinn Féin—the IRA's political wing—and most other Catholic and Protestant parties in Northern Ireland. At first, Browne had difficulties adjusting to the outside world. He was terrified to cross streets because he couldn't judge the speed of cars. He had also lost social skills. "If I asked a woman out for a cup of coffee, was I being a pervert?" he recalls wondering.
Two things helped ease his way into postwar society. Browne had studied meditation with a dozen "rough-and-tough provos [provisional IRA members]" in Long Kesh, and after his release, he began teaching yoga classes in Derry. An initiative called the Sustainable Peace Network proved even more beneficial. Today, Browne brings together former combatants from both sides—and sometimes their victims' families—to share experiences and describe the difficulties of adjusting to life in a quiescent Northern Ireland. "In the early days, some combatants—both republicans and Loyalists—were threatened to not take part [in the reconciliation efforts]," Browne tells me over coffee in his yoga studio outside Derry's 400-year-old city walls. But the threats have subsided. "To hear what your [former] enemies experienced is life-changing," he says.
The Troubles, as Northern Ireland's sectarian strife came to be known, erupted nearly 40 years ago, when Catholic Irish nationalists, favoring unification with the Irish Republic to the south, began a violent campaign against Britain and the Loyalist Protestant paramilitaries who supported continued British rule. Over some 30 years, more than 3,500 people were killed—soldiers, suspected informers, militia members and civilians caught in bombings and crossfire—and thousands more were injured, some maimed for life. Residents of Belfast and Derry were sealed off in a patchwork of segregated neighborhoods divided by barbed wire and patrolled by masked guerrillas. As a 17-year-old Catholic teenager fresh from the countryside in 1972, Aidan Short and a friend wandered unwittingly onto a Protestant-controlled road in Belfast. The two were seized by Ulster Volunteer Force (UVF) gunmen, a Loyalist paramilitary group. Accused of being members of the IRA, the teens were shot at point-blank range, leaving Short paralyzed and his friend—shot through the face—still traumatized 35 years later. "A small mistake could ruin your life," Short told me.
Ten years ago, the Good Friday Agreement officially put an end to the Troubles. The deal, brokered by President Bill Clinton, Senator George Mitchell, British Prime Minister Tony Blair and Republic of Ireland Taoiseach (equivalent to prime minister) Bertie Ahern, represented a historic compromise. It created a semiautonomous government body comprising both Catholics and Protestants, and called for disarmament of paramilitary groups, release of jailed combatants and reorganization of the police force (at the time, 93 percent Protestant). The agreement also stipulated that Northern Ireland would remain part of Britain until a majority of its citizens voted otherwise. Another breakthrough occurred in May 2007: Martin McGuinness, a leader of Sinn Féin (headed by Gerry Adams) and former commander of the IRA in Derry, formed a coalition government with Ian Paisley, a firebrand Protestant minister and chairman of the hardline Democratic Unionist Party until June 2008. (The DUP had refused to sign the 1998 agreement.) "I still meet people who say they [had] to pinch themselves at the sight of us together," McGuinness told me during an interview at Stormont Castle, a Gothic-styled landmark that serves as the seat of government.
Not everyone welcomes the peace. Shunning the tenth-anniversary celebrations last April, Jim Allister, a former DUP leader, declared that the Good Friday Agreement "rewarded 30 years of terrorism in Northern Ireland by undermining both justice and democracy." Surprisingly, the construction of so-called peace walls—barriers of steel, concrete and barbed wire erected between Protestant and Catholic neighborhoods—has continued since the agreement. Most of the walls, which range from a few hundred yards to three miles in length, stretch across working-class neighborhoods of Belfast, where Protestants and Catholics live hard by one another and sectarian animosities haven't died down. Some IRA splinter groups are still planting explosives and, rarely, executing enemies.
During the Troubles, IRA and Loyalist paramilitaries functioned as neighborhood security forces, often keeping the two sides at bay. Now those internal controls have disappeared, and communities have requested that the municipal council construct barriers to protect residents. At a business conference in Belfast last May, New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg commended the progress made so far. But he said that the peace walls would have to be dismantled before U.S. companies step up investment. Paisley responded that only local communities could decide when the time is right. The peace process "is not like going into a darkened room and turning on a light switch," says McGuinness. The IRA, the armed wing of McGuinness' own Sinn Féin, waited seven years before handing over its weapons. "It's going to take time."
Even in its embryonic stages, though, the Northern Ireland agreement is increasingly regarded as a model of conflict resolution. Politicians from Israel and Palestine to Sri Lanka and Iraq have studied the accord as a way to move a recalcitrant, even calcified, peace process forward. McGuinness recently traveled to Helsinki to mediate between Iraqi Sunnis and Shiites. And Morgan Tsvangirai, Zimbabwe's opposition leader, praised Northern Ireland's "new beginnings" when he visited Belfast last spring to address a gathering of liberal parties from around the world.


Comments
Dunnes Stores is not a British(English) department store as was mentioned. It is an Irish republic chain store, which originated in Cork. I shopped there for years before emigrating.
Posted by Anne O'Neill Bones on February 26,2009 | 04:01PM
My late father,a former prisoner of the British during the Easter Rebellion, always said There will never be peace in Northern Ireland till the British got the hell out. It looks like the Irish have come to terms with political situation as long as they can be treated equally. There has been too much blood lost trying to do otherwise
Posted by M
There are a lot of "Rocks " that need to be overturned so the truth comes out to bind the wounds of Northern Ireland.You can't KILL for 38 years and expect families to forget.
Posted by Daniel Begley on March 5,2009 | 11:42AM
Well as we know the calm will not last all the time a british subject is in charge of the police and there are soldiers in any form in the north. the last saturday 2 soldiers were shot by Real IRA and then yesterday the continuity IRA shot a police officer in the north. if people want to be british go to england scotland or wales and let us be in peace alone on OUR Island. You can not expect to invade a land and not expect them to be hostile. The fact of the pressence of the British on this Island is a hostile action and every man and women have the right to demand in any way for them to leave. The news on both sides always mentions the IRA but never all the things the british soldiers do or the loyalists who killed 3 times more civilians than the IRA. 35 anniversary of the Monaghan and Dublin Bombs aproaching. All IRA actions have always been in respone to actions by the British . The reason the British are targeted by the middle east is because of their pressence in other peoples countrys. The British must learn that all the time they go in these lands they will have to become targets . In short the British bring it all apon themselves, if you join an army that invades other lands you have to be responcible and become a target. If a man goes into a boxing ring he should expect to be hit.
Posted by Daithi O'Raithbheartaigh on March 10,2009 | 12:00PM
I just hope the recent efforts of the 'Real IRA' don't start the whole killing mentality again. Enough is enough...
Posted by JSPC on March 10,2009 | 02:25PM
Sadly this is an extremely one sided article. Should we actually attempt to achieve peace healing must come on both sides. Should the author attempt to study the history of the conflict such information would come to light and perhaps be represented factually rather than as hearsay, as the author does with the few Protestant accounts listed. I come from and Orange and Green family, Mother is protestant, Father is Catholic. The moment of healing comes when either side realizes that at the heart of the matter we all have one common goal. Skewed representation only furthers the divide. Not surprised that it is represented this way in Smithsonian, but I am saddened by it.
Posted by AlexanderB on March 12,2009 | 06:12AM
Alexander, I come from an Orange and Green Marriage; my husband is Catholic and I am Protestant (although I was Catholic when I was a baby). You are right in that both sides need to recognize the way we are the SAME, and set aside the arguments about how we are different.
As I attended church many times with my husband I realized that there are many good things about the two groups that are the same. It is time we begin to appreciate each other.
Posted by Angela on March 18,2009 | 09:07PM
I suggest looking at the lyrics of "Sunday Bloody Sunday," the famous protest song written by Irish rock band U2 in response to two specific episodes of the Troubles:
* * *
I can't believe the news today
I can't close my eyes and make it go away
How long, how long must we sing this song?
How long, how long...
Tonight...we can be as one
Tonight...
Broken bottles under children's feet
Bodies strewn across the dead end street
But I won't heed the battle call
It puts my back up
Puts my back up against the wall
Sunday, bloody Sunday
Sunday, bloody Sunday
Sunday, bloody Sunday
And the battle's just begun
There's many lost; tell me who has won
The trench is dug within our hearts
And mothers, children, brothers, sisters torn apart
Sunday, bloody Sunday
Sunday, bloody Sunday
How long, how long must we sing this song?
How long, how long....
Tonight...we can be as one
Tonight....
Tonight....
Sunday, bloody Sunday
Tonight
Sunday, bloody Sunday
Wipe your tears away
Wipe your tears away
Wipe your tears away
Wipe your tears away
Sunday, bloody Sunday
Sunday, bloody Sunday
And it's true we are immune
When fact is fiction, TV reality
And today the millions cry
We eat and drink while tomorrow they die
The real battle yet begun
To claim the victory Jesus won
On...
Sunday bloody Sunday
Sunday bloody Sunday....
* * *
This song speaks volumes to me, especially that one line: "There's many lost; tell me who has won."
I would also recommend looking up the song on Wikipedia, where you'll find some quotes from Bono Vox (U2's lead singer) and Larry Mullen Jr (the drummer) which give their further thoughts on the matter.
It's true that the families of past victims can't just forgive and forget. But holding a grudge will only make things worse.
Posted by Kyra on March 20,2009 | 01:49PM
This article reflects a rather naive and uninformed knowledge of the author as to the real situation in the north of Ireland. This is clearly shown in the first paragraph where the term "Catholic paramilitary" is used(shades of AP writer Shawn Pogotchnik). The crux of the division in the north is economic, where religion is used as a propaganda subterfuge. The fragile state of affairs continues and will continue while Britain maintains a military mindset to control the region, and,refuses to allow open and public investigations of its role in the killing of many unarmed civilians. Closure for victims of the families of those killed, appropriate justice for all, equal opportunity for all and a real democracy are also required ingedients for a sustainable peace in the region. While the problem goes back to at least the 18th century, the real basis for the "troubles" over the past 80+ years has been Britain's devious divide and conquer policies since the 1921 Partition of the country. These policies have been enforced by a police state and destructive British intelligence and security actions. To quote author Sean O'Casey (RIP)"You cannot put a rope around the neck of an idea; you cannot put an idea up against the barrack-square wall and riddle it with bullets; you cannot confine it in the strongest prison cell your slaves could ever build." This has yet to sink into the British government heads (of state).
Posted by James J. Gallagher on March 29,2009 | 10:10AM
It is truly sad to see the Smithsonian article so one-sided. The lack of an historical context to not only the Troubles but also more than eight hundred (800) years where the denial of civil liberties, property ownership, internment without trials, equality of religious practices, voting rights, right to equal government social services, and on and on, is extremely troubling. Yes, areas of Northern Ireland continue to be divided, investments are being denied by international companies looking for walls to come down, however, the areas that ARE coming together are those that have come to recognize that all the citizens should be treated equally within the law of the land, while at the same time working on healing long wounds of the denial of the basic civil rights. When this recognition occurs, one of the most wonderful thing happens: children are brought up to recogize that everyone should be treated equally and the chain of events going back not just 40 years of "the Troubles" but eight hundred years is FINALLY broken! J. Terry Ryan, President Children of Ireland Group, Inc.
Posted by J. Terry Ryan on March 30,2009 | 03:44PM
Unfortunately we do not have a good solution for these festering religion problems. All through history we have only applied temporary solutions. I expect that human nature remains constant and that gets in the way of peace. I am a Jew who married a Catholic and we made it work for us not for millions of people.
Posted by Mireille on April 4,2009 | 06:57PM
this madeness has to stop
Posted by Ryan on October 1,2009 | 06:24AM
The title of this article is "Northern Ireland, getting past the troubles" Of course it wont be forgotten, but you can try to put it in the past. Obviously, hence getting past the troubles.
Posted by Sandra on October 1,2009 | 06:26AM
you can always forgive but not forget. Not going to lie just give up on grudges and if you only disciminate it only makes more room for hate. Many people have gone threw these type of things look at the wars. vietnam, the holocaust, world war 1 and 2 people forgave and of course will never forget but the only way to forget it happened to to not hate so stop
Posted by brandon on October 1,2009 | 06:37AM
This is not really about religion, but Great Britain's past as an empire. They invaded Ireland, and have been resented for centuries. It will take a long time for change to be fully realized. People die out. Attitudes change. One of the most beautiful places in the world, though. May God help them all.
Posted by David Stuard on October 29,2009 | 03:39AM