In Northern Ireland, Getting Past the Troubles
A decade after Protestants and Catholics agreed on a peace treaty, both sides are adjusting to a hopeful new reality
- By Joshua Hammer
- Smithsonian magazine, March 2009, Subscribe
(Page 3 of 4)
The next morning, I drive out from Belfast to the north coast of County Antrim, where something of a tourist boom is underway. Green meadows, dotted by yellow wildflowers, stretch along cliffs pounded by the Irish Sea. I follow signs for the Giant's Causeway, a scenic shoreline famed for its 40,000 basalt columns rising from the sea—the result of an ancient volcanic eruption. Some of the structures tower four stories above the water; others barely break the surface to create a natural walkway—remnants, according to Irish myth, of a path laid to Scotland by the Irish giant Finn McCool.
Two miles inland lies the quaint village of Bushmills, its narrow main street lined with old stone taverns and country inns. I pull into the packed parking lot of Old Bushmills Distillery, makers of the popular Irish whiskey. The distillery received its first license from King James I in 1608. In 2005, Diageo, a British spirits manufacturer, purchased the label, tripled production and renovated the facilities: 120,000 visitors or so tour each year. Darryl McNally, the manager, leads me down to a storage cellar, a vast, cool room filled with 8,000 oak bourbon casks imported from Louisville, Kentucky, in which the malt whiskey will be aged for a minimum of five years. In the wood-paneled tasting room, four different Bushmills single malts have been laid out in delicate glasses. I take a few sips of Bushmills' finest, the distinctly smooth, 21-year-old "Rare Beast."
Later, from the ruined stone ramparts of Dunluce Castle, dating to the 14th century, I gaze across the Irish Sea's Northern Channel toward the southwest coast of Scotland, some 20 miles away. Stone Age settlers crossed the straits here, then Vikings, and later, Scots, who migrated in the early 17th century—part of the still bitterly resented Protestant colonization of Catholic Ireland under James I.
Farther down the coast lies Derry, a picturesque city on the River Foyle, freighted with historical significance for both Catholics and Protestants. I cross the murky river by a modern steel suspension bridge. A steep hill is dominated by the city's 400-year-old stone ramparts, one of the oldest continuous city walls in Europe. Inside the wall stands an imposing stone building—headquarters of the Apprentice Boys of Derry, a Loyalist group. William Moore, its general secretary, leads me upstairs to a second-floor museum, where multimedia exhibits recount the establishment in 1613 of an English Protestant colony in Derry—previously a Catholic settlement. The newcomers built a walled town on the hill and renamed it Londonderry. In 1689, James II, a Catholic, set out from France to capture the city, a key offensive in his plan to cross the Irish Sea and retake the British throne. During the 105-day siege that followed, Moore tells me, "inhabitants were reduced to eating dogs and cats, and 10,000 of 30,000 Protestants died of starvation and disease." William III's forces broke the cordon and sent James back to France in defeat. Since 1714, the Apprentice Boys have commemorated the siege with a procession on the ramparts. (The group takes its name from 13 young apprentices who shut the gates and pulled up the drawbridges before James' forces arrived.) Catholics have long viewed the march as a provocation. "It's commemorating 10,000 deaths," Moore insists defensively.
Catholics have their own deaths to mark. On January 30, 1972—Bloody Sunday—British paratroopers firing rifles here killed 14 protesters demonstrating against the British practice of interning paramilitary suspects without trial. (A British government-funded tribunal has been investigating the incident for a decade.) The massacre is seared into the consciousness of every Catholic in Northern Ireland—and is one reason why the sectarian split ran so deep here during the Troubles. Protestants referred to the city as "Londonderry," while Catholics called it "Derry." (The bite is going out of this dispute, although the official name remains Londonderry.) Kathleen Gormley, principal of St. Cecilia's College, remembers being upbraided by British troops whenever she used its Catholic name. "We're obsessed with history here," Gormley tells me.
Yet times are changing, she says. Gormley believes that Derry has made more progress in defusing sectarian animosity than Belfast, which she visits often. "People in Belfast are more entrenched in their mind-set," she tells me. "There's a lot more cross-community involvement here."
In contrast to Belfast, where certain Loyalist parades continue to provoke disruptions, in Derry tensions have eased. The Protestant Apprentice Boys have even reached out to the Bogside Residents, a group representing Derry's Catholics. "We recognize that the city is 80 percent Catholic," says Moore. "Without their understanding, we knew we'd [keep having] major difficulties." The Boys even opened its building to Catholics, inviting them to tour the siege museum. "It helped us to relate to them as human beings, to understand the history from their perspective," Gormley told me.
But old habits die hard. One morning, I drive to south Armagh, a region of rolling green hills, pristine lakes and bucolic villages along the border with the Republic of Ireland. It's a land of ancient Irish myths, and stony, unforgiving soil that historically kept colonists away. During the Troubles, this was an IRA stronghold, where highly trained local cells carried out relentless bombings and ambushes of British troops. "We were first seen as ‘stupid ignorant paddies,' and they were ‘Green Berets.' Then they started getting killed on a regular basis," says Jim McAllister, a 65-year-old former Sinn Féin councilman. We had met at his run-down housing development in the hamlet of Cullyhanna. Though his midsection is thickening and his gray hair has thinned, McAllister is said to have been among the most powerful Sinn Féin men in south Armagh. By the late 1970s, he says in a heavy brogue, "the IRA controlled the ground here." British forces retreated to fortified camps and moved around only by helicopter; ubiquitous posters on telephone poles in those days depicted a silhouetted IRA gunman peering down a sight and the slogan "Sniper at Work."
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Comments (12)
The Protestant people of Ulster will never surrender to IRA terrorists, and our beloved land will remain British for ever more.
God Save The Queen.
Posted by John Knox on December 30,2011 | 01:26 AM
I just came across this and thought I would leave a post. I'm a photography student in Belfast and all my work is based on things we can't see in the province. The majority of my work is just to show both communities in Northern Ireland to one another and just thought it would be a great idea to allow people to get an insight to locations they would never get to see mainly due to their religion. In majority of other countries in the world, it doesn't seem a problem to try new things and see other cultures but Northern Ireland just seems to have that stationary view that all doors are closed. Well I hope to change that in one way or another so I hope people viewing this blog would take the chance to look at my work and see Northern Ireland in another perspective rather than its gloomy past.
http://www.flickr.com/photos/ianfosterphoto/
Posted by Ian Foster on November 26,2009 | 07:14 AM
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 | 06:39 AM
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 | 09:37 AM
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 | 09:26 AM
this madeness has to stop
Posted by Ryan on October 1,2009 | 09:24 AM
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 | 09:57 PM
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 | 06:44 PM
Hello Joshua , thank you for travelling to Ireland and indeed writing an article on the new “peace” in my country. I would like to kindly request that you consider some of my experience as a lifelong resident as a worthy comment.
Irish nationalists living in the North of Ireland lived for 50 years under British Unionist misrule and discrimination. They were continuously burned from their homes, discriminated against in the workplace and murdered long before the commencement date of 1969 as the troubles. There was already an ongoing British Unionist Militant aggression and murder campaign against Irish Catholics in June 1966. *1
I am genuinely unsure why these major matters are void in your article Joshua especially when I consider that you interviewed former combatants including The Deputy First Minister, Martin Mc Guinness of Sinn Fein. However, such exclusions seriously deprive your sincere article of factual truth, fairness and accuracy relating to the root cause of the British/Irish conflict in the North of Ireland.
Many Irish Nationalists today remain indebted to the reporting and assistance from Americans and America. Catholic homes were rebuilt after being burned to the ground by what is often described as British Unionist pogroms. The finance to rebuild such homes was sent by Americans. *2
*1. http://www.conservapedia.com/Ulster_Volunteer_Force
*2. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/American_Committee_for_Relief_in_Ireland
Posted by Sean Mac Eachaidh on March 29,2009 | 11:02 PM
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 | 01:10 PM
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 | 04:49 PM
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 | 12:07 AM
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 | 09:12 AM
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 | 05:25 PM