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Educate me: Ireland
 

Educate me: Ireland

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[#12999079]

I like to think that I know a little bit about a lot of things. "Enough to get by" is how I've phrased it in the past. But there are massive holes in my knowledge.

The recently closed thread about Palestine for instance. I have no idea, not the first clue. It seems like something important which I should feel strongly about, but I'm catastrophically ignorant.

Antisemitism. I don't get it. This is a history which is lost to me. I have a couple of Jewish friends (who I'd ask about if I knew where to start) but from the outside looking in, the everyday Jewish seem like nice people aside from a propensity towards ritual circumcision which I am opposed to, and the Orthodox ones get the best haircuts and dress code. Quite why they seem reviled in some quarters, I have no notion.

I may come back to these if this idea of a thread series is successful. But, for now let's consider Ireland.

--

I am a late bloomer when it comes to politics. Prior to maybe ten years ago I was wholly disengaged. I grew up in the 1980s when the news was full of the IRA telling people they were going to blow them up, then blow them up. 🤷‍♂️ As a high-school kid it seemed to me to be an argument between two Christian factions worshipping the same god in a slightly different manner. They all seemed to go out of their way to antagonise each other, one side arranging rallies through the other side's turf and then getting indignant when there was a bit of a barney. Meanwhile, the shouty man from Sinn Fein seemed to be The Bad Guy, a respectable front for terrorism which I couldn't comprehend. Honestly, I still don't.

Then, "The Troubles" were seemingly resolved. Agreements were signed. What these entailed I don't know, something about getting ready for the weekend. There was some sort of Masonic handshake and perhaps around the same time I came to realise that there was another undercurrent where part of NI wanted to be in the UK and another wanted Ireland to be its own thing. Is that even correct? I don't really understand why Ireland isn't it's own thing anyway, or whether that would be good or bad (let's ignore brexit here for argument's sake). I've visited both halves. They seemed nice. Have I conflated two separate concerns, religion and geopolitics? Who knows. Not me.

Then the Tories got in bed with the DUP who up until that point I'd never heard of and suddenly Sinn Fein are the good guys? How did that happen?

I am baffled. Hands up, I am ignorant. Me backfilling a lifetime of history knowledge under my own steam would take, well, another lifetime. I wouldn't know where to begin. So, would someone care to take a little time to give me the John Craven's Newsround version of the last half-century in Ireland?

Thanks in advance, card's behind the bar, asbestos overcoat on standby, obligatory YouTube link to Mitchell & Webb's "are we the baddies?" sketch.


 
Posted : 11/10/2023 6:16 pm
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(... and in anticipation of anyone thinking this is me trolling, no, it is a genuine request because I am genuinely this stupid when it comes to world history and I want to be Better.)


 
Posted : 11/10/2023 6:20 pm
J-R, piemonster, matt_outandabout and 2 people reacted
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You could do worse than watch this as a bit of background:
https://www.bbc.co.uk/iplayer/episode/p0gd27b7/union-with-david-olusoga-series-1-3-the-two-nations


 
Posted : 11/10/2023 6:24 pm
rjmccann101 reacted
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Belfast Born, moved over here before i was 5, born in 1977

Politics of it all i never understood

Crazy stuff i do remember

My grandad retiring from the Ulster police, and handing his revolver back

An army squaddy squatting at the end of my road looking down the barrel of a rifle

going through turnstyles into built up areas, being metal detected by hand and going through metal detectors into high street shops, as a small child, all patrolled by soldiers

armoured landrovers everywhere.. road blocks, heavily armoured police stations

having to go across wasteland and a stream to get home one day because a whole road was closed off due to a bomb scare

ends of houses with murals for either side, and being told my my mum and uncle (as an adult re visiting in the 2000s) that we can't go down those streets as they are catholic

My father told me a story about when he was a teen having to jump through windows of a house to get away from hails of bullets

All crazy stuff, and a lot of memories for such a short period of living there


 
Posted : 11/10/2023 6:34 pm
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will be following with interest as i too am in the same boat.  never really understood ireland, nor israel/palestine, and never really felt the need to so far.  sometimes its nicer being in that 'ignorance is bliss' bubble, hence i dont even watch the news, havent seen any of the recent atrocities, just read about them on here.
this is where i get my news, as unless it deteriorates into keyboard war, then i find most posts tend to match my own thinking.
thanks for the thread, i should end up a little more knowledgeable from it.


 
Posted : 11/10/2023 6:34 pm
geeh, dc1988, jairaj and 1 people reacted
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if it’s specifically Troubles-era stuff you’re interested in

I don't know enough to form any sort of option on what I might be specifically interested in. I just want to be less of an ignoramus.


 
Posted : 11/10/2023 6:35 pm
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Start in the 1500s and then work your way forward. Be warned that history is frequently written by the winners of conflicts etc. etc.


 
Posted : 11/10/2023 6:56 pm
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The very simplistic one is:
Ireland was colonised on and off over the centuries with varying levels of success (random fact. One pope said Ireland belonged to the English King. One pope was English. Guess the shape of the venn diagram) and what became Northern Ireland was, oddly from our modern eyes, the area which was most native Irish.
Under James the 1st and the 6th this was ended (by war) and a very deliberate colonisation project started to wipe out the Irish culture there. Unlike previous colonisation efforts large areas of land were seized and towns created on them populated by English and Scots who had to be protestant in order to keep them separate from the locals.
This bubbled along with several unsuccessful uprisings until the successful war of independence in 1919 (incidentally one historical what if is whether it would have been successfully prevented if WWI hadnt happened since there were a lot of discussions going on how to better represent the Irish immediately prior to WWI).
However due to how NI had been settled it meant there was in the 1920s a majority there who wanted to remain in the UK. In order to end the war the partition therefore happened.
There was then the Irish civil war immediately after since the peace treaty terms didnt satisfy everyone.

Which brings us to the last fifty years.
We start of with a protestant majority and catholic minority who are (broadly speaking) pro remaining in the UK vs pro joining the rest of Ireland.
The demographics start to shift against the protestants which makes them nervous and there is also victimisation of the catholics in terms of jobs etc which leads to the start of the troubles.
Whats often missed is the British troops were originally sent in to protect the catholics but due to factors beyond me managed to end up antagonising them instead.


 
Posted : 11/10/2023 7:07 pm
J-R, ebennett and doris5000 reacted
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I believe the “shouty bloke” you refer to was the Rev Ian Paisley (who was a Protestant) Sinn Fein was fronted by Gerry Adams and Martin McGinness who had to have voiceovers when on the news because of the association with the IRA.


 
Posted : 11/10/2023 7:20 pm
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the news was full of the IRA telling people they were going to blow them up, then blow them up. 🤷‍♂️

There was an excellent sort of dramatised documentary in Radio 3 many many moons ago - these sort of layered testimonies of people growing up in various conflicts - enduring violence - experiencing some sort of horrific pivotal moment and resolving to take a side. It was all collaged together-  child soldiers in Africa, the Taliban, Northern Ireland and so on. What was intriguing was you didnt really know where each story was leading - the same background and experiences could lead someone to join the police or a paramilitary, become a UN Peacekeeper or join the Lords Resistance Army. I only happened across it half way through on a late night drive. Wish I knew what it was called as I'd love to track down a copy of it.

What was quite facinating though was it revealed different government's philosophies in addressing insurgency. The USA see's its leader as 'Commander in Chief' - the top of a chain of command that leads directly to the soldier on the ground and it sees its terrorist organsiations as being the same - its always fighting its own shadow - so it exercises a strategy of 'Decapitaton' believing that removing the head of an organisation will defeat it - So you knock off Sadam Hussain or Bin Ladin and expect that whole organisation will collapse. What happens time and time again is it becomes apparent that one leader is keeping 10 pretenders to the throne in check - non of whom you know anything about and are now all out to make their own mark- you go from. fighting one know enemy to 10 unpredictable ones. What the US could never really do with Bin Ladin though was find any actual link between Bin Ladin and any of the actions attributed to him. Even on the day he was killed the headlines changed from describing him as 'the man who masterminded 9/11' in the morning to 'the man who inspired 9/11' by the afternoon. There was no chain of command as much as the US wanted to believe there was.

The UK - as a country that has been managing the decline of an empire for a century  has always behaved very differently in relation to insurgency and rebellion- the one thing they / we aim to do is to always leave leaders in place. That way you have an organisation that is lead by someone you know the history and motivations and morals  of and know  how they operate which makes predicting their actions easier. The whole thing oddly becomes more gentlemanly and sporting as those leaders somehow feel validated by it all -  It lead to the weirdly cosy arrangement in NI of having agreed procedures for giving notification of an attack.


 
Posted : 11/10/2023 7:22 pm
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As a Southern Irish person I am still learning about some of the recent history as we were relatively isolated from it all. My wife (Catholic) grew up in the North during troubles and obviously has seen loads more than me. Including regular army patrols across her dad's farm and wife, mother and siblings being barricaded into house while dad sat up all night when the friendly protestant neighbours came a calling around the 12th of July.
I've listened to some of the The Troubles Podcast which found interesting about lots of the period.

Edit - just remembered an issue we had this summer, problem with water supply to the farm. We couldn't find the water coming line onto land. Turns out, as they were catholics water board/ workers wouldn't fit it late 60's/ early 70's so no official record. My now deceased father-in-law and his brother had to dig/ lay it. Lovely time to be alive in Norn Ireland


 
Posted : 11/10/2023 7:28 pm
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We didn't start it...but suffered from Norman imperialism. It's not the sort of thing that I like discussing via the internet.
One of my very middle class English mates did a tour of Ireland 2 years ago and now has a very different perspective.


 
Posted : 11/10/2023 7:33 pm
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On enduring memory I have as a child was trying to fathom why one man was standing spreadeagled against a wall with a soldier crouched beneath him.

Of course I now know thats how the British army used Irish locals as human shields.

My family on my Fathers side originates from Ireland, in the county of Derry. I think it goes or originates at or around the 10th century.

Mothers side is from South of the island.


 
Posted : 11/10/2023 7:37 pm
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Whats often missed is the British troops were originally sent in to protect the catholics but due to factors beyond me managed to end up antagonising them instead.

Back then Catholics in NI were being denied civil rights which certainly didn’t help matters.


 
Posted : 11/10/2023 7:45 pm
 kilo
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The demographics start to shift against the protestants which makes them nervous and there is also victimisation of the catholics in terms of jobs etc which leads to the start of the troubles.

Lots of inaccuracies try;

https://www.irishtimes.com/news/ireland/irish-news/how-the-troubles-began-a-timeline-1.3987076


 
Posted : 11/10/2023 7:48 pm
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The plantation of Ulster, with people loyal to the James the sixth/first. Ironically presbyterians fleeing religous persecutiion in Scotland


 
Posted : 11/10/2023 7:49 pm
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A star named Henry by roddy Doyle is quite a good fictional story based on elements of early 20th century Ireland.


 
Posted : 11/10/2023 7:57 pm
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funnily enough, I had to try and sum this up recently. My partners nephew (11 y/o) asked me if i was in the army cadets when i was his age and i had to explain why my family arent big fans of the british army - Mums from norn iron and we from the nationalist community. This meant nothing to him so i tried to explain the whole thing in summary as best (and neutrally!) as I could. This is what I told him...

Many hundreds of years about the British / English invaded and colonised Ireland. Whilst not very nice, this wasn't a uniqely evil thing for the brits to be doing. The whole history of europe is countries trying to take over one another. Once Irish had been taken over, the brits did all the sorts of things colonisers do. They suppressed Irish culture, especially the language, eg renaming towns. They helped create (or at least made it a catasrophe) a famine which killed a lot of people (~25% of the country). They gave the land they conquered to their own people - a lot of scottish protestants, especially in the north of ireland. More on them later.

The Irish weren't best pleased about that, but Brits were strong so not much they could do. This simmered away for a few hundred years until WW1 when there was a rebellion. The rebellion wasnt actually massively popular with the irish ironically, it was quite a niche interest. However the british crackdown to the rebellion was absoultely brutal, with the army massacring civilians. This changed everything and the rebellion became a much bigger thing.

At this point the brits were kind of done with ireland, WW1 had take a huge tole and they really didnt need it. So they tried to cut a deal. The deal was that the Irish could have their own state, but the brits would keep what is now northern ireland. The border was drawn so that in northen ireland, the decendants of those britsh protestants would be in the majority, and the decendans of the irish natives would be in the minority. This deal split the rebllion, one faction wanted to take it, and one wanted to keep fighting. There was then a civil war which was as awful as they always are. The faction that wanted to take the deal won, and the Repulic of Ireland and the British province of Northern Ireland were now a thing.

This takes us from WW1 to the 1970s. Ireland did its own thing and was a deeply odd country by western european standards, verging on a catholic theocracy. Northern Ireland was also not the most cheerful of places. It was a very poor place, all those britsh folks, we'll start calling them unionists now because they want to remain a part of the british union, worked factory jobs for not much money. They built things like the Titanic. They werent well off, but they were in a better position than the irish minority, well start calling them Nationalists as they want to be part of the Irish nation. The Nationalists were way less likely to have proper jobs - the factories were closed shops, they were much poorer.

The working class unionists weren't all that thrilled about being poor. This gave their politicans a problem, so they choose to blame everything their resident miniority group - the Nationalists. Some of the unionists took this too far, rioting and attacking the Nationists. It got quite grim as the local police werent able (or willing, they were all unionists!) so the Brits back in London sent in the army to rescue the Nationalists. The Nationlists welcomed the British army, making tea for them on their doorsteps, which is quite the plot twist.

Good relations between the nationalists and the army didn't last. The nationalists were also unhappy with their lot, particularly not (really) having the vote. They took inspiration from the civil rights movement in the USA that was happening at the time, and mostly peaceful protests and demonstrations took place. Unfortunately, the brits didn't much care for it and thought that The Paracute Regement would be good people to police a demonstration. They weren't and once aagain the British army was killing Nationlist civilians.

This period of time is known as 'The Troubles' it is charactarised by terrorist attrocity and government reprisal, and the two communities, Nationalist and Unionist becoming more divided than ever. This is the time that may parents and grandparents lived through and it was dreadful. My grandfather owned a small business. Some Unionist neighbours decided that he shouldn't, so they told the authorities that he was a terrorist. He wasn't - he hated the terrorists, saying they were '10% idiot romantic dreamers, 80% straight up opportunistic criminals and 10% psychopaths that are in it for the murder'. That didnt matter of course, so the army came to the house at 3am, and dragged him out by his hair infront of his screaming children and taken away. He was imprisoned without a trial (interred).

He got out eventually, and had a run in with the terrorists later. My uncles aged 10 and 8 at the time, found an arms stash. Granda came home from work to find two piles of bullets divided up (one for me, one for you) and my uncles playing cops and robbers with real pistols. He did the only responsible thing, and phoned the authorities, and the army came round and took it all away. Next he called the local IRA man (i know this sounds wierd, but its a very small place, everyone knows everyone), and told him that if they didnt want the army taking away their weapons, they shouldnt leave them somewhere children can find them. He got a bullet posted to him every now and again for the rest of his life, he died aged 89.

This cycle of violence and these sort of stories carried on for decades. For us it culminated in the Omagh bombing - families home town. My pregnant aunt walked past the car bomb and into a shop a couple of doors down when the bomb went off. She was cut to ribbons and we knew many of the people who died.

Of course, these sorts of things dont happen any more so the cycle of violence did end. It's hard to work out what the exact moment things started to change, but theres a few important things that happened along the way.

Nationlists legitimate political grievences were addressed - they got the vote, the previously racist police force was disbanded and replaced with a representive one with Nationalist members. Previously the nationalist community was totally powerless, if you were the victim of a crime, you eiher had to suck it up - or ask the terrorists to deal with it. They'd ask for something in return of course. This undermined civilian support for the terrorists. Unionists had also to acccept these reforms, and some very brave people chose to do so. Brave because there were Unionist terroists too. Some didnt accept them and still don't.

In addition, the British found new ways of dealing with the terrorists. It turns out that the bunch my granda described as 'fools, criminials and pyschopaths' were easily corrupted. Quickly the number informants almost matched the number of true belivers and the British spies knew about every attack before it happened. The also changed their military tactics, using special forces to conduct 'extra judicial killings' aka Murder on people they strongly suspected of being terrorists.

So between reforming the governance and dealing with terrorists differently, eventually things got better. Joining the EU helped alot. It removed the need for the hard border. Nationalists who lived and worked in Ireland proper could come and go as they pleased as a dual national.

That took a lot longer to write than it did to say. I am not a historian, i have no doubt over simplified the wrong things and i am of course, biased. Still, best I could do and I did try.

Id recommend the book 'Milkman'. Its very good, and gives you a much better impression of what it was like to live through that historical facts.


 
Posted : 11/10/2023 7:57 pm
thebunk, towpathman, Jordan and 24 people reacted
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my son has loads of books and is really interested in modern Irish history/ the old IRA/ Micheal Collins etc  and could probably tell you all you want to know from that era from the Republics point, but for me living way down in Cork, the troubles are not something I know a lot about other than my brief time spent there many years ago.
My experience…..
first came to Republic of Ireland in 98 with work and been here pretty much since. Learned not to call the UK the mainland pretty quick. Drank lots. Had a great time and even met my wife. <br />Went up north for 6 months too in 98. Had a great, but scary time. Being Scottish everyone asked what team I supported, I stuck with Dundee Utd. Was told a few things (not sure if pulling my leg or any truth in them) avoid the black cabs and don’t drive directly behind an RUC Land Rover. Was unnerving seeing the armed soldiers at road blocks etc. Had a hire car from the ROI when I went up at first and quickly learned to avoid driving through red/white/blue kerb stone painted areas during marching season (had no idea what marching season was) as the car reg upset the locals. Changed the car, got one with a uk reg, it upset other locals in the Green/white/orange kerb stone painted areas, so finally settled on a Northern reg car. Was in Omagh about 1hr before the bomb went off (worked in strabane at the time), and was pulled over by the cops a little later as I sped away from Strabane (overtook an unmarked car), not knowing at the time what had just happened down the road. Couldn’t work out why they were so agitated and I thought they were being a bit tough on me for speeding as they searched me and the car and then told me what had happened a few miles away and ****ed me right out it! 😳. One of the women I worked with in Strabane used to say her teenage son and their friends would wind up the RUC and lob things at them for fun!!!  Had to go to Banbridge after their bombing to help our work clear up. Stayed a few weeks in the Ballymac in Antrim, great hotel. Apparently it was a UFF target some years earlier! So some nervy times. The people I met were all great, just a bit cautious about where I went and what I said.


 
Posted : 11/10/2023 8:00 pm
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It's a very complex issue - and best read round and digging deeper to investigate and form opinions.  

TBF you are unlikely to get a balanced view here either.  But British rule, suppression of the Catholics, the Irish Famine, the Battle of the Boyne, sectarian hate, distrust of Catholics / Catholic Church and in modern times the continued ritual of grown-up wanting to walk through "enemy areas" wearing orange sashes , and prior to an during "The Troubles", the anti Catholic views of the police, state and major employers, control of drugs, prostitution, arms , extortion , smuggling, gang warfare, control of neighbourhoods, punishment gangs,  the influence of the Roman Catholic church on the Southern Irish state until relatively recently.

The British Establishment was very anti Irish 

The BBCs "Once Upon a Time in Northern Ireland" is a good place to start - speaking to those who were involved as to why they were involved.


 
Posted : 11/10/2023 8:01 pm
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The Republic of Ireland's neutrality in WW2 adds some background to the history.

Tens of thousands of Irish citizens volunteered to fight for GB in WW2 and Allied aircraft were allowed to overfly Ireland

The "troubles" are much more complex

In later decades the UK provided air cover over Ireland to supplement their Cessna 172 aircraft whenever threats were detected.

Ireland used Cessnas until 2019 and the two countries have been close for longer than you'd imagine.


 
Posted : 11/10/2023 8:06 pm
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Nothing to add other than my grandad remembered hiding from the Black and Tans when he was little down on the Dingle Peninsula. Other than that he hated to see the news about the IRA in the 80s as he thought it gave all Catholics a bad name and found it embarrassing to be associated with them.

I think he had a fair bit of abuse for being Irish and Catholic when he came over here as a navie on the roads just before WW11, a time when guest houses etc still had signs saying 'No Black's or Irish'.


 
Posted : 11/10/2023 8:21 pm
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As a soldier I spent a third of my 23 year career in Northern Ireland with my first tour in 1986 and my last in 2000.  I did 6 month roulement tours on my own and a couple of 2 year tours accompanied by my family. I have served all over Northern Ireland - Belfast, Lisburn, Maze, Bessbrook and Crossmaglen in South Armagh, Omagh and Derry/Londonderry.  My army trade was 'ammunition technician' and my job there was 'IEDD'.  Improvised Explosive Device Disposal.  I came away with a 'mention in dispatches', a 'Queens commendation for bravery' and memories which still sometimes keep me awake at night.  I've been spat on and bottled whilst trying to render a bomb safe, shot at and had bombs explode in the near vicinity.

On one of those 2 year tours in the late 1980s we lived 'outside the wire' in a housing estate in Lisburn which was mixed in with civilian housing and completely unprotected.  My wife and then toddler daughter learned not to answer the door to anyone, how to check for booby trap bombs under the car before they got in it and how to pretend they weren't a soldier's spouse/child if asked - convincing no one.  There were under car booby traps exploding killing drivers and close quarter assassinations of off duty UDR and policemen in the surrounding streets whilst we lived there.  One time my wife and child were trapped in a shopping centre after an off duty RUC man was shot in the face by the IRA and the police dropped the shutters at either end to contain the gunman in the shopping centre where my wife and pushchair seated daughter were!

On a later tour my (by then 2) kids went to a local school and learned the significance of the inevitable question 'are you catholic or protestant'?  Made more complicated because I was (nominally) CofE and my wife Catholic and my kids were neither! We are all confirmed atheists now!  I have loads of 'war stories' of my experiences taking bombs apart. Not just IRA - but INLA, UVF, RHC, UDA etc. We were equal opportunities bomb disposal operators!

Despite all this I have many happy memories of a beautiful country and (mostly) warm hearted people.  My son was born there (entitling him to an Irish passport the jammy sod).  I made lots of friends, some of whom I still keep in touch with.  I don't have a blinkered ex squaddie view of the conflict.  There were evil things done by all sides - including of course the British Army.  I never witnessed any of that and am proud of my role which (collectively by my unit- not specifically by me) saved lives.  I could talk about this subject for hours, I have studied the history ever since I first went and continue to do so, but I'm still learning. 'Complicated' is very apt.

Despite a few idiots, Northern Ireland is completely transformed since my time serving there.  Thank god for the GFA and all on both sides who had the courage to step up to the plate.


 
Posted : 11/10/2023 8:22 pm
twistedpencil, ads678, jairaj and 10 people reacted
 kilo
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I think he had a fair bit of abuse for being Irish and Catholic when he came over here as a navie on the roads just before WW11, <br /><br />

Hell we got that growing up in London in the seventies, hopefully it has died out now, that and the UK is no longer the lure it once was.


 
Posted : 11/10/2023 8:26 pm
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Couple of bits:

The trouble was really geographically isolated for the most part.  We all knew where to find it and where to stay away from so mostly people led a normal life.

Since no one's mentioned, the 1916 Easter Rising was initially extremely unpopular amongst most Irish people but the unnecessarily brutal reaction by the British soon changed that.

I went to a mainly Protestant school and learnt our history roughly from Henry VIII onwards.  We were left in no doubt that the way the British did things in Ireland left them responsible for the mass death an migration brought about by the famine.  I feel they'd have done it to their own people just as readily though.

My dads cousin was killed in an IRA bomb so I'm pretty much against Sinn Fein but it would be nice to have an alternative to the unionist parties.

Brexit has brought a united Ireland closer by many years but given half of NI looks to London for it's media that's still a long way off.


 
Posted : 11/10/2023 9:13 pm
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Mrs S is from Co. Londonderry (guess which faction, for the non-Northern Irish here). We got married out there and if I was using the BIL's car there were places I could not drive through on pain of being shot up at the other end of the village. Also had to check the car after every parking stop. We brought her parents back to Suffolk for a break after the two lads were shot in Belfast after taking a wrong turn and ending up in a Nationalist funeral.

Same BIL got married after the car had a device attached to it while he was visiting his girlfriend to collect her for a night out! That was an interesting wedding, the bride was part of a sect that did not have musical accompaniment at their services. The chapel was out on "the Moss" and we had one photo outside the car before the security officer moved us on. (There was a patrol out there somewhere, thanks chaps, and an observation helicopter overhead).

Since the GFA the nephews now work in Bannbridge with Catholic workmates and very integrated. Hopefully  the corner has been turned and there is no appetite to pick up the Armalite again.

IT's a lovely part of the world and the people are generally very friendly, my ulra-English (RP) accent can sometimes irk some of them but we can now book AirBnB's in parts of the province my in laws used to visit only at night and wearing face-camo while carry SLR's.

I don't discuss politics with the brothers as they are now of an age where they have rather entrenched views, my MIL had a respectful regard for Martin McGuiness before he died, despite him being the commander that ordered the bomb for their house in the 70's and her last vote was for SDLP from 80+ years of voting OUP.


 
Posted : 11/10/2023 9:30 pm
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You could try E  F Foster's Modern Ireland 1600 to 1972.  I found it very readable and it covers a good chunk of what you want to know.


 
Posted : 11/10/2023 9:42 pm
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I grew up on the opposite sides of lots of the above and my missus still wakes up screaming in the middle of the night about army at the bedroom door.

However that is now a world - an age ago.

This:

"Despite a few idiots, Northern Ireland is completely transformed since my time serving there.  Thank god for the GFA and all on both sides who had the courage to step up to the plate."

Thats the new world: sworn enemies bit the bullet, smudged over some terrible stuff, thought about what comes next. The next generation. And here we are. Brexit shakes some of the foundations. But IMO it took enormous courage to get to this.


 
Posted : 11/10/2023 9:57 pm
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Interesting thread. I'm still learning. Born and raised in a protetsant estate in Belfast, only left 9 years ago to come to this kip. Only a protestant by the fact my family were. I'm not religious, I hate it. Granted, it was a war of occupation.

I have family members that were involved in the forces, in various ways. I recently learnt for example, that one of my grandas was forced out of thier family home for being a policeman in the RUC. A protestant removed from a protestant estate. I had an uncle who's house was petrol bombed. My dad was almost murdered walking home from seeing my mum one night in the 70's. It's a very complex issue that I don't think I'll ever fully understand. Thankfully, I grew up without hatred. I even managed a 6 year relationship with a girl from West Belfast. Our families had no issues. I wonder sometimes if how I viewed it all has shaped me more than I think. I remember vividly thr Omagh Bombing, the Shankhill bombing. Gazelles constantly overhead, every day, every night. Sitting having your dinner watching a Army have a nosey down your alleyway, and the next day sitting in the back of a landrover looking through their rifle scope, as kids.


 
Posted : 11/10/2023 10:04 pm
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Some fascinating experiences shared here. Thank you.


 
Posted : 11/10/2023 10:20 pm
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a couple more vignettes...

All my uncles and aunts gained university educations thanks to the british taxpayer. Most stayed in England or went to America after uni. My uncle though, went back to NI and worked as a civil engineer for the government, one of very few Nationalists to do so. For some reason it took about 10 years longer than his peers for him to gain chartered status. Predjuice was suspected as the gov had to sign off on people getting chartered, and it was obvious by his name which community he was from. Ought to just be a rubber stamp job though, it was for all of his unionist colleages. A few years ago (well after he retired) he managed to get all the paperwork for the chartership process via a freedom on information request. All the denials were there - no reason give, just a signature...Arlene Foster.

One of my cousins fell in with the wrong crowd and became radicalised. He was 15 at the time, on his bedroom wall on day all the posters were rock bands, cars etc, the next they came down and up went bobby sands and tricolours and balaclavas and gunmen and the rest. He'd spend a lot of time ranting about the brits and the cause etc. He was managed to be talked down in the end, but quite a few favours were called in to get the right people to talk to him about why it was a terrible road to go down. Very frighting for his parents - this was about 10 years ago so they though they were done with the troubles.


 
Posted : 11/10/2023 10:59 pm
quirks reacted
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Yes thanks to those sharing your experiences.

OP, the David Olusoga, Union program gives a good context of the sectarian issues within Europe and the plantation. Once Upon a Time in Northern Ireland is also worth watching, as honest accounts of people's experiences and feelings and how they've changed, or not.


 
Posted : 11/10/2023 11:01 pm
 mrmo
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One interesting point, it was Presbyterian's that led the demand for self governance in the pre 1800 rebellion, but Westminster deployed the two time honoured strategies, soldiers and divide and conquer.


 
Posted : 11/10/2023 11:07 pm
gordimhor reacted
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The Rest is History did four podcasts that cover the background to Irish Independence and its legacy, which are worth a listen. Once upon a time in Northern Ireland is widely well reviewed but I haven't seen it. Haven't watched Olusoga either.


 
Posted : 11/10/2023 11:33 pm
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I feel they’d have done it to their own people just as readily though.

They did at Peterloo which was around the same period.


 
Posted : 11/10/2023 11:42 pm
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The Rest Is History podcasts are a good primer and fairly balanced, if you can stand a lot of plummy English chortling.

just before WW11, a time when guest houses etc still had signs saying ‘No Black’s or Irish’.

Someone always rolls this out - and there's no evidence for it whatsoever. Supposedly it was a very common sign and yet there are no photographs of it and no contemporary reports of it at all. It makes no sense whatsoever. There have beem black people in the UK for 400 years, and yet before Windrush they were statistically immaterial. Why would people put up signs to deter a community of black people who they had literally never seen? It would be a total anachronism.

https://historyreclaimed.co.uk/was-there-anti-irish-racism-in-britain-in-the-postwar-period/

That's not to say there wasn't bigotry against Irish people and racism against black people. Of course there was. But some things are folklore and some things are history.

PS most of my "heritage" is Irish.


 
Posted : 12/10/2023 12:05 am
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I believe the “shouty bloke” you refer to was the Rev Ian Paisley (who was a Protestant)

The self-ordained Reverend Ian Paisley I believe (I say that as a Catholic myself btw) was a rabble-rousing towering bigot and huge obstacle to peace in Northern Ireland.

Here are some of his choice quotes:

"They breed like rabbits and multiply like vermin"- talking about Catholics at a loyalist rally in 1969.

"Save Ulster from sodomy!"- his slogan in a 1970s and 80s campaign against legalising homosexuality.

He claimed that the Pope was the "Anti-Christ"

Loads more here:

https://www.irishtimes.com/news/the-sayings-of-ian-paisley-1.819530

Ian Paisley did however mellow considerably in his final years and to my total astonishment he stood on the floor of the House of Commons in 2001 and declared :

"There is no difference between the tears of a Roman Catholic mother and the tears of a Protestant mother. They are both mothers, and they both have the same feeling and the same love"

That ^^ has always stuck in my head and I in fact paraphrased him when I said on the currently closed Palestine/Israel thread yesterday that there is "no difference between Palestinian tears and Israeli tears".


 
Posted : 12/10/2023 12:10 am
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The self ordained Reverend Ian Paisley

A lightweight. Over here we had Pastor Jack Glass.

If ever there was a character synonymous to Glasgow, it was Pastor Jack. Rumour has it he went straight to heaven(1936-2004) as the devil was terrified of him.


 
Posted : 12/10/2023 12:39 am
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The Irish weren’t best pleased about that,

A masterpiece of understatement


 
Posted : 12/10/2023 12:48 am
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Further to my waffle above, a few random images from the album.

FB_IMG_1697064072528FB_IMG_1697064035823FB_IMG_1697064027279FB_IMG_1697064021795FB_IMG_1697064013132FB_IMG_1697064092994


 
Posted : 12/10/2023 12:49 am
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And a few more....
FB_IMG_1697064691773FB_IMG_1697064702644scan0031scan0005

Screenshot_20231011-235601Screenshot_20231011-235518


 
Posted : 12/10/2023 12:53 am
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May I just point out here that as a white male of Anglo Saxon protestant descent I am the baddie in everyones story.  I feel oppressed

I found it best in Ireland to when anything historical came up  "that would be my ancestors being beastly to yours again?


 
Posted : 12/10/2023 12:55 am
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Apologies blokeuptheroad - you are being serious I am being drunk and flippant.

I cannot imagine how it must have been to be a squaddie in amongst it all.


 
Posted : 12/10/2023 12:56 am
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It's a shame I don't have more pictures of hillwalking in the Mournes with my daughter, fishing in Lough Neagh, watching the road racing at Portrush, live music and beer festivals at the Ulster hall, getting pished at Daft Eddie's and a hundred and one more happy memories. Good and bad memories, thankfully more of the former.


 
Posted : 12/10/2023 1:03 am
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