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The Troubles

Not my cruise troubles. 🙂 Troubles much bigger than mine.

The Troubles is the name given to an era in Northern Ireland’s history marked by violent conflict between two groups: British Protestant vs Irish Catholic. Both sides had enormous losses, with some 3,500 people killed and 50,000 wounded, the majority of them civilians.

I vaguely remember in the 1970s and 1980s seeing headlines that made it seem like Belfast was the most dangerous place on earth. I’m embarrassed to admit how lacking my knowledge of Ireland was before I came here. I always thought Northern Ireland was just the northern part of Ireland. I never clearly understood that there were two separate entities: The Republic of Ireland, and Northern Ireland. Northern Ireland is part of The United Kingdom, uses British pounds for their currency and is not part of the European Union. Ireland is an independent country with euros as its currency and is part of the European Union. The strife goes back over a century, all the way to the Irish partition in 1921.

Hundreds of memorials scattered around Belfast bear witness to the war. The topic is still contentious and sensitive, and the version you hear depends on who you ask. The Conflicting Stories tour in Belfast addresses the history in a novel way. A taxi takes you to the memorials and historical sites of one group, with a guide who was personally involved with that group. Halfway through the tour, you switch taxis and a guide involved in the opposite side takes over. My niece Chrissy and I took the sobering tour. We started out with Frank, who was on the Protestant side, and then swapped out with Mickey for the Catholic side.

I loved this approach and found their personal stories compelling. Both men had lost friends and family during The Troubles. I walked away with an appreciation for the complexity of the conflict, but also an acknowledgement that for a casual observer like me, it’s virtually impossible to unravel who did what to whom, and why. What was clear to me was how one group’s martyrs can be another group’s terrorists.

Chrissy listening to Frank”s British Protestant version
Mickey, presenting the Irish Catholic side

Both men had witnessed friends and family murdered by the opposing side. The most astonishing thing about all this is that the two men are now friends and bear no animosity toward each other. And Belfast is a beautiful, vibrant city, instead of the most dangerous place on earth. Somehow, that alone gives hope.

Frank turning us over to Mickey, at the halfway point
Clonard Church & Monastery, on the frontline between Catholic & Protestant areas
7 responses to “The Troubles”
  1. Tina BOULTON Avatar
    Tina BOULTON

    Thanks Basia. Beautifully written and enlightening.

  2. With my Jersey City friend, Tim Curtin, and Congressman Frank Guarini, I was on the committee for peace in Northern Ireland, decades ago. May the world follow their example.

    1. Oh that’s cool Andrea. Yeah the tour guide repeatedly mentioned U.S. involvement in the peace keeping process.

  3. Margret Avatar
    Margret

    Basia, after your travels, you may want to watch the movie “Belfast”. I cried a lot….

    1. I will put it on my list for watching on a sea day!

  4. chris barry Avatar
    chris barry

    Basia – what an insightful history lesson. So much tragedy in those countries. I was in Berlin 1989 at the very time in history that the wall was being taken down, and we heard so many terrible stories of those murdered trying to cross over the wall. When will man’s inhumanity to man end? (Maybe when we start having more women leaders who care about people’s lives!) Thanks!

    1. Oh wow, yeah that would have been an interesting time in their history to be there.

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