Okay, well—the tour of the Troubles. It was the fastest 90 minutes
of my life. So much crammed into that short time.
And here’s the thing: despite the 6.5-mile, gazillion feet-high
wall separating the Protestant from the Catholic neighborhoods, with corrugated
metal gate openings that are closed essentially at dusk cutting off access, it’s
clear to me that life is vastly safer and more congenial since the Good Friday
Agreement of 21 years ago. Except for that wall, I almost could not believe they
were the same places I’d visited in 1994. And even though the day was crappy
weather-wise, the whole place looked vastly brighter and decidedly less grody
than the last time I was there.
For one thing, the murals have become much less incendiary—the in-your-face-surrender-or-die
stuff has been painted over with images that show community and heritage. Viz:
This portrait of a to-the-core leader of Ulster Defence Association
(UDA) paramilitaries (which is on the side of the house where he lived) who was
assassinated in October 1981 replaces one that was way more militant:
My guide, Stevie, did not mention that the UDA guy’s son, born in
July 1981, was also a Unionist fanatic. He was killed in 2003; two bullets to
the head.
These three pictures are of murals that were replaced:
The Maze prison, AKA H Blocks, where convicted paramilitaries from
both sides were sent to do their time. (Although they were kept in separate
cell blocks.)
The Belfast Mona Lisa, so named because the UDA paramilitary’s gun
barrel follows you around. (I don't know whether it's good or bad that this has been defaced.)
This one was a full-wall mural of a UDA leader. You can't really see them, but there are three crosses in the background of the Grim Reaper. The name of an IRA fighter is on each of the crosses. According to Stevie, this was a warning that the UDA was going to get those three guys. Pretty in-your-face to put that up permanently on a wall, letting your enemies know specifically that they're walking targets. (As it happens, the three IRA men survived.)
Most of the murals feature men and their view of the fighting. But
here’s a piece commissioned to commemorate the women caught up in the conflict:
Oh—so you know, not all murals are political. This was on a
building next to the UDA guy’s house:
On the Catholic side, you mostly see things like this mural of
Bobby Sands, who died while on a hunger strike in the Maze.
It’s painted on the side of the building that houses Sínn Fein,
the Republican political party.
Something that I found extraordinary was that Gerry Adams, the
Sínn Fein leader, was elected to (British) Parliament in 1983, from West
Belfast. West Belfast is the district that encompasses both the Shankill and Falls Road enclaves of Protestants and
Catholics.
The thing everyone remembers from Belfast (aside, these days, from
Titanic and Game of Thrones) is the Peace Wall, which runs between the
sectarian neighborhoods.
Belfast has commissioned local artists to create murals along it.
For perspective, those are two-story houses, on the Catholic side,
behind the wall.
One section also has ribbons of quotations:
From Khahil Gibran
From a Belfast children’s song.
And a quote from Bill Clinton, who visited the wall while in
office. (I didn’t shoot it.)
There are some segments that are also open to the public for
comment:
Stevie offered me a marking pen, so my contribution was from
Robert Frost: “Something there is that doesn’t love a wall.”
What’s interesting is that in front of the wall on the Protestant
side, there’s a street and space. From the Catholic side, however, the wall
cuts right through people’s back yards. And some of them have had to build
small-mesh fencing (similar to the fortified police stations) around their
entire gardens to defend against Molotov cocktails and the like being launched
over that wall.
Imagine growing up with that. It's really very similar to the Berlin Wall.
At the end of a street bisected by the wall,
local (Catholic) residents planted trees to hide it:
They must have been fast-growing trees.
And here’s a set of gates next two another installation
of murals in the Catholic neighborhood. Notice both vehicular and pedestrian
gates, with a kind of no-man’s-land between them:
These murals are more about hope:
Much of the Republican strategy was modeled on
the African American civil rights struggle, and this one pays tribute to the
likes of Mandela, Ali, King and Douglass.
This one may not be entirely hopeful, but it
does depict the blindingly obvious.
And this one—well, I just dunno.
But, see what I mean about a lot to process?
One of the hopeful things about this all is
that taxi tours of the sectarian areas are a booming business. I mean—fleets of
them beetling about with tourists and passing on the history. I’m pretty sure
Stevie comes from the Catholic area; he didn’t exactly call the UDA crowd rat
bastards, but his choice of verbs and modifiers leaned against the Loyalists.
However, I imagine there are Protestant drivers
who give the same tour with different applications of verbs and modifiers.
Also, while we were at the wall, Stevie said
that there are walking tours of both areas, led by former fighters in the neighborhoods
they know best. If you started on the Falls side, your guide hands you off to an
ex-UDF guy at the wall; if vice versa, your guide hands you off to an ex-IRA
guy. They all form a confraternity of oral history—Stevie recognized one of the
guides coming in from Shankill—and they all work together.
I am not a little concerned, however, that the idiocy that is Brexit, in which Britain is happy to violate the Good Friday Agreement WRT the border between the Republic and Ulster if that's what gets May her "deal", may deal a major blow to this hard-won progress. But for the time being, things are pretty good here.
Peace out from Belfast, then.