On the far side of revenge
I
used to sit beside a quiet spoken man from Belfast in the Jock Stein Stand at
Celtic Park. At half time or during lulls in games he’d tell tales of his youth
growing in that proud old city. I got a sense of the community and pride people
there had; they cared about each other and suffered a lot together during the
dark days of the conflict which engulfed the six counties from the late 1960s
onwards. He told me he worked in a bakery and set of for work at the crack of
dawn when the streets were eerily quiet. He’d occasionally see the
smouldering cars and debris of the previous night’s violence and try somehow to
keep his life as normal as possible. His great release from the tension of
living in what was, in those times, a war zone was to cross the Irish sea and
watch Jock Stein’s Celtic play. ‘It
transported me out of my life for a while,’ he told me, ‘reminded me that there were people not so
far away living normal lives.’ Those trips kept him going through some of
the darker days of Belfast’s chequered history.
Celtic
supporters from the north of Ireland are many and they make regular trips to
watch Celtic play. The tales we’d hear in the old Jungle or in the pubs around
the stadium were often at odds with the one dimensional version of events we
got on the news. The idea that there were two warring tribes at each other’s
throats while the British army was an impartial referee trying to keep them
apart was difficult to sustain as their actions showed them to be adopting the
same counter insurgency tactics they had used in Malaya, Kenya, Aden and a host
of other colonial conflicts. Propaganda was a huge part of this strategy and a
compliant media generally accepted the army’s version of events and printed it
as truth. Thus the great injustices of Ballymurphy, Bloody Sunday and scores of
other incidents were perpetuated for decades. Innocent people were not only
killed but they were smeared as terrorists after their deaths in order to
excuse the brutality of the army. Soldiers acted with impunity and the very few
who were brought to book for crimes including murder did little jail time and
were welcomed back into their regiments when released.
Films
such as the Ballymurphy Precedent which told the personal stories of the
families and victims of the 1971 massacre are at long last beginning to bring
some truth to the historical record of what actually happened back in those
dark days. The word ‘Precedent’ was used in the title as it suggests that the
incident led to the culture of impunity among soldiers which led to the
massacre in Derry a few months later. Callum Macrea’s film demonstrates that
the grief of families and burning sense of injustice has never dissipated.
Another
aspect of the conflict which is also coming under scrutiny was the collusion of
the so called forces of law and order with loyalist paramilitaries. Sean Murray’s
powerful and troubling documentary ‘Unquiet Graves’ was given an airing at the
Glasgow Film Theatre this week and laid out a damning indictment against
elements within the RUC and UDR that some not only colluded with loyalist
groups but were active members of them. The so called Glenanne gang were responsible
for over 120 murders in the ‘murder triangle’ straddling the counties Armagh and
Fermanagh at the height of the conflict. The documentary uses powerful survivor
testimony to bring those dreadful events to life and in one section Margaret
Campbell, who watched her Trade Unionist husband Pat, killed in front of her
spoke movingly of the callous nature of the treatment she received from the
Police. This already traumatised woman was taken to a Police station to view a
line-up of potential suspects. She told the Policeman who waited by the door
that she recognised one of the men but he told her she had to go up the line on
her own and place her hand on the man’s shoulder. She fainted and no one was
ever convicted of her husband’s killing. Indeed the documentary points out the
RUC had a 100% failure rate in tracing who committed these murders,
One
chilling point of the documentary was the interview conducted in South Africa
with former RUC man John Weir who spoke in a remorseless monotone about why
they had killed so many innocents. In the end the IRA’s reaction to the
activities of the gang demonstrated how close the north came to open civil war.
The Kingsmill atrocity, when they killed 10 Protestant workmen on their way
home from work, was meant to warn the loyalist death squads that they’d best end
their activities. John Weir spoke
chillingly of how in the aftermath of Kingsmill it was suggested they attack a
Catholic Primary School and kill the children and teachers. He stated that even
the hardened killers of the Glenanne gang thought this was going too far. Weir
stated that he joined the group to ‘take
the war to the IRA’ but with depressing predictability the group killed
mostly innocent people with no connection to any paramilitary group.
Sean
Murray’s documentary is not an easy watch but it is necessary that the truth
comes out. The people directly affected by the violence of that era on both
sides deserve that much. Of course it’s highly embarrassing for the British
state to admit even after all these years that some of their employees were
acting like banana republic death squad but the truth can be healing as well as
painful. That being said, there is unlikely to be a ‘Truth and Reconciliation’
commission of the kind which helped heal South Africa in the post-Apartheid era.
Looking honestly into those sad times would no doubt horrify the average UK
citizen to learn the truth of Britain’s dirty little war in Ireland.
I
write these words not to point score or support one side of that conflict over
another but to remember all the innocent victims alive and dead who suffered
grievously in those times. Pain knows no boundaries of nationality, faith or
political leanings. The families of those killed in Ballymurphy, Derry, Dublin,
Monaghan, Kingsmill and a hundred other places in those sad years deserve the
truth. Justice remains elusive and far away but it is beholden on all sides to
stop hiding behind mealy mouthed words, stop the eternal delays and obfuscation
and simply tell the truth.
Seamus
Heaney, Ireland’s Nobel Prize winning poet wrote an elegy about his relative
Collum McCartney, an innocent victim of the Glenanne gang. Part of it reads….
‘Across that strand of ours the cattle graze
Up to their bellies in
an early mist
And now they turn
their unbewildered gaze
To where we work our
way through squeaking sedge
Drowning in dew. Like
a dull blade with its edge
Honed bright, Lough
Beg half shines under the haze.
I turn because the
sweeping of your feet
Has stopped behind me,
to find you on your knees
With blood and
roadside muck in your hair and eyes,
Then kneel in front of
you in brimming grass
And gather up cold
handfuls of the dew
To wash you, cousin. I
dab you clean with moss
Fine as the drizzle
out of a low cloud.
I lift you under the
arms and lay you flat.
With rushes that shoot
green again, I plait
Green scapulars to
wear over your shroud. ‘
(From The Strand at Lough Begg)
Ireland
is changing fast and there can be no return to the dark days gone past. The
Republic is now a liberal and progressive place and Northern Ireland is awaking
to the reality that the Catholic minority will soon be a majority. Old hatreds
still fester in some quarters of course, so much blood and pain takes time to
heal but few want a return to the chaos of the past. Unity is more than the
colour of the flag which flutters on the flag pole; it is the ability of two
cultures being able to live together in peace; two traditions recognising the
common bonds of humanity which bind them more closely than the divisions caused
by ancient quarrels. Bobby Sands once said that, ‘Our revenge will be the laughter of our children.’ I hope all the
children of Ireland are able live and grow up in a peaceful more tolerant
society. Seamus Heaney also wrote…
‘The innocent in gaols
Beat on their bars together.
A hunger-striker's father
Stands in the graveyard dumb.
The police widow in veils
Faints at the funeral home.
History says, don't hope
On this side of the grave.
But then, once in a lifetime
The longed-for tidal wave
Of justice can rise up,
And hope and history rhyme.
So hope for a great sea-change
On the far side of revenge.
Believe that further shore
Is reachable from here.
Believe in miracles
And cures and healing wells.’
On the far side of revenge there can be a better
future for everyone. Truth can lead to forgiveness and people can change. Sean
Murray’s excellent and beautifully crafted documentary tells the story of a
great wrong and the dreadful effects it had on so many innocent people. I hope
they find truth and I hope they find peace; these ordinary, decent people are
the real victims when folk try to solve their disputes with violence. Let them
be the last generation to suffer like this. Perhaps then all that pain and loss
will have been worth something.
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