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No Peace for Northern Ireland


Article # : 14231 

Section : CURRENT ISSUES
Issue Date : 7 / 1988  2,240 Words
Author : Paul Badham
Paul Badham is chairman of the Religion and Ethics Department at St David's University College, Lampeter, at the University of Wales. He is the editor of Religion, State, and Society in Modern Britain (in press).

       Ever since the only English pope, Hadrian IV, encouraged King Henry II to conquer Ireland in the twelfth century, there has been a legacy of suffering in Ireland and of political stress in Britain. The "Irish Problem" has taken different forms in different centuries, but has always entailed bitterness and bloodshed. For twenty-six of the thirty-two counties of Ireland, the issue was largely resolved by winning independence in 1921, and this has ushered in fifty years of peace and communal harmony in the South. Only in the North--where the majority rejected the prospect of joining a united Ireland--has a stable peace proved elusive. Since 1968, terrorist activities have been a constant feature of Northern Ireland's life.
       
        To understand the problems of Northern Ireland, it is necessary to go back almost four centuries to the aftermath of the Reformation, when the rest of Britain went Protestant but Ireland did not. The consequence of this was that at a time when religious commitment was central to political loyalty, the British crown settled the north of Ireland with Scottish and English Protestants, who formed a loyal nucleus in a hostile land. For four hundred years, the descendants of these settlers enjoyed a privileged position in Irish life, and staunchly supported the unity of the United Kingdom against the increasing demands for Irish home rule. From the time of Gladstone, the Protestants of Ulster have refused to consider any suggestion that they should become part of a united Ireland, and they have asserted the importance of their Britishness with a zeal unparalleled in any other part of the United Kingdom. Conversely, the Catholic minority has equally strongly identified itself as Irish and has longed to be reunited with the rest of the Irish people in a free and independent ... (1963 of 13494 Characters)
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