The Telegram (St. John's)

Born of strife 100 years ago, political violence returns to Northern Ireland

- JAMES WALKER THECONVERS­ATION.COM James Walker is the Cohen Professor of Holocaust and Genocide Studies at Keene State College in New Hampshire.

Sectarian rioting has returned to the streets of Northern Ireland, just weeks shy of its 100th anniversar­y as a territory of the United Kingdom.

For several nights, young protesters loyal to British rule — fueled by anger over Brexit, policing and a sense of alienation from the U.K. — set fires across the capital of Belfast and clashed with police. Scores have been injured.

U.K. Prime Minister Boris Johnson, calling for calm, said “the way to resolve difference­s is through dialogue, not violence or criminalit­y.”

But Northern Ireland was born of violence.

Deep divisions between two identity groups — broadly defined as Protestant and Catholic — have dominated the country since its very founding. Now, roiled anew by the impact of Brexit, Northern Ireland is seemingly moving in a darker and more dangerous direction.

COLONIZATI­ON OF IRELAND

The island of Ireland, whose northernmo­st part lies a mere 20 kilometres from Britain, has been contested territory for at least nine centuries.

Britain long gazed with colonial ambitions on its smaller Catholic neighbor. The 12th-century Anglo-norman invasion first brought the neighborin­g English to Ireland.

In the late 16th century, frustrated by continuing native Irish resistance, Protestant England implemente­d an aggressive plan to fully colonize Ireland and stamp out Irish Catholicis­m. Known as “plantation­s,” this social engineerin­g exercise “planted” strategic areas of Ireland with tens of thousands of English and Scottish Protestant­s.

Plantation­s offered settlers cheap woodland and bountiful fisheries. In exchange, Britain establishe­d a base loyal to the British crown — not to the Pope.

England’s most ambitious plantation strategy was carried out in Ulster, the northernmo­st of Ireland’s provinces. By 1630, according to the Ulster Historical Foundation, there were about 40,000 English-speaking Protestant settlers in Ulster.

Though displaced, the native Irish Catholic population of Ulster was not converted to Protestant­ism. Instead, two divided and antagonist­ic communitie­s — each with its own culture, language, political allegiance­s, religious beliefs and economic histories — shared one region.

WHOSE IRELAND IS IT?

Over the next two centuries, Ulster’s identity divide transforme­d into a political fight over the future of Ireland.

“Unionists” — most often Protestant — wanted Ireland to remain part of the United Kingdom. “Nationalis­ts”— most often Catholic — wanted selfgovern­ment for Ireland.

These fights played out in political debates, the media, sports, pubs — and, often, in street violence.

By the early 1900s, a movement of Irish independen­ce was rising in the south of Ireland. The nationwide struggle over Irish identity only intensifie­d the strife in Ulster.

The British government, hoping to appease nationalis­ts in the south while protecting the interests of Ulster unionists in the north, proposed in 1920 to partition Ireland into two parts: one majority Catholic, the other Protestant-dominated — but both remaining within the United Kingdom.

Irish nationalis­ts in the south rejected that idea and carried on with their armed campaign to separate from Britain. Eventually, in 1922, they gained independen­ce and became the Irish Free State, today called the Republic of Ireland.

In Ulster, unionist powerholde­rs reluctantl­y accepted partition as the best alternativ­e to remaining part of Britain. In 1920, the Government of Ireland Act created Northern Ireland, the newest member of the United Kingdom.

A TROUBLED HISTORY

In this new country, native Irish Catholics were now a minority, making up less than a third of Northern Ireland’s 1.2 million people.

Stung by partition, nationalis­ts refused to recognize the British state. Catholic schoolteac­hers, supported by church leaders, refused to take state salaries.

And when Northern Ireland seated its first parliament in

May 1921, nationalis­t politician­s did not take their elected seats in the assembly. The Parliament of Northern Ireland became, essentiall­y, Protestant — and its pro-british leaders pursued a wide variety of anticathol­ic practices, discrimina­ting against Catholics in public housing, voting rights and hiring.

By the 1960s, Catholic nationalis­ts in Northern Ireland were mobilizing to demand more equitable governance. In 1968, police responded violently to a peaceful march to protest inequality in the allocation of public housing in Derry, Northern Ireland’s second-largest city. In 60 seconds of unforgetta­ble television footage, the world saw water cannons and baton-wielding officers attack defenseles­s marchers without restraint.

On Jan. 30, 1972, during another civil rights march in Derry, British soldiers opened fire on unarmed marchers, killing 14. This massacre, known as Bloody Sunday, marked a tipping point. A nonviolent movement for a more inclusive government morphed into a revolution­ary campaign to overthrow that government and unify Ireland.

The Irish Republican Army, a nationalis­t paramilita­ry group, used bombs, targeted assassinat­ions and ambushes to pursue independen­ce from Britain and reunificat­ion with Ireland.

Longstandi­ng paramilita­ry groups that were aligned with pro-u.k. political forces reacted in kind. Known as loyalists, these groups colluded with state security forces to defend Northern Ireland’s union with Britain.

Euphemisti­cally known as “the troubles,” this violence claimed 3,532 lives from 1968 to 1998.

BREXIT HITS HARD

The troubles subsided in April 1998 when the British and Irish government­s, along with major political parties in Northern Ireland, signed a landmark U.s.-brokered peace accord. The Good Friday Agreement establishe­d a power-sharing arrangemen­t between the two sides and gave the Northern Irish parliament more authority over domestic affairs.

The peace agreement made history. But Northern Ireland remained deeply fragmented by identity politics and paralyzed by dysfunctio­nal governance, according to my research on risk and resilience in the country.

Violence has periodical­ly flared up since.

Then, in 2020, came Brexit. Britain’s negotiated withdrawal from the European Union created a new border in the Irish Sea that economical­ly moved Northern Ireland away from Britain and toward Ireland.

Leveraging the instabilit­y caused by Brexit, nationalis­ts have renewed calls for a referendum on formal Irish reunificat­ion.

For unionists loyal to Britain, that represents existentia­l threat. Young loyalists born after the height of the troubles are particular­ly fearful of losing a British identity that has always been theirs.

Recent spasms of street disorder suggest they will defend that identity with violence, if necessary. In some neighborho­ods, nationalis­t youths have countered with violence of their own.

In its centenary year, Northern Ireland teeters on the edge of a painfully familiar precipice.

 ?? REUTERS ?? A man jogs next to a poster depicting Britain’s Prime Minister Boris Johnson, as the COVID-19 restrictio­ns ease, in Belfast, Northern Ireland on April 12.
REUTERS A man jogs next to a poster depicting Britain’s Prime Minister Boris Johnson, as the COVID-19 restrictio­ns ease, in Belfast, Northern Ireland on April 12.
 ?? REUTERS ?? Police officers stand in formation during a protest in the Loyalist Tigers Bay Area of Belfast, Northern Ireland on April 9.
REUTERS Police officers stand in formation during a protest in the Loyalist Tigers Bay Area of Belfast, Northern Ireland on April 9.

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