Impartial Reporter

When will we learn our lesson about trusting promised funds?

This week: On Brookeboro­ugh Campus’ fund being removed

-

THE wheels of power sharing have only started rolling in recent weeks. However, already it seems that promises are not being kept. That, of course, should come as no surprise after events of these past few years. “Never trust a Tory” should be the mantra when it comes to Irish affairs.

I say ‘Irish’ here because they’ve been using this island as a career plaything long before the Border was created.

Throughout history, they’ve said one thing, and done another.

Maybe that’s because it works well in their own constituen­cies, as proven in every election cycle, where English voters turn into goldfish.

Tories have become masters at bluffing the electorate with promises they don’t keep.

They do this on rinse and repeat. They keep people poor and hungry. Then rally them around the flag. And it seems to work.

People forget that flags don’t put food on the table, to paraphrase John Hume.

On this side of the water, people have longer memories and are more politicall­y astute. That’s why it’s unforgivab­le to see games already being played with government funding.

£150million of a promised educationa­l budget has already been ‘repurposed’ within the Treasury’s £3.3billion financial package for the restoratio­n of the powershari­ng Executive.

That money was intended as support for the so-called Fresh Start Agreement, partly designed to boost integrated education projects. Now, ten such projects are going to have their funding withdrawn.

Amongst these, Brookeboro­ugh Shared Education Campus is Fermanagh’s sole victim of the cuts. Once again, what the Tories say they want, and what they actually do, are very different things.

Just a few weeks ago, there was a lot of talk about a shared society – normality, prosperity, integratio­n, and all the rest. And the vision of a Brookeboro­ugh Campus represents those very same values.

But deep down, such values are of secondary importance in the game of politics played by a pack of careerists.

Brookeboro­ugh – and everywhere east of it, out to the Irish Sea – doesn’t really matter in Westminste­r.

Then again, maybe nor does Bradford or Blackburn – but such places haven’t come through the same legacy of conflict.

Yet, if such places don’t get a second glance until somebody like George Galloway comes along, then they’re not losing sleep over

Brookeboro­ugh’s campus.

But that integrated campus could and should be integral to their policies. A few months back, the village of Brookeboro­ugh featured in this paper, with locals talking about its loss of shops, services and so on.

For decades now, Brookeboro­ugh has been bypassed on the road between

Belfast and Enniskille­n. As villages in Fermanagh have grown, from one end to the other, this one has largely stayed the same.

Possibly that’s to do with a lack of available land to build houses. Sometimes it’s said that farmers just won’t sell suitable sites for developmen­t, for various reasons.

Maybe partly it’s to do with history and legacy – a bit like Bull Mccabe in John B. Keane’s play.

Whether in 1960s Kerry or 21st Century Fermanagh, people just want to hold on to ‘The Field’ and not let go.

So there are lots of background reasons as to why villages like Brookeboro­ugh haven’t had the space or chance to grow, over time. But that’s all the more reason for the government supporting developmen­t.

One of the great things about the notion of a Shared Education Campus is that the place is perfectly suited to it. Over these past few decades, Brookeboro­ugh has become a champion of crosscommu­nity relations.

There have been all sorts of commendabl­e activities down through the years. These include cross-border partnershi­ps and community festivals.

Often, these were instigated by the local primary schools and the teachers in their spare time.

Of course, like everywhere else, Brookeboro­ugh’s schools are separated on the basis of denominati­ons (not religions, because – as far as I know – there are possibly no Sikhs, Hindus or Muslims, etc., in town).

But unlike a great many communitie­s in Northern Ireland, the area is ‘mixed’.

It’s probably a quite different experience growing up in Brookeboro­ugh to places that are exclusivel­y one or the other.

Therefore, Brookeboro­ugh’s a perfect location for such a campus. If British politician­s are serious about integratin­g this society, they should be showcasing that integratio­n and not stifling it.

Deep down, would they prefer a situation like that at the other end of the road from Belfast to Enniskille­n?

There, on the bus journey out of Belfast, you can see two City Farms. One’s in the ‘Protestant’ Village area, and the other’s across the carriagewa­y, in ‘Catholic’ West Belfast.

As many city farms as possible for kids is a great idea. but I doubt that those on either side would ever cross over to the other. That’s very sad. If you talk to people who grew up on the Shankill Road, for example, they’ll admit to never knowing Catholics in their whole childhoods.

I’m very glad not to have lived in such a place. Mind you, spending a lot of time with grandparen­ts as a child, most of the Protestant neighbours that I knew were much older than me, in my early years.

So I’ve an odd memory of my first encounters with those of the same age. They took place on the borders of the Lakeland Forum swimming pool, as they were getting out. and we were getting in.

We used to go into Enniskille­n on different buses at the same time. Then one school would go to gymnastics, and the other would go to the swimming pool, before we’d swap around at half time.

That was as close as we got but it was probably still closer than 90 per cent of those in the towns and the counties that surrounded us.

And out of those seeds planted by headmaster­s such as Phil Mccrystal, and the recently deceased Sam Blair, a stronger oak of partnershi­p has grown.

That tree was nourished too by so many influentia­l female teachers who were instrument­al in the formative years of partnershi­p, including Sheila Carson, Christine Taylor and Bridget Maguire.

It’s a pity then that the government has taken an axe to funding for visions such as Brookeboro­ugh’s Shared Education campus.

It’s yet another shallow decision by the Tories, relating to a place they don’t care about. Maybe they’re just addicted to political gymnastics.

Hopefully though, one day, such a vision of partnershi­p will become a reality – revitalisi­ng Brookeboro­ugh and its greenbelt surrounds.

We can all work together without losing our own identities. We can even share the same swimming pools, political forums, sites, and Saint Patrick’s Day.

Paul Breen is @Charltonme­n on Twitter/x.

 ?? ?? File photo from 2016 of Hazel Gardiner, Principal of Brookeboro­ugh Controlled Primary School, and Dermot Finlay, Principal of St. Mary’s Primary School, upon the then green light being given to the Brookeboro­ugh Shared Education Campus.
File photo from 2016 of Hazel Gardiner, Principal of Brookeboro­ugh Controlled Primary School, and Dermot Finlay, Principal of St. Mary’s Primary School, upon the then green light being given to the Brookeboro­ugh Shared Education Campus.
 ?? ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom