Professor Peter Shirlow FAcSS, Irish Studies, University of Liverpool: Speech at Sinn Fein Ard Fheis 2017.

Similar documents
Ensuring equality of religion and belief in Northern Ireland: new challenges

Actor 1 I vow to thee my country, all earthly things above, Entire and whole and perfect, the service of my love;

SECTARIANISM Newsstand

June 2018 History, people and hope in the Middle East. Philip Woods, Area Coordinator, Middle East and Europe Presbyterian World Mission

Anti-Zionism is not anti-semitism

The West and the Muslim World: A Conflict in Search of a Peace Process

Week 1. Number of candles lit prior to service: 6. Introduction: Scripture reading: Matthew Reflection: Prayer:

Revision Notes: Unit Is it fair?

I never said anything against gay people.

Student B klet. Name: Venue:

Paris should make us reflect on our violent past

The work of Christian Peacemaking Lesson 1: A Christian response to conflict. Turn the other cheek

SICRIE Project Presentation by the group from Belfast

Deputy Chancellor, Mr Peter Hayes, members of the University. Council, Emeritus Professor Ross Chambers, fellow members of

Why I Love and Hate My Religion. Religion has always been a normal part of my life, and thus something I took for

SUGGESTED STRUCTURED ACTIVITIES TO REINFORCE LEARNING OUTCOMES: Debate Workshops Role play Pupil journal Collages

Geography 7th grade 1

Value: Peace Lesson 3.12

Human Rights Knowledge Organiser

Statement on Inter-Religious Relations in Britain

Atheism Is No Longer A Political Taboo

The place of British Values in Church of England schools

GOD S VALENTINE by Sharon Montsion

A RECEPTION WILL FOLLOW IN THE LARGE MEETING ROOM IN THE BASEMENT

Who Was Saint Patrick?

Life Together Romans 13:8-14 Crossroads Christian Church Matthew 18:15-20 Sep. 7, 2014 Pentecost13A

3. Why is the RE Core syllabus Christian in content?

SERMON. Who Do You Say That I Am. August 27, Rev. Dr. Eric C. Smith

In Joy and in Sorrow Luke 19: A Sermon Preached by Ernest Thompson. First Presbyterian Church Wilmington, NC. March 29, 2015

THE PSYCHOPATHIC SOCIETY: part 5: "the massacre of the innocents" alexis dolgorukii 1997

Motion from the Right Relationship Monitoring Committee for the UUA Board of Trustees meeting January 2012

Mercy is not a word we use a lot today. But it is a very Biblical concept, and one we could use some more of today.

The Things That Make for Peace

Marriage. Embryonic Stem-Cell Research

Part II Sociological Features of Contemporary Anti -Catholicism

I ll be frank and honest. My heart is heavy and my spirit aches deeply.

Why does the Bible care about what consenting adults do in private?

How persuasive is this argument? 1 (not at all). 7 (very)

Hang-Ups: 1.) a source of mental or emotional difficulty, a preoccupation, fixation, or psychological block; a complex. 2.) something that causes you

Hed: The Sacredness of Language. Homily: Red Mass, Diocese of Harrisburg. September 18, By Bishop David A. Zubik

The Churches & Reconciliation in Northern Ireland Dr Gladys Ganiel

Sheep in Wolves Clothing

CHRISTIAN IDENTITY AND REL I G I o US PLURALITY

Resolution adopted by the General Assembly. [on the report of the Third Committee (A/65/456/Add.2 (Part II))]

THERESA MAY ANDREW MARR SHOW 6 TH JANUARY 2019 THERESA MAY

THE JAILOR SET FREE! (Acts 16:16-34)

CHURCH OF IRELAND GENERAL SYNOD

Something to consider before we begin... Should education be culturally appropriate to all?

The Old Hickory Bulletin. Go Tell A Story

HUMILITY AND THE KINGDOM A SERMON DELIVERED AT PATRICK HENRY COLLEGE ON REFORMATION DAY 2008 PHILIPPIANS 2:1-11 REV. CHARLES R.

But better than both is the one who has never been born, who has not seen the evil that is done under the sun. 4 And I saw that all toil and all

Spiritual Practices for Black Lives Matter: Discomfort, Humility, Imagination Discomfort Rev. Nathan Detering October 16, 2016

Local People Global Faiths

God is Love Pastor Joe Oakley GFC 1/15/17

Thy Kingdom Come. Genesis 18:20-32; Psalm 138; Colossians 2:6-15, (16-19); Luke 11:1-13

The Twenty-fifth Sunday of Ordinary Time (Year B)

I. Christ was in complete control. A. Though he was betrayed (47-50)

August 19/20, 2017 St. Ann Parish, Augusta 5:00 p.m. (Vigil) What a pleasure to be with you here at St. Ann Parish on this beautiful Saturday evening,

Towards a New Approach to Religion & Identity

Jiddu Krishnamurti. Action And Relationship

Ecumenism & Interfaith Dialogue. Section A: Part 4

World-Wide Ethics. Chapter Two. Cultural Relativism

King s College, Pentecost 2018

SHAME, GUILT AND REGRET AND RE-FRAMING THEM

1 Chapter 6 (Part 2): Assessing Truth Claims

Sermon MLK,Jr.: Break down the Walls January 18, 2009 Scripture: I Samuel 3: 1-20, John 1: 43-51

John 1:19-34 Jesus the Messiah 10 th May Jesus the Messiah

Dr. Who Did What? Text: Amos 5:24 Luke 4: A sermon preached by James F. McIntire. January 17, 2016 Martin Luther King, Jr.

BIG IDEAS OVERVIEW FOR AGE GROUPS

1 ANDREW MARR SHOW, JEREMY HUNT MP, FOREIGN SECRETARY

ANDREW MARR SHOW 30 TH SEPTEMBER 2018 TOM WATSON

HE MADE THEM MALE. Defining manliness in today s culture. He is Humble! 1 Peter 5:5-7. Men s Breakfast. Sermon given on March 17, 2018

Saul - The Story of a Conversion

Is Pluralism the Way Forward for the Church?

In-Dependent. a sermon. Trinity Reformed Church July 2, 2017

In the Name of Allah Most Gracious Most Merciful The Islamic Resistance Movement Hamas

Intelligence Squared U.S. Special Release: How to Debate Yourself

Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde by Robert Louis Stevenson

GALATIANS Lesson 3. The Divine Origin of the Gospel Galatians 1:11-24

If you remove from your midst oppression, false accusation, and malicious speech; If you bestow your bread on the hungry and satisfy the afflicted;

Fifty Years on: Learning from the Hidden Histories of. Community Activism.

Prisoners Legal Service 20 th Anniversary What is Possible?

THE DIALOGUE DECALOGUE: GROUND RULES FOR INTER-RELIGIOUS, INTER-IDEOLOGICAL DIALOGUE

Maundy Thursday. 24 March 2016

Peace and Harmonious Coexistence: An Islamic-Buddhist Dialogue

Carnegie Shul Chatter

RULE OF LIFE Version approved July 2016

grassroots, and the letters are still coming forward, and if anyone s going listen, I do hold out hope that it s these commissioners.

Chueh Fan Guang Ming Temple. 100 Tasks of Life English

Give Others Time To Study

... it is important to understand, not intellectually but

Revelation Chapter 11:14-19 The Third Woe *All scripture references are from the NASU unless otherwise noted*

PEACE & RECONCILIATION

Trinity City 5pm & 7pm Church Sunday 24 th April 2016 Talk Acts 9:1-31 The Persecutor: Saul

I Have A Dream. New Far East Book Six Lesson Four 黃昭瑞. Judy Huang 台南女中

Institute on Religion and Public Policy. Report on Religious Freedom in Egypt

This document consists of 10 printed pages.

Go and Do Likewise based on Luke 10:25-37 A sermon preached by the Rev. Elizabeth Smith-Bartlett at the Larchmont Avenue Church July 10, 2016

Leaving Certificate Applied

As we begin today, I am going to review what Marc and Aaron covered, because the ideas that they covered give us a good overview of the book.

Transcription:

Professor Peter Shirlow FAcSS, Irish Studies, University of Liverpool: Speech at Sinn Fein Ard Fheis 2017. Although I am from a unionist background but I do not feel out place. That is due to the fact that I have been welcomed. An example of when I did feel out of place was when a friend and I were walking to Parkhead and as we were checking our tickets we realised we were to be seated in the Celtic end. This was problematic as my friend was wearing a Rangers top. Fortunately, I had brought my coat which I gave it to him. He very hurriedly put it on! Unfortunately, he was at least 4 stone lighter and as we entered the ground he looked like a man who had turned up wearing a one man tent. We sat down as a public announcement declared that the club would take racism and sectarianism seriously and would eject offenders. They, the offenders, obviously knew they would not. The announcement ended to a chorus from SOME, and I purposefully use the word SOME, Celtic fans proclaiming that they would rather be a Pakistani (not the word they used) than a Prod. Some Rangers fan replied with the Billy Boy song and the line concerning being up to their knees in Catholic (not the word they used) blood. The Celtic fan beside me turned to me and said those Rangers fans will never change. I replied those Celtic fans who sang that racist song won t either. They are only having a laugh he proclaimed. I never went back! On the first day that my son started playing rugby at Malone, in East Belfast, the new parents were summoned to a meeting. A small, tough looking man entered the room and introduced himself as the person in charge. There is only one rule in this club, he declared, if you are a sectarian bigot, racist or homophobe get out! There s the door. I decided to stay! The person in charge was an ex-ruc man. Around the same time Paul McAreavey, from Ballymurphy, signed for Linfield. As he was sitting drinking a pint in his local a man threw a bag in front of him. He

opened it to find thirty 10 pence pieces. Thirty pieces of silver was the price for which Judas betrayed Jesus. How could crossing the sectarian divide be Judas-like?. Paul McAreavey, as far as I know, is still a republican and a Celtic fan. That was not a problem for Linfield but it was a problem for the person who labelled him as Judas, who was also a republican and a Celtic fan. With regard to sport and the challenge of sectarianism I was recently involved in the following exchange. Around the time of partition my great-grandfather tried to form a trade union in a mill in Lisburn. He and the handful of the others, both Catholic and Protestant, were blacklisted by Catholic and Protestant employers. My grandfather, his son, was harangued for standing up for a Catholic neighbour. It was during the year of her coronation. She was to pass by the labourer s cottages were my family lived. A bigot told my family s neighbour that as she was a Catholic the Queen wouldn t want to see the likes of her. My grandfather seized him and pointed out that the woman s two sons had fought, and I think one had died, for king and country. He reminded him that his two sons had not signed up to fight fascism. As a small boy I remember my grandmother fretting when she heard of killings. She did not classify the dead. Her emotions of love and grace were universal and not selective. My own father would have cuffed my ears if I had thought or spoken in a sectarian fashion. My forbearers were anti-sectarian, but they were pro-union. The idea that being prounion is inherently sectarian is not only wrong it is inherently sectarian. Question 2: What is sectarianism? Sectarianism has two forms - prejudice and exclusiveness Prejudice is the obvious form: Sectarianism is vicious, insidious and repugnant. It is unjust and acrimonious. It is both within and without the groups that we belong to. Sectarianism is not a natural state. We are not born sectarian. One reason why people were pro-union was as recognised, in your own motion, was due to the south s religious doctrine alienating sections of the Protestant people.

We must consider that we can be both sectarianized but not sectarian. How could the treatment of Catholics in the North and Protestants in the South not make us suspicious of each other? How could the violence of the past not make us fearful of each other? The 2nd form of sectarianism, that we do not consider as much as the first is exclusiveness. We rarely consider it as it involves introspection and looking at ourselves. Exclusiveness is the belief that the group you belong to is virtuous, righteous and authentic. The very idea that your identity and its related actions are beyond reproach, is sectarian. That, superiority complex, is sectarian. As a republican recently told me we are the beautiful people. Given that beauty is relative I asked who are the ugly people? His face read like a man who had not really thought his comment out. The exclusive position is attached to the belief that your opponents must be converted to your cause. Prejudice is the belief that all others are wrong. If your opponents are misguided, then that begs the question what do they have to offer you? There is nothing that you have to offer your opponent, other than your claim that you are exceptional, and they are flawed. If your identity is non-negotiable and if it has no failings, then you will believe that you are stigma free. You will hear any challenge to your identity as an attempt to shame you. There will be no space to engage with constructive criticism. You will remain captured within the prison of your own superiority. You will speak and even shout but you will not hear. Regarding identity there is no such thing as splendid isolation. Each day in Northern Ireland we perform a very harmful and destabilising ritual. What we know as the politics of whataboutery. We all know that Northern Ireland is a traumatised place. That trauma is reproduced with the turning on of the radio or the TV and hearing the daily row over if you say that, I ll say this. If you say Bloody Sunday I will say Bloody Friday, if you say McGurks Bar I will say Kingsmill. We can scream "truth" as we deny truth to others. Of course the issues around those events have not been resolved. But "a nation that keeps one eye on the past is wise. A nation that keeps two eyes on the past is blind." Being right about the past appears more important than healing, restoring or

bringing about the stability required to end such re-traumatisation. Convincing the 'other' side that they were wrong will not diminish their, or even your, suffering. We get caught up in the politics of legitimacy as opposed to realising that much of our gut, our sectarianisation, if you will, exists because we have experienced the same events but differently. Not because of our ideology per se but because the violence on our doorstep came predominantly from the other side. What is anti-sectarianism? The most important point about anti-sectarianism is that it stretches across the sectarian divide. In acknowledging that to be the case we then come to realise how artificial the sectarian divide is. Throughout the conflict we had evidence on a near daily basis of people proving that the sectarian divide was artificial. But we rarely or ever recognise that. We have silenced the narrative around those who, during the days of violence, aimed to maintain relationships across the sectarian divide. People I know who lost loved ones received many letters from across the divide. I have read them and common phrases are; this was not in my name, I too lost a son but am from the other side. I know your pain, this was senseless and unfair. One letter, sent to a woman in Ardoyne, whose son was killed, began I am a Protestant from the Shankill. I am proud of that and my Protestant faith but I never wanted anything to happen to your son or anyone s son. I enclose a bible signed by members of our congregation. Here is a challenge to us all. Find those letters and give them power. Put them on gable ends, in our documents and on social media. If sectarianism has power then giving power to these letters subverts that. Heaney s assertion that hope and history had to rhyme for peace ignored the fact that it rhymed in those letters. That brings us to what anti-sectarianism is and that is the creation of interdependence. What is interdependence?

A non-sectarian society would uphold free association, tolerance and acceptance of difference. Paradoxically, a non-sectarian society would be one in which there are many sects, groups and types of identity. It would be a place of diversity and the site of parity of esteem. Interdependence requires mutual reliance between groups. It aims to rupture ethnic seclusion. It challenges the idea that we as groups should remain independent from each other. Ultimately, it challenges us to come out of that sense that our identity is independent of others. Anti-sectarianism elevates us from the idea that our identity is self-sufficient. Because self-sufficiency rejects the fact that many cultures have influence upon us. Ethnic seclusion is a form of cultural smugness never mind myth. Here is an example of interdependence. I as someone who has a different identity to you would not write your motion in the way that you did. I would have framed it differently. But I support its aims. Knowing that we are saying the same thing but differently is important but what is more important is our recognition that we can only challenge sectarianism together. The Conclusion: Challenging through knowledge Maybe we should understand that the cultures of Irish and Ulster-Scots are more inter-twinned than we assume. When I first went to university I was sitting with two friends. The unionist goes who will we vote for in the student elections. Ainny or Grainny? A friend, who was a republican from Lurgan, said I think you mean Grainne and Aine. To judge our lack of knowledge as prejudice is wrong. It was simply a lack of acquaintanceship. That was a shameful event for me. Not that I didn t know Irish but that I was corrected by someone from Lurgan. In recent research regarding the electorate in Northern Ireland the presentation of our findings served to remind us of the identity trap. One of the findings that related to marriage equality was that the majority of those who described themselves as Protestants were supportive. Moreover, the share of those who supported marriage equality and voted DUP had grown to around 40%. A DUP member told me that was nonsense and a SF member, in a style reminiscent of Victor Mildrew

announced, I don t believe it! That research also shows that Protestants under the age of 40 and those who do not vote, are firmly pro-union. That group are more prochoice, more likely to not be offended by a relative marrying across the sectarian divide and more supportive of integrated education than Sinn Fein voters. If that comes as a shock to you, ask yourself why? If we are truly supportive of conflict transformation then we need to accept that the end result is not that we change our identities. We need to realise that our identities are not the problem but how we practice them. If we do not hear what we are being told because if does not fit our narrative of who we are then we are being thoughtless. If we do not accept that we must hear things about us that are painful and uncomfortable then we will remain in a perpetual state of sectarianised fear. The gut will forever rule the mind. If sectarianism is built on prejudice it will wilt upon the demise of bigotry. I will end on the following; "The importance of moving towards a society where there is respect and understanding of each other s traditions cannot be stressed enough. Differences in our society must cease to be barriers. Difference must be recognised and appreciated and celebrated. "I believe this is a tremendous time in our history. A time of opportunity - if grasped. Not to do so would be foolish in the extreme." Those are not my words they are those of Martin McGuiness. End.