Belfast

Sep. 8th, 2001 09:05 pm
gerbie: (Default)
[personal profile] gerbie
This week I was shocked again by the news. This means something. I have travelled a bit and have seen quite a lot of poverty and misery. I have been watching the news for ages and have seen wars, murders, battles and other violence. After a while you take things for granted. It is far away from home, it doesn't hit you anymore. I know it's wrong, but people have a strong sense of survival, if you take everything that is wrong in this world personally, one wouldn't be able to live a life at all.

But once in a while you still get a shock. A six year old with a gun in school is bad. More troubles in the middle east is extremely bad. But in the end, you've come to expect things like that. But the thing that shocked me was the first days of school in Belfast.

For those of you who haven't been listening really well in Geography and History classes, Belfast is the capital of Northern Ireland, part of the United Kingdom. It is the top one third of the island of Ireland, a very catholic country. As the British are protestant, Northern Ireland is a mixture of both, which has been leading to troubles for centuries, violent troubles for decades now. But even then, I still had the impression that we were in a civilized world. Victims were mostly policemen, soldiers, activists and terrorists searching each other in a battle for freedom. There are always mistakes that led to innocent bystanders being wounded or even killed, but those were quite often just mistakes.

This time they went beyond that. Catholic school kids had to be protected by a whole squadron of police to get to school. Let me repeat this, as to stress the absurdity of the situation: SCHOOL CHILDREN NEEDED POLICE PROTECTION TO GET TO SCHOOL.

They didn't have to cross a battle field, they weren't passing a secret service office, they weren't old enough to be secret activisit disguised as school kids. They were merely primary school children, some of them as young as four years old, who had to go to school. Their crime was that they were catholic walking to school through a protestant street. If you had seen the coverage on tv, your disgust would have been as big. Whole crowds of people were trying to stop these kids from going to school. Parents were trying to protect their children from the things thrown at them. If it hadn't been for a huge police force keeping the two groups apart, it would have been a battle.

The second or third day even a bomb was thrown, wounding four police and a mother. How low can you go? Throwing bombs at innocent children (children are innocent as per definition, but I still felt the need to add the adjective) because they have a different religion, how absurd is that? Apparently the defence of the behaviour was based on several facts, among them the fact that protestants can't march through catholic areas during their annual marches. As if the children have anything to do with that!

Let me point out one thing, before I get accused of choosing sides. I do not have a religion. I respect everyone who does, but can't stand people fighting over it. There is plenty wrong with catholics. They've a history of killing and raping indians and others in the America's, Vatican city is the richest country in the world. The pope is a wanker who tells poor Africans to go and multiply as if Aids and overcrowding doesn't exist. But in this case the bad guys have to be the protestants. Ireland always has been catholic, it wasn't until Britain conquered a part of it, that it partly became protestant. After a century there the protestants invented a tradition of marching. This was never a real tradition, whatever the hardcore will tell you now. They remember winning the battle so many years ago. How do they do that? By dressing up in their suits, with a lot of Orange and flags and walk through the area's where the catholics live. Has there ever been a more blatant case of provocation? I'm ashamed, as a Dutchmen, that they use the colour Orange to express their sense of superiority.

Obviously these marches have no other aim than to rub in that they are still in control in a part of the country, where they shouldn't be at all. Obviously these marches cause a lot of friction and some of them have been forbidden or rerouted. But to take all that out on little children, you've got to be completely heartless. To involve children in your own little pathetic little battle, disgusts me more than I could imagine. Get a bloody life, go and do something useful with your spare time. How is it possible that whole crowds of people were there to try to stop these children in the first place? Haven't they got jobs to go to? Haven't they got any decency in them?

Sometimes, when I see or read stories like this, I get extremely depressed about the future of the world. In a so called civilised country, one of the richest countries in the world, a country that has a reputation for decency, politeness and culture, it is still possible to throw a bomb at a four year old and get away with it. How can you be proud that you have beaten the Germands at football, how can you be proud of a booming economy, a strong pound sterling, if you can't even protect you own citizens well enough. UK, feel ashamed!

So very true

Date: 2001-09-08 12:23 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] wimmeke.livejournal.com
It's true, this is very, very bad. And I am so glad someone stood up and posted the entire story, even more accurately as I could have ever done so, although I already knew it all and it is absolutely right. I have a lot of English friends and I may shock them all by confronting them with a link to your post, but what happened there shouldn't have happened at all.
Thank you so much for your post and for telling the story to the world.

Re: So very true

Date: 2001-09-08 12:54 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] gerbie.livejournal.com
Thanx. I've tried to tell the story the way I see it, that doesn't mean it is right. I'm afraid there is no right and wrong in this case. But do feel free to tell anyone you think who might be interested, or who you think should read it. Information is always a good way of fighting ignorance. Knowledge is power.

Re: So very true

Date: 2001-09-08 01:07 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] wimmeke.livejournal.com
I was talking about the history of things, how Northern Ireland became the battleground it is now. As for who is right and who is wrong, we may never know.
I posted a link to your story in [livejournal.com profile] chatzone, if you are interested in joining any discussions that arrise from there, please feel free.
Waar woon je ergens in Nederland ?

Re: So very true

Date: 2001-09-08 03:24 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] gerbie.livejournal.com
The problem is, as usual, that history is an interpretation as well. Not even there I can claim to be historically correct, I try to be objective and give facts as I know them, somebody would explain the same facts differently. Though it does remain that a victory 400 years ago resulted in marches less than 100 years ago.

I don't know the chatzone, but I'll check it out now.

Ik ben een Tukker, uit Twente dus. Hoe was je mijn post overigens tegengekomen?

Date: 2001-09-08 04:08 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] jeroen.livejournal.com
Very well put, I totally agree with you, I was disgusted too when I saw the images of these so called 'grown up' people terrorising these scared children, they're really crazy over there!

Date: 2001-09-09 01:23 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] gerbie.livejournal.com
But does it change anything if we ramble on here? I'm afraid not.

Date: 2001-09-08 09:09 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] javamental.livejournal.com
Recently I caught a documentary on the History channel about how the Nazis brainwashed little kids into spying and fighting for them, and felt much the same disgust and horror you feel over this.
"Adults" are expected to have to deal with this kind of horseshit, and be terrorized for their causes. Even though adults can be "innocent victims" too, that's part of being old enough to care about something. But kids -- Jesus Christ. Whatever happened to the sanctity of youth? Those rotten bastards should be strung up for throwing bombs at kids. No amount of history, perspective, holy causes, or ideals can ever making killing or harming children for any reason right. Anyone who thinks so is too full of their own shit. It's just horrifying.

Re:

Date: 2001-09-09 01:14 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] gerbie.livejournal.com
But however much we moan over here, nothing is going to change over there, that's the real tragic part I'm afraid.

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