Tags
"Neither an Elegy nor a Manifesto", 1994 World Cup, 2004 World Series, bombings, Boston Red Sox, Giants Stadium, Good Friday Agreement, Ireland, John Hewitt, New Jersey, North Antrim Coast, Northern Ireland, Omagh, REAL IRA
In the summer of 1998, I took my new baby daughter home to Northern Ireland, my lovely, tragic Northern Ireland. It was my mother’s sixtieth birthday, and between my father, my brother, and a handful of relatives who could keep a secret (an impressive trait in rural County Derry) we planned a “This is Your Life” style surprise. It was delicious, knowing we had all swallowed the same secret, and that my all-knowing mother was completely in the dark.
The Troubles had tainted previous visits home, but this time was going to be different – no bombs, no shootings, no petrol bombs, no more girls tarred and feathered for falling in love with a boy from the other side. I found something symbolic, magical even, in returning home with a new baby girl in my arms to a new optimism fueled by The Good Friday Agreement.
It had been different four years before. That trip had coincided with Ireland’s qualifying for the World Cup. The country was ecstatic, with factories, offices, shops, even banks, all closing early so everyone could make it home, or to the pub, in time for kick-off at the Ireland v Italy match being televised live from Giants Stadium in New Jersey. We had thought of going to the pub to watch the first-round match, but my father convinced us to stay home, have a few drinks, and watch from the comfort of the living room. So we stayed in and watched – in joyous disbelief – as Ireland went up 1-0 against Italy at Giants Stadium. When the lads in green scored a goal, we roared with pride even as we were afraid to look, not unlike Boston Red Sox fans prior to the 2004 World Series.
The second half of the match was well underway when two men, their faces hidden behind balaclavas, stormed into a tiny packed pub, The Heights Bar, in the village of Loughinisland, County Down. With an AK47 and a Czech made rifle, they shot madly and indiscriminately at the sixteen men gathered around the bar watching Ireland beat Italy. They killed six of them. According to witnesses, the two gunmen laughed as they made their getaway. The first killed, Barney Green, was in his eighties, someone’s grandfather, and as I recall from the stories that later poured from that heartbroken village, he had put on his best suit to mark Ireland’s making it to the World Cup.
Chilling even now to think of Barney Green struck down with such savagery in the very moment as that jubilant Irish squad burst out of an American football stadium, awash in green, buoyed by the chanting of 60,000 supporters, anticipating champagne and a night of revelry, only to be silenced and sickened by the hideous dispatch from a country pub back home.
Another atrocity. Another anniversary for the people of Northern Ireland that would leave us wondering again how we would ever recover from the madness that once more brought wrenching anguish to so many. My country is so tiny – I’ve been told it fits into one third of the state of Kansas – I imagine everyone knew someone who knew someone maimed or killed in the largest mass murder in its history. I knew Aidan Rush, a barman at the local pub in my hometown. A relative of his had been killed in the Omagh bombing. I remember wondering what I could possibly say to him by way of condolence, knowing there are no adequate words.
I felt sad and foolish, and I felt cheated, having dared to believe that peace had come to the country I had left but still loved. I should have remembered what Yeats wrote in The Isle of Innisfree, that “peace comes dropping slow.”
For many Northern Ireland families, mine included, the youngest generation knew only a country in conflict. But in 1998, my daughter would witness a new country, a country at peace. The people had voted for it in anticipation of a new era for Northern Ireland. A brand new day. That year, when my mother’s sixtieth birthday arrived, I telephoned in the morning with love and good wishes and a promise that we would arrange a trip home soon. Yes, she had received the flowers I’d sent, and she was looking forward to going out for dinner with my father that evening. On their way, he took a bit of a detour for a quick visit with my Aunt Sadie, where delighted shrieks of “Surprise!”exploded from the well-hidden gathering of family and friends whose cars were parked on another lane, far out of sight. One of my cousins even assumed the role of This is Your Life host, Eamonn Andrews, complete with a big red book, and related the story of my mother’s life to all assembled.
When she reached the part about my mother becoming a grandmother for the first time just eight months earlier, she suggested calling me so that I could at least be part of the celebration by phone. Naturally, I was unavailable, given that two days earlier, I had flown in to Belfast with Sophie, and had been holed up at my Aunt Sadie’s house enjoying secret visits with my dad and my brother, the three of us laughing that my mother – who usually knows everything – was oblivious to all the subterfuge. She was disappointed that I wasn’t home, but was quickly distracted by the doorbell ringing. Thinking it was yet another cousin or a friend with a birthday present, she opened the door to find looking up at her from a nest of pink blankets, her beautiful baby granddaughter. It was a perfectly executed surprise, planned down to the very last minute, and one my mother would cherish always, as a jewel in a box.
Unbeknownst to us and to most ordinary people in Northern Ireland, another plan was coming to fruition, a diabolical scheme that would, one week later, rip asunder the tiny market town of Omagh in the neighboring county of Tyrone, devastating families from as near as Donegal and as far away as Madrid, Spain, and reminding us all that Northern Ireland’s Troubles were far from over.
I don’t know all the details. I’m afraid of them.
It frightens me to consider the machinations of minds that could craft a plan to load a nondescript red car, plate number MDZ 5211, with 500 pounds of explosives, park it in the middle of a busy shopping area, and place two phone calls to the local television station, one to the Coleraine Samaritans, with a warning 40 minutes before the bomb inside it exploded. There was confusion as the police evacuated the shoppers – mostly mothers and children on back-to-school shopping sprees. Thinking they were moving them away from the Court House to safety, the police moved people to the bottom of Market Street, where the bomb was about to be detonated.
I wonder if they felt that familiar relief, the kind you know from past experiences of bomb-scares and hoaxes, if they felt they were out of harm’s way and just in time, believing that it would all be alright. Maybe they told themselves it was just a bomb scare, like old times, not to be taken very seriously but still they would cooperate with the authorities so they could get back to their Saturday afternoon shopping, seeking out bargains for backpacks and books, new uniforms and lunch-boxes, full of the promise that accompanies the start of a new school year.
I cannot write about it without weeping.
Mere seconds after this photo was taken with a camera later retrieved from the rubble, the 500 pound bomb inside the red car exploded, blowing the vehicle to bits. Like a butcher’s knife, the blast cut through the row of little shops. I recall the harrowing accounts of witnesses, forever altered, who saw blood flowing in the gutters and pieces of people in the street, describing the savagery, the carnage before them as a war zone, a killing field.
At the same time, my brother, his girlfriend, and my baby girl were driving around the North Antrim coast, listening to Neil Young and Paul Brady CDs, occasionally breaking into song as we took in wild scenery around us. We stopped to show Sophie the horses and cows that peered over gates along the country roads. It was a beautiful, windy Irish day, and we were happy.
We were not listening to the radio that afternoon, so we didn’t hear the news. We had no reason to believe anything was wrong, until, heading home at dusk, we were stopped at a police checkpoint, where we were told to take a detour. And we knew. It had happened again. My parents knew too. Worse, they were worried sick. Something horrific had happened, and they had no idea where we were. Worried, they paced the floor until their driveway was lit up again with the headlights of my brother’s car.
There was no peace. Nothing had changed, and everything had changed in that blast that killed 29 people and unborn twins. And there would be no justice. No one has been convicted. Why?
The Omagh list of dead “reads like a microcosm of Troubles deaths, and left no section of Irish life untouched. The town they attacked is roughly 60:40 Catholic:Protestant, and the dead consisted of Protestants, Catholics, a Mormon and two Spanish visitors. They killed young, old and middle-aged, fathers, mothers, sons, daughters and grannies. They killed republicans and unionists, including a prominent local member of the Ulster Unionist Party. They killed people from the backbone of the Gaelic Athletic Association (GAA). They killed unborn twins, bright students, cheery shop assistants and many young people. They killed three children from the Irish Republic who were up north on a day trip. Everyone they killed was a civilian. The toll of death was thus both extraordinarily high and extraordinarily comprehensive.”
Without answers, we can only bear witness. Can we ever bear our pain and that of others in a way that brings about peace and understanding? Is Northern Ireland forever destined to use remembrance as the ultimate divider? Will the families of the bereaved ever see justice?
No answers. Only this:
“Neither an Elegy nor a Manifesto” by John Hewitt
So I say only: Bear in mind
Those men and lads killed in the streets;
But do not differentiate between
Those deliberately gunned down
And those caught by unaddressed bullets:
Such distinctions are not relevant . . .
Bear in mind the skipping child hit
By the anonymous ricochet . . .
And the garrulous neighbours at the bar
When the bomb exploded near them;
The gesticulating deaf-mute stilled
by the soldier’s rifle in the town square
And the policeman dismembered by the booby trap
in the car . . .
Patriotism has to do with keeping
the country in good heart, the community
ordered by justice and mercy;
these will enlist loyalty and courage often,
and sacrifice, sometimes even martyrdom.
Bear these eventualities in mind also;
they will concern you forever:
but, at this moment, bear in mind these dead.
James Barker (12) from Buncrana
Fernando Blasco Baselga(12) from Madrid
Geraldine Breslin (43) from Omagh
Deborah Anne Cartwright (20) from Omagh
Gareth Conway (18) from Carrickmore
Breda Devine (20 months) from Donemana
Oran Doherty (8) from Buncrana
Aidan Gallagher (21) from Omagh
Esther Gibson (36) from Beragh
Mary Grimes (65) from Beragh
Olive Hawkes (60) from Omagh
Julia Hughes (21) Omagh
Brenda Logue (17) from Omagh
Anne McCombe (45) from Omagh
Brian McCrory(54) from Omagh
Samantha McFarland (17) Omagh
Seán McGrath (61) from Omagh
Sean McLaughlin (12) from Buncrana
Jolene Marlow (17) Omagh
Avril Monaghan (30) from Augher
Maura Monaghan (18 months) from Augher
Alan Radford (16) Omagh
Rocio Abad Ramos (23) from Madrid
Elizabeth Rush (57) Omagh
Veda Short (46) from Omagh
Philomena Skelton (39) from Durmquin
Frederick White (60) from Omagh
Bryan White (26) from Omagh
Lorraine Wilson (15) Omagh
Kathleen Hoffman, PhD said:
Again you overwhelm me…
Editor said:
Oh, Kathleen, it is the story of Northern Ireland that overwhelms. That such a beautiful country can with some of the most wonderful people you will ever encounter, can harbor such hatred. It reminds me of what Sherman ALexie said – that the world gave us Hitler, but it also gave us Bruce Springsteen.
Elizabeth Aquino said:
Yes, you overwhelm with your riveting storytelling. I am sorry to say that I was unaware of this spectacular violence so soon after the Good Friday peace accord. It might have been because I, too, had a baby that year, on July 25th — but I am grateful that you have educated me, here, and also eulogized the people who were lost to such senseless violence.
Editor said:
And on it continued that summer, Elizabeth. In July, Three little boys, brothers – Richard 11, Mark, 9, and Jason , 7 – were asleep when the UVF threw a petrol bomb through a window. They burned to death. Senseless, maddening, such a waste. I was a new mother, safe and sound in America, thinking nothing like Omagh could happen here, and then 9.11.
paddy's wagon said:
Oh my goodness Yvonne, I too find your story overwhelming. Last year I was in Ireland from NZ for a month & stopped for a brief visit to Omagh & the location of that horrific scene. I too wrote about that tragic day in my own blog but to read your portrayal of it was so much more sobering.
Congratulations on your nomination on to the Blog Awards Ireland 2013 Long List. I too have made it on to the list, but unlike you, I have a gnats chance of making it any further. 😀
Best Wishes,
Paddy
speccy said:
wow
Thank you.
My family are from Omagh. One of us is on that list.
Editor said:
Fiona, I am so sorry.
lesleypr said:
I’m not often lost for words, Yvonne, but this morning I am. I have none. I do have tears, however, and they are flowing as I type. This is one of the most hauntingly beautiful pieces of writing I have ever read. I was in Cornwall the day that Omagh was ripped apart, with my own baby daughter. We were staying with my cousin who had relocated there many years before, trying to help him persuade his wife that it was now safe for her to visit his homeland, with their own young son…
Thank you for this poignant tribute, Yvonne, which to me is in fact a eulogy for all of our country’s innocent, futile victims. xx
Editor said:
Oh Lesley, it was such a blow to all of us wasn’t it? Along with the heartache, I remember feeling so very foolish, that I had dared believe our country was at peace. And the rippling effect of that bomb in such a tiny country – everybody seemed to know somebody who had been killed or hurt. I will never forget it. Or those three little boys who burned to death a month later in Ballymoney. My brother’s first assignment as a reporter was to interview the grandmother of those three boys. I just can’t imagine it.
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blarneycrone said:
Reblogged this on The Blarney Crone and commented:
Lovely piece of writing on unlovely events in my homeland
Editor said:
Thanks very much for reblogging. Yes. OUr lovely, tragic country. What will become of it?
Alan McCullough said:
Let us not forget the hundreds who were injured, maimed and blinded in this atrocity. They are the forgotten victims
Editor said:
How right you are. And all those who love and care for them and who seek justice for them.
Thank you.
Editor said:
Indeed. So, so many when you consider those who love and are taking care of so many so terribly damaged.
Thank you.
betty watterson. said:
My goodness this tears my heart out, the memory of that awful day will never leave me . You have written this so well . what an awful tragedy, God bless the people of Omagh left behind to weep, Thank you
Editor said:
Me neither, ma. I was trying to remember where you were when we were all out driving. I know there was a detour in getting back to Crumlin. When did you find out about it? I was just trying to put the pieces together in my memory … so sad for all the people who live in its aftermath, still in pain and without any answers. Sickening.
karen sutherland said:
dear Yvonne,
I could not read your haunting and devastating portrayal of what happened in omagh without thinking of the awful and sobering juxtaposition of the events only a week apart for you and your family. to have had such feelings of confidence, to have such incredible pride and joy, to be taking your tiny baby girl back to your homeland with such excitement and delicious anticipation. to be feeling the happy flutters of your heart as you pictured the fabulous birthday surprise for you dear mother seeing you, and her new granddaughter for the first time, to imagine the joy melting with love throughout each guests’ heart, watching the dream come true with tenderness and sweet tears of reunion, the brilliance of a milestone, pulled off to such perfection…
…and then the unspeakable horror of mass murder in omagh, leaving such despondency and decimation of the hopefulness that it was then a place of peace. your writing pays witness in such horribly raw truth – I wonder that you could ever look back and recapture the innocence of the time, such a joyful and memorable kaleidoscope of that sweet baby girl in her nest of pink blankets, being handed into the arms of her grandmother for the first time.. as your heart was sickened with such anger and sadness – it’s so utterly palpable. it makes me cry, and worry for your sweet heart, that senselessness and it’s overlaying of a beautiful memory that should shine in your mind with indescribable delight.
the sobering eloquence of the poem by john Hewitt, then the names and ages of the poor victims – I am so sorry for each and every one of them, for their loved ones, for you and your family, Yvonne. I try to put myself in your place, try to feel each nuance of the shock, the horror, the question “WHY”, the grief of the human carnage, the wondering if justice will ever be served, and send my feelings of sorrow and sympathy and the fervent hope for healing and comfort out to the universe so that maybe somehow there can be true peace in omagh.
much love, XOXOXOXO
Karen, TC
Editor said:
Karen,dear
You write with such heart, such intuition, and such elegance – yes, those happy flutters of the heart juxtaposed with inestimable horrors. The pendulum swings predictably from hope to despair – in the name of history, culture, religion. So much time wasted. So much loss.
I can barely watch what’s been going on of late inBelfast – makes me wonder if we have learned anything.
Thank you
Y
Xx
ganching said:
A really moving post. I was also in Northern Ireland that week. My sister and I had rented a cottage in the Glens of Antrim and during the time we were there various members of the family came and stayed. It was a lovely holiday. That Saturday was our last day and we spent it driving round round the coast. We stopped at a pub in the afternoon for something to eat and began to realise that something serious had happened.
I remember being in my parent’s house laster that evening, all of us together watching the endless news, feeling flat and slightly sick. It was as if the whole country and everyone in it, had been attacked.
It is true that NI is so small that everyone knows someone who has suffered a lost. Sadly things haven’t moved on as much as they should have and I fear there is a whole younger generation who are still steeped in bigotry and hate.
Editor said:
I am afraid of that same thing.
It has been surreal to watch recent events unfold and to feel that sickening déjà vu. So much time squandered, so many missed opportunities to move forward.
I’m going back in November – a week in Dublin & then up to NI. I am looking forward to it, but as you know yourself, there’s a faint rattle of apprehension inside.
Anonymous said:
Beautiful post, Yvonne. I picked up this quotation recently:
“Where you come from is gone, where you thought you were going to never was there, and where you are is no good unless you can get away from it.”
Flannery O’Connor.
Right now I’m reading a book by one of my favorite authors, John Waters (the Irish journalist) called Jiving at the Crossroads. An excellent read though I am a bit lost because I know next to nothing about Irish politics. I recommend this one highly though my favorite remains Lapsed Agnostic.
Editor said:
That is one terrific quote – thanks.
I just ordered the book – ashamed to say although I’m from there, I don’t know as much about the politics as I should, only the impact on ordinary live.
Thanks again
y
Robert Nielsen said:
Thank you for sharing such a moving personal account. The poem in particular touched me.
Editor said:
Thank you – indeed, the Hewitt poem will most likely never leave you.
Y
Editor said:
Reblogged this on considering the lilies and commented:
Lest we forget
Anonymous said:
Oh Yvonne it still tears my heart out , when will we ever have peace, I could weep with sadness this sad August day and think of all the people whose lives have been wrecked for ever… No peace. How sad ..
The Accidental Amazon said:
I can only weep and feel utterly heartsick. I just cannot understand how humans can be so diabolical. This must have been gut-wrenching to write, never mind to experience. But thank you for writing it. News reports never communicated reality like this. xoxo, Kathi
galeweithers said:
Dear Yvonne, this story was so riveting I could not stop reading until the very end. As I read your words I could feel the pain of loss and disappointment, and it is sad that those among us inflicting pain fail to understand that senseless killing of innocent people solves nothing. I do not know the recovery plan from the madness, but I do hope that Northern Ireland will continue to be strong and to brave, in spite of the madness. Thanks for sharing. Hugs!
Editor said:
Thank you so much for reading and remarking, Gale. Yes. Madness and heartache and so much of it.