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BELFAST, Northern Ireland -- Lee Young, 8, and
Cein Quinn, 7, live barely 200 yards apart, but they have never met, and maybe
never will.
Lee is Protestant, Cein a Catholic -- and their
communities in Belfast's west inner city are separated by a wall called a peace
line.
It's nearly 40 years old and 40 feet high.
Ten years after peace was declared in Northern
Ireland, one might have expected that Belfast's barriers would be torn down by
now. But reality, as usual, is far messier. Not one has been dismantled. Instead
they've grown in both size and number.
The past decade of peacemaking has brought
political elites of both sides together in a Catholic-Protestant government in
hopes that their example would trickle down. Their experiment in cooperation,
highlighted by the power-sharing government's first anniversary Thursday, has
encouraged thriving employment, tourism and nightlife.
But it
has not delivered meaningful reconciliation. Instead, for dozens of front-line
communities of Belfast, fences still make the best neighbors.
"The
Troubles" began at these sectarian flashpoints in the late 1960s, and survive
today in a legacy of mutual fear and loathing. The rate of sectarian killings
has fallen to virtually zero thanks to cease-fires underpinned by IRA
disarmament, and the feeling on both sides is that the barriers help keep that
peace.
No. No
way does that peace line come down," said Cein's mother, Allison Quinn, 32,
sitting on her living room sofa on the Catholic side of the fence alongside her
sister and a cousin.
Despite
its height, every so often a particularly strong-armed Protestant manages to
hurl a brick over the top -- enough to rattle any backyard barbecue.
"It's
definitely not safe to take it down, and I don't think it ever will be. There's
bitter loyalists over there," Quinn said, using a term for anti-Catholic
militants. "They're out drinking in the street at night. If you take it down,
they'd have easy access here and come over starting fights. You'd just be asking
for trouble."
The wall
30 paces from her front door was born in 1969 as makeshift coils of barbed wire
laid by British troops, shipped in following riots that forced hundreds of
families, mostly Catholics, from their homes.
At the
time, the senior British army commander, Lt. Gen. Ian Freeland, predicted: "The
peace line will be a very, very temporary affair. We will not have a Berlin Wall
or anything like that in this city."
But those
barbed-wire coils became miles-long brick walls separating Catholic from
Protestant in west Belfast. Even higher walls shield a Catholic enclave in
Protestant east Belfast, while the north side is carved up by dozens of smaller
barriers.
In this
city of 650,000, roughly half Catholic and half Protestant, only the university
district and upper-class streets, chiefly on the south side, bear no clear-cut
tribal identity.
The
newest peace line, erected earlier this year, runs past one of Belfast's few
"integrated" elementary schools -- a place where Catholic and Protestant
students are deliberately brought together.
Fewer
than 3 percent of Northern Ireland kids attend such schools.
Quinn, an
unemployed single mother, loves her newly built town house, complete with oak
floors and modern kitchen, its rent subsidized by the British government Housing
Executive. That it's right by the barricade doesn't bother her at all.
"I would
never move. It's so handy. And it's lovely," Quinn says emphatically.
Just then
her boy Cein comes in, rubbing his head after bumping it on a curbstone while
playing outside. He's soon immersed in his handheld video game.
Asked if
he's ever gone next door to see the Protestants, Cein says no.
Would he
like to meet his neighbors and play in their playground?
"No way,"
he says with a smile. Why not? "'Cuz they're ugly."
His
mother shrugs. "I'd like him to mix with Protestant kids, but it's just not
safe," she says.
Outside
Quinn's cul-de-sac, children's voices float over from beyond the wall. By day,
when the peace line is opened for traffic, those kids are a few minutes' walk
away. By dusk, when the doors are locked, > it might take an hour.
On the
Protestant side of the wall is a fenced-in, concrete soccer field. Here a
stranger is greeted by two boys who let loose with suspicious questions and
bigoted quips. Their fathers belong to the UDA, the Ulster Defense Association,
a militant Protestant group that killed more than 300 Catholics from 1971 to its
1994 cease-fire.
"Are
youse a taig?" says one burly boy, using an insulting word for an Irish
Catholic.
"It's all
taigs over there," says another, waving dismissively at the wall. "They're
soap-dodgers, so they are."
Soap-dodgers?
"Sure,
them ones never take a shower. You can smell 'em from here."
The boys
laugh and resume their game.
This is
where Lee Young, Cein's neighbor, plays soccer. The boy wears the blue jersey of
Glasgow Rangers, a Scottish soccer club with an exclusively Protestant following
in Belfast. Were he to walk next door onto Catholic turf, he would be certain to
suffer verbal bullying or worse -- perhaps from kids wearing the green of
Glasgow Celtic, the Catholic favorite.
Wearing
the "wrong" sports gear is just one of scores of sectarian measuring sticks that
have proven deadly in the past. So are names. A "Cein" -- a Gaelic name
pronounced Keane -- would be instantly identified as Irish Catholic, because the
Protestant side shuns the Irish language.
On Lee's
Protestant street, just past the modest playground, a few wind-tattered British
flags flutter above doorsteps and a wall mural salutes the masked gunmen of the
UDA. Youths have adorned walls with "KAT," short for "Kill all taigs," as well
as insults to the pope.
On the
Catholic side, the turf is marked with Irish flags, Gaelic street signs, IRA
murals and insults to Queen Elizabeth II.
John
Young, Lee's dad, is as moderate a soul as you could meet on either side of the
peace line. He thinks the peace process, and gradually lessening tensions, mean
that the wall probably could come down. But there's always a but.
"But
there's no need to take it down. I wouldn't really think about it at all. I'm
happy enough with it there," said Young, 34.
Young
acknowledges that only a decade ago he was a hard-line hothead who joined the
Orange Order, a Protestant club with an anti-Catholic ethos, and scuffled with
police and Catholics in street clashes.
He says
his varied work experiences since -- as security guard, construction worker and
now grocery store deliveryman -- mellowed him through regular social contact
with Catholics. He resigned from the Orange Order a few years ago.
“I drive
through that peace line almost every day to the other side's homes and there's
no bother," Young said. "The other side would actually treat you better -- tip
you quicker."
But he
acknowledges that some neighborhoods, those most notorious for Irish Republican
Army sympathies, give him the creeps. "There's areas I have to drive into where
the hair stands up on the back of your neck.
But
that's only natural."
Catholic
colleagues on occasion have invited him across the wall for an after-hours pint
at their pub. He won't go.
"You'd be
afraid that they might recognize you're from the other side.
Am I too
tight in the eyes?" he said, referring to a stereotype of Protestant eyes
supposedly being closer together.
His boy
is asked whether he'd like to go over the wall to play with Catholics.
"The
wall's so the taigs don't attack us. We don't go over there," Lee answers
matter-of-factly.
His
father is visibly discomforted. "My son wouldn't know a Catholic from a Hindu.
It's just the friends he plays with. They're sons of UDA men and they teach him:
'That's taigs over there,'" he said.
If Lee
and Cein ever met, it would be at one of Belfast's many "neutral" playgrounds,
pools, parks or upscale suburbs.
Indeed,
the nearest Cein and many other kids from west Belfast have been to Lee's home
is a city-run swimming pool on the nearby Shankill Road. It has Belfast's only
wave-maker. They travel there in school-supervised visits.
Cein's
mother said she would like to shop on the Shankill, where stores are family-run
and cheaper. The IRA blew one up in 1993, a fishmonger's, killing nine
Protestants in a bungled targeting of UDA commanders.
But
there's only one Shankill business she considers worth the risk -- the
drive-through window of Kentucky Fried Chicken.
"We've
got no Kentucky on our side. Mmm-mmm," she said, making a finger-licking
gesture. "But you'd never walk. You'd nip over and make it quick."
There are
striking similarities between the experiences of the Quinns and the Youngs. Both
feel safe living beside a peace line. Both say their problems come from
hell-raisers within their own community, not the other side. Both feel powerless
to stop them.
Quinn
said her previous neighborhood -- barely a half-mile away in a sprawling,
low-rise housing project -- is increasingly overrun by glue-sniffing,
car-stealing teens. Such behavior was once brutally suppressed by IRA
"kneecapping" squads. But the group has been keeping its 2005 promise to
renounce bloodshed, and that means no more vigilante violence either.
"The
hoods have taken over. There's no telling them what to do. It's the Wild West,"
she said.
Quinn
says she has never called the cops to prevent a crime, and doesn't think she
ever will. Her attitude illustrates the other daunting task of peacemaking -- to
build Catholic trust in what was once an overwhelmingly Protestant police force.
A
sweeping reform program with affirmative-action recruitment over the past seven
years has dramatically reshaped the police, with the goal of a 30 percent
Catholic force. But many Catholics remain hostile to the police -- or fearful of
being labeled collaborators.
So does
she think the IRA should resume shooting teens in the legs? An uncomfortable
silence follows.
"Well, I
don't know. But the current situation is out of control," she says finally.
Like
Quinn, Young moved his family much closer to a peace line about three years ago
to get a better state-provided house, even though the street had a history of
murderous UDA feuding. "Before, you'd be considered crazy to buy here. But
people's attitudes are changing.
There's
not so much to be scared of anymore," Young said.
But
police say UDA members orchestrate most crime in the area. Some are Young's
neighbors.
"I call
them the problem ones," he said, pointing to a row of houses outside his kitchen
window, then lowering his finger because he didn't want anyone there to see. "I
know who they are and what they do."
His
backyard fence burned down recently when a car belonging to a UDA neighbor was
torched, apparently in a criminal dispute.
"I've
really no problems with Roman Catholics," Young said with a wry smile. "It's my
own kind that cause me the headaches. Maybe I need another peace line!"
On the
Net:
Map and
photos of Belfast peace lines:
http://www.belfastinterfaceproject.org/interfacemap.asp
Used with
permission of The Associated Press © 2008 All Rights Reserved.
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