As Though You Had Died

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“‘It is as though you were absent and you hear me from far away and my voice does not reach you. It is as though you were absent, distant and full of sorrow, as though you had died.’ Eugene Toman, Gerva[i]se McKerr, Sean Burns 1982-2007”. The lines are from Pablo Neruda’s poem ‘I Like For You To Be Still‘. The trio of IRA volunteers were shot and killed on 11 November, 1982, by an undercover unit of the RUC in an alleged shoot-to-kill incident.

Taghnevan Drive, Lurgan

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Copyright © 2009 Peter Moloney
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Óglach Raymond McCreesh

IRA volunteer Raymond McCreesh, originally from Camlough, died on May 21st, 1981, after 61 days on hunger strike. “In proud and loving memory of ten brave Irish soldiers who died on hunger strike in 1981 for their five just demands. I gcuımhne ar ıobaırt [íobaırt] cróga na staılceoırí ocraıs 1981 ní dheánfar [dhéanfar] dearmad orthu.”

Taghnevan Drive, Lurgan

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Copyright © 2009 Peter Moloney
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Welcome To The Shankill

“Welcome to the Shankill” in ten languages, home of Norman Whiteside, Baroness May Blood, Jimmy Warnock, William Conor, Col. James Cunningham, Johnny McQuade, Wayne McCullough, and the Rev. Henry Montgomery. The attractions include Crumlin Road gaol, lower Shankill murals, Bayardo victims memorial, Carson mural, Cupar Way peace line, Shankill memorial garden, Spectrum centre, Shankill graveyard, Woodvale park. An ‘Alternatives’ stencil would later be added in the bottom right.

Gardiner Street, Belfast

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Copyright © 2009 Peter Moloney
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The City’s Soul In Verse

“This has always expressed its soul in verse. ‘Derry mine! My small oak grove/Little cell, my home, my love!’ – Attributed to St Colmcille. The saint’s story is told as St Columb in the Cathedral and as St Colmcille in the Long Tower Church.
‘The purple headed mountains/The river running by/The sunset and the morning/That brightens up the sky.” – Mrs Cecil Frances Alexander.  The 19th century hymn writer was inspired by the view of the Creggan Hills.
‘My heart beseiged by anger, my mind a gap of danger/I walked among their old haunts, the home ground where they bled/And in the dirt lay justice like an acorn in the winter/Till its oak would sprout in Derry where the thirteen men lay dead.” – Seamus Heaney. The poet expressed his reaction to the events of Bloody Sunday, 30th January, 1972, in ‘The Road To Derry’.
‘But when I’ve returned oh my eyes how they burned/To see how a town could be brought to its kneesBy the armoured cars and the bombed out bars/And the gas that hangs on to every breeze/
Now an army’s installed by the old gasyard wall/And the damned barbed wire gets higher and higher/With their tanks and their guns Oh my God, what have they done/To the town I loved so well.’ – Phil Coulter ‘The Town I Loved So Well’. The singer-songwriter summed up how many people felt during the Troubles.”

Double Bastion, Walls Of Derry

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Copyright © 2009 Peter Moloney
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Mourneview Youth

Here is the scene at Mourne Road along the side of the Mace (later a Spar). On the low wall is a ‘Mourneview Youth’ mural (presumably by BlazeFX) – there were previously LVF murals on this wall. In the bricked-up windows are a series of cultural panels, on the Battle Of The Boyne, music, William McFadzean’s VC, fire, faith, defence (WWI), plus one other (perhaps ‘school’?)

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Copyright © 2009 Peter Moloney
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