Tricolour and Sunburst flags with a simplified version of the Sınn Féın logo. Above can be seen an old graffiti: “Damn your concessions, England; we demand political status.”
They May Kill The Revolutionary (no separate image; below is a close-up from the image above; there’s an image of the mural at CCDL; and here’s a version in Belfast)
Here are later-in-the-year images of the murals in The Fountain, Londonderry – the building (which would later become the Cathedral Youth Club) is showing some wear and tear. See previously in 1986 The Fountain and for the murals in progress in 1985.
The ten deceased hunger strikers are named, called “H-Block Martyrs”, and their entry into heaven requested: “St. Peter let these men into heaven, for they have served their time in hell” (for info, see I Refuse To Change) alongside a christian cross.
The lower part of the gate is the last stanza of a Yeats poem, Three Songs To The One Burden: “Some had no thought of vi[c]tory but had gone out to die, that Ireland mind be greater, her heart mount up on high; and yet who knows what[‘]s to come[?]”
Here is a paint-bombed 1986 version of the H-Block virgin Mary mural in Rockmount Street, Belfast. For the mural in original (1981) condition, see Blessed Are Those Who Hunger For Justice.
“Vote Sınn Féın 1 2 3 4” and “Tıocfaıdh ár lá!” have been painted on top of a 1981 mural based on a poster sent by the Iranian Ayatollah Khomeini, which featured the head of Bobby Sands against a backdrop of skeletal bodies, one of which can still be seen in the top middle of the wall. Somewhat ironically, the original mural also included the quote to the right: “The Irish Republican Army is right: The British government does not listen to the ballot box in Ireland and the only thing they will listen to in Ireland is what they listened to in other colonies: agitation, rebellion, and armed forces”.
(An image of the original mural can be found in the Paddy Duffy Collection – T00048)