BELFAST... AND FURIOUS !

entre Irlande et Royaume-Uni

17 juillet 2009

Bye Bye Belfast, Au Revoir Irlande

This will be my last post in this blog. Tomorrow, I'm leaving Belfast and Ireland for good. Direction : Greece and Athens ! :-)

Here are my last pictures of Belfast, not very cheerful ones : last week was the Twelfth of July, and it's the bonfire season, when Loyalists remind everybody the day of the Battle of the Boyne, by burning huge stack of woods and crap, and as you can see they add insult to injury by burning the Republic of Ireland flag on it (sometimes, even the picture of the pope). Of course, sometimes, it depends the year, the situation is quite tense between the communities : bomb alerts, riots, etc. On the second picture, you can see the police, near where I work, closing the Albert Bridge due to a bomb scare in the central station. Due to this, we finished 1h30 earlier this day !

P110709_11 P100709_15

I will keep writing a blog, a new one, and this time i will experiment a new provider, probably Blogger.

Posté par rvthomas à 11:04 - BELFAST - Commentaires [1] - Rétroliens [0] - Permalien [#]
Tags : , ,


27 juin 2009

The Twelfth is Coming

It looks like a wild wasteland, but this is not littering. This is the preparation for the Twelfth of July.

12

Posté par rvthomas à 20:58 - BELFAST - Commentaires [0] - Rétroliens [0] - Permalien [#]
Tags : ,

12 juillet 2008

THE TWELFTH

Today is the 12th of July, the most important and most dodgy date of the Northern Ireland's Calendar. Last night, all the loyalists districts were up and dancing and drinking around big bonfires like the one on this photo here, burning images of the Pope, and the Irish flag. Why ? Because this date encompasses severals of British-Irish history, all of which are at the advantage of the Protestant side.

P7110010

Thedefile

On this flags, displayed during the marches on Lisburn Road, you can see King Billie, the British King William III. On July 1st 1690, during the Battle of the Boyne (on the Irish soil) William of Orange beat the deposed king James II, and his Catholic-Irish army, and achieved the Glorious Revolution. The Battle of Aughrim, the 12th of July 1691, in which the last Catholic Jacobite army was destroyed, in the bloodiest battle fought on the Irish soil, and the reign of William of Orange was definitely secured.

KingBillie KingBillie2

All these dates merged into one to because they have in common the same ground and result : the victory and survivance of the Protestant forces and people on a predominantly Catholic and Irish country. Hence, no surprise you can see Martin Luther here.Martin_Luther

March

Therefore, this date has become the most important date of the Northern Ireland calendar, the one when it is not safe to stroll around the streets. Some years ago, soldiers were deployed in the streets. Because this is a very one-sided party, and better not to come wavering the Irish flag !

UlsterConventionOrangemen

Posté par rvthomas à 10:47 - NORTHERN IRELAND - Commentaires [2] - Rétroliens [0] - Permalien [#]
Tags : , , , ,
« Accueil  1