Building Peace in Northern Ireland: Christian Reconcilers in an Economy of Hate

The Ardoyne neighborhood is not a place a tourist would want to visit. Its streets today are the front lines of what some would classify as a religious holy war, and are the regular backdrop for violent scenes of masked demonstrators, burning cars, and heavily armed soldiers and riot police. Guard t...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Eric Getty
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Gonzaga Library Publishing 2003-01-01
Series:Journal of Hate Studies
Subjects:
Online Access:https://jhs.press.gonzaga.edu/articles/10
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spelling doaj-7b68cd3224904441809f2a1c794b580a2020-11-25T02:50:09ZengGonzaga Library PublishingJournal of Hate Studies2169-74422003-01-0121476210.33972/jhs.1010Building Peace in Northern Ireland: Christian Reconcilers in an Economy of HateEric GettyThe Ardoyne neighborhood is not a place a tourist would want to visit. Its streets today are the front lines of what some would classify as a religious holy war, and are the regular backdrop for violent scenes of masked demonstrators, burning cars, and heavily armed soldiers and riot police. Guard towers, walls topped with barbed wire, armored cars, and helicopters are part of daily life in this area, but this neighborhood is not in the Middle East. Rather, it lies far to the north in Belfast, Northern Ireland, part of industrialized Western Europe. Here, row upon row of run-down brick tenements intertwine in a rusted-out, crumbling, crime-ridden tumor in the north end of the city. The people who live here are largely poor, unemployed, inadequately educated, and suffer from widespread drug and alcohol addictions. All of these ingredients create a dangerously volatile mix, but what makes the Ardoyne a particularly tense place is that its streets have been divided and subdivided between Catholic and Protestant zones, and the slightest provocation can become the spark that sets off an explosive chain-reaction of communal violence.https://jhs.press.gonzaga.edu/articles/10religious violencenorthern irelandcatholicprotestantreligion
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Eric Getty
spellingShingle Eric Getty
Building Peace in Northern Ireland: Christian Reconcilers in an Economy of Hate
Journal of Hate Studies
religious violence
northern ireland
catholic
protestant
religion
author_facet Eric Getty
author_sort Eric Getty
title Building Peace in Northern Ireland: Christian Reconcilers in an Economy of Hate
title_short Building Peace in Northern Ireland: Christian Reconcilers in an Economy of Hate
title_full Building Peace in Northern Ireland: Christian Reconcilers in an Economy of Hate
title_fullStr Building Peace in Northern Ireland: Christian Reconcilers in an Economy of Hate
title_full_unstemmed Building Peace in Northern Ireland: Christian Reconcilers in an Economy of Hate
title_sort building peace in northern ireland: christian reconcilers in an economy of hate
publisher Gonzaga Library Publishing
series Journal of Hate Studies
issn 2169-7442
publishDate 2003-01-01
description The Ardoyne neighborhood is not a place a tourist would want to visit. Its streets today are the front lines of what some would classify as a religious holy war, and are the regular backdrop for violent scenes of masked demonstrators, burning cars, and heavily armed soldiers and riot police. Guard towers, walls topped with barbed wire, armored cars, and helicopters are part of daily life in this area, but this neighborhood is not in the Middle East. Rather, it lies far to the north in Belfast, Northern Ireland, part of industrialized Western Europe. Here, row upon row of run-down brick tenements intertwine in a rusted-out, crumbling, crime-ridden tumor in the north end of the city. The people who live here are largely poor, unemployed, inadequately educated, and suffer from widespread drug and alcohol addictions. All of these ingredients create a dangerously volatile mix, but what makes the Ardoyne a particularly tense place is that its streets have been divided and subdivided between Catholic and Protestant zones, and the slightest provocation can become the spark that sets off an explosive chain-reaction of communal violence.
topic religious violence
northern ireland
catholic
protestant
religion
url https://jhs.press.gonzaga.edu/articles/10
work_keys_str_mv AT ericgetty buildingpeaceinnorthernirelandchristianreconcilersinaneconomyofhate
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