A One-Day Trip Out of the Blue.
It all started out with a casual comment in passing from our
director. “I am going to go to Belfast to meet some people. –You could come as
well.” Really, it was more like an afterthought; I doubt the possibility of us actually
agreeing even occurred to him. However, we did. In the end, only two people in
my class did not go.
But let’s rewind slightly: The show we are doing this term
is a devised show, which means that the in Belfast. This is all a part
of the Troubles that technically has been going on in Northern Ireland for the
last 500 years. Long story short, one part wants a unified Ireland, the other
side wants to stay in the UK, and the conflict is not always peaceful.
director chooses a topic/event, and we
improvise all the content to create a play from scratch. What our director
decided on was the 1981 hunger strike in Long Kesh prison (also known as the H
Blocks)
As research, our director had planned a trip to Belfast to
talk to some people, and so it was that, because of a simple suggestion,
fourteen of us boarded an EasyJet flight 12.20 Sunday the 25th of
January.
Officially, this couldn’t be defined as a class trip, as we
had to pay for all of it ourselves. There was no way the university would have
the money to get us there – not to mention they would never allow us. Travel
was a full £96 counting busses and the flight, then there was the food on top
of that. But while it definitely was a heavy blow to my economy, I am glad I
went.
Belfast is a very interesting, and truly, very beautiful
city. It is smaller than you expect. Walking around a neighbourhood I
suddenly
realised there were green hills in the background. The city centre is just like
any other city, welcoming and vibrant in its own way. However, walk only a few
minutes out, and a completely different atmosphere greets you. You suddenly
realise the Troubles are not over, a tense undercurrent running like
electricity under the very pavement, making the hair on your neck stand on end
if you stop to look and listen.
Separating the two different factions is a high, long wall,
called the Peace Wall. The gates leading
through close every day at five at
which point children from either side gather to hurl abuse and whatever objects
they have at hand at each other. These are children that don’t even know each other. The top of the wall has been recently added on to make it harder to throw things over. The next picture shows the wall from the inside where the houses lining it all have mesh cages to protect them from petrol bombs.
Either side of the city is decorated with wall murals,
honouring their people. It is hard to get your mind around. Within this tiny
city, men are celebrated as freedom fighters on one side and as terrorists on
the other.
Monday we met up with our director at 9.30 outside a pub. Now
came the reason we actually travelled here. Through some chain of contacts, our
director had gotten a man to agree to meet us for a talk. The pub was opened
just for our sake, and for two hours we listened to a middle-aged Irish man tell
us details from the inside.
To me, it still hasn’t quite sunk in how lucky (if you want
to use that word) we were to meet this particular man. Not many in our position
would get that privilege, and it is something that should not be discussed
loudly in public places.
Then it was all over. Monday evening we were back on a plane
and returning to Southend.