Martin McGuinness MLA – Warrington
September 2013
Over the past few days I have been
reflecting about what I should say this evening and I keep coming back to the
journey that has brought not just me here tonight, but also Colin and Wendy and
in a wider way the people of Warrington.
It has been a journey which has
involved much hurt and pain.
A journey for the Parry and Ball
families which began when the IRA planted a bomb here in Warrington in 1993.
For me it began many years earlier on
the streets of Derry in the late 1960s. The partition of Ireland left a system
of political and economic discrimination in the north which set the context for
30 years of war on our streets.
I have followed many coffins and
stood beside many grieving families in the years since. But there can be no
greater tragedy in life than parents having to bury their child. The deaths of
children as a result of the conflict is something that those of us who were
engaged in armed organisations, be they British or Irish have to accept responsibility
for.
No child whether they were killed
with a plastic bullet fired by a British soldier or RUC man, or killed by an
IRA action or by a loyalist gang should have died.
In the natural order of family life
it is the child who buries the parent.
So I am mindful, as a father and a
grandfather, of the unimaginable devastation caused when a parent has to bury a
child.
Such tragic circumstances arising out
of a natural illness may allow a family in some way, over time, to find the
space to anchor itself and resume life again.
It is therefore almost impossible to
comprehend how a family suddenly bereaved as a result of a violent incident,
where a child is lost, would ever be able to reach a point where normal life
would resume again.
I know from my personal experience of
meeting relatives of those killed as a result of the conflict in Ireland that
their lives are never the same again; life’s compass is permanently broken.
And so it is with the Parry and Ball
families who lost their boys, 12-year-old Tim Parry and 3 year-old Johnathan
Ball in March 1993 when an IRA bomb exploded in Warrington.
I remember well the tragedy; the
scenes of overwhelming grief on the streets of Warrington were heart-rending.
On that Saturday morning I was in the
process of making arrangements through a back channel to the British government
for a meeting between myself and Gerry Kelly with a representative of the
British government in Derry. Two days later that meeting happened.
The British government could have
walked away – but they knew as did we – that the only resolution to the
conflict lay in dialogue. There would never be a military solution to the
political conflict we were in.
I also remember well the scene in
Castlerock days later when 4 Catholics were gunned down by the UFF as they
arrived at work on a building site. I knew one of the men, Jimmy Kelly an IRA
Volunteer.
As a republican leader it would be
hypocritical for me to seek to distance myself from the consequences of armed
struggle or the IRAs role in it.
Nor can or would I attempt to excuse
the human loss caused by the IRA bomb in Warrington.
Regrettably the past cannot be
changed or undone. Neither can the suffering, the hurt or the violence of
the conflict be disowned by Republicans or any other party to the
conflict. None of this of course offers any comfort to
the many victims of the conflict, from all sides, including and in particular
the many hundreds of innocent victims including Tim Parry and Johnathan Ball
The challenge for all of us engaged
in the peace process and the political process in Ireland and indeed for the
British Government also, is to ensure that there can never be a repeat of what
went before. We must learn the lessons of history; we must build a
durable and just peace.
In my experience of meeting those
bereaved by the conflict in Ireland it never ceases to amaze me how generous
and compassionate many of them are despite their loss. I am also conscious that
there are others who are unable to make that journey.
A few years ago I met with Colin and
Wendy Parry in Warrington. That was a significant act of generosity,
reconciliation and hope by Colin and Wendy. Sadly Johnathan’s parents Wilf Ball
and Maire Comerford are now both deceased. The reception I received here was
exceptional and yet humbling. It was symbolically as important as any of the
other steps made in the peace process. It has had a lasting impact on me.
Gestures like this, though difficult
personally for those bereaved, are crucial to building peace and reconciliation.
It is this generosity which has made
the difficult job of making peace in Ireland that much easier and rewarding.
The poet Seamus Heaney in response to the 1994 ceasefire, said, that the
ceasefire was an opportunity to open a space – a space where hope can grow.
I know from speaking to the bereaved
on all sides of the conflict that they look for hope in the midst of their
personal despair.
It is this hope that they draw from:
hope that their children and grand children will live in a World free from
violence and injustice.
Some families and the Parry and Ball
families are an example of this; turn their tragedy into a worthy and personal
crusade for the greater good of humanity.
The setting up of the ‘Tim Parry and
Johnathan Ball Foundation for Peace’ by the families was in memory of the two
boys, to keep alive their innocence and the expectation of their lives, so
tragically ended.
Last year I met Queen Elizabeth when
she visited Belfast.
I was of course very conscious
of the symbolism involved in the meeting. But I was also conscious that she was
a victim also. Yes she is head of the British State, but she is a human being
and one who had been bereaved at the hands of the IRA yet still was clearly a
supporter of the Peace Process. I was struck by something she had said in a
visit to Dublin the previous year when she laid a wreath at the Garden of
Remembrance for all those who had died in the cause of Irish Freedom.
At a dinner in Dublin Castle she
said:
“To those who have suffered as a
consequence of our troubled past I extend my sincere thoughts and deep
sympathy. With the benefit of historical hindsight we can all see things which we wish would have been done differently or not at all.”
I echo those words and extend to all
British and Irish who have suffered as a result of the conflict in Ireland and
Britain, my sorrow and sympathy for the hurt and loss endured.
She went onto say that we should be
able to bow to the past but not be bound by it.
That is what I see here in this
building.
The Warrington Peace Centre which was
opened on the seventh anniversary of the deaths of Tim and Johnathan in March
2000 is dedicated to teaching people of all ages and races how to avoid using
violent methods to resolve conflict. It is a beacon of hope for the
future.
Colin Parry, Tim’s father, visited
Ireland many times after the deaths of his son Tim and Johnathan Ball.
He became a great advocate for peace
in Ireland; a champion for peace and the resolution of conflict.
In doing so he has made a valuable
contribution to the new and peaceful society we have in Ireland today.
Since the awful tragedy in Warrington
in March 1993 profound and far-reaching changes have taken place in Ireland and
in relationships between the British government and the people of Ireland
nationalist and unionist.
New political institutions are in
place in Ireland. These institutions are based on the principles of power
sharing, equality and respect for cultural diversity.
For the first time in over eight
centuries of troubled history the people of these islands, British and Irish
and their representatives have placed dialogue and not coercion at the centre
of their relationships.
These changes mean that no more
people from either Britain or Ireland need risk the lives of other people or
their own lives over political differences.
It means that children like Tim and
Johnathan in Ireland and Britain can grow from childhood to being adults
without the consequences of political violence visiting them.
The Irish peace Process is rightly
held up as an example of a successful model. Myself and other peace negotiators
from Ireland have travelled to conflict torn regions all over the world, to
outline the story of the Irish peace process. My party has contributed to
embryonic political settlements and peace processes in recent times in the
Basque country, Philippines, Columbia and Burma.
And, while we can, and perhaps
should, be proud of our work beyond our own shores, we should not forget that
we have much more to do at home to secure and build the peace.
The Warrington Peace Centre stands
tall as a testimony to this for all of us who have sought to chart a way from
conflict to peace in Ireland that and between Ireland and Britain. And a
timely testimony at that.
Sinn Féin is disappointed that our
partners in government in the north of Ireland, the DUP, have reneged on a
Programme for Government commitment to build a peace centre at the Maze Long
Kesh site. For many, given the journey we have all trodden and the
changes that have come about and our work abroad as advocates of peace
building, it beggars belief that we cannot agree on the building of a peace
centre.
But what it is that has tripped us
up? What has tripped us up is the past, how we speak about it, how we present
it, and how we address it. And its role in reconciliation.
Myself and Peter Robinson knew when
we commissioned this project that there would be difficulties. We agreed that
the peace centre would be exactly that, a peace centre.
We recognised that it could not be
the preserve of any one section of the community.
We also agreed what it couldn’t
be. It could not be a commemorative zone for any particular side or party
to the conflict or a place to retrospectively validate their role in the conflict.
We advocated the need for the new
site to be a genuinely shared space. And so, despite all the
difficulties we were optimistic about its future.
However, it is clear that there are
groups, who for various reasons are opposed to the building of the peace
centre. The peace centre has been cast by them as shrine to those who engaged
in the conflict. Nothing could be further from the truth. The
glorification of conflict is the antithesis of peace building.
The exploitation of this fear has
paralysed many on the unionist side and the peace centre is now in a logjam.
But the exploitation of this fear has
only been possible because of our collective failure to address the past.
And, in hindsight, we should have
known better.
Hardly a month goes by in the north
that we are not faced with an anniversary of a past tragedy.
Each such occasion evokes painful
memories.
And while each such occasion reminds
us that we have still to address the past in a way that complements and assists
the building of the future we are all committed to and will serve our better
interests, we have not yet applied ourselves sufficiently to this
end. We cannot allow this mistake to continue.
Some politicians have sought to use
victims for their own political ends. This is wrong on every level. The past
cannot be allowed to destabilise the future. But it must inform our path to a
better future.
I am a firm believer that we can deal
with every issue if we get the framework right and the context right.
Thus far, when it comes to dealing with the past, we have achieved neither.
Conflict resolution is about much
more than ending conflict. The conflict is over, but the work of conflict
resolution must continue.
If we approach conflict resolution on
the same basis that we approached ending the conflict then I firmly believe
acknowledgements about the past can become a powerful dynamic which will move
us again to new places that many believe are beyond us.
Truth recovery and acknowledgment are
critical to dealing with the past. They can breathe life into the quest for
reconciliation.
Dealing with the past will help and
guide us in our building of the future. And building for the future
will enable us to deal with the past.
The thinking which brought us all to
the negotiating table must be maintained and must drive us forward.
That is, there can be no winners. And that means there must be no
losers. If we move forward on this premise then we are duty bound to
acknowledge and respect our differences and to compromise. There is
no other way.
Relying on old certainties will only
produce old results. We need new approaches, new relationships and new results.
Within Ireland it means building new
relationships and meeting challenges in a positive way with at all times an eye
on building the peace and promoting reconciliation. With Britain it means
building an understanding of our historical difficulties without letting them
become an obstacle to good relations in the future.
Creating a new society at ease with
itself is the challenge facing us now. I believe in the unity of the people of
the island of Ireland. There is a democratic and peaceful way to achieve that
or to reject that. It is for the people to decide. I commit to approaching that
work with compassion and imagination.
Dialogue, building trust, making
political compromises are the seeds to achieving this new beginning.
This applies globally as much as
applies at home. There are many ongoing and brutal conflicts in Iraq and
Afghanistan and in Syria – thousands of people, including many
children killed, injured or displaced from their
homes. I wish the new talks process in the Middle East
well. The lesson from the conflict from which we have emerged in
the north of Ireland is the same for everywhere else. There are no
military solutions to any of these conflicts. Politics, dialogue and
diplomacy are the only guarantee of lasting peace.
We need to bear this in mind as we
approach World Peace Day on Saturday.
Compromise is not a dirty word. I am
proud of the compromises which I have made in the pursuit of building peace.
When you come to a place like
Warrington, when you meet people like Colin and Wendy Parry it is very
difficult not to be positive for the future.
But Republicans cannot make
agreements with ourselves. We need unionist partners. We need civic partners.
We need to agree the direction of travel for our society and stick to that road
map despite the attacks from the rejectionists be they unionist or so called
dissident republican.
At times people get frustrated,
myself included, at some of the political log jams which crop up from time to
time in our process. And at times people can focus on the negativity which
flows from these and miss the reality that the job of government continues –
Ministers are taking decisions everyday, the All-Ireland and East West
political architecture continues – everyday that this happens is another brick
being laid on the path to a new future.
Of course we need to find a way of
dealing with the past. Of course we need to put plans in place that ensures
that the marching season doesn’t become a by word for street violence every
summer. But all of this is doable.
When you reflect on the challenges we
have overcome to date – when you reflect on the journey we have all travelled –
then it is patently obvious that we cannot and will not let these legacy issues
to drag us backwards.
So my message from Warrington – from
a building with represents the future – is very simple – Peace needs
Partnership.
Let that be what guides us through
the next period. Let that be the principle which underpins our political
engagement going forward. Let that be the road map to a future built upon
genuine reconciliation and progress.
I was once in the IRA. I am now a
peace builder. I don’t expect anyone to take me at my word. I expect them to
take me by my deeds. I have spent 20 years building the peace. But peace
building like conflict is a joint enterprise. I challenge all of the parties to
the conflict to pledge their commitment to the type of acknowledgement, respect
and compromise we need to move forward in the years ahead.
Sinn Féin Mountmellick – Serving The Community
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