Irish Eyes are Weeping
I suppose when one thinks of Ireland, thoughts of green come to mind. Snow is not a common thing at all as the fields are always some colour of green, depending on the season and the amount of rain that falls. Here is a picture of Slemish mountain, not green, but covered in a white carpte of snow, where local legend holds that St. Patrick himself tended sheep as a slave.
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As we leave the spectecular beauty that is Slemish, where when one climbs to the top and sits in the stone chair where St. Patrick himself is said to have sat upon, we will walk down the road called the "Troubles". During the "Troubles" thousands of lives were shattered by the senseless killings of members of the security forces and civilians. There is an old joke about how the pilot spoke to the passengers as they were about to land at Belfast Airport and asked them to reset the time on their watches. He told them to turn back their watches to the year 1690. The Irish have long memories. They hold grudges and grievances for a long, long time, don't forget that!!

The Nine Glens of Antrim, magnificent in their forty shades of green, radiate outwards towards the Irish coast from the mountainous heartland of the county, cut through the black basalt by rivers and further gouged by ancient glaciers. The nine Glens of Antrim are known as Glenarm, Glencloy, Glenariff, Glenballyemon, Glencorp, Glanaan, Glendun, Glenshesk and Glentaisie.
And the green glens of Antrim are calling to me.
Sure if only you knew how the lamp of the moon
Turns a blue Irish bay to a silver lagoon
You'd imagine the picture of heaven 'twould be
Where the green glens of Antrim are calling to me.
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But I'd be where the people were simple and kind
And among them the one who's been aye in my mind
Sure I'd pray that the world would in peace let me be
Where the green glens of Antrim are heaven to me.
Composed by Kenneth North © 1950 Carolin Music.
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The words of this Irish song captures the inspirational beauty of this troubled land. The Green Glens of Antrim without a doubt display some of the most beautiful sights found in nature. It is so hard to comprehend that behind this tremendous display of nature's wonders that such an evil is lurking, waiting to strike terror into the hearts and minds of the people who fall under their intimidation and control and continuely used and exploited for political purposes.
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spectecular water falls are to be found everywhere
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It is rumoured that these Paramilitary murals will be replaced under a government-funded scheme to redecorate Northern Ireland's walls with more welcoming images.
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The proposals have been criticised by some tour guides. Tourists can see a lot of Northern Ireland's history with some of the Belfat Murals they have often been described as a picture book that shows the last 35 years of conflict.
The murals tour in Belfast is one of the most popular, must see attraction for tourists visiting Northern Ireland. With peace and stability now almost normal in Northern Ireland, Peace Line Tours would like to ask the question is it time for the murals to go, or are they just a harmless tourist attraction and a reminder of the past. ( Of course they will lose tourist dollars as well.)
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REMEMBERING
Between 1969 and 2001
3523 people
were killed as a result of the Troubles:
2055
by republican groups
1020
by loyalist groups
368
by British and Irish security forces
80
by groups or persons unknown.
Status
Most of those killed were civilians or members of the security forces, with smaller groups of victims identified with republican and loyalist paramilitary groups. It is often disputed whether some civilians were members of paramilitary organisations due to their secretive nature.
An analysis of those killed by status gives:
1857
civilians
1121
members of security forces
394
identified as members of republican groups
151
identified as members of loyalist groups
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The security force members include:
498
British army personnel
301
Royal Ulster Constabulary officers
197
Ulster Defence Regiment personnel
24
Northern Ireland Prison Service officers
7
Royal Irish Regiment personnel
9
Gardaí (police officers in the Republic of Ireland)
6
Territorial Army personnel
6
police officers in England
4
Royal Air Force personnel
3
Royal Navy personnel
1
Irish Army soldier
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CHRONOLOGICAL RECORD OF THE DECEASED
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ROYAL ULSTER CONSTABULARY
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Constable Victor Arbuckle
killed 11-Oct-1969 by Loyalists
Shot dead during riot on Shankill Road.
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Constable Sam Donaldson
killed 12-Aug-1970 by the IRA
by booby trap car bomb in Culloville, Crossmaglen
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Constable Robert Millar
killed 12-Aug-1970 by the IRA
by booby trap car bomb in Culloville, Crossmaglen
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Constable Robert Buckley
killed 28-Feb-1971 by the IRA
shot dead during riots at Alliance Avenue, North Belfast.
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D/Inspector Cecil Patterson
killed 28-Feb-1971 by IRA
shot dead during riots at Alliance Avenue, North Belfast.
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Constable Robert Leslie
killed 18th-Sept-1971 by the IRA
Shot and fatally wounded in Castle Place, Strabane
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Constable Cecil Cunningham
15th-Oct-1971 by the IRA
Shot dead in Ardoyne, Belfast.
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Constable John Haslett
killed 15-Oct-1971 by the IRA
Shot dead in Ardoyne, Belfast.
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Sargeant Ronald Dodd
killed 27-Oct-1971 by the IRA
Shot and fatally wounded at Gallagh, Toomebridge
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Inspector Alfred Devlin
killed 29-Oct-1971 my the IRA
Killed in bomb at Chichester Road RUC Station, Belfast
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D/Constable Stanley Corry
killed 1-Nov-1971 by the IRA
Shot dead in Andersontown, Belfast
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D/Constable William Russell
killed 1-Nov-1971 by the IRA
Shot dead in Andersontown, Belfast
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Sargeant Dermot Hurley
killed 11-Nov-1971 by the IRA
Fatally injured in gun attack on Oldpark Road, Belfast
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Constable Walter Moore
killed 11-Nov-1971 by the IRA
Fatally injured in gun attack on Oldpark Road, Belfast
A chronological record of the deceased is available from this menu.
1969
1970
1971
1972
1973
1974
1975
1976
1977
1978
1979
1980
1981
1982
1983
1984
1985
1986
1987
1988
1989
1990
1991
1992
1993
1994
1995
1996
1997
1998
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To find information relating to a deceased officer
please select the year in which he or she died.
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The
ULSTER DEFENSE REGIMENT
This The Ulster Defence Regiment's Roll of Honour and in this section I intend to inform you about the brave men and women who paid the ultimate sacrifice with the aim of helping to bring peace to Northern Ireland.
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1971
1972
1973
1974
1975
1976
1977
1978
1979
1980
1981
1982
1983
1984
1985
1986
1987
1988
1989
1990
1991
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Maybe there is hope ....
A television programme produced by the BBC includes a meeting between former loyalist paramilitary Michael Stone and Sylvia and Roddy Hackett, the widow and brother of a man he is convicted of murdering.
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Michael Stone became notorious when television cameras captured his gun and grenade attack on mourners at an IRA funeral in Milltown cemetery in 1988 killing three people.
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When questioned by police about the attack, Stone confessed to another three murders including that of Dermot Hackett. Stone claims that Mr Hackett was an IRA man, but the family have always denied that.
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After the meeting, Fergal Keane asked Sylvia whether she now thought it was the right thing for her to come to meet Michael Stone. Sylvia said she had waited a long time for this day and it had given her a "little bit of healing. It's been like a life sentence for me and the girls. This was something I just had to do. To show him I'm not just this bitter woman who everybody thinks I'm going to be. I do feel sorry for him. But it was my way of showing I'm a Christian.”
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