The Impact
The Troubles, claiming to have ended in 1998 with the Good Friday Agreement, has had a lasting impact on Northern Ireland because of violence, divide and inequality (BBC, 2018). These two pictures, taken not even a mile apart, are an example of how the Troubles are still lingering in Northern Ireland and how some cannot move passed them. The first, a Unionist/Loyalist/Protestant sign indicating their allegiance to the United Kingdom and their feelings of attack in a mostly Republican/Nationalist/Catholic area of Derry. The second, a Republican sign making reference to the violent attack on the Republicans in Derry and their eventual freedom after The Troubles.
Although Rublicans are "free" in Derry and the rest of Northern Ireland, I am not sure that the forty years of the Troubles were necessary for them to gain freedom. The power struggle, the inequality, between the Catholics and the Protestants needed to be discussed, needed to be re-balanced, however, a forty year, violent war between two opposing sides within the same country was not the answer to the problem. Unfortunately, power and greed to keep that power, created tension that eventually developed into hatred and deeper greed.
BBC
(2018). The Troubles. Retrieved from http://www.bbc.co.uk/history/troubles
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