
NORTHERN
IRELAND:
GENERATIONS OF CONFLICT, GENERATIONS OF HOPE
Joe
Campbell is the Assistant Director of the Mediation Network for Northern
Ireland, where he has worked for the past four years. Before this, he
worked for with the YMCA of Northern Ireland. In this article, prepared
from a telephone interview, Joe reflects on his years of working for peace
in his home country of Northern Ireland.
For twelve years, I worked
with young people, aged 15-25, in inner-city Belfast. These young people,
both Catholic and Protestant, were mostly poor and unemployed. We did
many things together: sailing, canoeing, hiking, and other recreation
programs, and I learned to know many of them very deeply. However, many
of them had different kinds of connections outside of the youth program,
connections to the junior wings of various paramilitary organizations,
Protestant and Catholic.
I found myself being drawn
in further - visiting the young people in prison, working with the gangs,
working on after-prison rehabilitation. I realized that I was working
with the results of the violence in Northern Ireland, and I decided I
needed to work with the structures of our society that cause and foster
division. I now work for The Mediation Network engaging in long term peacebuilding
through various programs.
Because Northern Ireland is
such a small country, I continue to bump into people I have worked with
through teaching and youth work. Some are doing well, and appreciate the
time and effort that I spent with them. I meet people who are driving
buses and doing other honest work. Some are now police officers whom I
meet in the course of my current work. When I visit prisons, I meet some
of the people I worked with and taught. If I meet a paramilitary leader,
chances are that I know someone well who is very close to him. That's
helpful in instilling confidence and acceptance.
These relationships are still
very important. I feel deep connections with these people; in many cases,
we've shared a wet tent in the mountains. Just yesterday, I went to a
church for a mediation session and met a man holding a child. He's one
of the people I worked with when he was a youth. He s a former prisoner,
now deeply involved with the church.
Here
we were,
family members from both sides of the conflict,
at a church to which none of us belonged,
praying together for peace in our country.
I found it very symbolic and moving.
Why do I do this kind of work?
I need to go all the way back to my grandparents to answer this. My grandfather
was Protestant; my grandmother Catholic. When they married in 1900, it
was no easier then than now to cross that religious barrier. But they
did, and they raised 11 children. The six men were raised Catholic; the
five women Protestant. My mother is one of the women. So I have Protestant
cousins and Catholic cousins.
I remember Good Friday 1998,
the day the peace agreement was signed late in the evening. We all knew
that things were coming to a head. The local Anglican Church asked people
to come to pray early that morning for peace. That's not my church, but
my wife and I went to join the prayers. As we were praying, five of my
Catholic cousins slid in beside us. Here we were, family members from
both sides of the conflict, at a church to which none of us belonged,
praying together for peace in our country. I found it very symbolic and
moving.
I'm doing this work for my
children and their children. I want to hand my country over to my grandchildren
in a better state than it is now. I'm also doing it looking back, in memory
of my grandparents and with thanks to my parents who raised me with contacts
and strong relationships on both sides.
I do have hope. I have hope
because people can change. I've seen people change, both youth and adults.
I've seen them change from a sectarian, bigoted position to one of inclusion
and understanding. I've seen men who have done terrible things coming
out of prison and working for peace and reconciliation. I've been inspired
by women who have lost their husbands and sons but who have refused to
be overtaken by bitterness, and who are working endless hours to bring
about peace and reconciliation.
What gives me strength and
keeps me going? I need to recognize the limits of my own ability. I need
to attend to myself. I want to make a positive contribution to peace in
Northern Ireland, but I need to remember I'm only one person. It's important
for me to keep the rhythms of my life in balance. The work for peace is
important, but that's not all of life. Life is bigger than work.
It's vital to me to stay aware
of God's spirit. Daily quiet times and Bible reflections help me carry
the spirit of Christ with me. These quiet, reflective times give me a
bigger perspective than what I'm doing. The question becomes, what's God
doing here in Northern Ireland? And what is God doing in me?
My family is very important.
I m fortunate to have a good, healthy family. My family includes my wife
and three children (young adults now), as well as my broader family. Recreation
is also important -- sailing, teaching young people how to handle boats,
gardening, doing things like woodwork with my hands. Last night I was
doing some woodworking with a friend. It was nice to see results quickly;
that doesn't happen when you're working with people. My wife and I are
sponsors of a youth group at our church, so I'm spending several weekends
in the mountains with them.
Getting away is also important;
getting out of the country for a while. Holidays are important. The time
I've spent at EMU has also been good. It has given me time for myself,
time to reflect, and time with other people from situations of conflict
who have similar experiences to mine. It has helped me to get my work
into perspective.
In a long, protracted conflict
like ours, the country is littered with people who were once active in
peacebuilding, but are now angry, disillusioned, and bitter, who came
to the work with a lot of enthusiasm and energy, but were unable to sustain
it for the long haul. I need to make sure that doesn't happen to me.
It is important to distinguish
the peace process from the political process. The political process is
deadlocked now, but the peace process is continuing. It can't stay that
way indefinitely. In many ways we're in an unsettled, undefined space
right now. Northern Ireland is moving from being a segregated society
to an integrated one, one that we hope will be inclusive and interdependent.
We're in the middle now, and that makes the work more difficult. It's
important to keep the long view, particularly in a period like the present.
Joe
Campbell is currently working on his MA at CTP.
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