BELFAST, Northern Ireland (AP) 鈥 Teenagers from Catholic and Protestant youth groups lit candles on a Belfast street in memory of those who perished in the Holocaust, then listened solemnly to a warning about the dangers of Northern Ireland鈥檚 own infamous religious bigotries.
鈥淲e all know what prejudice is,鈥 said Stephen Hughes, leader in charge of St. Peter鈥檚 Immaculata Youth Centre, his voice robustly carrying over the twilight rush-hour traffic. 鈥淲e were encouraged to hate each other because they鈥檙e Protestant or they鈥檙e Catholic.鈥
The teens were too young, he noted, to remember 鈥渢he Troubles鈥 鈥 three decades of sectarian violence that claimed more than 3,600 lives in the late 20th century and left countless more wounded and bereaved.
The violence largely ended 25 years ago this month with the signing of the Good Friday Agreement, which laid out a political process for resolving Northern Ireland鈥檚 future.
But that political process has been turbulent, skirmishes have periodically resurfaced, and Catholic and Protestants remain segregated in many ways.
Moreover, Catholics now outnumber Protestants in a land historically defined by its pro-British Protestant majority. But neither of them are in church as often as they used to be, those who profess no religion are growing, and Catholics have mixed views about uniting with Ireland, meaning it鈥檚 not expected to come to a vote any time soon
There鈥檚 still plenty of work for those in the business of reconciliation and community-building.
The Holocaust memorial event on a January evening was one of a series of small yet earnest activities by two youth groups 鈥 the Catholic St. Peter鈥檚 Immaculata and the Townsend Street Social Outreach Centre, located in an adjacent Protestant neighborhood. Their aim is to build communication and friendship across the walls and habits separating their communities.
The event was commemorating a genocide far greater than the Northern Ireland conflict, but the memorial offered a powerful and relevant warning, Hughes said.
鈥淥ur own hatred, the laughs and jokes we make about each other, can quickly escalate,鈥 he said.
He urged the teens to be peacebuilders. 鈥淭hankfully, you don鈥檛 know that violence,鈥 he said. 鈥淭he thing is, you鈥檚 are the future.鈥
And then the youths climbed back into their minibus for a stop at McDonald鈥檚, where they mingled over Big Macs and fries before heading home to their separate neighborhoods.
Religion, long a part of the problem, can be part of the solution, said Ruth Petticrew, longtime director of the Townsend Street organization. 鈥淟et鈥檚 show people that love works, but it has to be genuine love, not preaching at them."
The 25th anniversary of the Good Friday Agreement is arriving as Northern Ireland鈥檚 population undergoes dramatic change.
Northern Ireland was created a century ago as a six-county entity with a two-to-one Protestant majority 鈥 fiercely loyal to the United Kingdom even as the rest of predominately Catholic Ireland won independence from it.
Long a minority, Catholics now comprise 42% and Protestants 37% of Northern Ireland鈥檚 population of 1.9 million, according to the Northern Ireland Statistics and Research Agency.
But in another demographic jolt, the number of people who don鈥檛 identify with any religion jumped to 17%, up from 10% a decade earlier.
Faith leaders in Northern Ireland say church attendance has shrunk even among those who still identify as Christian.
The Good Friday Agreement authorizes a referendum on Irish unification if polls ever indicate it would likely pass.
But nearly twice as many people in Northern Ireland 鈥 50% vs. 27% 鈥 would vote to stay in Britain rather than to join Ireland if a referendum were held now, according to a 2022 survey published in the Irish Times.
What鈥檚 more, only 55% of Catholics in Northern Ireland would vote to join Ireland. Most others would either stay in the U.K. or were uncertain.
Secular and other voters are even more mixed 鈥 with nearly a third uncertain.
鈥淭here鈥檚 more and more and more people like myself who also don鈥檛 actually identify with the idea or don鈥檛 take a position on being part of the U.K. or part of the Republic of Ireland,鈥 said Boyd Sleator, coordinator of the group Northern Ireland Humanists. 鈥淲e should just think about governing ourselves.鈥
Even if religion is in retreat, faith-based groups are still working toward reconciliation on a grassroots level.
Few efforts are more striking than what鈥檚 taking place at the Building Bridges Community Boxing Club.
It operates in what was once the fellowship hall of a Presbyterian church that has since closed. The building was acquired by 174 Trust, a faith-based community group, and turned into a boxing gym.
It鈥檚 located astride one of the 鈥減eace walls鈥 that divide neighborhoods in an effort to keep sectarian violence at bay. The gym鈥檚 front door opens onto a predominately Protestant neighborhood, its back door onto a mostly Catholic neighborhood.
That enables the gym to stay open in the evening, accessible to youths from both neighborhoods 鈥 even after the gates to the peace wall are closed each night.
Unlike some sports, which are divided along sectarian lines, boxing brings out fans from all communities, said the Rev. Bill Shaw, CEO of the 174 Trust, which works closely with the boxing club. When one young boxer, a Protestant, began to have success in the ring, his newfound Catholic friends from the gym turned out to cheer him on.
鈥淲hen people don鈥檛 know each other and have no contact with the other, you can live with that prejudice and allow it to poison yourself,鈥 Shaw said.
But it鈥檚 a different story, he said, 鈥渨hen they actually meet each other.鈥
Much of Shaw's work is at The Duncairn, a community center located in another former Presbyterian church located a few blocks from the boxing gym in a historically embattled neighborhood. Within its stained-glass windows and Gothic arches, The Duncairn today hosts concerts, exhibitions, an Irish-language preschool, a caf茅 and support groups.
On a winter morning, Catholic and Protestant clergy gathered for prayer around a table at the Duncairn.
One by one, they earnestly prayed for an end to prejudice and hatred, followed by contemplative silences and quiet expressions of 鈥渁men.鈥
The goal for such centers, Shaw said, is reconciliation rather than proselytizing.
鈥淔aith is what motivates us,鈥 said Shaw. 鈥淚t鈥檚 not what we鈥檙e selling.鈥
Another faith-based initiative was evident on a winter evening, when scores of people from multiple churches and neighborhoods gathered in a Methodist sanctuary to pray together, listen to a Catholic speaker and worship with Psalms set to traditional Irish tunes accompanied by fiddle and tin whistle.
It was part of the larger 4 Corners Festival, an annual series of events seeking to bridge the religiously fractured city.
鈥淭he legacy of conflict has left us with fear,鈥 said the Rev. Martin Magill, a Catholic priest and a festival organizer. 鈥淏eing able to provide safe spaces is very important.鈥
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