This is perhaps the most personal blog to date. I thank you in advance for both your comprehension - and compassion.
My family moved to Coleraine in 1954 when my father was made cashier in the Northern Bank, a solidly protestant institution which had been caring for presbyterian and anglican funds and families since 1824. Catholics went to the Bank of Ireland or the Hibernian. Coleraine was known as "the trim little borough", a small town and port dating from the seventeenth century Plantation of Ulster.
Not much happened until around 1968 when our world began to swell, heave and then erupt. The government of Northern Ireland decided to site the second university in Coleraine, thereby ignoring the much better claims of Derry/Londonderry and thus striking the match which would ignite the riots of 1969.
And the directors of the Northern Bank decided to appoint the first catholic to the staff of their Coleraine branch whose manager was by now my father. Consternation all round. At least six of the major local nomenklatura called to inform my father in no uncertain terms that they would withdraw their accounts forthwith and instanter and would never darken the doors again if such heresy were to come to pass. My father, having run himself ragged securing the university account for the Northern Bank - where it resides to this day - raced up to Belfast to discuss this with the directors and was instructed to let the aforesaid accounts go.
All well and good in the calm of the boardroom - not so easy when you have to eyeball the offended in the street, the shop and the golf club. The upshot was that the young man was duly appointed, my father was so stressed that he suffered the first of the heart attacks which would kill him a year later and not one of the accounts was ever withdrawn.
I thought of this at the weekend when a crowd of drunken, so-called protestants descended like a plague of locusts upon a street to taunt and abuse their soccer opponents. Sectarian politics play proxy soccer in Northern Ireland: the bigots on both sides play out their fantasies by supporting either Glasgow Rangers or Glasgow Celtic. Rangers won the Scottish league for the first time in four years and four years of humiliation and taunts were visited upon the local Celtic supporters.
Kevin McDaid, a catholic community worker married to a presbyterian, went out to try and stop the hand to hand fighting in the street. He was abused, attacked, beaten up and stabbed - and died in his son's arms. His wife and a pregnant neighbour were also seriously assaulted before the police could call in reinforcements.
And we tell the world that we have a peace process? No, we have a sham - and it will continue to be a sham, a fake and a sleight of hand until eventually the slightest glimmer of reason begins to dawn on even the thickest neanderthal that violence begets and achieves - nothing. The defence pleas of "under the influence of drink and the mob" will fall on the coldest of hearts and the deafest of ears in due course.
I spoke to my son last night. He was thinking of working over here for a few months next winter. For the first time since he moved to England, I told him that he would be better to stay away, no matter how much I would love to see him more regularly. "At least", said I, " over in England they just murder you for normal reasons: guns, drugs and crocks o' gold."
Ashamed? You don't know the half of it.