GGRY

Here is a small piece of repbulican graffiti in the Elmfield area of Glengormley – a hammer and sickle.

See previously: Glengormley Republican Youth | Gleann Ghormlaithe Poblachtacht

Church Crescent, Glengormley, Newtownabbey.

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Do You Believe?

The replacement board – the word “believe” among flowers – is innocuous, but the replacing itself is remarkable, for a number of reasons.

The “Final Salute” board/mural at the top of the Rock (that ‘Believe’ replaces) depicted an iconic scene from the hunger strike period, of the funeral volley being fired over the Sands’s coffin on May 7th (reproducing the photograph seen previously in IRA Final Salute). More than 100,000 people came out onto the streets of west Belfast for the procession and images of the event were beamed to scores of countries by news crews from all corners of the globe which had flocked to west Belfast.

Further, the board has been in place since 2011, put in place for the 30 anniversary of the strike and Sands’s death on May 5th, and it was painted by Lucas Quigley, an IRA volunteer and brother of Jimmy Quigley (see M08864), who died on September 25th, last year (youtube). Being 12 years old, the board was not in good condition. It has been removed and is going to the Ulster Museum for its ‘Troubles And Beyond’ collection.

Finally, as far as its replacement goes, we would not have expected a non-sectarian replacement. This wall has had a CNR mural on it since Beıdh An Bua Agaınn in 1989. Even the USDT piece from 1996 onward featured an Irish dancer and an Irish inscription: “mol an óıge agus tıocfaıdh sí”. In general, we are not aware of any murals or boards depicting the 1981 hunger strike that have been re-imaged.

In this case, the new piece came from the children of John Paul II primary school, using the same style of ‘flower bed’ as at the entrance to the Felons’ Club. The work was funded by a grant from the Housing Executive to the Falls Community Council (Belfast Media) with support from the Resource Centre and USDT.

The task of repainting the wall, including the (painted) green head and orange foot for the previous board — and thus of removing Bobby Sands’s name from the wall — has been delegated to the owner of the building (News Letter). It is possible that something sectarian could be added to the lower space after that.

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Stand Together

“Is your private or social landlord failing to finish repairs in your home? Don’t stand alone, stand together – join the Tenants’ Union in Ardoyne. CATU Belfast. beflast@catuireland.org”

CATU – “community action tenants’ union” – was formed in 2019 and its slogan – “we only want the earth” – comes from James Connolly’s poem of the same name.

The Belfast branch is on Facebook.

For the mural in the background, see What Is A Free Nation? For the slogan, see also Our Demands Most Moderate Are.

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Changed Priorities

In the post of the new Sam Rockett mural in Woodvale – Essence And Space – we said that the “peace” line separating Wyndham Street from the rest of Torrens had been taken down as the area was redeveloped from roughly 2008-2012. As can be seen from this gallery of images, however, some of the infrastructure remains, particularly the school building (former site of Naíscoil Bheann Mhadaigáin (Belfast Media profile)) and the adjacent waste-ground in Torrens Crescent, which remain undeveloped. The alley to Cliftonville is gated at both ends.

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Pride Of Glencolin

Glencolin estate was built next to Moyard House (which in 1984 became home to the Roddy’s (web), shown in the image directly below) on the Glen Road in 1979 (Belfast Forums). For the fortieth anniversary of “eastát Ghleann Collaınn” the mural at the entrance to the estate was (belatedly) repainted. The composition of the mural remains as in the previous version, with the Roddy’s and Oliver Plunkett church in the shadow of Dubhaıs and Slıabh Dubh; they are now joined by images of Gaelic games. The Bobby Sands quote has been removed.

The 2018 side-wall shows boxer Brendan Irvine — “the wee rooster” — who represented Ireland in the Tokyo (2020) and Rio (2016) Olympics at flyweight (Olympics).

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All Smiles

The faces of local children are rendered in ceramic tiles by Clare McComish (web), replacing a Sean McCaughey mural in Brompton Park, Ardoyne, as part of the 2009 Re-Imaging Communities project (see Visual History 10).

NVTv has video about the mosaic, starting at 14m 14s.

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Copyright © 2023 Extramural Activity
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How To Climb A Wall

The Gladstone Bar — seen on the right of the image above – was in Gilford Street at the junction with Divis Street, which stretches towards the city on the left. The other street image is perhaps also Divis St/Falls Rd though there are no easily-identifiable landmarks. In between them is a scene from the 1930 Laurel and Hardy film, Night Owls (WP).

To the left of these three is a mural of an island paradise, and to its left (in the final image) we find Muhammad Ali, based on the famous photo of Ali standing over Sonny Liston in their second encounter.

The murals are in a courtyard off Ross Road and were probably painted at the request of a local resident. The Ali-Liston fight – in 1965 – perhaps gives a date for the consciousness that groups all of these items together – the Gladstone was still standing in the 60s and Laurel and Hardy played on UK televisions into the 1970s. The source for the palm trees is unknown.

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Time For A Socialist Republic

The waste ground at Corrib Avenue (in the curve between Rossnareen and Lenadoon) is being developed with new houses by Choice (Belfast Media) and Lasaır Dhearg have taken advantage of the hoarding mounted around the construction site to display the messages above — “Remember the hunger strikers” — and below, with an image of James Connolly — “Time for a socialist republic”.

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Restoration Of The Monarchy

Red and then green and then back to red, at least in part. This “Royal mail” post-box is at the entrance to Glencolin, west Belfast. With bonus “Join RSF – Éıre Nua” stencil on the electrical box across the street.

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Today’s Society Is Unequal

Commentary on the performance of “leaders” during Covid and in the fact of economic inequality, in Lenadoon, west Belfast:
“While we couldn’t bury our dead, our “leaders” drank wine.” (perhaps a reference to the images from the “leaving do” party in Downing St showing Boris Johnson with a glass of wine (iTV)
“Today’s society is unequal. We are expected to pay higher bills for the same wage?”

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