Today is Eleventh Night in Northern Ireland. On July 11th the
Protestants burn huge bonfires in every neighborhood and town in Northern
Ireland – where they burn Catholic symbols (ie Crosses, Irish Flags, pictures
of the Pope, etc.)
Tomorrow is the “The Twelfth” in Northern Ireland. The
Twelfth is when the Northern Irish Protestants celebrate the Victory of
Protestant King William of Orange over the Catholic King James II at the Battle
of the Boyne (1690), which began the Protestant Ascendancy in Ireland
Note: it was celebrated by the Irish Protestants in all of
Ireland until 1922 when Ireland became an independent country and Northern
Ireland stayed part of the UK.
The Twelfth is really just a day for Northern Irish
Protestants to carry-out anti-Catholic attacks, parades and demonstrations. The
Protestants parade and march through Catholic neighborhoods – even going
through the Peace Lines separating the two communities – to show that the
Protestant Ascendancy is still alive after all these centuries and to make sure
the Catholics “know their place” at the bottom.
There has always been violence and even death since The
Twelfth was first celebrated in the late 18th Century.
Here is a picture of the Protestant Area of Belfast, Northern
Ireland. The Red, White and Blue of the British Flag is there to let Catholics
know it is a Protestant Area and that Catholics are not welcomed or safe there.
In case a Catholic still doesn’t understand that they can
then read the Ulster Loyalist Protestant Sign on the Mural. I took this picture
in June 2010. I was in Northern Ireland at the end of June and even then you
could see bonfires being built in every Protestant area for the 12th.
The Twelfth should be banned as should any event or act that
promotes the violence and death of either Catholics or Protestants.
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