My posting is pathetic. Pathetic, I tell you! I have another post in my drafts folder that discusses this at more length. In the meantime, let's talk about this week!
Chance started feeling puny on Tuesday, and I've picked up the same bug. It's pretty rotten - sinus headache and sore throat. Chance has a nasty persistent cough, but I've avoided that so far. Yesterday, though, the weather was just gorgeous, so I bullied everyone into going out for a bit. We chose the Beaghmore Stone Circles just outside of Cookstown, and finally made it out of the house about 3:00.
Getting there's not so bad - it's M1 all the way to the Dungannon exit, then only about 15 miles on the A29. Not so bad, that is, until you hit the "M1 closed, follow diversion" signs at Portadown. That diversion went all the way into Portadown, then back up to the M1, adding at least 30 minutes to the trip. Since it was getting on in the day, we stopped at a little chippery in Dungannon and ate some fine Irish fried stuff. OK, maybe not so fine, but it got some food into the kids. Thus fortified, we headed on to the stone circles and into the evening. But alas, just before Cookstown, we hit another diversion.
Rather than try to find something that we hadn't seen any signs for yet anyway, we decided to go east, toward Lough Neagh, and find the Arboe Cross. This 10th-century High Cross is said to be one of the best examples of the form in Ulster. As you can tell it's severely eroded, but it's still amazing to think that some of the New Testament scenes it depicts were nearly ten centuries old when the cross was made.
The cross is on the site of St. Coleman's monastery, built in the 6th century but completely destroyed by a Viking invasion in 1166. Rumors point to an extensive tunnel network under the grounds, but nothing's been discovered. Given the geography of the area, where the monastery site sits about 50 feet above the lough, caves would seem like a possibility. Today, though, the site holds a ruined 18th-century era chapel and what seems to be the family cemetery of the Martin and Devlin families. Some of the memorials gave us an indication that Ardboe residents were actively involved in Republicanism - Wikipedia verified this with one whole page on The Troubles in Ardboe, and another on Matt Devlin.
As an American in Northern Ireland, the Troubles don't generally jump out at you. True, there's the murals, but outside of East Belfast there aren't many, and the feeling I get is that they're more tourist destinations than political expressions. Some areas and towns fly the Union Jack and the Ulster banner, and have red, white, and blue curbstones, but that strikes a festive tone more than anything. But that may be because I've generally stayed in Belfast, and the Ardboe cemetary was my first closeup look at the Republican side of the conflicts. Generally the people I've spoken with about the Troubles - folks like cabbies, and some of the people I work with - say that the media overplayed the everyday risks faced. But the feeling I get is one of "if we don't talk about it, it will go away". I think Northern Ireland will certainly come to terms with the Troubles, especially as money continues to pour into the area (the best demonstration of a peace dividend), unemployment drops, and education rises. In the meantime, I "enjoy" a fairly privileged position among my co-workers as someone who's genuinely interested in the culture and history of Northern Ireland, and I get to ask some fairly direct questions. More on that later!
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