I am very glad I picked up this book at the Museum of Free Derry during my summer visit there. I was hooked the moment I started to read it. The writing style, made of snippets of interviews of survivors and family of the victims of Bloody Sunday is addictive: you cannot stop reading.
What I didn't realise when learning about "The Troubles" is the AMOUNT and LENGHT of injustice that people have suffered, after the events; even after the 1998 Agreement. The EXTENT of the British cover up is mind-blowing. These are 15 mins of a massacre for which (some of) the truth is still hidden from one the most POWERFUL governments in the world, and its ARMY - 50 years afterwards!
Despite the military being found guilty of the massacre of innocent people, and "Lord Justice" having distorted the truth at great length for the then Prime Minister Edward Heath's NI propaganda war, everyone involved from these high-power positions from British side walked free, unpunished. On the opposite, they were let to have high-ranking careers with no repercussions, and actually got merits. Baffling! That's the society we live in and it makes me sick.
A few extracts from the book that stuck with me:
- We deplore the action of the army and government in employing a unit such as the paratroopers who were in Derry yesterday. These men are trained criminals. They differ from terrorists only in the veneer of respectability that a uniform gives them.
- [Derry Journal 01.02.72] It was a simple massacre. There were no petrol bombs, no guns, no snipers, no justification for this well organised slaughter. Derry's Bloody Sunday will be remembered as the British army's greatest day of shame.
- [RR] The feeling at the deaths - it wasn't a feeling of anger. More of sadness and resignation that they could do this with impunity and say that they were fired on.
- [The Widgery tribunal] The paratroopers were wearing dark glasses and I remember they were all laughing. It was obvious to us that it was a whitewash. The way the looked at it - they were protecting their own and they were not protecting us.
- For those affected, Widgery's report confirmed that the entire British establishment stood behind those who had opened fire of Bloody Sunday.
- [LY] Had Widgery's report been fortnight and honest, we may have been spared the thirty-right tears of hurt and a secondary inquiry.
- [JH Derry Journal, April 1972] It's like blaming a man shot walking down the street, for walking down the street.
- [EM] It was all there - all in the body of the Widgery Report - and that led me to believe that they all must have known it, the whole cabinet and upper echelons of the law and everyone else. I fit was obvious enough for me to work out, then they all must have known it was lies.
- [EM] I think that Widgery really destroyed the credibility of British politics and the British establishment generally over the range of issues that affected Northern Ireland. In that sense, Widgery was an absolute disaster for the British state and their relations with Norther Ireland.
- [ED] What really made Bloody Sunday so obscene was the fact that people afterwards, at the highest level of British justice, justified it.
- [EM] There is no other atrocity which had the political resonance and the political impact that Bloody Sunday did.
- Despite the Coroner's report, what happened in Derry was buried by the British army and successive governments.
- [JM] Will the army learn? They'll learn, yes, but they'll learn the wrong lessons. They'll learn to cover things up better. They'll learn no moral lesson from Bloody Sunday.
- [Innocent] That day our lives changed for ever, it dictated how things went. We've dedicated most of our lives to the campaign for truth, justice and accountability. Truth is on our side, so I know we'll fight on now for justice, no matter how long it takes. We shall overcome.
- [DG] Like so many others, I make no apology for working hard to try to create the circumstances where it will be acceptable to deal honestly and freely with your neighbour; to fight injustice together without fear of being label as a traitor, and to work for a society that embraces the principles of justice, quality and independence.
- In July 2012, the PSNI announced they were initiating a murder investigation into the events of Bloody Sunday. Unbelievably, it was the first ever police investigation into the shootings - 40 years after events had taken place.
- In September 2021, a report by academics at Queen's University, Belfast and the human rights NGO the Committee on the Administration of Justice concluded that the proposals represented 'one of the most sweeping amnesties introduced in any jurisdiction since 1945'; they were not only 'in clear breach of binding human rights standards' but were 'significantly more expansive' than those brought in by brutal Chilean dictator Augusto Pinochet.
- [MM] The soldier who shot Annette may never be questioned. The British government has decided that the rule of law does not apply to Irish people, not even children. If a 14-year-old child was shot in England, it is inconceivable that the investigation would be dropped, but this is exactly what the British government wants to happen in Ireland.