4.7 • 1.6K Ratings
🗓️ 17 June 2024
⏱️ 48 minutes
🧾️ Download transcript
In the summer of 1970, Belfast stood on the precipice of war. By June, months of rising tensions burst into violence, setting the stage for one of the most controversial British military operations of the Troubles – the Falls Curfew. This three-day siege of a large nationalist working-class community marked a point of no return for many.
During the Curfew, four people were murdered.
Among the victims was Zbigniew Uglik, a young Londoner. His death has been shrouded in rumour for decades. In this first episode of "Three Days in July," I set out to uncover the truth about Zbigniew, a forgotten victim of the Troubles, and reveal how the British Army twisted his death to defend the indefensible.
Zbigniew’s story is a fascinating one that started in Eastern Poland in the early days of World War II. An innocent man, his tragic death at the hands of the British Army highlights the human cost of the Troubles.
Through careful research and respectful storytelling, the series will shed light on his life and the circumstances surrounding his death. We’ll also delve into the dark world of Black Propaganda, a sinister tool used during the conflict to mislead and deceive. This episode sets the stage for understanding how lies and misinformation played a role in the tragic events of those days.
Credits:
Written and Researched by Fin Dwyer
Based on Original Research by the Belfast writer and Journalist Pádraig Ó Meiscil. His substack is available here. You can reach him by email at [email protected]
A special word of thanks to Marta Riehle-Stern for sharing her family's history.
Interviewees: Marta Riehle-Stern, Pádraig Ó Meiscill & Dr Brian Hanley
Additional Narrations by Aidan Crowe and Therese Murray
Sound by Kate Dunlea
Additional Thanks: Sebastian Zimnoch and Stephanie Ní Thiarnaigh
Become a member at https://plus.acast.com/s/irishhistory.
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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0:00.0 | What do you get when you mix fashion designers, financial advisors and dance studio? |
0:06.0 | Hmm? |
0:07.0 | No, no, not a catwalk of strutting accountants. |
0:17.6 | No, not a ballet piece about balance sheets. I'm actually just talking about workspace. With 4,000 of London's most original businesses already |
0:21.6 | calling workspace home, whatever it is you do, there's a space for you here. |
0:26.2 | It all happens at workspace, search workspace.co. UK. |
0:30.3 | So, where do you say your future after you may? |
0:33.4 | My future. Well, I'm not really sure. |
0:36.0 | I don't even think I want to continue with my degree subject, |
0:39.6 | but I want to do something relevant, something with support, that's going to make a mark. |
0:45.0 | Have you thought about an ACA qualification? |
0:48.0 | It's one of the most desired accountancy programs in the world. |
0:51.0 | Yeah, that's just the thing I was looking for. Open doors with Belfast. It's a tense evening. |
1:15.0 | Major violence has erupted close to the city centre. |
1:18.0 | Eventually the hotel receptionist Esther Sculli answers the phone. It's the information desk at Aldergrove Airport outside the city. A tourist has just arrived. He wants a room. A single for two nights. That Friday night is hardly an ideal time for anyone, let alone a tourist to visit Belfast. |
1:38.0 | Gunshots can be heard from the lower falls, but these are troubled times. |
1:43.6 | Rising tensions across Northern Ireland are driving away |
1:46.6 | potential tourists, and in such difficult times, |
1:49.8 | money is money. |
1:51.1 | At the hotel reception, Esther Sculli takes the reservation. No questions asked, no advice offered. |
1:57.8 | Just before six o'clock, the guest arrives. It's a man, early 20s, six foot tall, works as a postman. He's quiet, friendly, but it's his name that stands out. |
2:08.0 | He's from London, but signs the registration, is a big knee of uglic, Polish ancestry ancestry a bit unusual in Belfast in 1970. A few minutes later he's |
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