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The Irish Passport

Uppity Catholics

The Irish Passport

The Irish Passport

Society & Culture

4.8652 Ratings

🗓️ 6 June 2024

⏱️ 46 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

In February 2024, Michelle O'Neill assumed the position of first minister of Northern Ireland, making her the first person of an Irish-identifying, Catholic background to hold this most high-profile post in the devolved government. And yet, the difficulty O'Neill faced when trying to take her seat at Stormont highlighted the fact that, for a minority in the territory, Catholic nationalist are not seen as having a legitimate role in Northern Ireland's society. In this episode we look at the phenomenon of "uppity" Catholics - people who have been perceived to rise too far above their station, and who have thereby become targets for abuse and even violence. We speak to Pr Colin Harvey from the Human Rights Centre at Queens University Belfast about becoming a political target in the wake of Brexit, and we hear from Irish Times journalist and Author Martin Doyle about growing up in an aspirational Catholic family during the Troubles whose successes in local business fostered dark resentments in the local community ... Martin Doyle's award-wining memoir, Dirty Linen, was published by the Irish Academic Press in 2023, and can be purchased here. Irish Passport Patrons have access to an exclusive extended reading of Martin's essay, “A ghost estate and an empty grave”. If you would like to support the podcast and access over 100 pieces of extra content, you can become a patreon supporter at www.patreon.com/theirishpassport. This episode featured ‘The Moon Got Tangled in the Branches’ by Aleksey Chistilin

Transcript

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0:00.0

Hello, welcome to Irish Passport.

0:02.5

Let's do it.

0:03.3

Welcome to the Irish Passport.

0:05.0

I'm Tim McInerney.

0:06.2

I'm Naomi O'Leary.

0:07.2

We're friends.

0:07.9

Can you both to Naomi?

0:08.8

Honor Afat, Tim.

0:10.2

This is your passport to Irish culture, history and politics.

0:13.4

I'm recording.

0:14.4

One, two, two, three.

0:16.8

Okay. We must be respectful of each other.

0:40.3

The days of second-class citizenship are long gone and today confirms that they will never come back.

0:47.3

I stand here proud, proud and elected First Minister, as someone who represents that good for the agreement generation

0:55.0

and someone who will lead us into the next 25 years.

0:58.0

I'm also an Ulster woman, a Turone woman, a deeply proud Irish and European citizen.

1:04.0

And this is an historic day and it does represent a new dawn.

1:09.0

For the very first time a nationalist takes up the position of

1:13.4

First Minister. That such a day would ever come was unimaginable to my parents and grandparents'

1:19.7

generation. But because of the Good Friday Agreement, that old state that they were born

1:25.2

into is now gone and a more democratic and a more equal society exists.

1:30.3

And this is now a better place for all of us.

...

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