Were you at that UVF commemoration on Saturday? No, me neither. But thousands were - 10,000 is the figure most sources quote. Men dressed in period costume, carrying replica weapons, marching in columns. They were inspected by Billy Hutchinson, who played the role of Edward Carson and wore a top hat.
What’s sort of surprising is how low on the news agenda this event was. Ten thousand people, men shouldering replica rifles, the re-enactment of events which by any definition were, at the time, illegal as well as disloyal. Maybe the media played it down through embarrassment over Billy in that hat. Or maybe reporters were concerned to play down what could be seen as a veiled threat.
What’s that? No threat of any kind involved in Saturday’s event, it was simply a re-enactment of a historical occasion from 100 years ago? You could be right. But here’s the odd thing. When I interviewed unionist politicians for my book Whose Past Is It Anyway?, it was made clear that come 2016, any re-enactment of Easter Rising events, with men carrying replica weapons, etc, would be seen as a veiled threat that what had happened in 1916 could happen again.
So which way would you lean yourself? With those who’d see this as simply a historical re-enactment, full stop; or a historical re-enactment cloaking hints that the present-day UVF hasn’t gone away, you know?
I made a comment/prediction/observation on an article you wrote back in January, I'm curious what your view would be on the matter/have I been proven wrong in the 9 months since...?
ReplyDeleteThe 2nd comment (the long one)
http://judecollinsjournalist.blogspot.ca/2013/01/they-havent-gone-away-you-know.html#comment-form
Who or what were the sinister looking men marching in lines without any replica weapons? I don't think it takes too much of a stratch in omagination to know.
ReplyDeleteAnd why was Billy Hutchinson inspecting anything? Should it not have been Peter Robinson as the leader of the largest unionist party or maybe Billy holds some other position that gives him greater authority to inspect the troops.