Material Conflicts: Parades and Visual Displays in Northern Ireland
by Neil Jarman
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Oxford: Berg Publishers, 1997
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While the Orangemen parade through Belfast, their brethren are
holding similar demonstrations across the north. Each year the
Orange Order holds Twelfth parades in eighteen locations, and
the small Independent Orange Order, a product of a split in the
early 1900s (Morgan 1991), hold their own event. The Twelfth is
the centrepiece of the marching season, and the climax of the
Orange parades, but the Order is only one of a number of similar
bodies that organise parades in Northern Ireland. On 13 July the
parading tradition is taken up by the Blackmen from Counties Armagh
and Down, who host a large parade and gathering at Scarva, Co.
Down, reputedly on the route that King Billy's army took on its
way south. The Black parades continue through August, until their
main demonstration on the last Saturday marks the traditional
end to the parading calendar.
Some members of the Orange Order will have begun their association
as children, as members of the Junior Orange Order, but most join
an Orange lodge as adults. Most men then progress rapidly to membership
of the Royal Arch Purple Chapter, a body that has little in the
way of public identity and is scarcely distinct from the Orange.
They are then eligible to join the Royal Black Institution (RBI),
or, to give it its full title, the Imperial Grand Black Chapter
of the British Commonwealth, which is regarded by many as representing
the more middle-aged, middle-class, respectable and religious
side of Orangeism. Alongside membership of the Orange and Black
some men also belong to the Apprentice Boys of Derry which, with
a membership of around 12,000men, is the smallest of the
three main orders. The three senior loyal orders are responsible
for organising the major annual parades that commemorate the Williamite
and Somme anniversaries. They also organise a wide range of smaller
parades, and these have increased in number to such an extent
that the period from Easter to the end of August is now known
as the marching season. The marching season is dominated by the
parades of the loyal orders; but there is also a distinct nationalist
parading calendar that is part of the wider culture of parading,
and this will be considered later.
The Orange, The Black and The Boys
The build-up to the Twelfth that I have described in the Sandy
Row area of Belfast is replicated across the north. In the two
or three weeks prior to the anniversary of the Boyne all Orange
lodges will parade once or twice to church services, and many
towns hold mini-Twelfth parades around the time of the Somme commemorations
on 1 July In recent years these have become increasingly popular,
and more districts seem to announce a preparatory parade each
year. These are usually evening events, and amount to little more
than a relaxed stroll around the host town, a warm-up for the
big parade. They are social rather than commemorative occasions:
they draw large crowds on to the streets, and attract visiting
lodges and bands from nearby towns and villages. Apart from the
Twelfth these are the only occasions when the banners are publicly
displayed.
While the focus of attention is on the Ulster parades, Orangemen
also parade in Britain and Ireland in this period. On the Saturday
before the Twelfth, the County Donegal Orangemen host a parade
at the small seaside resort of Rossnowlagh. This is primarily
for lodges from the Republic; but large numbers of Orangemen come
from Northern Ireland, making a symbolic gesture of solidarity
to those brethren that were abandoned to the demands of pragmatic
politics in the 1920s, when nine-county Ulster was partitioned
to ensure a permanent Protestant majority in the new northern
statelet. The same weekend some Orangemen and bandsmen make the
journey over to Scotland, where a number of Orange parades are
held in the Strathclyde region. On the return they are accompanied
by Scottish bandsmen, and sometimes Scottish Orange lodges, who
come over to parade in Belfast and elsewhere on the Twelfth. Many
bands and lodges have built up long-standing connections in Scotland,
which are renewed each year. English Orange lodges hold an annual
parade in Southport on the Twelfth; but many members prefer to
come over to Ulster for the parades. The reciprocal network of
affiliations that are extended the length and breadth of the north
on the Twelfth are thereby further extended, to include brethren
in Ireland, in Scotland and in England.
The Twelfth signifies the climax of the Orange Order parades,
and many people spend the next day recovering from the walking
and celebrating. But 13 July also marks the first of the major
Black parades, when up to 50,000 visitors come to the parade and
Sham Fight at Scarva in County Down. In contrast to the exertions
of the Belfast Twelfth, this is only a short parade, and if the
weather is fine the day has the feel of a large picnic in the
countryside.
Although Orange and Black parades are broadly similar in form
and style, there are significant differences, which highlight
the complexity and variations both within the loyal orders and
from area to area (see Cecil 1993; Larsen 1982). The Black parade
is a much more stately affair: it is little more than a short
walk through the village, which is taken at an easy pace and is
far less dominated by the military rhythms of the Belfast Twelfth.
There are fewer of the noisy blood and thunder bands at Scarva,
and instead the music is provided by a wide selection of bands:
accordion, pipe and a range of part-music and silver flute bands.
These styles of bands are usually dominated by women and older
men: the musicians often play from sheet music, while the music
is softer and more melodic, with more hymns and fewer party tunes.
Although accordion bands do still parade in Belfast, the pipe
bands no longer attend: the walk is too long and the bands are
too slow. In contrast, the pace of the Scarva parade is set by
the pipe bands, who always turn out dressed in full highland costume.
The parade therefore sounds different; and it also looks different.
The displays of national emblems are usually less pronounced,
and paramilitary regalia are rare: the visual displays of the
Black banners give less emphasis to the military history of Protestantism,
and are heavily dominated by religious themes (see Chapter 8).
These differences can be seen as contrasts between the more elderly
and religious orientations of the Black and the working-class
secularism of many Orangemen. They also represent some of the
differences between urban and rural areas: rural Orange parades
are more like Black parades, with a wider range of bands and more
Biblical imagery, while the blood and thunder bands also bring
their paramilitary style to the Belfast Black parade.
The Belfast Twelfth and Scarva signify the two poles of 'Orangeism':
the urban event, dominated by the young, secular, and working-class,
is 'rough' and noisy, while the rural parades are representative
of elderly, middle class, religious, respectable values (Buckley
and Kenney 1995). But these distinctions are always matters of
degree: both parts are always present at the major parades; they
are the two halves of the Orange community; it is neither just
religious, nor purely secular and sectarian: it is always both.
One of the most surprising features of the Orange tradition is
that it still manages to retain this diversity of features within
a single organisation, within a single event, and that it has
not been subject to schism and fragmentation in the way that the
Protestant Church has. In fact virtually all sects within the
Protestant faith are able to come together within the framework
of loyalist parades. This is possible because that framework,
while nominally religious, is principally about a collective national
identity, constructed and maintained in the face of a threatening
Other.
The Twelfth parades also traditionally marked the beginning of
the summer holiday period, with factories and industry closing
down for two weeks. As a result there is a break in the marching.
The season recommences in mid-August with the Relief of Derry
commemoration, organised by the Apprentice Boys, and more Black
parades. The Apprentice Boys are based in the city of Londonderry;
their main purpose is to commemorate the events of the siege of
the city in 1688-9. To do so they host a small parade each December
to mark the Closing of the Gates and the beginning of the siege,
and another on the Saturday nearest 12 August to mark the Relief
of the city (Derry Day). This latter is one of the biggest events
in the parading calendar: it draws members, bands and supporters
from all across the north, as they come to Derry for the day to
remember 1689, to walk the walls, and to renew friendships. On
the same day the Blackmen of County Fermanagh commemorate the
battle of Newtownbutler in 1689, when the Enniskillen garrison
defeated the approaching Irish army, an event that in turn assisted
the final relief of the siege of Derry (Macrory 1988).
The final major parading day of the season is the Last Saturday
of August, when the Royal Black Institution hold six county demonstrations
(Black Saturday). This day does not herald any specific anniversary,
but rather marks a ceremonial end to the summer marching season.
These are only the largest and most prominent of the parades:
woven in amongst these anniversaries are numerous smaller events
that often pass unnoticed except by those immediately involved.
These begin with an Apprentice Boys parade on Easter Monday and
end with Reformation Day church services at the end of October;
in between, each of the local branches of the loyal orders will
hold a number of church parades, as well as parades to unfurl
banners and to dedicate halls, charity parades, and others.
How Many?
In 1995 there were 3,500 parades held in the north of Ireland:
2,581 of these were classified by the police as loyalist events,
and 302 were nationalist (these will be considered in more detail
in the next chapter); the remaining 617 were made up of such events
as St Patrick's day parades, the trade union May Day parades and
those organised by bodies such as the Boys' Brigade and the Salvation
Army. In spite of the insistence on the importance of parading
as a tradition, with all the implications of continuity and lack
of change that that word suggests, police records show (Table
6.1) that there has been a steady increase in loyalist parades
over the past ten years. The figures also show a vast imbalance
between the number of parades that are held by the two dominant
communities: loyalist parades outnumber republican ones by around
9:1. I want therefore to address three issues that these statistics
raise: firstly, Why are there so many parades? ~ even given the
number of anniversaries and local parades already discussed above,
the numbers seem excessive; second, Why are the numbers of parades
increasing?; and third, Why is there such a difference between
the number of loyalist and republican parades?
The description of the main anniversaries of the marching season
only scratches the surface in addressing the number of parades
that are held each year. If we return to the description of the
Belfast Twelfth, it is clear that not only are there a number
of smaller parades in the days preceding the main event, but that
there are also many small parades on the Twelfth itself, as lodges
and bands assemble at their local hall prior to parading to join
the main event. There is no requirement to seek permission to
hold a
Source: Royal Ulster Constabulary Chief Constable's Annual
Report. (No statistics were published prior to 1985.)
parade - it is regarded as a civil right (although not an unproblematic
one); however, under the 1987 Public Order (Northern Ireland)
Order, parade organisers must notify the police of their intentions
to hold a parade, and indicate the route and the probable number
of participants, at least seven days beforehand. This is done
by filling out a detailed form known as an '11 / 1'. In most cases
this is a formality: the police do not give permission or sanction
the parade, although if in their opinion they think the parade
may cause serious public disorder they can impose constraints
(on music, on flags, etc.) or order that the parade take a different
route. Most parades take the route they wish, with a minimum of
constraint. Each parade organiser therefore fills in an 11 / 1;
and each completed 11 /1 signifies a statistical parade.
Each of the main parading days will involve a large number of
individual parades. Members of the loyal orders rarely depart
for, or arrive at, a venue in a quiet and inconspicuous manner.
In many cases a lodge or a band gather in the morning at the lodge
master 's or the band leader's house; they may then parade to
the local hall to meet other local lodges, and collectively they
will parade to the main assembly point. In other cases the lodges
parade through their home area before boarding a bus that takes
them to the main venue. Some lodges or bands may have taken part
in three different parades before the main event has started.
Each major event always involves a large number of these small
feeder parades, and, whether it includes 10 men or 10,000 men,
statistically each parade is treated the same. Although there
are eighteen main parades on the Twelfth of July, the total number
of notifications, and therefore legally recorded parades, on the
Twelfth in 1995 was 547. Over 20 per cent of all loyalist parades
were held on a single day Similar large numbers of parades will
be held on Derry Day and on Black Saturday: the marching season
therefore is not evenly spread. The large number of loyalist parades
is in part a reflection of both the scale of the organisation
and its decentralised nature. There is no part of the Orange hierarchy
that oversees, or restricts, these parades. Some areas seem to
parade more often than others; but there is no formal means of
constraint - the decision to parade to another parade is a purely
local matter, although one that invariably invokes the idea of
tradition.
Providing an explanation for the steady growth in the number of
parades is rather more difficult. However, one must be aware that
tradition is a vague, and sometimes elastic, concept, especially
when it is used as political weapon and when there are no clear
records available. Nor do the police statistics provide much help.
They do not indicate whether the growth is a regional factor or
specific to one organisation, or represents an increase in one
particular type of parade. The decentralisation of the loyal orders
means that no central records are kept of the total number of
parades, while individual members often have no more than a very
general idea of the total number of parades in their own areas.
Few people are willing even to admit that parade numbers are growing
to any extent, and, on the contrary, many loyalists feel that
their parading traditions are under threat. Nevertheless, I will
offer some suggestions to account for the increase. The decentralised
nature of the loyal orders is probably one factor in the growth
in the number of parades in recent years. In the past the elaboration
of loyalist parades and displays has occurred largely in response
to perceived political threats: parading was a way of displaying
and affirming communal strength and local dominance. In recent
years, and perhaps particularly since the signing of the Anglo-Irish
Agreement in 1985, Protestants have felt their constitutional
position, and therefore their sense of national identity, more
threatened than at any time since partition. One response has
been to parade more frequently in local areas, and also to organise
more parades for more events: mini-Twelfth and Somme anniversary
parades seem to have been two particular growth areas. Another
growth area may be in the number of feeder parades to main events,
especially as the loyalist communities have become more dispersed
in the greater Belfast area: for instance, there has been a steady
increase in the total number of parades on the Twelfth in recent
years - these have risen from 361 in 1990 to 547 in 1995. It is
difficult to account for this increase except as an expansion
of local practice.
Another prominent factor has been the emergence of a new type
of parades that are organised by the bands themselves, and that
fall outside the auspices of the loyal orders. Band parades are
held on each Friday and Saturday evening and on many Saturday
afternoons throughout the summer months (Bell 1990). These are
a distinct part of the wider loyalist culture of parading, but
are not related to any formal commemoration. Instead, they are
social events: the host band uses the event to raise money, while
the visiting bands compete with each other for a range of trophies
and prizes that are adjudged to them on their marching and musical
abilities. The successful bands are those that go to lots of other
parades, and only by visiting other band parades are they likely
to attract bands to their own parade. A more recent extension
to these social events has been the development of commemorative
band parades: these are held both to honour the memory of local
paramilitaries and on Armistice Day in November to commemorate
the First World War UVF volunteers. Both of these types of event
illustrate the close links between some of the bands and the paramilitary
groups. While they are not a part of the formal commemorative
cycle, these parades nevertheless add another layer to the network
of affiliations that is mapped out across the province, and add
more figures to the statistics.
Parading is often claimed to be a specific feature of Orange or
loyalist culture, and a parade an expression of Orange culture.
The implication of this statement is that parading is not a feature
of nationalist culture. But the discrepancy between the number
of loyalist and nationalist parades can also be related to the
broader political history of Ireland. The imbalance of power in
the north has historically been used to constrain nationalist
and republican parades, while loyalists have come to regard parading
as a key element of their culture and an expression of their inalienable
civil rights and liberties. Loyalists expect to be able to march
where and when they will in their country; but they regard nationalist
parades as a threat to public order. Loyalist parades are inevitably
presented as cultural and traditional rather than political, while
nationalist, and in particular republican, parades are seen as
political and therefore provocative and confrontational. Traditional
parades are presented as unproblematic and uncontentious, whereas
political parades need to be carefully policed and constrained.
The opportunity to demand and to exercise the right to march is
thus a symbol of the distribution of political power in Northern
Ireland. Tradition is invoked wherever possible, while the language
of politics is avoided.
Although parading continues to be claimed as the prerogative of
the loyalist community, nationalists also have a long history
of parading. The nationalist parading bodies, the Ancient Order
of Hibernians (AOH) and the Irish National Foresters (INF), as
well as the republican movement organise an extensive range of
parades throughout the marching season and, as we shall see in
the next chapter, in recent years the republican movement has
readily taken up the practice of parading as an element of its
own culture of remembrance. But it is almost easier to regard
these as two distinct marching seasons - a nationalist commemorative
calendar that runs in parallel to the loyalist one. The two cycles
are only ever vaguely connected: although the loyalist parades
over the Easter weekend were begun in the 1930s to counterbalance
the republican Easter parades, few people are aware of this, and
they are now an accepted part of the loyalist tradition. In practice
the marching season consists of two groups of interlocking but
distinct cycles (see Table 6.2): loyalist and nationalist groups
neither share nor contest any commemorative occasions. Furthermore,
the two communities rarely ever parade on the same day: most loyalist
parades are held on a Saturday or on a weekday evening, and only
church parades (which are treated by Protestants as an extension
of the act of worship) are held on a Sunday, which is idealised
as a purely religious day. In contrast, Sunday is used by Catholics
as the principal day for religious observance, recreation and
public demonstrations. Morning Mass is followed by an afternoon
of sports, and, on the appropriate occasions, by public commemorations
and political demonstrations. The two cycles of commemorations
never coincide: the two communities parade on distinct and mutually
exclusive anniversaries, and on different days of the week; and
furthermore, they rarely even parade over
*Including all the major parades but with an over-emphasis on
Belfast for the Orange Order mini-Twelfth (M-12) parades.
The exact dates often vary from year to year; most are held on
the nearest weekend.
the same routes or through the same towns. However, the cumulative
effect of the (seemingly) continuous routine of alternating loyalist
and nationalist parades is to raise tension and to sour community
relations, particularly during the most intense cycle of parades
in midsummer.
The Geography of Parading
The significance of parading in the politics of Northern Ireland
is as much about geography as it is about history. For loyalists
parading is a means of displaying faith and pride in one's culture,
and exercising the right to parade is also a means of confirming
that Ulster is British. Nationalists on the other hand see loyalist
parades as triumphal expressions of superiority, as coat-trailing
and an indicator of the continuing differences in communal civil
rights. Both perspectives have a validity. Parades are expressions
of culture, displays of faith and acts of domination; and
they are intimately linked to the wider political domain. They
work both as a part of an internal dynamic and to consolidate
difference. Kertzer (1988:23) has argued that the simultaneous
enactment of ritual activities is a widely used mechanism through
which peripheral groups are symbolically connected to the centre
of political power. Geographically or socially marginal groups
mirror the displays of the political or ritual centre, and thereby
are able to affirm their place in an idealised unity (see also
Vogt and Abel 1977).
In Northern Ireland, the Protestant ideology of individualistic
egalitarianism circumvents the need for a permanent centre. On
the Twelfth of July and on the Last Saturday there is no unifying
centre that determines either the ritual procedure or standards;
rather, a multitude of decentralised events incorporate the whole
province within their scope. The parades simultaneously connect
the entire unionist population of Northern Ireland in the process
of public commemoration. But they do so without valuing one group
of people, one locality or one parade venue over another: each
locality that hosts a parade is on an equal footing with the others.
Belfast may host the biggest single event and attract much of
the media coverage on the Twelfth; but the city never hosts a
major Black or Apprentice Boys parade. All venues attract prominent
public speakers from within the loyalist community; but the political
heavyweights may choose, or be invited, to appear at any of the
many venues. lan Paisley parades each year with the small Independent
Orange Order (although he is not a member), away from the centre
of political importance in rural County Antrim. Furthermore, the
decentralised nature of the organisation of the parades demands
a constant rotation of the venues: this helps to consolidate the
unity of Protestant Ulster by drawing a maximum number of people
into participation. Because this custom draws on and reconfirms
the egalitarian principles of Protestantism, it thereby confirms
to the faithful that Ulster remains in essence a Protestant state
for a Protestant people. The parades themselves commemorate military
victories, but the process of commemoration has become interwoven
with the threads of religious faith, and each year these are re-spun
across the province.
The Twelfth of July generates the biggest parades and crowds,
the most colour and noise as well as the most disruption and protests.
It remains the highlight of the parading calendar, THE single
event that marks the Ulster identity. The locations of the Twelfth
parades are therefore shared out across the province, to include
as many towns and villages as possible within the celebrations.
The only place apart from Belfast to host an annual Twelfth parade
is the staunchly Protestant town of Ballymena in the Democratic
Unionist Party heartlands of mid-Antrim. Apart from these two
fixed points, each of the six Orange county organisations has
its own routine for planning the location and the number of parades
in its own area. The 17 venues outside Belfast are divided as
follows:
In County Armagh the parade rotates on an ll-year cycle around
the principal towns of the county. Apart from Fermanagh, the other
counties hold larger numbers of smaller parades at which participation
is based at the lower district level of organisation. In County
Down, for example, there are four parades in which the lodges
from Newtownards, Upper Ards, Bangor and Holywood Districts from
the north of the county walk together; the 15 Mourne District
lodges in the south hold another parade; the eastern Districts
of Lecale, Saintfield, Castlewellan, Comber and Ballynahinch hold
another; and the lodges from eight western Districts hold the
fourth. By rotating the venues within each group of districts
practical matters such as the organisational work and the cost
of the day's commemorations are shared around. Large parades are
shared around a greater number of venues, and these costs are
incurred only rarely. In County Armagh the parade has been held
in 12 different venues in the past 26 years, and no district has
hosted the event on more than three occasions; whereas in the
Mourne District, in which only a small number of villages are
represented, the parade returns on a much more regular cycle.
Table 6.3 lists the venues of all the Twelfth parades, by county,
in the 26 years of the Troubles. Like Co. Armagh, many towns and
villages host the event on a regular cycle: these range from a
parade every two years for Kilkeel in the Mourne district to one
every 10 years for Ballyclare. The majority of cyclical parade
venues host the event on a cycle of between four and eight years.
Besides the practicalities that affect the rotating of parades,
the scale of the distribution symbolically affirms Ulster's Protestant
status. The insistence by the Orangemen that they have a right
to walk anywhere in Northern Ire ' land, and that Ulster is primarily
a Protestant province, is annually put into practice, and over
a period of years the entire six counties is encapsulated within
the recurring and expanding trace of 'traditional' routes. Most
towns and villages, regardless of the relative proportions of
Protestant and Catholic inhabitants, will eventually host a parade,
which will thereby confirm their symbolic 'Protestant' status.
Orangemen claim that being able to walk along traditional routes
is an essential feature of their civil rights. Any challenge to
this is seen as symptomatic of the creeping influence of Dublin
and of the threat of compromise over the status of Northern Ireland.
The range of towns and villages that are regularly paraded implies
that these rights are being actively maintained, and that nowhere
is abandoned as an integral part of Protestant Ulster. In practice
it seems more complicated. Some of these venues have not been
walked on the Twelfth since the early 1970s, although they are
maintained as traditional routes by hosting other parades. In
County Fermanagh, an area in which the Orange Standard (the
Order's monthly paper) regularly claims that Protestants are being
hounded out of their farms in the remoter border areas ('ethnically
cleansed', in their current language), one-third of the venues
have not been used in recent years: the Twelfth parades have been
concentrated in fewer, larger and safer towns. However, the Black
parades in late August, which, until recently, have not tended
to
Table 6.3. Location and Number of Twelfth Parades, 1968-1994
generate such strong emotions as the Twelfth, continue to be held
across a wide range of venues. Smaller venues, such as Claudy,
Co. Derry, Sion Mills near Strabane, Moy on the Tyrone-Armagh
border and Dromore and Donaghadee in Co. Down, can maintain their
traditional status by hosting Black parades on the Last Saturday.
Once the wider range of parades and the complex patterns of sharing
the venues around are drawn out, the settlements that are voluntarily
excluded from the major events of the parading cycle are few indeed.
Nevertheless, there are some. Most of the places that have not
hosted a major loyalist parade are on the margins of the province,
and have no great symbolic significance to Orangemen. They are
either geographically isolated or surrounded by towns and villages
that do hold parades, and can thus be overlooked without causing
an affront to Orange tradition. Such places include Cushendall
and Whitehead on the Antrim coast; Strangford and Ballywalter
on the Ards peninsula; Ardglass, Killough and Rostrevor on the
South Down coast; Crossmaglen and Middletown on the Armagh border;
and Belleek on the Fermanagh border. The towns of Coalisland in
Tyrone and Dungiven in Co. Derry are the only other substantial
places that have been (relatively) parade-free recently, although
Dungiven was the site of major disputes in the 1950s (Bryan 1996;
Farrell 1980). All of these are also towns and villages with an
overwhelmingly Catholic and nationalist population, and this seems
to be discreetly acknowledged as a significant fact by the Orangemen,
in spite of the rhetoric of walking where they will. Similarly
within Belfast, some nationalist areas that were once paraded,
such as the New Lodge and parts of the Falls, have long been abandoned.
Part of the concerns of the loyal orders over the growing nationalist
protests at their parades is that the areas where they are no
longer able to walk freely will only increase. The fight to maintain
traditional routes in areas with a large Catholic population is
an attempt to deny or to ignore the demographic and political
changes that have been taking place in Northern Ireland in the
past few decades.
Although some nationalist towns or areas do seem to be acknowledged
as inappropriate venues by the loyal orders, an overwhelming or
dominant Catholic population need not be regarded as a deterrent
if the Order regards it as part of a traditional Orange route.
Keady in Co. Armagh and Pomeroy in Co. Tyrone, both of which have
an estimated 95 per cent Catholic population, have hosted controversial
Twelfth parades in recent years (Belfast Telegraph 11.7.89).
In 1991 a judicial review was held at the last minute on an RUC
decision to authorise the parade through Pomeroy, an event that
occurs every 7 years. After permission to allow the parade was
finally given, the local Orangemen agreed to amend their route
slightly to avoid an area that was described as 'predominately
nationalist' (BT 11.7.91, 12.7.91). Still, a massive security
operation was mounted to protect the estimated 10,000 marchers.
In most similar cases the RUC have been prepared to authorise
Orange parades even in the face of stiff local opposition, and
have emphasised the Order's own arguments that the practice is
traditional (a distinct legal category until 1987) and that it
is not meant to cause offence or that the parade will not take
very long or cause much disruption. On such occasions an appeal
is often made to the memory of previous parades that have passed
peacefully or to nostalgic recollections of those days, before
the Troubles, when Catholics enjoyed watching the Orangemen pass
by. Until recently only rarely have the opponents' arguments been
upheld, and usually some form of compromise that favours the Orangemen
has been enforced.
Parades in Conflict
This is not an unchanging scenario, however: the disputes in Keady
and Pomeroy marked the beginnings of a more serious contest over
the right to parade, which has counterposed this civil right with
the right not to suffer unwanted parades. The dispute reflects
how parading is seen from two distinct perspectives. As I have
described, the unionist community see the parades as an expression
of their civil rights, a celebration of their culture and a confirmation
of their constitutional status; whereas nationalists regard the
(seemingly) constant parades as triumphalist reminders of their
second-class status. The earliest signs of the present dispute
began with disputes over loyalist parades in Castlewellan and
Downpatrick in the early 1980s and in Portadown in 1985 and 1986
(Bryan, Fraser and Dunn 1995). These resulted in a change to the
law, and some restriction on the rights of traditional parades;
but the balance of political will remained with the Orangemen,
as the cases of Keady and Pomeroy illustrate. However, since the
ceasefires of 1994 the issue of the right to parade has become
a major political issue.
Residents' groups opposing Orange parades began to appear in 1995,
in Belfast, Bellaghy, Derry and Portadown, and over the next year
similar groups were formed in other nationalist towns and villages.
They have demanded that parades be re-routed away from their areas,
or that the loyal orders seek the consent of the residents before
trying to parade. The loyal orders have generally been unwilling
either to change the route of their parades or to negotiate with
the residents, whom they regard as little more than a Sinn Féin
front. Mediation has largely been unsuccessful and compromise
rare; instead, the dispute has brought to a head the divergent
attitudes of the two communities (see Jarman and Bryan 1996; Montgomery
and Whitten 1995; Pat Finucane Centre 1995 1996). In July 1996
the decision by the police to ban an Orange church parade from
walking along the nationalist Garvaghy Road in Portadown led to
several days of loyalist road-blocks and rioting. When the police
reversed their decision in the face of even more massive public
disorder, the nationalist community reacted in a similar way.
The dispute polarised the two communities in a way that had rarely
been seen before, even during the height of the Troubles; the
political middle ground disappeared; and there was widespread
speculation of a return to paramilitary violence. In the event
the two sides pulled back, although the protests against parades
continued, and the dispute escalated on a slow fuse with a campaign
of consumer boycotts, intimidation, sporadic arson attacks, increases
in residential segregation, the picketing of Catholic churches
and a general rise in tension. The government belatedly announced
a review of the law and decision-making process surrounding the
rights to parade; but this was regarded by many on both sides
as too little,too late. As I write, the review body is
just beginning its work.
The crisis illustrates the continued symbolic and political significance
that is given to the right to parade, to particular parade routes,
to the importance of parading for geographical and communal identity,
and the difficulties of balancing conflicting perceptions of those
rights. But it would be wrong to see 1996 as merely a cyclical
re-enactment of 1969 - many things have changed: too many for
some, not enough for others. In 1996 it was a confident and assertive
nationalist community that confronted the loyal orders, and although
they were angry at what was seen as the playing of the Orange
card in Portadown and the capitulation of the state to the threat
of violence, nationalists are more readily able to assert their
own communal identity than a generation ago. While the loyal orders
feel threatened by the demands to give up or change their traditions
of parading, the nationalist community have readily asserted their
own rights to parade. A little-publicised feature of the Troubles
has been the way in which the nationalist community, and in particular
the republican movement, have used public parades to assert their
growing power and to extend their tradition of commemorations;
we turn to these parades next.
Photographs by Neil Jarman
(The following photographs appear in the book at the end of chapter 6. Neil Jarman has also provided additional photographs of parades, bands and banners.)
Walking I, Edenderry, Twelth 1995 [Black and White Photograph]
Walking II, Lower Falls, Internment Parade, August 1993 [Black and White Photograph]
Walking III, East Belfast, Somme Parade, July 1993 [Black and White Photograph]
Walking IV, Londonderry, August 1992 [Black and White Photograph]