Tanenbaum Center for Intrreligious Understanding
  
 

“You can unite people by
showing your interest in them, by caring for them, by loving them.  But you can’t unite them by using violence on them. Instead of bringing people together, violence is widening the gap between
them."   


Father Alex Reid

 

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Father Alex Reid & Reverend Dr. Roy McGee, Northern Ireland 

On opposite sides of the dispute in Northern Ireland, Father Alex Reid and the Reverend Dr. Roy Magee each risked their lives and reputations in search of peace.  It was the history of their land that called each of them to peacemaking, but it was their deeply held religious convictions that helped them to answer the call.

Although the conflict between Protestants and Catholics in Northern Ireland has simmered for centuries, sectarian violence rose to new levels in the mid-1960s. At the time, Father Reid and the Rev. Magee were beginning their separate careers in the church, and both felt a strong calling to help diffuse the conflict.  Unlike the Catholic Church, the Protestant clergy and most prominent political figures, Reid and Magee believed that engaging paramilitary groups like the Irish Republican Army and the Ulster Defense Association was the only way to stop the
violence.


Drawing inspiration from the example of Jesus, both men took extraordinary personal risks to reach—and redeem—those responsible for perpetrating the conflict. Rev. Magee patrolled the streets at night to prevent escalating violence, while Father Reid worked in prisons to resolve a standoff over hunger strikes.

Through the years, as Magee and Reid gained credibility with their constituencies and developed important relationships with political leaders, their hard work paid dividends. Their crowning achievement came in 1998, when their success in negotiating cease-fires with the paramilitaries opened the way for the historic Good Friday Agreement, which established a power- sharing agreement between Protestants and Catholics.  As Gerry Adams, the President of the political party Sinn Féin, recalled after the agreement: “We would not have even the possibility of a peace process if it wasn’t for the unstinting, patient, diligent work of [Father Reid].”


To this day, both men continue to promote peace in areas of violent conflict.  Father Reid was recently instrumental in brokering a ceasefire with the Basque separatist group, ETA, in Spain, while the Rev. Magee works to ease tensions among Protestant groups in Northern Ireland.


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