Feature History - The Troubles (1/2) - YouTube

Channel: Feature History

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Oh
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Diddly dee! A leprechaun put a bomb in me potato, ah!
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Now with all the Irish people having been disgusted and left, we can start.
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Hello and welcome to Feature History. Featuring the impatiently awaited and source of much pester - The Troubles. A rather understated
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name for a 30-year long period of sectarian violence at its finest. It formed both the issues and the culture of our contemporary
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Northern Ireland and is such a relevant topic today.
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You can expect many, many unwanted opinions in the comments. Enough about that though.
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We have two videos worth of controversy to get through here and now. And
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later when the second part goes up. For the source of The Troubles, you can go all the way back to
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1169 with the Norman conquest of Ireland.
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But for the sake of brevity I'm going to try to rush to the 20th century. Irish leaders for many centuries would struggle
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politically with English kings, and this peat with the Protestant Reformation
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that saw the majority of England turn Protestant with their monarchy and the majority of Ireland remain Catholic. A
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Rebellion in the late 16th century saw new efforts to assimilate the Irish by just replacing who the Irish were.
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Protestant English and Scottish were sent to Ireland to attempt to colonize the island and saw success in the North,
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or as it is otherwise known by, Ulster. The following English Civil War and Glorious Revolution
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would see the Irish Catholics ally with the losing side leading to penal wars being placed on them by the Protestant English Parliament.
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During the great French Wars the French would provoke a Protestant-led rebellion for Irish independence.
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Which caused the British government to claim Ireland as a core part of their kingdom and bring them under further control.
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Concessions would be made with the Catholic emancipation in 1829,
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but it did little to improve their position.
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The damage had been done and many Catholics were still made to live on the poorer land. A
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turning point would be the decimation caused by the Irish potato famine in 1845. 1 million deaths,
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Exacerbated by British mismanagement, caused the Irish to demand for an Irish parliament. Some demanded for full Irish independence
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but the most popular movement was that of Home Rule. It would see a self governed Ireland within the United Kingdom.
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Its bill would finally be passed in 1912, much to the scrutiny of the mostly Protestant
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Ulster loyalists in the North. It would, however, be placed on hold
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given the outbreak of the First World War. Some more radical Irishmen would come out against British rule in
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1916, dubbed the Easter Rising. it had failed,
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but when the insurrectionists were executed by the government, the rebels would become martyrs - their fringe movement turned to public outrage.
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seventy-three members of the Irish Republican Party, Sinn Fein, would be elected to the British Parliament in
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1918 and would refuse to attend the Parliament in London. Instead, choosing to form an Irish parliament in Dublin in
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1919. This action would spark the war of the independence that saw the Irish Republican Army brought together to fight for,
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well, an Irish Republic. The Anglo-Irish treaty drawn up in
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1921 would see a partitioned Ireland. One to be split between the mostly Catholic nationalist south and the mostly Protestant
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loyalist North. However,
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there was a catch, as there is a significant Catholic minority present in Northern Ireland. There was also a substantial amount of people
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generally not pleased with the treaty, refusing to recognize the compromised Irish Free State and certainly refusing to recognize a British
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Northern Ireland. The stem of the IRA would break off as the
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Anti-treaty IRA, and fight in the Civil War - only to be put down in 1923 and have the Free State be affirmed.
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These wars had caused a drift in Northern Ireland. The
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Protestant majority now suspected and occasionally feared the Catholic minority who had grown to see the Protestants as oppressive and tyrannical.
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Over the course of several decades, segregation became normalized between the two communities. In hiring,
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education, and housing
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Protestants and Catholics rarely mixed. The anti-treaty IRA still existed,
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however dormant. It had begun to see an influx of Marxists, much to the annoyance of the older more traditional
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members. In the early 60s, Northern Ireland became subject to a civil rights movement, set on highlighting the inequalities in the province.
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Stauncher loyalists feared it as an IRA front - a facade made to lead to a united Ireland.
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Civil right protests began to lead to riots as both partisan loyalists and the Royal Ulster Constabulary
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wished to crack down upon them. This led to a great number of Catholics rejecting the RUC's Authority, attempting to create their own
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Institutions as seen in the self-declared autonomous area of free Derry. Tensions had been rising steadily since
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1966, and would climax in '69.
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A Protestant parade was set to move through a Catholic area of Londonderry or Terry or whatever you want to call it
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so you don't get mad.
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Protestants and Catholics would initially begin slinging any old crap at each other, leading to clashes. As the police moved in to crackdown,
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battles erupted. This is known as the Battle of the Bogside. Hundreds of police and civilians were injured in the riots and the
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officers of the
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constabulary would be pushed from the Bogside area. By the third day of rioting, things had become intense and the Northern Irish Prime Minister
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requested British troops to relieve the officers. A
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Battalion would intervene as a neutral force to separate the residents from the police and bring an end to the battle. With the news of
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the battle spreading quickly,
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agitated Irish nationalists began to break out in protest and the Ulster loyalists,
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fearing a total uprising, began to clash with nationalists; causing widespread violence across
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Northern Ireland. With an overwhelmed and accusedly biased Constabulary
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not of much help, the British Army would have some serious trouble maintaining law and order.
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The army had initially been welcomed as a neutral force into The Troubles. The Nationalists and
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Loyalists both believed the army was there to protect them from the other. As the violence continued,
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however, some nationalists began to believe too little was being done to quell the violence against them.
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The divide in the population was clear.
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But beneath the surface, another divide had formed. In the IRA, the traditionalist Republicans broke away from the Marxist bunch
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due to the perceived unwillingness of their leaders to protect nationalist communities. This new provisional IRA would soon dwarf its paternal
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organization. They had, though, inherited a crumbling support. Few wanted the help of a paramilitary gang. This changed when in the Battle of st.
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Matthews in 1970, the local IRA beat back an armed loyalist mob in a shootout, serving to guard a Catholic nationalist
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enclave. It was a significant propaganda victory for the
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organization. The British Army looked to disarm this violence and would enter the infamous Falls Road area of Belfast, a
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Nationalist stronghold, to seize (?) They were thorough and harsh in their action, doing a significant disservice to their reputation.
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In The Falls Curfew, the army would come under harassment from both the IRA and
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angered residents, leading to the unfortunate death of four civilians. In
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August of 1971, the British army
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and RUC would undertake Operation Demetrus, which sought to intern paramilitary members. However, their list held a strong
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nationalist bias and the operation itself was subject to fumbles - leading to an upsurge in
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reactionary violence. Those interned reported torture. Two IRA members were killed, two soldiers had also been killed,
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not to mention 20 civilians.
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It wasn't a good look to say the least. With
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Nationalist support of the army at an all-time low, in the hopes of defeating the IRA militarily, the soldiers would be turned to local policing,
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checkpoint duty, and riot control. The unpopular policy of internment continued as well. Imprisonment without trial was seen as the only
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logistical way to deal with the unrest. In
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January of 1972, both the Army and the police were deployed to oversee an anti-internment march in Derry.
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British paratroopers were present
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and they had been despised for their role in killing eleven people during Operation Demetrius. Small groups began to lob rocks at the paratroopers,
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provoking the paratroopers to open fire in return. The crowd would quickly devolve into chaos.
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Twenty-eight people would be shot and fourteen died. Given the circumstances of their deaths, the paratroopers were decried for their actions and
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British Army at large felt the ire of the nationalist Catholics and more - in what would become known as Bloody Sunday
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they had to put a definite end to any idea of a honeymoon.
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Yes, I know this part was short, but tough tits. You'll get another one eventually, so don't sulk. Until then,
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I don't know, just pledge to my patron or something. That's usually what cool people do. Toodles!