Five months after my visit to this creepy mural in Belfast, I'm still thinking about it during a rare quiet morning to myself. I didn't buy a black cab tour but I did rent a car, parked it by the Remembrance Garden, and then walked the few minutes down Falls Road to the Bobby Sands Mural (on the headquarters of Sinn Fein) and then wandered down to the Peace Wall on my own. This walking tour doesn't take long and delves into the IRA side of The Troubles, the major conflict that gripped Northern Ireland and the U.K. in the 60s, 70s, 80s and 90s. I feel like walking the whole thing lended a different element to it - I was able to get a better feel for the people on the street, the bustle of the neighborhood now; the pulse of this part of the city. I highly encourage it.
Bobby Sands was probably one of the most "famous" members of the IRA - he spent the majority of his young adult life behind bars, was elected to parliament while in jail, and died in the media circus of the 1981 IRA Hunger Strike. A little bit of reading will uncover his tortured childhood - full of threats and bullying from loyalists in the neighborhood where his family lived when locals discovered he was Catholic. His death launched the birth of Sinn Fein into mainstream politics and he's often seen as the poster child for a "free Ireland." As you stare at the gaunt lines in his face, you do wonder if he was a freedom fighter or just plain crazy. Or maybe you start thinking about how a life of segregation, bullying and oppression can turn you into an obsessive and desperate person. And then you think about the current conflicts still percolating around the world and how they are founded on the very same principles. Oh Bobby Sands - here's a mural that makes you think. And shudder. He was only 27 when he died. read more