The last film screened at the Cannes Film Festival in 1968. A provocative,…
The Jackets Green
- Description
- Reviews
- Citation
- Cataloging
- Transcript
"What are you fighting for?"
Armed simply with this question, Arthur Mac Caig goes to Northern Ireland to confront Irish Republicans. The result is an inside look at the ghettos of Belfast.
The first image is of a young man marching through the city streets. He is 20 years old, but very much a child. His face belies enormous tension, as does the tight grip on his rifle. His teeth are clenched in fear. Rita O'Hare, director of "Republican News," a nationalist weekly, was severely wounded by British soldiers. Later imprisoned for 3 years, she now lives in exile in the South of Ireland. Then there is Brendan Hughes, former IRA leader, who has spent 13 years in prison, conducted a 53 day hunger strike, and been tortured on several occasions. He says, "In the beginning when a soldier or a policeman had been killed, I was happy. But now I feel sadness. I don't wish the death of anyone, but here the only reality is war."
THE JACKETS GREEN calls no one to arms, but offers simple portraits of a few men and women most often represented as fanatical zealots. As they speak candidly about their cause, it becomes difficult to continue branding them as "terrorists."
"An expressionistic and very lyrical trip through the streets of Belfast. [Mac Caig's] camera, subjective as it may be, delivers rare emotional forces."—Humanité (Paris)
"The images carry an emotional charge that is incompatible with objectivity. Rather, we have a poem about an endless revolt, the lament of the IRA, and of British torture. There are the troubled looks of the children, songs that warm the heart and the cold prisons that destroy them."—Antoine Perraued, Telerama (Paris)
Citation
Main credits
Mac Caig, Arthur (film director)
Other credits
Image and sound, Mick Collins; editor, Arthur Mac Caig; music: Enya, Bridge Kernan, Christy Moore.
Distributor subjects
Conflict Resolution; Human Rights; Ireland; Western EuropeKeywords
WEBVTT
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Belfast, Northern Ireland.
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Sixty five years
after its creation,
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this tiny state governed by
London remains unstable.
00:01:04.000 --> 00:01:06.469
The British forces
have constantly
00:01:06.470 --> 00:01:08.049
been opposed by the IRA,
00:01:08.050 --> 00:01:09.729
the Irish Republican Army,
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a clandestine military
organization.
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The IRA is supported
by Sinn Féin,
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the legal critical branch of
the nationalist movement.
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This film is a brief voyage
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onto one side of this conflict,
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that if the Irish Nationalist.
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In West Belfast, unemployment
is well over 50 percent.
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This part of this city
occupied, patrolled,
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and placed under constant
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surveillance by the British army.
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Nonetheless, West Belfast
remains an IRA stronghold.
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When I first was
arrested, that when
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the British troops raided
the house that I was in,
00:02:11.555 --> 00:02:15.064
and they arrested
me. I felt relief.
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I\'ve been on the run
for almost three years,
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which was tiring,
which was exhausting,
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and which was pressure.
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My initial feeling of
relief didn\'t last
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very long because I was
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then taken to
interrogation center.
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There was fear. I didn\'t
know when I was going
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to get out of the
interrogation center,
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I didn\'t know if I
was going to die.
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Today, Brendan Hughes
is a member of Sinn Féin.
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But during the 1970s,
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he was considered by
the British Army to
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be an important
leader of the IRA.
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Arrested and interned in 1973,
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he became one of the
first prisoners to
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escape from the high security
prison of Long Kesh.
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Brendan Hughes has spent
13 years in prison.
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When they first
brought us to the
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barracks which is
Springfield Road,
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I was tied to the chair,
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and was repeatedly punched,
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my private parts were squeezed
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over a period of
two or three hours.
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A gun was put in my head
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and there was no
ammunition in the weapon,
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they fired the weapon, and told
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me that they were going to kill
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me and dump me up right
here [inaudible].
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My hands was stretched out
on the table and I was
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repeatedly hit with
a small hammer,
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it caused my hands to swell up.
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This went on for a period
of eight to nine hours.
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Repeatedly punching,
repeatedly asking
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questions about other people,
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other members of the
Republican movement.
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Born in Belfast,
mother and grandmother,
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Rita O\'hare is presently
editor of Republican News,
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the widest selling weekly
newspaper in Ireland.
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In 1971, she was
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seriously injured when
shot by British soldiers.
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Following the [inaudible],
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she took refuge in the
Republic of Ireland.
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She\'s spent 3.5 years in prison.
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Fresh fruits.
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I can\'t carry it all.
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Of course, you will. We\'ll
give you a transport home.
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Exactly, I know.
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I knew that
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there was no evidence
to really to
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convict me on the charge
which was attempted murder,
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a British soldier,
and the comment it
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was me [inaudible] murdered.
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But I knew that there
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was no evidence to
connect me with that.
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Apart from the fact
that we\'d be in there
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and we know that we have
Republican sympathies.
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After the last court
appearance that I made,
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I came out of the court
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and there was a group of
British soldiers there,
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once he had been given evidence,
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and in front of RUC
men, legal people,
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to senior British Army officers,
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two of them threatened
to kill me and said,
00:05:06.255 --> 00:05:09.119
\"We should have finished
her off at the time.
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But we\'ll get her.\" I heard
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another one said, \"Or
we\'ll get her kids.\"
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It\'s 16 years ever
since I left Belfast,
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I can\'t go North,
I don\'t go North.
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I don\'t take a risk because
I think it would be
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crazy to do it.
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After taking this immediate
decision, I got [inaudible].
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But I mean it, there are
times I would love to go,
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we love to go home [inaudible].
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[inaudible] support I
hope no women will be called
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[inaudible] For everyone knows
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that she has brought the North,
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the towers of Lucifer,
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the prosecutor of
people. [inaudible]
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In 1976, Brid Brounlee
was arrested for membership
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of the IRA and for possession
of an incendiary device.
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She spent six years in prison.
00:06:06.515 --> 00:06:08.509
Her husband arrested following
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a shootout between an
IRA commando on the
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policing Liverpool is serving
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a life sentence in
an English prison.
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I joined the IRA after
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my childhood was spent being
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awakened at three
and 4:00 O\'clock
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in the morning by
British soldiers,
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raiding my home, arresting
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various members of my
family, trade my childhood.
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Not less than two years,
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I lost many friends.
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They were murdered by
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the British forces in
the North of Ireland.
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I realized exactly
what was happening
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in my country and decided that I
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should join in the
fight against it.
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Every struggle, of course,
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the people who had
been fade and have
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been portrayed as
terrorists and mad bombers.
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Every way, you want to
knew it\'s been that way,
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and I think that the terrorists
are the British Army.
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They shouldn\'t be here. They are
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in somebody else\'s country.
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What do you feel
about the bombing
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that occurred and its killing
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where several innocent people,
civilians, were killed?
00:07:19.560 --> 00:07:23.000
Horror. Shock.
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Explosives, one of the most
deadly weapons of the IRA,
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but these actions
are aimed mainly
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at British military personnel,
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innocent civilians have
also been victims.
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In this respect, the bombing
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in Enniskillen on November 8th,
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1987 was certainly the IRA\'s
most catastrophic action.
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Eleven civilians killed.
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All of us felt to a
battlefields because it
00:07:51.780 --> 00:07:54.224
was just shooting out of carbon.
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It was the most appalling hour
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of judgment that they made
in a long, long time.
00:08:00.315 --> 00:08:04.359
But the IRA certainly haven\'t got
00:08:04.360 --> 00:08:10.610
the market on atrocities.
00:08:11.130 --> 00:08:14.889
Derry, January 1972,
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British paratroops opened fire.
00:08:16.960 --> 00:08:19.790
14 civilians killed.
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In 1980,
00:09:10.990 --> 00:09:12.579
Brendan Hughes led
that the first hunger
00:09:12.580 --> 00:09:15.324
strike of Nationals
prisoners in Long Kesh.
00:09:15.325 --> 00:09:18.939
This drastic action was provoked
by prison conditions and
00:09:18.940 --> 00:09:20.499
the British government\'s
decision to
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suppress political
prisoners status.
00:09:22.900 --> 00:09:25.089
A 53 day ordeal which
00:09:25.090 --> 00:09:27.219
very well could have
finished with death.
00:09:27.220 --> 00:09:30.234
The second hunger strike
led by Bobby Sands,
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10 Irish nationalists died.
00:09:33.040 --> 00:09:39.020
Michael Devine was the
last on August 20th, 1981.
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There was lasting freedom
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that I can remember
of the hunger strike
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was a feeling of loneliness.
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No matter how many
people are around you.
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There\'s an absolute
feeling of loneliness
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and a feeling of
nowhere else to go.
00:10:00.610 --> 00:10:03.999
You are there, you
have a commitment.
00:10:04.000 --> 00:10:06.294
I was a political prisoner.
00:10:06.295 --> 00:10:09.069
The British were denying
my political rights,
00:10:09.070 --> 00:10:11.709
denying that I was a
political prisoner,
00:10:11.710 --> 00:10:13.239
and triumphed when
they label ed me as
00:10:13.240 --> 00:10:15.789
a terrorist and as a gangster.
00:10:15.790 --> 00:10:17.904
None of us, in the east blocks
00:10:17.905 --> 00:10:20.244
seen ourselves as that.
We were not that.
00:10:20.245 --> 00:10:23.409
What seeped in, there
was a beautiful feeling,
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there was a fantastic
feelings of comradeship.
00:10:34.530 --> 00:10:37.974
The war continues and
00:10:37.975 --> 00:10:41.540
West Belfast remains
a city under siege.
00:10:42.750 --> 00:10:47.679
British military posts and
forts are scattered throughout
00:10:47.680 --> 00:10:51.909
Nationalists neighborhoods
and army helicopters
00:10:51.910 --> 00:10:55.074
hovering above the
city, 24 hours a day.
00:10:55.075 --> 00:10:56.844
Cameras, microphones,
00:10:56.845 --> 00:10:59.484
the most sophisticated
technologies employed.
00:10:59.485 --> 00:11:02.900
All in an effort to seek
out a hidden enemy.
00:11:04.740 --> 00:11:07.809
For us, this is
just the usual for us.
00:11:07.810 --> 00:11:09.069
You know what I mean?
Total harassment.
00:11:09.070 --> 00:11:14.079
A rifle pointed at
our heads is normal.
00:11:14.080 --> 00:11:15.309
Frankly, I\'m just used at
00:11:15.310 --> 00:11:16.429
that because I work use to here.
00:11:16.430 --> 00:11:18.980
I tell you what. I
wouldn\'t be standing here.
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This is fine as far as strong.
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Just two weeks ago,
00:11:28.360 --> 00:11:30.369
there was a woman of the IRA
00:11:30.370 --> 00:11:33.939
[inaudible] Not a
soldier up the top of
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the street that day
at all and worked for
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out of shooting,
demonstrate, sharp soldier.
00:12:35.400 --> 00:12:38.439
My early involvement in
the Republican movement,
00:12:38.440 --> 00:12:40.284
when I heard of a British soldier
00:12:40.285 --> 00:12:42.714
or a noisy one being killed,
00:12:42.715 --> 00:12:44.739
I felt good about it.
00:12:44.740 --> 00:12:46.674
I felt that\'s one
of the enemy away.
00:12:46.675 --> 00:12:49.779
Today, I think I feel sad about
00:12:49.780 --> 00:12:53.049
it because I don\'t
want anyone to die.
00:12:53.050 --> 00:12:55.794
The fact is there is a
war going on an island.
00:12:55.795 --> 00:12:57.384
There are two sides to that war,
00:12:57.385 --> 00:13:00.084
the Irish people and the
British Establishment.
00:13:00.085 --> 00:13:02.829
There is no future in this
country for my children
00:13:02.830 --> 00:13:06.159
until the British are removed.
00:13:06.160 --> 00:13:09.054
Until then and only then,
00:13:09.055 --> 00:13:10.374
I\'ll be happy and only then,
00:13:10.375 --> 00:13:12.500
my children will be happy.