In the 11 months between August 1971 and July 1972, Northern Ireland experienced its worst year of violence on record. The 'year of chaos' came between of two major military operations, namely the introduction of internment of IRA suspects, without trial, and Operation Motorman, the invasion of barricaded no-go areas in Belfast and Derry. During this whole period, Malachi O'Doherty was a cub reporter in Belfast, working in the city, covering the violence, returning home at night to a no-go area behind the barricades where the streets were patrolled by armed IRA men. O'Doherty takes readers on a journey, at this time of crucial change, through the events of that terrible year, which he argues should be a reminder that political and military miscalculation can lead to civil war and that there is no more urgent need for creative political thinking than now, in the new instability created by demographic change, one hundred years after the partition of Ireland.
I was 19 in 1972 and lived close to the heart of the Troubles. I remember very well the horror and senselessness of the murder and mayhem but how at the same time most people tried to get on with their lives as normally as possible. This in a sense is one reason why the 6 counties didn’t descend into civil war. Stubbornness and common sense came into play. Malachi O’Doherty has given us an almost forensic insight into what happened in that horrific year, a year that he describes as a cross-section of the Troubles. In other words, one year of many. It’s a detailed account of the grotesque killings that year and the thinking (or lack of it) behind them. This is essential reading for anyone who wants to try and grasp what life was like some 20 years before the Good Friday Agreement - and for those who lived through it - lest we forget. One line from the book will stay with me - in describing the tit-for-tat sectarian murders the author said it was ‘killing innocent for innocent’.
A moving and highly personalised account of the worst period of the Northern Irish Troubles, which opened with internment, and finished with Operation Motorman, via the carnage of Bloody Sunday, the creation of Vanguard, the imposition of direct rule, Bloody Friday, and the start of sectarian murder.
I was really affected O’Doherty’s feeling of sadness, as a place he clearly loves teetered on the edge of total savagery. But I also loved his final question- what pulled Northern Ireland back from the brink of a Bosnia-style abyss?