Within a
week of his 40th birthday, Rev. Ian Paisley moved decisively from
fire-and-brimstone pulpit pounding in Northern Ireland to incendiary political
partisanship in April 1966.
The
ostensible cause of his agitation was Ulster Prime Minister Terence O’Neill’s commemoration of the 50th anniversary of the Easter
Rising, a well-meaning but toothless gesture that Paisley interpreted as a
dangerous concession to the province’s Roman Catholic minority.
Protests
planned by Paisley led O’Neill to restrict the Easter rising commemoration
parades on April 17th. Those security measures, without equal
countervailing measures against Protestant marchers, reduced Catholic support
for a Prime Minister perceived as timorous and condescending while emboldening
Paisley and his associates.
Through
size and the passion of a true believer, Paisley dominated the groups he
founded or transformed in adulthood. In 1951, at age 25—only five years after
ordination—he set up his own fundamentalist Free Presbyterian Church of Ulster.
By 1966 he
organized opposition more aggressively against O’Neill, by:
*founding
the Ulster Constitutional Defence Committee;
*establishing the Ulster Protestant Volunteers, who would use the motto “For God and Ulster,”
formerly associated with the notorious Ulster Defence Force;
*co-founding The Protestant Telegraph, an answer to the more mainstream unionist newspaper, the Belfast
Telegraph (sample headline from late October 1966: “Were the Reformers
Right in Separating From the Church of Rome at Reformation?”; and
*street
protests and rallies, often proceeding through Catholic neighborhoods as
provocative gestures.
What came
to be known as “The Troubles”—the three-decade sectarian conflict that cost
3,000 lives in Ulster—did not arise in a vacuum, nor even solely through
social, economic, or political differences. Their destructive heat derived from
rhetorical tropes that gave currency to ancient grievances and prejudices.
Paisley
was not the sole purveyor of this bombast, but as an increasingly visible
minister—and, ultimately, the politician with the most formidable base—he bore
the heaviest responsibility for its use.
In
journalist Tim Pat Coogan’s memorable summary from The I.R.A.,
Paisley possessed “a doctorate from Bob Jones’s Bible Belt University, lungs
like the Bull of Bashan and a theology from the Apocalypse…In terms of bigotry
he would stand, were he a Muslim, 359 degrees to the right of the Ayatollah
Khomeini.”
Kenneth
Branagh’s Oscar-winning screenplay for Belfast includes a brief scene with a screaming Protestant minister who is more than a little reminiscent
of Paisley. Many YouTube viewers reacted with amusement at the over-the-top
deliver y of this bilious rhetoric, but there was nothing remotely humorous
about it at the time.
Denunciations
of Vatican II’s ecumenical statements, including on an October 1962 visit to
Rome where he intended to distribute pamphlets, led to him being detained for
questioning when he and other clerics arrived at the Eternal City.
He viewed
O’Neill’s outreach to the Catholic minority as a political counterpart to this,
even having gone so far as to lead a 1965 march by 1,000 loyalists to Ulster’s
government seat, Stormont, to protest the historic first official visit to
Northern Ireland by an Irish taoiseach (prime minister), Sean Lemass.
(Two
years later, when Lemass’s successor Jack Lynch arrived in Ulster, Paisley pelted his
car with snowballs.)
With
pressure groups that could quickly be turned into mobs at his disposal, Paisley
ramped up his anti-O’Neill, anti-Catholic campaign. In June 1966, he led members
of his Free Presbyterian Church to picket and harass delegates to the General
Assembly of the Presbyterian Church of Ireland for its openness to ecumenism.
Instead of
curtailing his fanaticism, his arrest and subsequent three-month imprisonment
only conferred martyrdom status on him within the loyalist movement.
His
vehement opposition to the Catholic civil-rights marches of 1968 and early 1969
lifted his visibility, and when he finally plunged into the political arena in
the latter year, his better-than-expected polling results in O’Neill’s own Bannside
constituency helped trigger the Prime Minister’s resignation.
At this
point, he began the modus operandi to which he would adhere for most of the
rest of his life: whip followers up into a murderous frenzy, while vanishing
before violence inevitably occurred.
In 1971,
Paisley formed the Democratic Unionist Party, with considerable overlap from adherents
to his own Free Presbyterian church. He now held a seat in Westminster as a Member
of Parliament and by decade’s end would also start a quarter-century stint in
the European Parliament.
Many of his colleagues may have grown chary of his
antics (e.g., denouncing Pope John Paul II as the Antichrist when the pontiff
visited the European Parliament in 1988). But there was seemingly little they could, or would, do about them.
Paisley
continued to obstruct the peace process, including by opposing the 1998 Good
Friday Agreement that effectively ended 30 years of The Troubles. When he
assumed power in 2007, it was as part of a power-sharing agreement with Sinn
Fein –the same kind of pace he had denounced and torpedoed in the 1973 Sunningdale Agreement.
Longtime
Ulster observers couldn’t get over the jovial relationship he now enjoyed with
the Deputy First Minister in the government, Sinn Fein’s Martin McGuinness. But
the realities of power can only be denied for so long.
In the
same sense that only Cold Warrior Richard Nixon could have gone to Red China,
only an incendiary bigot like Paisley could have agreed to peace negotiations
with the IRA.
Upon his
death, many Paisley admirers hailed what he had done for peace. They overlooked
the irony that he had, in effect, engaged in the same reconciliation process
with Catholics that provoked his outrage against Captain O’Neill—and that he
had to detoxify the very environment he had inflamed with his rhetoric three
decades earlier.
Paisley’s
damage to the province was not only heinous but also injurious to the Unionist
cause he espoused.
When he
took umbrage at Captain O’Neill’s tentative attempt to ameliorate tensions
between Ulster’s two faith communities, the Irish Republican Army stood at its
lowest point since the six Protestant-dominated counties of Ulster were
partitioned from the 26 counties of the republic to the south. Its 1956-62
offensive was so disastrous that the paramilitary organization’s acronym was
spelled out to spawn a derisive nickname: “I Ran Away.”
Though
gerrymandering and discrimination raged on, growing educational opportunities
and the generous social welfare programs of Great Britain led many Catholics to
accept control by the crown.
This
month’s centenary of Paisley’s birth should lead to reflection, but hardly
celebration, about his legacy. His career holds implications beyond the British
Isles, to an entire political world with similar personalities.
Like
demagogues across the globe and ages, he stirred atavistic prejudices into
current socioeconomic grievances to advance his political interests. With such
people, decades of peace and civil rights advances are provisional, always
vulnerable to bigotry and backlash.