Northern Ireland: Gospel of Devlin
On a platform, she appears slightly hunched, her reddish-brown hair tumbling over her shoulders, gray-blue eyes flashing. She speaks in a rapid monotone. The words that tumble out are impassioned, provocative and to her fervent followers not a little messianic.
The campaigner is 21 -year-old Josephine Bernadette Devlin, who six short months ago was a psychology student at Belfast's Queen's University, and a scruffily dressed one at that. She still wears her clothes "back to front or upside down." But in predominantly Protestant Ulster, she has become the spokesman and symbol of a Roman Catholic minority fighting discrimination in jobs, housing and voting rights and against the policies of the ruling Unionist Party. Last week she triumphed over a Unionist opponent in a by-election, and on her 22nd birthday this week she will walk into Britain's Commons as the lady M.P. from Mid-Ulster, the youngest woman ever to sit in the House.
She is the most colorful and delightful newcomer on the British political scene in a long time.
Her arrival will probably be a more traumatic experience for the august chamber than for Bernadette. Says she: "I'll just walk into the House of Commons and say that the peasants have come into their own."
Bernadette is no peasant, though she comes from a poor family. She is in fact a remarkably poised and savvy political leader to whom activism is nothing new. As a schoolgirl, she recalls, "I organized little filibusters and things like raiding the library in protest against book-loaning rules that we thought were unreasonably strict. We would remove whole shelves of books at a time." Her talent found a larger stage during street clashes between Roman Catholics and Protestants last fall, and she could be seen organizing marchers and pleading eloquently against violence. The pleas were in vain, as evidenced by last week's clash between Roman Catholic marchers and police in Londonderry; 30 demonstrators and 40 policemen were injured.
When student civil rightists decided last winter to form a political movement called People's Democracy, Bernadette was one of the founders. During Ulster's February general election, she ran against the minister of agriculture. She lost but drew a surprising third of the vote and "learned from the experience that you can succeed in getting through to people if you try hard enough." Her second opportunity came in last week's by-election, made necessary by the death of one of Northern Ireland's twelve M.P.s. The Unionists, following tradition, nominated the M.P.'s widow, Mrs. Anna Forrest, who politely declined to hold public meetings. In what was immediately headlined as "the petticoat election," Ulster's rival Roman Catholic parties united behind one candidate, Bernadette.
- 1
- 2
- NEXT PAGE »
Most Popular »
- Prosecuting Mohammed: Harder Than You Think
- Retailers Gear up for Black Friday
- Now It's Official: There Is Water on the Moon
- The Meaning and Mythos of Manny Pacquiao
- 2012: End-of-World Disaster Porn
- Does Mexico City Need a Red-Light District?
- Why We Shouldn't Give Christmas Gifts
- Did a Time-Traveling Bird Sabotage the Collider?
- Iraq's Unspeakable Crime: Mothers Pimping Daughters
- How a Bank Robber Became an Antihero in France
- In a Malaria Hot Spot, Resistance to a Key Drug
- Did a Time-Traveling Bird Sabotage the Collider?
- The Meaning and Mythos of Manny Pacquiao
- Now It's Official: There Is Water on the Moon
- Why We Shouldn't Give Christmas Gifts
- Iraq's Unspeakable Crime: Mothers Pimping Daughters
- Five Things the U.S. Can Learn from China
- Prosecuting Mohammed: Harder Than You Think
- London Museum Asks Public What to Pitch
- Obama in Southeast Asia: Mending Fences in a Key Region







RSS