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Where Grieving Begins: Building Bridges after the Brighton Bomb - a Memoir
Patrick Magee
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Description for Where Grieving Begins: Building Bridges after the Brighton Bomb - a Memoir
Hardback.
An enduring peace is only possible through a genuine understanding of the past. To understand the Troubles is to set them in the context of the historical root causes of the conflict, in order to grapple with its pain and its horrors; to grieve and then, perhaps, to heal.
This is the memoir of Patrick Magee, the man who planted the 1984 Brighton bomb – an attempt by the Provisional IRA to kill the British Prime Minister, Margaret Thatcher, and her cabinet. In an unflinching reckoning with the past, Magee recounts the events of his life. He chronicles the ... Read moreprofound experience of meeting Jo Berry – whose father was one of five people killed in the bombing – and the extraordinary work they have done together.
A chasm of misunderstanding endures around the Troubles and the history of British rule in Ireland. This memoir builds a bridge to a common understanding. It is written in the belief that anything is possible when there is honesty, inclusion and dialogue.
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Product Details
Place of Publication
London, United Kingdom
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About Patrick Magee
Patrick Magee was released from prison in 1999 under the terms of the Good Friday Agreement. For 27 years, Patrick was a committed member of the IRA and remains a republican. He completed his PhD while in prison.
Reviews for Where Grieving Begins: Building Bridges after the Brighton Bomb - a Memoir
'An important book ... Only by hearing such voices will we shape our understanding into some kind of order and reconciliation'
Irish Times 'I read this book with total fascination. Different countries, different conflicts, Pat the bomber and I the bombed - yet how extraordinarily similar, intense, complex and healing the experience of reaching out to the hated 'enemy' ... Read morehad been for both of us'
Albie Sachs, former judge on the Constitutional Court of South Africa and chief architect of the post-apartheid constitution 'Magee’s narrative is calm and collected; analytical and poetic ... His emotional desire for reconciliation comes across as genuine and heartfelt'
Counterpunch 'Patrick Magee is a fine example of a human being making his way through an acute crisis. He and Jo Berry managed to transform the aftermath of a severe conflict into a profoundly useful form of communication. They both deserve our respect and admiration for this'
Scilla Elworthy, founder of the Oxford Research Group, co-founder of Peace Direct and three-time nominee for the Nobel Peace Prize 'A vivid, deeply personal account of why a young, unassuming man became a volunteer in the IRA, risked his life and sacrificed his freedom, to take on not just the British military in Belfast's ghettoes but in the lion's den itself'
Danny Morrison, Secretary of the Bobby Sands Trust and author of All the Dead Voices (Mercier Press, 2002) ‘Compelling … Pat’s exploration of his journey into republican politics, of life as an IRA volunteer, as a political prisoner and the consequences of the armed actions he participated in, provide an important alternative narrative to that often presented by others’
Gerry Adams, former President of Sinn Fein 'Not many autobiographies show an author feeling his way through his life, seeking to understand each phase of it. This one does'
Andersonstown News 'A treatise on processes of responsibility, grieving and reconciliation'
Red Pepper ‘A fascinating read’
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