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In Pictures
Gallery
Painting a brighter future in Belfast
Dylan Wilson plays in front of the mural that shows him with a granddaughter of Sinn Fein councillor, Joe O(***)Donnell. The poem was written by Dylan(***)s grandfather, Jim Wilson, a former Loyalist fighter [Credit: Angela Catlin]
Published On 25 Sep 2010
25 Sep 2010
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A new mural celebrating Belfast(***)s ship building tradition has replaced a contentious Loyalist mural at a flashpoint where Catholics and Protestants have battled each other for years [Credit: Angela Catlin]
Traditional paramilitary murals on the largely Protestant and Loyalist Shankhill Road [Credit: Angela Catlin]
A traditional July 12 bonfire in Ardogne with the Holy Cross Catholic School in the background. On July 12 the Protestant Orange Order parade to mark King William of Orange(***)s 1690 Battle of the Boyne victory over King James II [Credit: Angela Catlin]
This mural in north Belfast replaced one that likened the 2001 Holy Cross dispute - when Catholic girls had to be escorted to school by riot police - to the 1957 Little Rock High School incident in the US [Credit: Angela Catlin]
This mural in the Ardoyne replaced a mural called Collusion is not an Illusion. The new one celebrates the local guider festival which runs each year in Parkmore [Credit: Angela Catlin]
David Stitt is a former Loyalist fighter who now works as an outreach officer with a post-conflict peace body called Charter for Northern Ireland and is a member of the Belfast Conflict Resolution Consortium [Credit: Angela Catlin]