RUND ABDELFATAH, HOST:
Hey. I'm Rund Abdelfatah.
RAMTIN ARABLOUEI, HOST:
I'm Ramtin Arablouei.
ABDELFATAH: And this week on THROUGHLINE, we're bringing you something a little bit different. We really like the show "Today, Explained," and recently, they covered the history of Northern Ireland.
ARABLOUEI: Brexit has brought Northern Ireland and its troubled past back into the news, and we were right in the middle of trying to figure out how to tell that very complicated and contested history when we heard an episode of "Today, Explained," hosted by Sean Rameswaram, that did just that.
ABDELFATAH: So we decided to call up the person who made it.
NOAM HASSENFELD: My name is Noam Hassenfeld, and I'm a reporter-producer at "Today, Explained."
ABDELFATAH: All right. So, Noam, you decided to tackle the history of the troubles in Ireland more generally, which, as I think most people know - it's packed with a lot of competing narratives, a lot of emotion. So how did you even begin to approach telling this kind of story?
HASSENFELD: That was the biggest hurdle, I think, just because there are so many different ways to tell this story from so many different perspectives. I think people often look at this story, and they say, OK. There's the Catholic perspective, and there's the Protestant perspective. But there's not even just two perspectives. There is the British government perspective. There is the perspective of the Republic of Ireland.
What I decided to do was present the conflict part around Brexit, and in dealing with the history, I think what I really tried to do is focus on the effects and the suffering rather than the causes and who to blame. I worked with reporter Susan McKay, who herself had done a bunch of interviews with both Protestants and Catholics in Northern Ireland who had been impacted by violence committed by both Protestants and Catholics. And really, what I was trying to show is just how terrible this situation was through atrocities committed by all parties, how tenuous the peace that was created out of this was and how much of a tragedy it would be if we were to lose something like this over Brexit.
ARABLOUEI: One of the approaches you took clearly was to emphasize the experience of people who lived it. What was the thinking behind that approach? That really worked in terms of putting us there and in that history, so I just want to know what you're thinking.
HASSENFELD: Yeah. So I mentioned Susan McKay. I mean, she did this incredible series called Stories From Silence where she interviewed partners of family members that had been killed in the troubles, children of family members who had been killed in the troubles. It was really a very powerful series. And she did a lot of reporting through the Troubles and then followed up with them after. And it's the type of thing where - when I started out this story, I reached out to people. I was like, hey. Can - do you know anyone who can connect me to people who have personal stories in the troubles? And everyone is very rightly, I think, concerned about someone just parachuting in and telling the story incorrectly or insensitively.
And what Susan very graciously allowed me to do was - she had done this work. She had put in the time and really understood all of the things that had happened. She had lived through the troubles. You know, she grew up in Northern Ireland in Derry or Londonderry. And what she allowed me to do was basically take examples of people that were killed by both the Irish Republican Army and by loyalists and just understand that in both situations, it was, you know - you can argue who's to blame. You can argue whether something was a response to a previous action or who started it. It's not clear to me how you can ever solve who started it, but I think there's no arguing with the suffering. There's no arguing with how much this impacted every type of person in Northern Ireland. So I think focusing on personal stories was a good way to get that across.
ARABLOUEI: Thank you, Noam, so much for sharing you with us.
HASSENFELD: Yeah. Thanks, guys.
ARABLOUEI: After the break, the invisible border.
(SOUNDBITE OF PODCAST, "TODAY, EXPLAINED")
SEAN RAMESWARAM: A warning that today's episode features some graphic descriptions of violence near the top and the bottom of this first half. There's no violence after the break if you want to avoid it altogether. Let's begin.
(SOUNDBITE OF MUSIC)
RAMESWARAM: We have covered Brexit backwards and forwards on "Today, Explained." We've talked about trade and immigration and ideology, and it's all been sort of abstract, very political. But on the show today, our reporter Norm Hassenfeld is going to take us to a place where you can actually see what Brexit might do with your own eyes.
HASSENFELD: Yeah, and in the interest of minimizing my carbon footprint, I got someone closer to go for me.
LEONA O'NEILL: My name is Leona O'Neill, and I'm a journalist from Northern Ireland.
HASSENFELD: Northern Ireland is part of the United Kingdom, but it shares a border with the independent country of Ireland to the south.
O'NEILL: I am on the border between Northern Ireland and Southern Ireland. It's just outside Derry. It's a very, very, very busy road. I've pulled to the side of the road here. There's literally hundreds of cars going up and down past me here.
HASSENFELD: Right now, since both the United Kingdom and Ireland are in the European Union, that border is barely noticeable. But after tonight, while the country of Ireland will still be in the EU, things start to get complicated at the border.
O'NEILL: Brexit that has posed a particularly difficult and unique problem for us.
HASSENFELD: Brexit could bring checkpoints, police, the military. But that's nothing new for this border.
O'NEILL: When you say the border or the Northern Irish border, people think - they hark back to those days when there were huge, big military installations where the British Army would be there. You know, there'd be checkpoints and stuff like that. There is nothing like that now at the moment. It's something that's kind of forgotten about, almost. It's an invisible border.
(SOUNDBITE OF MUSIC)
O'NEILL: When I was growing up here beside the border, you know, you would approach the border. There were huge, big military installations - you know, corrugated iron walls, heavily fortified, full of soldiers, armed soldiers. So sometimes, your car would be pulled, and everybody would be taken out of the car. The car would be searched for guns and ammunition and all that kind of stuff. These military installations were shot at. They were bombed. You were almost taking your life in your hands stopping at them when you were passing, particularly with children in the car. It was quite a terrifying experience.
(SOUNDBITE OF MUSIC)
HASSENFELD: This peaceful spot where Leona is sitting right now - 30 years ago, it was a living nightmare.
O'NEILL: In 1990, Patsy Gillespie was a young father. The IRA, the Irish Republican Army, were targeting Patsy Gillespie because he worked in a British Army station here in Derry. They held his wife and his children hostage and told Patsy to get in his van and drive it to the British Army station here, the checkpoint in Coshquin. They said if he didn't do that that they would shoot his wife and his children.
(SOUNDBITE OF MUSIC)
HASSENFELD: This is Patsy's wife, Kathleen.
(SOUNDBITE OF ARCHIVED RECORDING)
KATHLEEN GILLESPIE: He was chained to the driver's seat and the steering wheel of that. It was loaded with 1,200 pounds of explosives, and he was made to drive the van to the army checkpoint at Coshquin. He had time to shout a warning, and I was told by one of the soldiers who survived that they heard, run, boys. I'm loaded. Run. And the bomb was detonated by remote control, and Patsy was blown to pieces with five soldiers. Patsy was actually identified by a piece of gray zip attached to a piece of the woolen cardigan and a bit of flesh.
HASSENFELD: To this day, Kathleen remembers Patsy on the border.
O'NEILL: I'm sitting here actually across the road from the memorial. Patsy's wife, Kathleen, leaves flowers. I can see them sitting here. She leaves flowers every week there for her Patsy.
(SOUNDBITE OF MUSIC)
HASSENFELD: Brexit isn't just bringing these memories back. It actually might disrupt this hard-fought peace.
O'NEILL: I know from speaking to dissident Republicans in the past that should any structure go up on the border, any kind of - even a sign that says, this is the border, they will blow it up. Anyone who puts the life of a customs officer at risk, they will need police protection. The police are then become a target as well as a customs officer. If there are attacks on them, the army might be brought back to protect the police who are protecting the customs officer, and then we're back in the 1970s, 1980s Northern Ireland. We have a very delicate peace here in Northern Ireland. Anything could just put it over the edge.
HASSENFELD: Peace in Northern Ireland isn't just delicate. It took decades of civilian uprisings, military crackdowns and brutal terrorist campaigns to reach this point. Thousands of people died in the process, and the peace deal that created this invisible border was an almost-impossible balancing act.
SUSAN MCKAY: Ireland was part of the British Empire up until the beginning of the 20th century, and this was not a situation which was desired by the majority of people in Ireland.
HASSENFELD: Susan McKay is an author and journalist from Londonderry in Northern Ireland. People there often call it Derry.
MCKAY: There was a smaller Protestant minority concentrated in the northeast of Ireland which did not want to be a part of a united Ireland.
HASSENFELD: So in 1921, Ireland was partitioned. The south was independent while the north remained part of the United Kingdom.
MCKAY: A border was put across the country, and it's an extraordinary border. You know, it zigzags all over the place. It cuts off one county, Donegal, practically from the rest of the Republic of Ireland. And it divides villages. It divides houses. It divides people's farms.
(SOUNDBITE OF ARCHIVED RECORDING)
UNIDENTIFIED REPORTER #1: This is Fintona, a small, rather old-fashioned town in County Tyrone, one of the six northeastern counties of Ireland which are held under British rule.
MCKAY: The situation in the north was that the unionists, who were those who were loyal to Britain, set up the northern state in such a way that Catholics and nationalists could really have no power.
(SOUNDBITE OF ARCHIVED RECORDING)
UNIDENTIFIED REPORTER #1: Two-thirds of the people of this little town are nationalist. That is to say, they are in favor of unity with the rest of Ireland and against being treated as part of Britain. One-third is unionist, which means favoring British rule and the partition of Ireland. But the town is controlled by that unionist minority and run solely in their interests.
MCKAY: So the upshot of this gerrymandering, as it was called, was that the Catholic population lived in extremely disadvantaged circumstances in crowded areas. They didn't have power, their unemployment was very high, and they were extremely unhappy about the state.
(SOUNDBITE OF MUSIC)
HASSENFELD: In the 1960s, things changed.
MCKAY: With the advent of television and with the advent of second-level education for larger numbers of people, the civil rights movement rose up about housing issues and employment issues. And it was met by the northern state with a very violent response.
(SOUNDBITE OF ARCHIVED RECORDING)
UNIDENTIFIED REPORTER #2: Civil rights protests against alleged discriminations were regarded at first as no more than a nuisance, but as they continued and became more insistent and extreme, petrol bombs ominously replaced stones as the main weapons.
HASSENFELD: This was the beginning of what people call the troubles - nationalists and Republicans fighting against unionists, loyalists and British troops and regular people caught in the middle.
MCKAY: Into the middle of that scenario, the IRA, the Irish Republican Army, began to build up force. And that was very much accelerated in January 1972, when Bloody Sunday occurred. And that was a notorious massacre of innocent civil rights marchers by a British regiment called the paratroopers.
(SOUNDBITE OF GUNFIRE)
MCKAY: Thirteen people were killed. None of them were armed. So a lot of people started to join the IRA at that point. You had appalling incidents, including Bloody Friday, when the IRA planted a lot of bombs in the shopping streets of Belfast, indiscriminately killing civilians.
(SOUNDBITE OF ARCHIVED RECORDING)
UNIDENTIFIED REPORTER #3: On that day, Belfast was attacked with 27 bombs in one afternoon - nine died and over 130 injured.
MCKAY: And you had loyalists going into collusion with renegade members of the British security forces killing Catholics in isolated areas around the country. In 1981, the British government tried to remove political status from IRA prisoners, and as a result, the IRA prisoners went on hunger strike. And Margaret Thatcher refused to relent.
(SOUNDBITE OF ARCHIVED RECORDING)
PRIME MINISTER MARGARET THATCHER: Crime is crime is crime. It is not political. It is crime. There can be no question of political status.
MCKAY: By the time a negotiation was reached, 10 of them had died. And by the early years of the 1990s, the people of Northern Ireland were just completely approaching despair.
HASSENFELD: Susan, you covered the troubles as a reporter. What was that experience like?
MCKAY: Well, being a reporter during the conflict meant going to a lot of funerals. It meant attending a lot of scenes for very violent incidents that happened. It meant talking to people who were in a state of shock and grief. And many journalists like me had to, you know, go to people's houses the morning after somebody had been killed and do interviews with bereaved families.
HASSENFELD: And you've been following up with some of them.
MCKAY: Yeah. I went back to many of the families that I had first met when they were first bereaved. They're all very powerful and all very moving, but a few of them did particularly stick in my mind. One of them was the story of James Morgan, which was told by his mother, Philomena.
(SOUNDBITE OF ARCHIVED RECORDING)
PHILOMENA MORGAN: James was - he was a 16-year-old. He was just like any other normal, happy-go-lucky 16-year-old. So on that day, James went to meet his friend Nathan about maybe two to three hundred yards up the road. He never made it. He was picked up, and they beat him right in the head with a hammer. And they killed him, and they buried him in an animal pit. We didn't know where he was. We looked for him. Then a detective arrived to tell us, so that's where I got the news from. The troubles would seem to be far from here, but it never even entered our heads that something like this could happen in a small village. But it did, and it changed things forever.
MCKAY: James Morgan was murdered by loyalists in 1997 near his home in the mountains of Mourne.
(SOUNDBITE OF ARCHIVED RECORDING)
MORGAN: And when it went to court, the judge said it was utterly sectarian. He was murdered for his religion. And for a long time after it, it was very nervy because I couldn't sleep. The rest of the boys were all late teens. Would they be picked up? Would they meet the wrong person? Would they go down a road that you didn't want them to go down? You know, Father Darcy used to say, if you get a good day, take it. And if you can laugh, laugh. And that's - we took his advice, and that's what we did.
(SOUNDBITE OF MUSIC)
MCKAY: People's lives were just ruined, and people had to come to terms with immense pain. And many, many people are still struggling with that pain.
HASSENFELD: Somehow, after all that pain, both sides made peace in 1998. And now Brexit might unmake it. More in a minute on "Today, Explained."
(SOUNDBITE OF ARCHIVED RECORDING)
UNIDENTIFIED REPORTER #4: Now beneath the pyramid penthouse of Stormont Castle buildings, the final scenes of this extraordinary political drama are about to be acted out.
HASSENFELD: April 10, 1998, Belfast, Northern Ireland, hours past a midnight deadline.
(SOUNDBITE OF ARCHIVED RECORDING)
UNIDENTIFIED REPORTER #5: Dawn broke in Stormont with the deadline for agreement well passed and the chances of a deal emerging seemingly slim.
HASSENFELD: It's Good Friday, the most somber day on the calendar for both Catholics and Protestants. It's all about death, sacrifice and the anticipation of rebirth.
(SOUNDBITE OF ARCHIVED RECORDING)
UNIDENTIFIED REPORTER #5: There was a growing feeling of anticipation as the conviction grew that they were witnessing history in the making.
HASSENFELD: All parties have been invited - the largely Protestant unionists, along with hardline loyalist groups, and the largely Catholic nationalists, along with hardline Republican groups.
(SOUNDBITE OF ARCHIVED RECORDING)
UNIDENTIFIED REPORTER #6: The mood here at Stormont veered almost by the hour between confidence that a deal was tantalizingly close to fears that these talks, even as the finish line loomed into sight, could still stumble.
HASSENFELD: David Trimble, head of the Ulster Unionist Party.
(SOUNDBITE OF ARCHIVED RECORDING)
DAVID TRIMBLE: We see this as laying the foundations for a healthy, vibrant democracy to replace the stagnation, frustration and powerlessness of the last three decades.
HASSENFELD: Gerry Adams, head of Sinn Fein, the political wing of the Irish Republican Army.
(SOUNDBITE OF ARCHIVED RECORDING)
GERRY ADAMS: These negotiations and new arrangements which result from them are part of our collective journey from the failures of the past towards a future together as equals.
HASSENFELD: As day stretches into evening, the mediator, former U.S. Senator George Mitchell, makes an announcement almost a century in the making.
(SOUNDBITE OF ARCHIVED RECORDING)
GEORGE MITCHELL: I'm pleased to announce that the two governments and the political parties of Northern Ireland have reached agreement.
DONNACHA O BEACHAIN: After a generation of struggle, I think many in the Republican movement said, look; it's time to cash in our chips.
HASSENFELD: Donnacha O Beachain, international relations, Dublin City University.
O BEACHAIN: They had entered a situation of what you might call a mutually hurting stalemate where, you know, they weren't going to achieve their objectives through force, but neither could the British government impose its authority by force either.
HASSENFELD: So they came up with a compromise with two parts.
O BEACHAIN: One was the relationships within Northern Ireland, the power relationships.
HASSENFELD: The deal promised that nationalists and unionists would always be represented in Northern Ireland's government.
O BEACHAIN: Both sides compromised but got something. And what they got was to share power within Northern Ireland based on power-sharing.
HASSENFELD: Part two - the bigger picture. On the one hand, it promised that Northern Ireland would stay part of the United Kingdom. But on the other hand...
O BEACHAIN: There was a provision for what's called a border poll.
HASSENFELD: Meaning that at any point in the future, there could be a referendum where the people of Northern Ireland would vote on whether to join a united Ireland, or as British Prime Minister Tony Blair put it...
(SOUNDBITE OF ARCHIVED RECORDING)
PRIME MINISTER TONY BLAIR: Those who believe in a united Ireland can make that case now by persuasion, not violence or threats.
O BEACHAIN: And if they voted in favor of united Ireland, the British government was duty-bound to legislate for it.
HASSENFELD: It was almost as if the deal was saying something different to each side. For unionists, this deal was ideally the end. But for nationalists...
O BEACHAIN: They would never have agreed to it if they had been sold it as an end in itself, so certainly it was presented as a stepping stone.
HASSENFELD: For one side, the deal affirmed that Northern Ireland was a permanent part of the United Kingdom. For the other side, the door was open for Northern Ireland to join the rest of Ireland.
O BEACHAIN: Everybody gets a little bit of what they want. Nobody gets everything, but everybody gets enough to sell it to their supporters.
HASSENFELD: It was kind of confusing, but that was by design.
O BEACHAIN: The term that they used was constructive ambiguity. You try and massage the unpalatable details to a certain degree when people are signing up to something, but ultimately, then you need to inject the money, the changed institutions very quickly afterwards so that people don't have time to go back and have this so-called buyer's remorse.
HASSENFELD: There was no perfect solution to the issue of the border, so the plan sidestepped it, hoping the problem might improve with time.
O BEACHAIN: The miracle of the Good Friday Agreement is that it's not, as is often touted, a conflict resolution situation. This is conflict management.
(SOUNDBITE OF MUSIC)
O BEACHAIN: We haven't, in a sense, dismantled the sectarian mindsets that exist in Northern Ireland. Only the guns have been put aside but not the divisive mentalities, and that's, of course, evident to anybody who visits Northern Ireland.
(SOUNDBITE OF TV SHOW, "PBS NEWSHOUR")
JOHN ALDERDICE: And we've done all these different things - institutional change, constitutional change. You still have a problem of attitudes not having changed.
O BEACHAIN: Even in Belfast, for example - the largest city - there are kilometers upon kilometers of walls which divide both communities.
(SOUNDBITE OF TV SHOW, "PBS NEWSHOUR")
KIRA KAY: Most were built during the troubles, but some have gone up even since the peace agreement.
O BEACHAIN: If you are from one community, you can spend your entire life growing up without meeting or having a serious conversation with somebody from the other community.
(SOUNDBITE OF TV SHOW, "PBS NEWSHOUR")
KAY: Ninety percent of Northern Ireland students study exclusively with members of their own community.
O BEACHAIN: You get employed in a different area. You read different newspapers. You play different sports. So Northern Ireland remains very divided. What the Good Friday Agreement did is that it regulated the conflict in such a way that people didn't feel it was worthwhile killing each other to resolve it.
HASSENFELD: All the while, the Northern Irish border has remained almost invisible.
O BEACHAIN: It's one that divides farms. It divides families. It's an unnatural border. And what the Good Friday Agreement managed to do was to make that border invisible, and what Brexit has done is it has reintroduced the threat of a visible border back on the island of Ireland, one that would be what they call a hard border - customs posts, security. And that's something that, of course, everybody who was involved in the Good Friday Agreement is trying to prevent.
ABDELFATAH: When we come back, how Brexit might play out in Ireland.
(SOUNDBITE OF PODCAST, "TODAY, EXPLAINED")
HASSENFELD: Tonight's Brexit deadline doesn't say much about what the deal will look like in practice.
O BEACHAIN: It's symbolism. The real negotiations are still yet to take place, and when the trade agreement is negotiated, the United Kingdom will have to make a choice.
HASSENFELD: The U.K. is going to have to figure out its trade borders all over again, and it's talking about drawing one in the Irish Sea.
O BEACHAIN: Which more or less allows for continuing free trade within the island of Ireland but a de facto border between Northern Ireland and the rest of the United Kingdom.
HASSENFELD: This trade border would split a country - Northern Ireland on one side, and the rest of the U.K. on the other - but the other option could be even riskier. Option two would risk undoing the Good Friday Agreement by rebuilding the land border between Ireland and Northern Ireland.
O BEACHAIN: That border between north and south would become the international border between the European Union and the United Kingdom, and it will have to be policed. It will be visible. And the history of Ireland suggests that once you have a visible border, it becomes a target. Then you will have to have reinforcements to defend it from attack, and you end in an escalating situation, which leads to widespread conflict.
HASSENFELD: The history of the troubles makes the risk of a rebuilt land border clear. But for unionists in Northern Ireland, a border in the Irish Sea could be dangerous, too.
BEN LOWRY: The problem for people from that perspective, who were by far the majority of the people who did vote for Brexit here, is that it throws up the possibility that the United Kingdom itself will not hold together.
HASSENFELD: Ben Lowry edits the unionist-leaning Belfast Newsletter.
LOWRY: This is a massive change. The impact of being edged out of the economic territory of your own nation is a very serious one.
HASSENFELD: But for Ben, it's not a shocking result.
LOWRY: Very many people in England, when put to the test, are not bothered in the least at the prospect of Northern Ireland leaving, and that is something that must concentrate the minds of those of us unionists to think carefully about what the future means.
HASSENFELD: A 2019 poll found that among pro-Brexit English voters, almost three-quarters that they didn't care if Brexit led to the breakup of the U.K., and 80% said that Brexit is worth it even if it unravels the peace process in Northern Ireland. As for those in Northern Ireland...
LOWRY: The arguments in favor of Brexit from a Northern Ireland perspective are that the European Union is a fundamentally incoherent system, that it tries too many things that are the preserve of the nation-state.
HASSENFELD: Essentially, the same argument made by the rest of Britain - that a nation should make choices for itself.
LOWRY: Think of the person in Northern Ireland who thinks of themselves as part of the United Kingdom, who doesn't think about it very much but then accepts that when the nation has decided to move on a major constitutional matter, then we, as an integral part of that nation, should move with it. I think the simple truth is that because it all happened relatively quickly, I don't think a lot of thought was given to the border between Northern Ireland and the Republic of Ireland.
HASSENFELD: So Brexit's left unionists with a lot of questions.
LOWRY: What do we do if England and the rest of the U.K. don't want Northern Ireland? What do we do if independence is not feasible? And what do we do if people in the Republic of Ireland don't want Northern Ireland? You know, we could just be this unwanted place that's in limbo forever.
HASSENFELD: Those are genuine concerns coming from a guy who was once bullish on Brexit.
LOWRY: If you'd asked me 10 years ago, I was a big supporter of Brexit because I thought that the cultural gulf between the United Kingdom and the mainland Europe was too great. And in theory, it still seems to have a lot of sense to it, but in practice, it would be problematic and potentially disastrous.
HASSENFELD: Brexit just doesn't have a good solution that satisfies everyone. For most people, the best solution was exactly the way things were - a tentative, fragile status quo. And Donnacha O Beachain says that was the miracle of the Good Friday Agreement.
O BEACHAIN: The whole idea of the Good Friday Agreement was to postpone the constitutional issue for at least a generation. Let's get people of different political aspirations working together for a generation or two, and then when they're used to working together within Northern Ireland, then we can delicately put the question, if a majority suggests it will happen, that we would maybe have a united Ireland. And what Brexit did is that it refocused attention on the constitutional issue, and all that work that had been put into deemphasizing the border, deemphasizing sovereignty, deemphasizing constitutional questions - that was now back front and center of practical politics.
HASSENFELD: That deemphasis seemed to be working. In a recent survey, half of the people in Northern Ireland considered themselves to be neither unionist nor nationalist, and the younger they were, the more neutral they got.
O BEACHAIN: The younger generation don't remember what the conflict was like. I mean, I'm a professor, as I said, at the university. I have 20-something students in front of me. It's just remarkable. It makes me feel, of course, incredibly old that they don't remember a conflict in Northern Ireland.
(SOUNDBITE OF MUSIC)
O BEACHAIN: I guess the fear is that as you have a generation who don't know the price of peace, who haven't felt the hurt and the devastation that conflict can cause, that this could be thrown away. So certainly, peace is not to be taken for granted. The Good Friday Agreement is, in many respects, a miraculous achievement.
(SOUNDBITE OF MUSIC)
HASSENFELD: I think what's so miraculous here is how rare it is that conflicts like this get resolved diplomatically without one side just surrendering. Think about what something like this would mean for Israel-Palestine, India-Pakistan or even Ukraine and Russia. I know none of these conflicts is exactly like the other, and even in Northern Ireland's case, the peace plan didn't solve everything. But the miracle here is that two sides that were at each other's throats for almost a century actually came together. They talked. They decided on a fragile peace, and it actually worked. And then people forgot.
(SOUNDBITE OF MUSIC)
RAMESWARAM: "Today, Explained" reporter Noam Hassenfeld. Thanks to Susan McKay, who allowed us to use the audio she recorded of Kathleen Gillespie and Philomena Morgan. Those interviews are part of the series Stories From Silence, which you can find at storiesfromsilence.com. Susan's also working on a book about Protestants in Northern Ireland and another one all about borders.
I'm Sean Rameswaram. The rest of our team here at "Today, Explained" is Brigid McCarthy, Haleema Shah, Amina Al-Sadi, Jillian Weinberger and Efim Shapiro. The Mysterious Breakmaster Cylinder provides music. We had a mash-up from Jeff Geld this week and extra hands on deck belonging to Roge Karma and Byrd Pinkerton. Our fact-checker Olivia Exstrum is moving on from facts. We wish her all the best and thank her for all of her checks. Our new fact-checker is Cecilia Ley (ph). Welcome, Cecilia.
"Today, Explained" is part of the Vox Media podcast network. Get in touch. Our email address is todayexplained@vox.com.
(SOUNDBITE OF MUSIC)
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