Peace comes dropping slowly

19.00

Denis Bradley was born and raised in Donegal. On joining the priesthood he found himself assigned to a parish in Derry, arriving in the summer of 1970 at the outbreak of the Troubles. Once played out in the shadows, Bradley’s pivotal role in Northern Ireland’s peace process is finally illuminated in this engrossing memoir.

Quantity

Description

Denis Bradley was born and raised in Buncrana, just 12 miles from the border with Northern Ireland. On joining the priesthood he found himself assigned to the cathedral parish in Derry city, arriving in the summer of 1970 as the streets were descending into chaos with the outbreak of the Troubles.

An eyewitness to the wanton violence of Bloody Sunday, Bradley was spurred to become involved in the ‘back-channel’ as one of three men who would provide a secret link between the IRA and the British government for thirty years.

Fervent in their belief that dialogue would bring peace, they brokered the crucial 1993 meeting between IRA men Martin McGuinness and Gerry Kelly and a British Intelligence agent codenamed ‘Fred’. This was a vital step on the road to negotiations which would lead to the ceasefire and the Good Friday Agreement.

Throughout it all, Bradley worked to combat addiction and homelessness in his adopted community, and made the difficult decision to leave the priesthood to marry.

Once played out in the shadows, Bradley’s pivotal role in Northern Ireland’s peace process is finally illuminated in this engrossing memoir.

Additional information

Weight 0.6 kg
Dimensions 22.6 × 15.3 × 3 cm
Book_author

Bradley, Denis

Publisher

Merrion Press

Imprint

Merrion Press

Cover

Paperback

Pages

272

Language

English

Edition
Dewey

941.60824092 (edition:23)

Readership

General – Trade / Code: K

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