| Paisley, Ahern Shake on It
By
Paddy Clancy
THE landmark historic handshake between Taoiseach (Prime Minister) Bertie
Ahern and hardline northern Protestant leader Ian Paisley has been widely
acclaimed throughout Ireland and Britain.
Although the event was carefully choreographed, with every minute detail
of the meeting discussed in advance between civil servants from both sides
of the border, it was still a momentous occasion, with seasoned observers
of The Troubles gulping on lumps in their throats. Some even fought back
tears of joy and relief.
What prompted most comment in the aftermath was the warmth of Paisley’s
greeting. There was no forced jocularity, no stiff formality accompanying
his handclasp.
Ahern was waiting on the steps of Farmleigh House, the former Guinness
home in Dublin’s Phoenix Park and now the Irish government venue
for important state occasions.
As the mini-cavalcade of two cars bearing Paisley and his party drove
up the long driveway Ahern patted down his jacket and waited to welcome
his guest. Then, as the cars pulled to a halt, the Irish government leader
bustled across the gravel, his face creased in a broad smile.
Paisley’s response was instant and as affectionate. He stepped from
his car and with an agility belying his 81 years, and moved briskly forward,
hand outstretched and boomed in that unmistakable voice: “Good morning!
I have to shake this man’s hand! Give him a grip!”
As they shook right hands, Ahern grasped the top of Paisley’s arm
with his free left. Paisley returned the gesture with what one observer
called “a manly wallop on the shoulder.”
It was no place for cynics. The leader of the majority of Protestant opinion
in Northern Ireland, who only a month ago was refusing to talk to Sinn
Fein, was now, after finally opening face-to-face talks with them just
a few days earlier, sharing a public podium with the leader of government
of the once-hated Republic.
Decades of conflict, 3,600 deaths and many thousands more injuries had
gone before that almost unbelievable moment.
The cordial formalities that marked the most historic event in Irish history
for many decades were over in a minute. Then the two men went inside to
discuss the new north-south friendly relationship.
Martin McGuinness, the Sinn Fein negotiations chief who will be deputy
to Paisley in the new power-sharing administration in Belfast from May
8, reckoned the manner in which the Democratic Unionist Party leader behaved
in Dublin, augured well for their future working relationship.
McGuinness, once a leader of the IRA that Paisley and his followers despised,
said, “I understand this was the first public handshake. That is
another important moment in history. It is very, very welcome.
“Certainly, from the contacts I have had with Dr. Paisley I am more
and more convinced that he is willing to enter into the political institutions
in the right spirit.”
Following his meeting with Ahern, Paisley underlined still more his eagerness
to surmount the bitterness of the past.
“Some say hedges make the best neighbors but that is not the case.
I don’t believe we should plant a hedge between our two countries,”
Paisley said.
Ahern echoed his sentiments. “We must do our best to put behind
us the terrible wounds of our past and work together to build a new relationship
between our two traditions.”
Seasoned journalists, many of whom spent more than three decades reporting
an apparently endless diet of violence and treachery, admitted they were
witnessing an occasion they never believed they would see in their own
lifetime.
Veteran TV political analyst Ken Reid of Ulster Television kept repeating,
“Is this a dream? Am I dreaming?”
A clue to some of the input by the taoiseach to the preparations that
paved the way for the big day was given by Foreign Affairs Minister Dermot
Ahern.
He recalled a cross-party summit in the Scottish town of St. Andrews last
October when the atmosphere between Paisley and Dublin leaders began to
thaw.
Bertie Ahern presented Paisley with a 50th wedding anniversary present
that resulted in a private handshake photographed by members of the Paisley
family.
Dermot Ahern said, “The taoiseach has been incredible in the way
in which he has dealt with this potentially difficult relationship with
Dr. Paisley and I think there’s a great understanding and a great
warmth, particularly after the St. Andrews gift.”
The anniversary gift, a wooden bowl, was carved from a tree grown on the
site of the Battle of the Boyne where Protestant English King William
III defeated deposed Catholic King James II in 1690.
Now Paisley and Ahern have agreed to visit the battlefield together
in the near future. Paisley gave an assurance, though they won’t
be refighting the battle.
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