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Amazing community programming since 1986.

Series:

A Century Later

Exploring marginalised groups and the construction of British and Irish identity in Northern Ireland.

Events such as the First World War, the Easter Rising, the Ulster Covenant, the Home Rule Crisis and Partition shaped Northern Ireland in the 20th century and as people commemorate the centenary anniversaries of these events, we are all reminded that history continues to influence identities, cultures and divisions in our society today.

All of these centenary anniversaries are potentially contentious. They offer a challenge and an opportunity to create a better understanding of our past, both over the last century and the last 40 years of the Troubles and peace process.

This special collection, A Century Later, was intended to be both different and complementary.

We wanted to concentrate on personal stories from the last 100 years, both from individuals and from those who have been marginalised by the century, our ethnic minorities, working class and LGBT communities, in particular. We were also interested to explore how those who had been injured in the Troubles of the more recent past felt about remembrance and commemoration.

Marginalisation is a multi-layered concept. To some extent it is a shifting phenomenon. Being poor, unemployed, disabled, of different ethnic origin or sexuality all bring risk of exclusion from the past and the present.

A boy on the Shankill Road experiences the horrors of the Belfast Blitz, a night that would live in his memories forever.
A grandson discovers his grandfather and the part he played in two important historical events, the signing of the Ulster Covenant and the fight in France during World War One.
Northern Irish businessman does business with Marxist revolutionary leader in Cuba.
Over thirty years of photography from a man determined to keep the history of the city he loves alive.
Proving innocence for the victims of a bomb that ripped through the heart of a North Belfast community, killing men, women and children.
The murder of a colleague forces a Police Sergeant to confront the attitudes of the police to the gay community in Belfast.
The history and impact of British colonialism across the globe and its part in shaping the multicultural society that Northern Ireland is today.
Searching for survivors amongst the rubble of one of the worst atrocities of the Troubles in Northern Ireland.
Reflections on a dying community which gave much to the development of Belfast.
A soldier in the British Army discovers his love for a country that is finding peace after decades of war.