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HARVARD GAZETTE ARCHIVES
On the Streets of Belfast
Senior does research in Northern Ireland -- from Sinn Fein to
women's roles in society
By John Marchetti
Special to the Gazette

Molly Hennessy-Fiske '99, in her Eliot House room, has researched issues
in Northern Ireland by going to Belfast and conducting interviews for her
senior thesis. Last month she returned from her second visit there.
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Molly Hennessy-Fiske '99 has a nose for news. She is an
executive editor at the Harvard Crimson, has interned for big city
newspapers, and will pursue a career in journalism after graduation.
This past summer, however, it was an academic pursuit, not a
journalistic one, that led Hennessy-Fiske to the newsmakers. Just
weeks after voters from Northern Ireland and the Irish Republic
ratified a landmark peace agreement, she was in Belfast conducting
interviews for her senior thesis. A social studies concentrator,
Hennessy-Fiske is writing her thesis on Belfast republican women
and their conception of nationalism. With support from the Harvard
College Research Program, she visited Northern Ireland in August.
There, she spoke with women associated with the Irish Republican
Army, met Sinn Fein head Gerry Adams, and attended a major
conference where she heard Ireland's key political leaders
speak.
"The Provisional IRA was born in the early 1970s,"
Hennessy-Fiske explains, "and from the start women were
recruited or volunteered to join the movement. They were a
heterogeneous group from primarily Catholic, working-class
backgrounds who were united by one cause: the militant fight to free
Northern Ireland.
"My interest in this topic developed from courses I have
taken," she continues. "I took Professor [of History] Susan
Pedersen's class on 20th-century Britain during my sophomore
year and ended up writing a paper on the IRA. Last fall, I took a
tutorial on torture and reconciliation with Jennifer Schirmer, a
lecturer in social studies. My final paper looked at women in the
IRA." By spring semester, when she enrolled in Associate
Professor of Government Louise Richardson's course on
terrorism, Hennessy-Fiske was sure she wanted to write her thesis
on women republican activists in Northern Ireland.
She was also sure that she wanted to go to Belfast. "I was
really eager to see the places I had been reading about,"
Hennessy-Fiske says. "So much of the history of the resistance
has to do with physical locations -- neighborhoods, boundaries,
where things began and ended." Belfast is also an ideal
research sight because it is home to Sinn Fein headquarters as well
as a number of veteran activists. Finally, two area libraries have
extensive archives on "The Troubles," as the peak period
of conflict between unionist, republican, and government forces is
known.
Before she left, Hennessy-Fiske worked on building a list of
Belfast contacts. She spent a good deal of the spring and early
summer on the phone. "Because of the time difference, I was
waking up at 5 in the morning to make my calls," she smiles.
Associate Professor Begona Aretxaga, who has written a book on
republican women's resistance during the 1970s and 1980s,
helped her draw up questions for her interviews. "Professor
Aretxaga also provided me with access to yet unpublished interviews
she conducted with IRA women," says Hennessy-Fiske.
Richardson and Schirmer helped Hennessy-Fiske successfully
present her project to the Committee on the Use of Human Subjects
in Research, the review board that determines whether proposed
studies will adequately safeguard the rights and welfare of its
subjects. "With this project, there were a number of concerns
about my safety and the safety of my interview subjects,"
Hennessy-Fiske says. She arrived in Belfast in August and spent her
first day walking the streets of the city, passing the sites of many of
the most violent encounters of "The Troubles."
"In West Belfast," she says, "street corners really
did become battlegrounds." She also visited Milltown Cemetery,
burial site of several prominent slain republicans. She was acutely
aware of the surveillance cameras and observation towers that
loomed above the graveyard. "I quickly found out that
everything is high security in Belfast," she says. "All of
the doors are locked, so you are constantly being buzzed into places,
even retail stores."
That first day was followed by an intense two weeks of activity
that saw Hennessy-Fiske land 23 interviews. She talked with
republicans, unionists, politicians, members of the clergy, and even a
man who made gravestones. "His business was located between
Catholic and Protestant neighborhoods," she says, "and he
showed me all of the bullet holes in his walls."
She admits she was a little nervous the first time she visited the
offices of Sinn Fein. "They are based in a largely abandoned
building," she says. "A group of men gathered out front
pointed me to this side entrance, which led to a winding staircase,
which led to an anteroom with an enormous steel door. It all seemed
so sketchy. The door was obviously huge for security reasons, and I
couldn't even move it. A man had to open it for me from the
inside. It happened every time I went back -- I just couldn't
make an unobtrusive entrance."
She had several enlightening talks with republican women and
discovered a difference in the way old and young approached their
activism. "The older women seemed to have seen the conflict
as purely political from the start," Hennessy-Fiske says.
"But because the younger women knew no life without
"The Troubles," there was a strong personal side to their
activism. One admitted that her involvement began when she was 7
and threw bottles at soldiers, with things escalating from there.
"All acknowledged one thing, however," she continues.
"Republican women have an established tradition of political
organization and leadership from which they draw both strength and
support."
Hennessy-Fiske was thrilled to discover an international
women's leadership conference in progress upon her arrival.
"I wasn't that excited that the Clintons were going to be
there," she says. "I just couldn't believe so many of
the women I wanted to talk to were going to be in one place."
Through a stroke of good fortune, she was able to gain full access to
the conference. "I had passes to all of the events, including a
few fancy receptions. I actually had to go out and buy a pair of shoes
so that I could go to them!"
During her stay in Belfast, Hennessy-Fiske was constantly
reminded of the historic April peace accord and all that it promised.
"I found signposts of change at every corner," she says.
Just days before she left, the bulk of British troops pulled out of the
city, effectively ending an occupancy that began in 1972.
"It was actually a little frustrating because I had originally
planned to limit the focus of my research to the situation in the
1970s," she says. "With all that has happened, though,
I've decided I definitely need to acknowledge the agreement in
my thesis. What I'm trying to do, then, is look at how yesterday
is influencing what is happening today."
-- This story originally appeared in The Harvard-Radcliffe
Undergraduate Research Programs Newsletter.
Copyright
1999 President and Fellows of Harvard College
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