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Note 34.12            Open season on Ireland and the Irish              12 of 17
DUB01::OSULLIVAN_D "Gall gan ceart ach neart"       140 lines   8-MAR-1988 17:20
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	The Short Life of Mairead Farrell.
Mairead Farrell, who died three days after her 31st
birthday, was an unlikely IRA recruit.  Born on the 
Stewartstown Road, in a relatively middle-class area of 
West Belfast, she was the only girl in a family of six 
children.  Although her maternal grandfather had been a 
Republican and was interned by the Black and Tans in 
Ballinmore, Co. Leitrim, her own parents were not 
politically involved and had hoped for a university 
education and maybe even a profession for their 
daughter.
According to her friends and family, she had been 
"involved" not so much for what happened to her own 
family but what she saw on the streets of the Falls 
happening to other families.  Her mother later said: 
"Mairead was strongly affected by different girls' 
fathers and brothers being arrested, being interned, 
for no reason at all.  That had a big influence on her, 
I think."
By her early teens she had already made a commitment 
and joined the Provisionals as a volunteer.  She told 
friends that by 14 she had decided to play her role in 
the "armed struggle", at whatever cost.  But whatever 
commitment she had made privately, her parents knew 
nothing.  To them she was a bright and well-behaved 
student at Rathmore Catholic primary and grammar in 
Dunmurry on the outskirs of West Belfast.  She did very 
well, passing her "O" levels in languages with ease.  
She was 15 when Bloody Sunday happened and she later 
said it was the images from Derry which confirmed what 
she saw as her future.
By June, 1975, she had left school at 18.  Ten months 
later, on April 6th, 1976, she was arrested after 
planting three bombs at Conway's Hotel, outside 
Belfast.  Her colleague and friend, Sean McDermott, was 
shot dead by the RUC and the third man involved in the 
bombing, Kieran Doherty, later died in jail in 1981 
while on hunger strike.
Farrell never regretted her role in the Dunmurry 
explosion.  No one was injured and that had been their 
intention she said.  In a detailed interview with 
Magill magazine shortly after her release from jail in 
September, 1986, she said: "I went out on an operation 
and there was the possibility of my being killed or 
caught.  It's just one of those things.  I did 10 1/2 
years for that.  There's no point in crying over it 
now."
According to Briona MacDermott, an Irish lecturer, who 
is currently writing a book on Farrell's life, she told 
her: "I was lucky that day."  She said the RUC told her 
they had not opened fire because they knew they would 
catch her.  "Nowadays they don't take prisoners," she 
told MacDermott.
For her involvement in the explosion she was sentenced 
to 14 years and in Armagh women's prison she adopted 
the same policy as the male prisoners and joined the 
gradual campaign to gain political status which 
continued in the "dirty protest" and the Maze hunger 
strike.  In December, 1980, Farrell and two other women 
prisoners, Mary Doyle and Mairead Nugent, went on 
hunger strike after nearly a year on the "dirty 
protest".  Within 10 days the fast was called off by 
the IRA after the Northern Ireland Office (NIO) had 
indicated the possibility of some concessions.  By the 
time Farrell came back from hospital, the NIO had 
denied any such possibility.
In the 1981 elections run during the height of the Maze 
hunger strike, Farrell was the only woman to contest a 
seat.  Her name was put forward in Cork North Central 
and she garnered a small percentage of the vote.
Farrell, according to women who were in prison with 
her, had the commitment and single-minded resolve to 
carry herself and many of the other women through these 
years, through strip-searching, months without sanitary 
conditions or a wash, hunger strike and solitary 
confinement.  "She was definitely a leader, she 
believed absolutely in what she was doing but was also 
very popular.  A good listeer who kept spirits up," one 
said.
At Magherberry Prison where she was moved shortly 
before her release, she continued to play a leading 
role in representing Republican women prisoners.  She 
told Magill that prison had taught her "the real values 
in life; it's made me more committed to my political 
beliefs," she said, and pleged to continue her active 
role.  During her years in prison she had taken an Open 
University course in politics and economics and last 
autumn, just over a year after her release at the age 
of 29, she began a BA degree in politics and economics. 
"She wanted to understand things.  For her it was the 
opportunity to get the university education she had 
missed," Briona MacDermott said.
MacDermott, who interviewed Farrell dozens of times 
over the last 18 months, told the Irish Times: "She had 
enjoyed her life since her release.  She had started 
studying again, had grown close to her family and to 
her younger brothers whose growing up she had missed 
out on.  She had a boyfriend and I think she wanted to 
have a normal a life as possible.  But she knew it 
would never be normal.  She was completely dedicated."
Her brothers are not politically involved and although 
she remained very close to her family, it is not 
thought any of them had much support for the very 
determined path she had made for herself since her 
release.  They accepted it with some resignation but 
were naturally devastated yesterday by her death.
Rita O'Hare, the editor of An Phoblacht, said: "I 
wouldn't like anyone to think Mairead was the type who 
had coolly preparing to lay her life down.  She was a 
lively happy-go-lucky, popular girl.  But she was 
committed to what she was doing and accepted the 
consequences."
"She had an inner calm as if she knew exactly what she 
was doing and why.  She was a very committed Republican 
and Socialist," MacDermott added.  her only regret 
about the Conway Hotel bombing was getting caught, and, 
according to her friends, her only likely regret about 
Gibralter would be getting shot.  She knew the stakes, 
they said.
Only 12 women, including Farrell, have died on what the 
IRA call "active service" and the last was Rosemary 
Bleakley, a Cummann na mBan member, who died in north 
Belfast in January, 1976.
	-  Irish Times, March 8th, 1988.
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