Though I did think that Ian Paisley, who died yesterday, was already dead. His huge, thundering presence was such a big part of British life that I assumed his more recent silence meant he was no longer with us. It’s impossible to overstate how famous, or infamous, he was in the 70s and 80s. Think of “The Troubles” in Northern Ireland and you instantly think of Paisley, bellowing at anyone who didn’t agree with him. His loud and uncompromising hatred of Catholicism meant that, to the North London Catholic community in which I grew up, he was the anti-Christ. Which is exactly what he called the Pope, to his face, in 1981. In a sense, the ferocious old firebrand died in 2007, the day he signed that power sharing agreement with Sinn Fein. Ulster is a much more peaceful place now than it was in Paisley’s political heyday. Back then, Belfast sounded like this.
Death of the “Anti-Christ”.

- Happy Birthda...16th Aug 2014
- I always like...14th Aug 2014
- The Railway i...12th Aug 2014
- The British o...11th Aug 2014
- John Bishop o...10th Aug 2014
- The Black Alb...9th Aug 2014
- The second fr...8th Aug 2014
- The day the p...6th Aug 2014
- 100 years sin...5th Aug 2014
- I went to see...4th Aug 2014
- RIP Mike Smith.3rd Aug 2014
- To Paul Conwa...2nd Aug 2014
- One of the gr...1st Aug 2014
- Enjoy this so...30th Jul 2014
- Written about...29th Jul 2014 prev next