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Hope and tears as Buncrana
remembers
18.08.08
TRAVELLING hand-in-hand
across the bridge of hope. The words from a poem
written by 12-year old Shaun McLaughlin before he
died in the Omagh bomb took on a special resonance
on Friday evening as a large crowd gathered in
Buncrana to remember the atrocity 10 years on.
The open-air mass was held at Knockalla Drive, the
small housing estate where Shaun lived just doors
away from his friend Oran Doherty, 8 and where a
stone-clad memorial erected not long after the
bombing, reminds visitors how the seaside town
across the border, was also shattered by the Real
IRA massacre on August 15, 1998. |
The relentless rain did
nothing to hamper the turn-out as young children
stood hand-in-hand with parents and grandparents
under a sea of multi-coloured umbrellas to remember
Shaun, Oran and James Barker, 12. Also remembered
were Fernando Blasco Baselga, 12, from Madrid, who
was a student on an exchange programme to |
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Buncrana and Rocio Abad Ramos, 24 who was one of the exchange
group leaders.
The poignant candle-lit service attended by several
hundred people, was concelebrated by local curate Fr
Eddie McGuinness and Church of Ireland rector, Canon
Sam Barton. It was made even more special by local
singers who sang carefully chosen songs including
REM's 'Hold On' and Cara Dillon's 'There were
Roses', a heartbreaking ballad about two young men
who were loyal friends despite being from opposite
sides of the religious and political divide.
An "overawed" Fr McGuinness told the gathering their
solidarity with the bereaved families a decade on,
was in stark contrast to "the savagery of Omagh".
"A clear message must ring out to those who still
think that violence works, a very clear message from
our hearts, from Omagh, from all of us, that enough
is enough. As a people we have suffered for many,
many years, on all sides through religious
differences and political differences but at the end
of the day, the people who suffer the most are the
poor, the children and the innocent," he said. |
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Bernadette Doherty and
Patricia McLaughlin, the mothers of Oran and Shaun,
were among the offertory gift bearers. As light
faded under a heavy grey sky, they carried photos of
their beloved children to the altar sheltered under
a mini-marquee.
Danielle McDaid offered up Shaun’s wrist-watch while
Caoimhe Doherty carried the brandy balls and
honeycomb sweets bought by Oran in Omagh that
fateful day.
Young Spanish exchange students visiting the town -
a tradition that has continued in defiance of the
terrorist bombing - huddled in small groups to pay
their respects. |
Paola Helguero who was
a Spanish exchange group leader at the time of the
bombing, offered a prayer for all 29 victims of the
single worst attack in 30 years of the Troubles.
Youth leader P.J Hallinan read out the beautiful
poem 'Our Brief Rainbow' while another bidding
prayer was an emotional rendering of Shaun's poem,
'The Bridge'.
The Bridge, by Shaun McLaughlin
Orange and Green - it doesn't matter.
United now,
don't shatter our dream.
Scatter the seeds of peace
over our land,
so we can travel hand-in-hand
across the bridge of hope |
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