Relics Of St Therese

Sir, - My admiration for people who see things which others fail to see is surpassed only by my admiration for those who see …

Sir, - My admiration for people who see things which others fail to see is surpassed only by my admiration for those who see things from the perspective of others.

On that basis my admiration for Kevin Myers knows no bounds. In his Irishman's Diary of April 24th, he deserves my double admiration for having highlighted an event which passed off with little comment, and seemingly little concern, for the message which it sent to Northern Protestants.

The appearance of members of the Defence Forces in full dress uniform, carrying the casket containing the relics of St Therese of Lisieux, sent a very definite message to us. Not only did it take us back to 1951, as Kevin Myers suggests, but it tells us that all we have heard about the Irish Republic being a pluralist society, where there is no longer a special place for the Roman Catholic Church and where it has ceased to be a "Catholic State for a Catholic People", has all been a sham. In fact it says that we, of the Northern Protestant unionist community, have been having the wool pulled over our eyes in recent years.

This display of "Catholic power", following the similar involvement some months ago of the Defence Forces in the enthronement of a Bishop, serves to confirm in the minds of Northern Protestants and unionists that there would be a "cold" welcome in the "Catholic State".

READ MORE

I wonder can your readers imagine the outcry there would be from Northern nationalists if some relics of William of Orange were to be carried off the boat at Larne by members of the British Army - or, worse, the RUC?

The message which this involvement of the Defence Forces in a Roman Catholic ceremony sends to the Northern Protestant community is that, in spite of all the talk, nothing has really changed! - Yours, etc.,

Rev Brian Kennaway, (Former Convenor, Education Committee, Grand Orange Lodge of Ireland), Crumlin Presbyterian Church, Co Antrim.