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5 answers

Very much so, but how Catholic are the Catholics and how Protestant are the Protestants? How Christian are any bigoted people?

Sad to say but as secularism and consumerism make their inroads on the heels of the new found peace and recent prosperity, so are old barriers increasingly broken down. It seems odd that greed is doing what Christianity hasn't.

There is still much to be done bfore we have true peace which is more than the absence of violence.

2007-02-03 08:46:49 · answer #1 · answered by palaver 5 · 0 0

The issue in Northern Ireland is political not religious. The media, who is always looking for short cuts and not the whole story, calls the participants Catholics and Protestants.

The conflict is about whether the British territory (probably the wrong word) of Northern Ireland should remain British or should become part of Ireland.

The majority of people in Ireland are Catholics. The majority of people in England and Northern Ireland are Protestants. There are actually Catholics and Protestants on either side.

The terrorists on either side of the issue are not Christian in any sense of the word.

With love in Christ.

2007-02-03 16:54:03 · answer #2 · answered by imacatholic2 7 · 0 0

The anti-treaty area (who needed to strive against for a united eire) didnt get an outrght victory and so the professional-treaty area were satisfied to reclaim the north at a later level, of direction this has nevertheless no longer materialised.

2016-11-02 05:46:10 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

I've heard of places where catholic school girls need protection to go to school and back home, so I guess the answer is yes.

2007-02-03 08:19:07 · answer #4 · answered by Gustav 5 · 0 2

No

2007-02-04 00:11:57 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

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