Presidents refusal of Armagh invitation unexpected say Church leaders
The Church Leaders Group, which is hosting the controversial service in St Patrickâs Cathedral Armagh next month, have said President Michael D Higginsâs refusal this week of their invitation to attend was âunexpectedâ.
It was also pointed out that in the invitation sent to him on May 20th last he was addressed as âThe President of Irelandâ. Speaking to The Irish Times in Rome on Thursday, Mr Higgins said:âI was also referred to as the President of the Republic of Ireland. I am the President of Ireland.â
The invitation was headed âThe Church Leaders Group (Ireland)â and extended âan invitation to you as President of Ireland to attend a Service of Reflection and Hope, to mark the Centenary of the partition of Ireland and the formation of Northern Ireland. The proposed date is Thursday 21st October at an appropriate time in the late afternoon. The service will take place in St Patrickâs (Church of Ireland) Cathedral in Armagh.â
It is understood the Church Leaders Group had been planning the event for over seven months and had agreed âin good faithâ to include a reference to âthe partition of Irelandâ, deliberately, to heighten the extent of division and difficulties involved, as well as âto reflect the terrible events of 1921.â
Until this week sources said the Church Leaders Group felt the signals from Ãras an Uachtaráin to their invitation to next monthâs Armagh service had been positive.
Opportunity for reflectionThe invitation sent to Mr Higgins said the service next month would be âof Christian worship hosted, organised and led by the leaders of the Church of Ireland, Roman Catholic, Presbyterian and Methodist Churches and the Irish Council of Churches. All of these churches extend across both jurisdictions on the island of Ireland.â
The service would âprovide the opportunity for honest reflection on the past one hundred years, with the acknowledgement of failures and hurts, but also with a clear affirmation of our shared commitment to building a future marked by peace, reconciliation and a commitment to the common good. The overriding theme will be that of âHopeâ,â it said.
It continued that: âA similar invitation is being extended to Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth. The congregation will include representatives from; the political leadership of Northern Ireland, the United Kingdom and Ireland, a cross section of the local population including some of our young people, and family members of those impacted during the difficult years of âthe Troublesâ.â
It concluded âwe look forward to your replyâ.
The invitation was signed on behalf of the Church Leaders Group by joint secretaries Rev Dr Trevor Gribben, clerk of the Presbyterian Church, and Rev Dr Heather Morris, secretary of the Methodist Church Conference.
The Church Leaders Group includes Catholic Primate Archbishop Eamon Martin, Church of Ireland Primate Archbishop John McDowell, Presbyterian Moderator Rev Dr David Bruce, (then) Methodist President Rev Dr Tom McKnight, and President of the Irish Council of Churches Rev Dr Ivan Patterson.
In a joint St Patrickâs Day statement last March they said: âSome may struggle with the concept of a shared history when it comes to the centenary of the partition of Ireland, the establishment of Northern Ireland and the resulting reconfiguration of Britishâ"Irish relationships. What is undeniable, however, is the reality that we have to live in a shared space on these islands, and to make them a place of belonging and welcome for all.â
In issuing that statement last March only the Presbyterian Church headed it, in bold lettering, that the Church Leaders Group was reflecting âon this yearâs centenaries of the establishment of Northern Ireland and the partition of Ireland in 1921.â
In its statement on the service last Wednesday the Catholic Church led for the first time with the sentence, in bold lettering also, that âChristian commitment to peace, healing and reconciliation underpins Service of Reflection and Hope to mark the partition of Ireland and the formation of Northern Ireland.â
All main churches in Ireland are constructed on an all-island basis. However the great majority of Catholics on the island live in the Republic, while approximately a third of Church of Ireland members live in the Republic. The great majority of Presbyterians, and Methodists, on the island live in Northern Ireland.
Of the approximately 190,000 Presbyterians on the island, about 2,000 live in the Republic.
ApoliticalThe head of the Catholic church in Ireland has said it would have been âvery specialâ had the Mr Higgins been able to attend a church service in Armagh marking the centenary of partition and the creation of Northern Ireland.
Archbishop Eamon Martin said the organisers of the event, the leaders of the main Christian churches in Ireland, had âalways insistedâ the service would âremain apolitical and we hope to try and keep it that way.
âWe canât rely on others to do that but we will be keeping this as a moment of prayer and reflection,â he said.
He said his understanding was that the Queen would be present at the event. A representative from the UK government will also be in attendance.
Asked if he hoped Mr Higgins would reconsider his decision not to attend, Archbishop Martin said that âat this stage I think the Presidentâs clear that he has made up his mindâ but he intended to âinvite the people of Ireland, north and southâ to join in prayer on that day.
He said church leaders had organised the event âknowing that it was a very contentious and tense thing to get involved inâ but they had been anxious to âtry to create a space where we all together this year could reflect this year on what happened in 1921.â
As church leaders, he said, âwe have to try to invite people to enter into that space in a manner of reflection, contemplation and of hope, and I think the President himself in his own speeches about the decade of centenaries has encouraged that we would enter into this space.
âItâs a delicate, difficult and sensitive space, and weâre trying to lead as church leaders,â he said.
Archbishop Martin was speaking as he arrived at an event in Belfast on Friday organised by the Presbyterian Church to mark centenary of partition and the foundation of Northern Ireland.
Also in attendance was the Minister for Foreign Affairs, Simon Coveney, and representing the UK government the newly-appointed minister of state at the Northern Ireland Office, Conor Burns MP.
Mr Burns said it was a âmatter for the President of the Irish Republic to decide whether he wants to come or notâ and it would ânot preclude us from carrying on marking a very significant historic event in an inclusive way for all communities here in Northern Ireland.â
âValid concernsâPoliticians from Northern Ireland were also present, including the First Minister Paul Givan and his party leader Jeffrey Donaldson, the Sinn Féin junior minister Declan Kearney, who was attending on behalf of Michelle OâNeill, and the Minister for Justice, Naomi Long of the Alliance Party, and the SDLPâs Claire Hanna and Matthew OâToole.
Mr Kearney said the President had been âcorrectâ not to attend the service and had set out his âvery valid concernsâ around it.
He said Sinn Féin had not received an invitation to the service but if the party did so it would also decline.
Asked about the reaction from the DUP he said it was âregrettableâ and was âplaying directly into the DUP narrative of trying to turn everything that weâre now dealing with into a proxy for how they deal with the protocol.â
Responding to the explanation given by Mr Higgins for declining the invitation, Mr Donaldson said he was âvery disappointedâ and it was âhighly regrettableâ he felt he could not attend.
âIf weâre going to build a shared future in Northern Ireland then we have to be able to deal with our shared history,â he said.
âIf weâre going to have a standoff over things that happened 100 years ago what hope is there of building the real reconciliation we need and approaching our shared future with hope?â
The SDLP leader Colum Eastwood said on Friday that politicians in the North should âpause and reflect on the weight of their wordsâ amid a âmanufactured rowâ.
He said âcynical criticismâ of Mr Higgins would not advance reconciliation, and he believed the aim of the remarks was ânot to advance reconciliation but to take advantage of grievance for political purposes.â
He said Mr Higginsâ time in office had âundoubtedly contributed to the healing process across these islandsâ and said he âwould respectfully ask that those for whom this is disappointing reflect on the honest remarks made by President Higgins last night and understand the views of those for whom partition is not a cause for celebration or commemoration.â
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