Laurence McKeown | |
|---|---|
| Born | September 1956 (aged69) Randalstown,County Antrim, Northern Ireland |
| Education |
|
| Occupation(s) | Writer, Academic, Playwright |
| Known for | 1981 Irish Hunger Strike,Belfast Film Festival |
| Notable work |
|
| Military career | |
| Paramilitary | Provisional IRA |
| Years of service | c. 1972 – 1992 |
| Battles / wars | The Troubles |
Laurence McKeown (born 1956) is an Irish author, playwright, screenwriter, and formervolunteer in theProvisional Irish Republican Army (IRA) who took part in the1981 Irish hunger strike.
McKeown was born in 1956 inRandalstown,County Antrim, Northern Ireland.[1] He attendedSt Malachy's College,Belfast.[2] As a teenager, McKeown had ambitions of becoming an architect and started working in the offices of aquantity surveyor when aged 15.[3] When aged 16 he joined the IRA. He said of joining the IRA: "There was a lot of soul-searching. It's not like joining a state army, where someone signs their name, gets a uniform and rifle, and the chaplain blesses them."[3] In August 1976, McKeown was arrested and charged with causing a series of bomb explosions and the attempted murder of a member of theRoyal Ulster Constabulary.[1][3] At his trial in April 1977, McKeown was found guilty and sentenced to life imprisonment in theMaze Prison.[1][3] McKeown refused to recognise the courts.[4]
McKeown took part in theblanket protest at theMaze Prison upon arrival in 1977 with the aim of resecuringSpecial Category Status for convicted paramilitary prisoners, which had been lost in 1975.[4] He then joined the subsequentno-wash protest in 1978.[4] In late 1980 the protest escalated and seven prisoners took part in ahunger strike, aimed at restoring political status by securing what were known as the "Five Demands":
The strike ended before any prisoners had died and without political status being secured, anda second hunger strike began on 1 March 1981 led byBobby Sands, the IRA's formerOfficer Commanding in the prison.[6] McKeown joined the strike on 29 June, after Sands and three other prisoners had died.[7] Following the deaths of six other prisoners, McKeown's family authorised medical intervention to save his life on 6 September, the 70th day of his hunger strike.[7] He described his recollection of the events in an interview:
"We were committed to something. Unless someone was coming in and saying “Right, you have your own clothes, you won’t do prison work, you have all your demands,” short of that we wouldn’t have entertained it. It was all or nothing at that stage. The fact that so many people had died made us even more determined."[8]
"You're very sleepy and very, very tired and you're sort of nodding off to sleep but something's telling you to keep waking up. This was the thing that kept everybody going through the hunger strike in trying to live or last out as long as possible. I knew death was close but I wasn't afraid to die – and it wasn't any sort of courageous or glorious thing. I think death would have been a release. You can never feel that way again. It's not like tiredness. It's an absolute, total, mental and physical exhaustion. It's literally like slipping into death."[9]
McKeown was released in 1992. Before his release, he completed abachelor's degree in social science from theOpen University while in prison, and subsequently obtained a PhD in Sociology fromQueen's University Belfast.[3][10][11] In the mid-1990s he co-founded theBelfast Film Festival,[3] and has written two books aboutIrish republican prisoners in the Maze Prison;Nor Meekly Serve My Time: The H-Block Struggle 1976–1981 (co-written with Brian Campbell and Felim O'Hagan) was published in 1994, andOut Of Time: Irish Republican Prisoners, Long Kesh, 1972–2000 was published in 2001.[11] In 1996 he was an unsuccessful candidate in theNorthern Ireland Forum election inSouth Antrim.[12] In 2006 he appeared in a two-part documentary titledHunger Strike, which was shown onRTÉ to mark the 25th anniversary of the 1981 hunger strike.[13] McKeown also works as a Development Officer forCoiste na nIarchimí, an umbrella organisation of republican ex-prisoners groups.[14]
McKeown and Brian Campbell co-wrote a film about the 1981 hunger strike calledH3 which was directed byLes Blair, and premiered in cinemas on 28 September 2001.[15] Before the death of Campbell in 2005, he and McKeown also wrote two plays together,The Laughter of Our Children which debuted in 2001, andA Cold House which debuted in 2003.[16][17] McKeown's first solo play,The Official Version, debuted on 18 September 2006.[18] He has continued to write drama, includingTwo Roads West which is asite-specific play set in aBelfastblack cab, where the audience enters the cab with the two actors. The play was revived with an altered script for aDerry location as part ofDerry City of Culture in 2013.[19]
In 2016, McKeown's playGreen and Blue premiered at the Girdwood Community Hub, Belfast as part of the Belfast International Festival. Produced by Kabosh,Green and Blue dramatises the realities faced by, and unlikely relationship between, aGarda officer and anRUC officer. It was inspired by theVoices From the Vaultoral history project which recorded first-hand accounts ofGarda Síochána andRoyal Ulster Constabulary experiences duringthe Troubles.[20]