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A dedicated republican and an
outstanding soldier
WHEN the family, friends and former comrades of Belfast IRA Volunteer
twenty-five-year-old Kieran Doherty learnt that he was joining the H-Block
hunger strike, as a replacement for Raymond McCreesh, it came as no surprise
to them.
Although Kieran had spent seven of the last ten years imprisoned, his
complete selflessness and his relentless dedication to the liberation
struggle left no-one in any doubt that Kieran would volunteer for this
terrible and lonely confrontation with British rule inside the H-Blocks of
Long Kesh. Last December he was amongst those thirty prisoners who were on
hunger strike for four days prior to the ending of the original seven-strong
strike.
Kieran was born on October 16th, 1955 in Andersonstown, the third son in a
family of six children. His two elder brothers, Michael, aged 28, and
Terence, aged 27, were interned between 1972 and 1974.
Kieran has two younger sisters, Roisin and Mairead; and his younger brother,
Brendan, aged twelve, is still at school.
BACKGROUND
Kieran's mother, Margaret, is a Catholic convert from a Protestant
background. His father, Alfie Doherty, who is a floor-tiler by trade, is a
well-known figure in Andersonstown.
Kieran's paternal grandfather comes from Limavady, County Derry, and after
his people moved to a house in North Belfast in the 'twenties, they were
threatened that the house was going to be burnt.
This was during the loyalist-initiated pogroms which followed partition.
They had to flee to West Belfast enacting a tragedy which was to repeat
itself in front of Kieran's eyes in the early seventies, and stir him to
take action.
Alfie's uncle, Ned Maguire, took part in the famous IRA roof-top escape from
Belfast's Crumlin Road jail on January 15th, 1943.
Ned Maguire's son, also called Ned, and a second cousin of Kieran, was an
internee in Cage S of Long Kesh in 1974, when he took part in the mass
escape from the camp during which Hugh Coney was shot dead by the British
army. Young Ned Maguire was one of the three who managed to reach Twinbrook
before being recaptured. He is now on the blanket.
Ned's sisters (and Kieran's second cousins), Dorothy Maguire, aged 19, and
Maura Meehan, aged 30, were shot dead by the British army on October 23rd,
1971, in a car in the Lower Falls area of Belfast. Both were members of
Cumann na mBan.
Another relative of Kieran's, his uncle, Gerry Fox, was part of the famous
Crumlin Road jail 'football team', who escaped from the jail by climbing
over the wall in 1972.
CHILDHOOD
However, Kieran's childhood was relatively ordinary. He loved sport more
than anything else, and was always out playing Gaelic football, hurling or
soccer.
Kieran went to St. Theresa's primary school, then moved to the Christian
Brothers secondary school on the Glen Road, where he studied until the age
of sixteen.
A keen Gaelic footballer, he won an Antrim Minor medal in 1971 for St.
Theresa's GAC.
Kieran took up cycling for a while, following his brother, Michael, in St.
Thomas' cycling club. His mother recalls him taking part in a race with a
faulty bicycle: "Although the chain came off at least twenty times through
the race, he was so stubborn that he finished with a bronze medal."
St. Thomas' cycling club was later decimated by internment. Kieran, his
brothers, and many other Andersonstown boys were to end up behind the wire.
To such an extent, that Kieran s young brother, Brendan, asked his mother
one day in 1975 when it would be his turn to go where all the 'big boys'
were kept. Brendan was then six.
In the summer of 1971, Kieran got a job as an apprentice in heating
engineering but was laid-off when the firm closed down a few months later.
He worked for a while at floor-tiling with his father.
JOINED
In the meantime, however, internment had burst open the lives of many
Andersonstown families. Kieran had never been interested in politics until
then: nor had his family ever discussed the political situation in front of
him.
Like hundreds of other boys and girls of his age, he was moved by the sight
of uprooted families leaving a home in cinders behind them. As all of the
evacuees were being catered for in local schools, Kieran and his brothers
begged their parents to allow them to go and help. Kieran saw the British
army on the streets, his friends and their families harassed. He joined na
Fianna Eireann in the autumn of '71.
Kieran proved himself to be an outstanding member of the Fianna. Reliable,
quick on the job, he was obviously giving the best of himself to every task
assigned him with the aim of being noticed and recruited for the IRA as
quickly as was possible.
Even at this early stage of his involvement, he is remembered for his
initiative and his discreet ways. Unlike some boys of his age, he never
boasted about his activities.
But the British army soon noticed him too and Kieran, his family, and his
home, became a target for frequent British army harassment.
On October 6th, 1972, the British army came to arrest Kieran, despite his
father's objection that Kieran was under seventeen. The Brits had checked
up, they said, and after a heavy house raid they took Kieran away in the
middle of the night. His father got him released eventually after waking up
the sexton of St. Agnes' chapel and obtaining Kieran's birth certificate.
The Brits were ten days too early.
True to form, on October 16th, the British army were back in force and
swamped Kieran's district, waiting for his return from work. But relatives
managed to warn him and he was driven over the border to an uncle in
Limerick.
He did not much enjoy his enforced exile and, bursting to get back into
action, he made his way back to Belfast at the beginning of '73.
INTERNED
A week or so later, he was arrested, taken to Castlereagh, and then interned
in Long Kesh where he spent over two years from February '73 to November
'75. He was among the last internees released.
Always even-tempered and quiet-spoken he used his time developing his
military skills.
In a letter to his mother he wrote: "They might intern all of us, but we
will come out fighting."
He made a lot of handicrafts during his two-and-a-half years in captivity.
His parents' home displays a lot of his work, in particular a hand-carved
wooden plaque commemorating Dorothy Maguire and Maura Meehan.
On the eve of his birthday in October '74, Long Kesh prison camp was burned.
When visits were eventually resumed he did not complain to his parents of
brutality but just remarked jokingly on the 'birthday party' he had been
given.
He was released from Long Kesh in November '75, as undaunted as he sounded
in his letters, and reported back to the IRA immediately. Always eager to
operate, he was included in a team of Volunteers from around Rossnareen
which gave the British army in Andersonstown many sleepless nights until a
wave of arrests in the summer of '76.
As the IRA/British army truce petered out at the beginning of '76, 'Big
Doc', as he was known by all, soon had to move out of his parents' house.
Raids were a fortnightly occurrence, at least, with furniture wrecked and
floorboards lifted.
Mrs. Doherty was tidying up a first-floor bedroom after such a raid when she
fell through the carpet, the floor, and partly through the sitting-room
ceiling. The Brits had omitted to replace the floorboards. The scar on the
ceiling can still be seen.
Many friends who met Kieran after his internment period found him extremely
mature for a lad of twenty, not boisterous like most people of his age. He
obviously, by then, had thought things out, made a definite choice, and
assessed the dangers.
As an operator he was a perfectionist and his comrades recall feeling
extremely safe with him. Even in the eventuality of things going wrong they
knew Kieran would not give anything away.
ESCAPES
He had many narrow escapes.
One night, as he was shifting 'gear' in Andersonstown, he was chased up and
down the side streets for over five minutes by two Brit landrovers.
Another time, as he was driving to a night job as security man for a firm,
armed, as he often was, he drove into a British army road block.
He calmly took his tie out of his pocket, put it on, tidied himself up, and,
winding down the window, shouted: "What's up lads? Let me through, please,
I'm going to my work, over there, security staff."
And the British soldiers opened the way for him. 'Big Doc' was welcome in
many Andersonstown homes and highly respected by all who knew him.
Families with whom he billeted remember how security conscious he was,
staying away for days, using billets in no regular pattern.
ENJOYED
Through those months of intense involvement Kieran had little chance to
unwind. He mostly liked to go to local clubs for a quiet pint with a few
friends.
He also had a reputation as a practical joker. One day he rang a friend from
a pub and told him they were wrecking the place, simply to have his friend
rush over in his car to pick him up.
In July '76, a few weeks before his arrest, Kieran enjoyed one of the rare
holidays he ever had since the arrival of British troops on his local
streets. With a few close friends he drove to the South and was able to
indulge in his love for outdoor activities, exhausting his friends with long
walks and swims.
By that time he had met his girlfriend, Geraldine, the only steady
relationship he ever formed during his short period of freedom.
They did not get much of a chance, as Kieran's heavy republican involvement
often interfered with their dating and since August '76 they only met for a
few minutes once in a while under the gaze of prison warders.
SEAN McDERMOTT
Kieran's comrades-in-arms recall one particular operation, of the many he
was involved in, when one Andersonstown Volunteer - Sean McDermott - was
shot dead.
Kieran got away and was told to lie low for a few days, but nevertheless he
appeared at his comrade's funeral.
Sean McDermott's mother has a photograph of the funeral cortege in which
Kieran can be seen, standing on the footpath, sombre, alone, looking on as
the coffin is carried to Milltown cemetery.
Sean's death, and the arrest of other comrades involved, hit Kieran very
hard.
BOMBING
In August '76, as Kieran and his unit were on a bombing mission, the van in
which they were travelling was chased by the RUC near Balmoral Avenue in
Belfast.
Kieran got out of the van and commandeered a car, which he left some streets
away and walked off.
Meanwhile, the others in the van were cornered, Liam White being captured
immediately, and the others, Chris Moran, Terry Kirby and John 'Pickles'
Pickering - himself later to embark on hunger-strike - finally giving
themselves up when surrounded in a house they had taken over.
The RUC picked Kieran up one-and-a-half miles away from the scene, unarmed.
He was later charged with possession of firearms and explosives and
commandeering the car. Forensic tests could not link Kieran to the first two
charges, and although it was impossible for the RUC to have spotted him
escaping, seventeen months later, at his trial, RUC Constable Bryons
perjured himself twice in order to see Kieran locked up.
On remand in Crumlin Road jail he met Francis Hughes and developed a great
admiration for him. Friends often speak of the similarities between the two,
always defiant, always fighting, born free.
In Crumlin Road, Kieran was often 'on the boards' as punishment for his
refusal to acknowledge the warders in any way. He carried this attitude into
the H-Blocks after he was sentenced, in January 1978, to eighteen years
imprisonment for possession, and four years for commandeering the car.
BLANKET
Kieran joined the blanket protest immediately as did his comrades sentenced
with him. He spent all but two weeks of his three years and almost eight
months in the H-Blocks, in H4-Block (the temporary spell was in H6), before
being moved to the prison hospital during his hunger strike.
Recollections of Kieran's experiences in the H-Blocks give an impression of
relentless conflict between himself and the warders, who made him a target
both because of his height and because of his stubborn defiance of the
prison regime.
On 'appeal' visits he always had to be dragged away, ignoring all calls to
end the visit. He never looked a warder in the face when one addressed him
and never replied to their orders. He always refused to submit to the anal
searches over the mirror before and after visits and was beaten for this.
The worst incident occurred in July '78 when Kieran refused a mirror search
before a legal visit. Eight warders jumped on him, one squeezing his
testicles until he became unconscious. He received blows to every part of
his body and was taken to the prison hospital.
Although people who visited him recall how often he arrived pale or with
grazes on his arms or bloodshot eyes, he never complained, brushing their
questions off with a shrug: "I'm OK. What's the sceal?"
CHESS
Although Kieran had not been taught Irish at school, and had no time to
learn it, later he became a fluent speaker in the H-Blocks like hundreds of
his imprisoned comrades.
Another skill mastered by Kieran, whilst in the H-Blocks, was playing chess
- crude chess men were made from scraps of paper and the game was played on
a mock board scratched out on the cell floors.
Displayed proudly in his parents' sitting room is an engraved plaque bearing
a stunning yet heartbreaking story in eight words: 'Kieran Doherty, 1980
Champion, Ciaran Nugent Chess Shield'.
And, next to it, another shield, again engraved 'Ciaran Nugent Chess
Shield', but this time with twelve metal tags, the top of which bears Kieran
Doherty's name and '1980', the other eleven still blank. A clue to Kieran's
patience and ability, a clue to the blanket men's grim determination to
outlast the H-Blocks.
CAVAN/MONAGHAN
In June of this year, in the Free State general election, Kieran was elected
a member of the Leinster House parliament for the Cavan/Monaghan
constituency with 9,121 first preference votes - only 303 votes behind the
then-sitting Free State Minister of Education.
HUNGER STRIKE
To a friend who visited him after the first hunger strike, which ended last
December, Kieran said: "They (the warders) are really rubbing our noses in
it. By God, they will not rub mine!"
Asked whether he would not settle down - after all, with five years done and
remission, another six years would soon be over. He replied: "Remission has
nothing to do with it. There is much more than that involved."
So he went on hunger strike on Friday, May 22nd, having put his name forward
for it long ago, as undaunted and full of fighting spirit as when he roamed
free on the streets of Andersonstown.
A child, like hundreds of others a product of British brutality and
stupidity in the North, who revealed himself to be an outstanding soldier of
the republic.
Kieran was a shy, reserved, easily-embarrassed young man who was
single-minded and determined enough to have become, in himself, a condensed
history of the liberation of a people.
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