The Peace Wall

One of the places Erin and I visited in Belfast was the Peace Wall, a landmark that tells the story of Northern Ireland’s long journey from conflict toward peace.  It is one thing to read about the decades of conflict known as The Troubles, but quite another to stand before a wall that still divides neighborhoods and carries thousands of messages of hope from visitors around the world.

The Peace Walls were first erected in 1969 as temporary barriers to reduce violence between Catholic and Protestant communities. More than fifty years later, many of these walls remain. The one we visited is covered with murals that tell the stories of those who lived through the conflict, while its steel gates and concrete barriers remind visitors that peace is something that must be continually nurtured.

Visitors are encouraged to leave their own messages on the wall, joining people from every corner of the globe who have written prayers, signatures, and hopes for a more peaceful future. Reading these words was as moving as seeing the murals themselves. They transformed a place once associated with division into one that now invites reflection.

Belfast’s Peace Wall stands today not only as a reminder of a painful history but also as a powerful symbol of humanity’s enduring hope that walls of division can one day become monuments to peace.