Skip to content

Home

Motorman by The Bogside Artists in 2001
Derry / Londonderry, Northern Ireland, February 2025

I saw this striking anti-war mural on the side of a home in Derry earlier this year. It demonstrates the massive impact that Operation Motorman (1972) had on residents, their homes and community.

And, coincidentally, several works by the Bogside Artists (Tom Kelly, William Kelly and Kevin Hasson) currently feature in St Albans Cathedral in the Art, Conflict and Remembering exhibition. Their powerful murals tell the story of the Troubles as experienced by the local community – from the Civil Rights marches of 1968 to the signing of the Peace Agreement in 1998. Do get there if you can or, better still, visit Derry to see them in person.


Welcome to One Word Sunday, and over to all of you to join the challenge with your own home post.
To join the challenge, please use pingback by putting a link in your post to the URL of this post, allowing others to have the opportunity to visit and join the challenge.  Then come back here and leave us a comment.
If you have any problems with linking via pingback, just add your own URL into your comment.

It also helps us find you in the WordPress Reader, if you use the tags OWS and OneWordSunday. And do feel free to socialise digitally with the hashtags #SixWordSaturday and #6WS. You’ll find me on Instagram @travel_travel_with_intent and @dsmythphoto

Next week’s theme will be hanging
Other forthcoming themes are listed here, and to see previous weeks of this challenge, click here

 


aDSC_0636_pp

 

 

Copyright Debbie Smyth, 28 September 2025

Posted as part of  One Word Sunday

46 replies »

  1. Just can’t imagine what it was like for the residents

    . . . . and to some degree the soldiers. Robert was stationed for a while in Northern Ireland in the 1970s. Once when we arrived after a break he was stuck at the airport for hours. There was no transport to meet him on arrival – some communication error – and he had to remain inside the airport until it did turn up. Too dangerous for a British soldier to be out in public on their own.

    Liked by 1 person

    • I always thought the journey into the city was scary just as a member of public.
      I don’t know when you were last there but it’s well worth going back. Such a friendly place. Some of the walls are still up but the communities are working hard to get to a point where they can come down. Or at least stay open.

      Liked by 1 person

  2. Pingback: Home | WordsVisual

Leave a reply to restlessjo Cancel reply

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

Enter your email address to subscribe to this blog and receive notifications of new posts by email.

Join 8,494 other subscribers

Popular Posts

About
Memory
Six images on display next week
Ugly
Countries ending and starting with A
Direction