The Corrymeela Podcast, Season 1, Episode 12. Martin Hayes.

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In this, the final episode of the first season of the Corrymeela podcast, Pádraig Ó Tuama speaks to Martin Hayes, the renowned and multi-award winning fiddle player. Martin talks about how music carries culture, memory, place and possibility. As always, Martin has his fiddle with him, so he plays music that demonstrates his insight.

We have a full transcript and some reflection questions here.

Martin Hayes’ website is martinhayes.com His albums can be found online or in music shops or directly from the store on his website.

As we evaluate the first season of the podcast, we have a short feedback form (it should only take you a few minutes to fill in). We'd be delighted to hear from you.

The Corrymeela Podcast, Season 1, Episode 11. Dr Lia Shimada

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Dr Lia Shimada is a a conflict mediator, a theologian and a geographer. She’s used these wide-ranging trainings to work at the interface of migration, ethnicity, change, religion and conflict. In this wide ranging conversation we discuss her experiences working in conflict mediation in Belfast, her experiences of migration, and how living with the death of her newborn son Rowan has influenced her sense of place.

As always you can find some reflection questions and a full transcript here.

This is the second-last episode of season 1 of the Corrymeela Podcast. We would love a few minutes of your time to get some feedback via this link..

You can find out more about Lia Shimada’s work on her website here. If you purchase ‘Mapping Faith; Theologies of Migration and Community’ from the publishers you can get a 25% discount (valid till the end of 2021) by using this code: ‘B25D9F4’ for the ebook and ‘MAPPING’ for the paperback.

The Corrymeela Podcast, Season 1, Episode 10. Michael Davies.

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This episode of the Corrymeela features Michael Davies. Michael is the founder and director of Parallel Histories, a UK educational company that offers new ways to study the history of conflict. In this conversation we consider the ways history is taught in Britain, how the crisis of narration can be possibility, and how religion education would benefit by being taught through historical approaches, not only doctrinal ones.

As always you can find reflection questions and the full transcript here. And you can find out more about Parallel Histories here.

As mentioned in the podcast, we would love to get your feedback on the Corrymeela podcast via this short form here.

The Corrymeela Podcast, Season 1, Episode 9. Peter Sheridan

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This episode of the Corrymeela Podcast features Peter Sheridan. For many years he was known as one of the senior-most Catholics in the police in Northern Ireland, and his policing career spanned the reform of the RUC into the PSNI. At the age of 48 he made a career change and became chief exec of the peacebuilding charity Cooperation Ireland.

As always you can find reflection questions and the full transcript here. And you can find out more about Cooperation Ireland here.

As mentioned in the podcast, we would love to get your feedback on our Corrymeela Podcast via this short form here.

The Corrymeela Podcast, Season 1, Episode 8. Dr Ebun Joseph

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For this episode of the Corrymeela Podcast, host Pádraig Ó Tuama speaks with Dr Ebun Joseph — sociologist, author, speaker, and originator of Ireland’s first course in Black Studies, based at University College Dublin. This wide ranging conversation approaches questions of Irishness and Britishness through narratives of race, discrimination and financial policies in places of employment.

You can find reflection questions and a full transcript here.

You can find out more about Dr Ebun Joseph’s work at University College Dublin here, or follow her on Twitter at @EbunJoseph Her academic text book Critical race theory and inequality in the labour market; Racial stratification in Ireland, can be bought here.

The Corrymeela Podcast, Season 1, Episode 7, Prof Christine Bell

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Professor of Constitutional Law, Christine Bell, speaks to the Corrymeela Podcast about Peace Treaties, Brexit, the Good Friday/Belfast Agreement and Human Rights. Christine Bell is a co-director of the Global Justice Academy, and a founder member of the Northern Ireland Human Rights Commission (established under the terms of the Good Friday Agreement).

As always you can find a full transcript of the episode, as well as reflection questions, here.

You can find out more about Christine Bell’s work at the Edinburgh Law School here, or follow her on Twitter at @christinebelled

The Corrymeela Podcast, Season 1, Episode 6. The Edge

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We were thrilled to speak to Irish rock legend The Edge, one part of U2. Born of Welsh parents and raised in Ireland, Edge has had longstanding interests in questions of politics, identity, belonging and religion. In this episode he speaks about all of these, and speaks, too, about how music has been the deepest call and passion of his life. Always interesting, always interested in learning, he shares what he’s reading, and how he sees the work of reconciliation being important in a changing Ireland, as well as in a changing world.

You can find some reflection questions and the full transcript by clicking here. U2’s website is u2.com

The Corrymeela Podcast, Season 1, Episode 5. Claire Mitchell

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We talk to the brilliant Claire Mitchell, a sociologist and writer from Belfast about Irishness, Britishness, border crossing, the unexpected advantages of a charismatic evangelical background, observations on religion from outside of religion, her grandmothers, and being a Lundy.

As always you can read the full transcript and find some reflection questions for personal or group discussion.

Claire Mitchell’s website has links to her books and articles.

The Corrymeela Podcast, Season 1, Episode 4, Professor Anthony Reddie

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Our fourth episode is an interview with Professor Anthony Reddie who considers Britishness, Belonging and Brexit through a Black Liberationist Theological point of view. Incorporating stories of his working class upbringing in Bradford, his parents' part of the Windrush generation, and his interest in both theology and history, this interview is wide ranging and informative.

As always we have provided a full transcript and some reflection questions for your personal or group use.

Prof Anthony Reddie’s book Theologising Brexit will be available in paperback from March 31st 2021 from Routledge. A link to his academic page at Oxford is here.

The Corrymeela Podcast, Season 1, Episode 3. Rev. Dr. Johnston McMaster

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Host Pádraig Ó Tuama interviews Rev. Dr. Johnston McMaster, who has spent decades - both as an ordained minister and as a writer and lecturer - considering the overlap between politics, history and religion in the divided loyalties on both sides of the border in Ireland.

Full copies of the transcript — together with four reflection questions for groups or individuals — can be found through this link.

Copies of Johnson McMaster’s book on the Churches and Partition are available from the publisher, The Junction, through this link.

The Corrymeela Podcast, Season 1, Episode 2. Dr. Gail McConnell

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For episode 2 of the Corrymeela Podcast, host Pádraig Ó Tuama talks with the poet Gail McConnell, whose forthcoming collection The Sun Is Open considers an archive-box of her father’s writings, clippings, poems and pamphlets. He was murdered by the IRA in 1984. Gail also speaks about creaturely poetry, parenthood, living with loss, and identity. Full transcript of the conversation, and group discussion questions are all available here. Gail McConnell teaches at the Seamus Heaney Centre for Poetry at Queen’s University in Belfast.
The collection of poetry discussed — The Sun Is Open — will be released by Penned in the Margins in the Autumn of 2021.

The Corrymeela Podcast, Season 1, Episode 1. President Dr. Mary McAleese

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We talked homeplace, religion, British-Irish politics, and leadership with former President of Ireland, Dr. Mary McAleese. This episode is filled with story, insight and the complicated art of compromise and negotiation. You can download the discussion question and episode transcript here. President McAleese’s memoir Here’s the Story is published by Penguin.

The Corrymeela Podcast, Season 1, Trailer.

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Host Pádraig Ó Tuama gives a preview of season 1 of the Corrymeela Podcast, a season considering Irishness and Britishness in 2021: a year with Covid; a year marking the centenary of the partition of Ireland; and the first year of Brexit. For all our interviews, we asked our guests some 'Very Short Story Questions' - questions you might want to ask yourself, or people you know. You can find these questions here. (We don't broadcast all the answers the guest gives to these, just one or two.)

About the Corrymeela Podcast

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During this year of the pandemic, we are not hosting any groups, or conversations at the Corrymeela centre, on the north coast of Ireland. But it is a significant year in Irish and British history, marking the centenary of the partition of Ireland, and the first year of Brexit. So, we are bringing twelve conversations from our kitchen table to yours; conversations that discuss Irishness and Britishness through the lenses of politics, history, art and theology.

So pull up a chair, listen with us as we listen, and talk with us as we talk. Every episode ends with our guest telling a very short story from their life, so don’t forget to listen right to the end.

You can hear all the episodes (one released every Thursday) below, or you can subscribe on your favourite podcast app.

With deep thanks to our funders: The Henry Luce Foundation, the Irish Government’s Fund for Reconciliation, the Community Relations Council, Northern Ireland, and the Friends of Corrymeela.