Jude Collins worked for thirty years as a lecturer at the Ulster University/Ulster Polytechnic. Before that, he was a high school English teacher in Derry, Dublin, Edmonton and Winnipeg (Canada).
He is the author of eight books, including Booing the Bishop and other stories and Martin McGuinness: The man I knew. He has been a weekly columnist for The Irish News, Daily Ireland and currently writes for The Andersonstown News.
He has broadcast on TV and radio for the BBC, the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation (CBC), Press TV and RTÉ. For the past thirteen years he has written a daily column on his blogsite www.judecollins.com
IRISH people can be great and they can be ghastly. Two events from last week highlighted the ghastly side of the Gaels.
Brendan Behan’s most famous quip was that, when republicans met, the first item on the agenda was the split. Aucontraire, Brendan. Gerry Adams and others have stressed how careful they were to keep all republicans up-to-date during the period leading up to the Good Friday Agreement. The unity notable among the various strands of republicanism contrasts sharply with our near neighbours and our really near neighbours.
Sometimes what’s happening is captured in the fate of one person; other times it’s seen the actions and mood of a whole community. Unionism and nationalism have reached that point where their present state and future prospects show as clear as day.
You probably know this, but Wayne Rooney, Declan Rice, Jack Grealish and Harry Maguire could have played for Ireland. Alas, their thoughts were on higher things, like playing for England and how much more money that’d be worth. Andy Burnham, said to have been a tidy footballer in his time, could not have played for Ireland, even though his great-grandfather was from Cork.
The Catholic Church and the GAA have been moving in opposite directions in recent decades. Such has been the shrinkage of the Catholic Church and the expansion of the GAA, In quite a few parishes the GAA acts as the social glue that holds communities together, rather than the Church.
George Bernard Shaw didn’t think much of teachers: “He who can, does; he who cannot, teaches”. Mark Twain wasn’t behind the door either: “I have never let my schooling interfere with my education” And then there are those great lines Paul Simon sings in ‘Kodachrome’: “When I think back on all the crap I learned in high school/ It’s a wonder I can think at all.”
The reason the Troubles horrified people here was because it brought war close up, in all its brutality. Wars far away - in Ukraine, in Lebanon, in Gaze – can elicit empathy from us all. But it’s only when it comes to your own door that you begin to understand the savagery of it all.
At times like this, most of us would settle for a degree of steadiness and maybe leadership in Ireland south and north. In the Dail, FF and FG have chokehold on power and they’re never voluntarily going to allow anyone else to replace them as choke-holders-in chief . The North is a bit more fragile – we’ve gone through protracted periods where our MLAs haven’t been around, and like a school when the principal is off, things managed to stagger on in more or less the same way.
The local B(ritish) BC has three major News anchors – William Crawley, Mark Patterson and Stephen Nolan – all three from a Protestant/unionist background. That, of course, doesn’t mean that all three aren’t impartial and engaging journalists. It doesn’t mean they are impartial and engaging either.
This is not a good time to be a Jewish person in the UK. In the past week, two Jewish men were attacked and hospitalized. In 2025, there were 170 antisemitic assaults in the UK alone, with four cases of extreme violence. Jewish people throughout the UK speak of feeling fearful, especially when there are marches in support of Palestinians.
Poor Micheál . Poor Keir.
Will the Israelis ever escape the label of genocide enthusiasts? Probably not, but that won’t worry them. Most of us like to have a reputation that allows others to think kindly of us, but Israelis have a thick skin .They also has an appetite for blood that would match any vampire.
It was a neck-and-neck race to recover the airman shot down by Iran in Iran. The Americans won the race, much to their relief. Had the Iranians found him first, he would have been put on display as someone several thousand miles from his home, part of the attacking American forces intent on conquering a country that has faced attack and division for decades. Today Trump’s boast is that they’ll be beaten“back into the Stone Ages”
I was speaking to someone recently and their take on our local politicians was “All they’re concerned with is Irish signs.” I tend at times like these to walk away, in case I hit somebody or worse, get hit.