Wall Street Journalのインスタグラム(wsj) - 8月25日 22時55分


Those who have come of age in Northern Ireland since the 1998 peace deal known as the “Good Friday Agreement” have avoided the violence that beset the region for three decades. ⠀

Their generation has been freer to ignore the differences that have divided the island of Ireland since it was partitioned in 1922 and the north remained in British hands.⠀

“I don’t even think about it as crossing the border,” says Brian Ó Dughaill, 25, pictured here with his girlfriend Doire Finn at Flagstaff Point, which overlooks both Northern Ireland and the Republic of Ireland.⠀

“The Good Friday Agreement was the start of a process that has let me live a life that wasn’t like my parents’ or my sister’s,” says Finn, 24, whose older sister can remember not being able to attend school because of bomb scares and soldiers patrolling near their home.⠀

But as the prospect of Britain abruptly leaving the European Union without a deal becomes more likely as the Oct. 31 deadline approaches, young people now face the possibility that a physical border might again divide Ireland in two, potentially reopening traditional animosities and risking a return to violence.⠀

Read more at the link in our bio. ⠀

📷: @photomcq1 for @wsjphotos


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