SquaresRenew 11: Clonard Monastery

Clonard Monastery is a Catholic church located off the Falls Road in Belfast, and home to a community of the Redemptorists religious order. We visited as part of our Conflicting Stories tour which I wrote about yesterday. In 2008 the church went through a £3 million pound restoration project, completed in 2012, so it could qualify for SquaresRenew under reconstruct. However, I had more in mind renew and move forward because of the part it played in the peace process.
Two of Northern Ireland’s most significant clergy who worked for peace, Fathers Alec Reid and Gerry Reynolds, lived here. Secret conversations between Sinn Féin President Gerry Adams and Social Democratic and Labour Party leader John Hume, looking for a political solution to the Troubles, were held in rooms in the complex while wider, interfaith conversations helped contribute to the 1994 IRA ceasefire. Definitely a move forward to where the country is today.
Part of Becky’s SquaresRenew Challenge, using images from our April 2024 trip to Northern Ireland to illustrate one or more of the following:
- Move forward
- Reconstruct
- Renew
- Burgeoning

How interesting to see all the places where peace finally took shape. And to understand it’s often those who work quietly behind the scenes that get things accomplished.
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Yes, it was interesting – and informative. I had no idea about the meetings which took place there.
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I love old churches. This one is truly stunning!
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It was beautiful, I wish we had had more time.
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what a great history. I like the ceiling of this cathedral
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It’s beautiful, but we only had a short time there unfortunately.
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I haven’t heard of this religious order before. What a beautiful interior this church has, especially the altar.
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Yes, it was lovely but we didn’t have time to look round properly unfortunately.
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A place in history!
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Yes, it is!
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What an excellent square, fitting the prompt several times over, Anabel – nice one!
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Thanks Sue! It’s amazing how much you can bend into shape for the challenge.
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Now that is much more like my expectations of Belfast today, a positive account of the peace process!
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Yes – still part of the same tour, but the first half which was much more encouraging.
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Much more positive than the experience you described yesterday.
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Yes, although all part of the same tour – the more optimistic part!
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I like all the reasons for including this one in squares
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Yes, it qualifies on multiple levels, and all good things.
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I love those organ pipes, they are so beautifully decorated 🙂
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Simply stunning – it was a beautiful church altogether, but we were only allowed a minute or two before we had to get on with the walk so those are the only photos we got.
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what a lovely peace, and the stories the walls must be able to tell
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ooh I meant to write place, cearly my brain had other days in light of what happened here
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I got your drift!
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phew, glad you did. My brain is having a little meltdown this morning.
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So interesting to see these places.
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It was, Barbara, and we learned such a lot on this holiday.
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