When an early winter light drapes the ancient walls of Derry, it seems to catch not only the stones but the many layers of memory that stretch back through decades. In places like the Guildhall plaza or the quiet rooms of the Museum of Free Derry, the shadows and the sunshine mingle, as if history itself gently breathes through the present moment. On this soft morning, the air carries a kind of reflection — the past is not distant here, but close enough to touch.
This week, President Catherine Connolly made her first official visit of her presidency to Northern Ireland, a journey that seemed to be shaped as much by listening as by leadership. Her itinerary brought her from Stormont’s corridors in Belfast to the streets of Derry, where she was greeted with respect and the quiet dignity that characterizes communities who have carried heavy memories for decades. In Derry, she addressed a civic reception at the Guildhall and later walked the quiet halls of the Museum of Free Derry, pausing before exhibitions that hold the stories of lives interrupted on a January day in 1972.
On the afternoon of her second day, the President sat with around fifty relatives of those who were killed or wounded on Bloody Sunday more than half a century ago. In that meeting, which took place against the backdrop of the anniversary recently marked on January 30, time seemed to fold — history meeting today, voices sharing the weight of loss and the perseverance of remembrance. These were moments of listening: of names spoken with care, of recollections shared with gravity and grace, and of reflection offered in return by a visitor whose presence was meant to honour, not to hurry.
The visit, part of a three-day set of engagements across Northern Ireland, also fulfilled a promise Ms. Connolly made in her inauguration to reach out to all communities, to celebrate heritage and acknowledge shared experiences. Beyond formal greetings and speeches, she walked through the smooth hush of places where stories gather and linger. There were no grand proclamations, only the softer truths of presence, of attention given to those who have waited so long for acknowledgment of their experiences.
In the gentle cadence of conversations that afternoon, history did not feel fixed — it felt alive, carried in the thoughtful voices of family members and in the contemplative gaze of a president who seemed quietly determined to hear them. The layers of time — past, present, and perhaps future — overlapped with an almost tender fluidity, as if someday to usher in a sense of broader understanding that bears witness to both sorrow and resilience.
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Sources News sources used:
RTE News BreakingNews.ie DerryNow LeinsterLeader / LongfordLeader Official President of Ireland press release (President.ie)

