Mairead Corrigan corrigan, mairead, moi ru kôr igun Pronunciation Key. corrigan, mairead , 1944,Irish social activist, b. Belfast. A volunteer social worker in the http://www.factmonster.com/ce6/people/A0813649.html
Extractions: Reference Desk Encyclopedia Corrigan, Mairead u u n] Pronunciation Key Corrigan, Mairead Williams , who also witnessed the incident, joined with Corrigan to form the Peace People Organization, a movement of Catholics and Protestants dedicated to ending sectarian fighting in Northern Ireland. For their work the two women were awarded the 1976 Nobel Peace Prize. The Columbia Electronic Encyclopedia, AD AD AD ADS Business Cards Link to Fact Monster Add Fact Monster search ... Privacy
Mairead Corrigan Interview mairead corrigan Maguire on the ceasefire in Ireland (Weekend Edition Toward a higher identity an interview with mairead corrigan Maguire. http://www.infoplease.com/ce6/people/A0813649.html
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MSN Encarta - Mairead Corrigan corrigan, mairead, born in 1944, Northern Ireland peace activist, recipient ofthe 1976 Nobel Peace Prize. corrigan shared the prize with fellow http://encarta.msn.com/encyclopedia_761596078/Mairead_Corrigan.html
Extractions: Subscription Article MSN Encarta Premium: Get this article, plus 60,000 other articles, an interactive atlas, dictionaries, thesaurus, articles from 100 leading magazines, homework tools, daily math help and more for $4.95/month or $29.95/year (plus applicable taxes.) Learn more. This article is exclusively available for MSN Encarta Premium Subscribers. Already a subscriber? Sign in above. Corrigan, Mairead Corrigan, Mairead , born in 1944, Northern Ireland peace activist, recipient of the 1976 Nobel Peace Prize. Corrigan shared the prize with fellow... Related Items see also Ireland Community of the Peace People 5 items Multimedia Selected Web Links Mairead Corrigan [Nobel Foundation] 1 item Want more Encarta? Become a subscriber today and gain access to: Find more about Corrigan, Mairead
MSN Encarta - Multimedia - Mairead Corrigan Northern Irish social worker and peace activist mairead corrigan won the NobelPeace Prize in 1976. corrigan helped found the Community of Peace People to http://encarta.msn.com/media_461534101_761571415_-1_1/Mairead_Corrigan.html
Corrigan, Mairead corrigan, mairead (1944). Co-founder of Community of Peace People with Mr.Ciaran McKeown and Mrs Name mairead corrigan (Miss) Age 27 January 1944 http://www.cartage.org.lb/en/themes/Biographies/MainBiographies/C/Corrigan/Corri
Extractions: Parents Family : 5 Sisters and 2 Brothers Education : St. Vincent's Primary School, Falls Road, Belfast Miss Gordons Commercial College for 1 year Employment Hobbies : Swimming Interests : Worked with Catholic Organisations as voluntary worker. Helped establish clubs for many physically handicapped children, teenagers, preschool play groups etc. Visited internees of Long Kesh Prison internees. Recognitions Received : Carl Von Ossietzky Medal for courage from Berlin section of International League of Human Rights.
Mairead Corrigan - Curriculum Vitae mairead corrigan. Betty Williams. New York Woodberry, 1977. Towards a HigherIdentity An Interview with mairead corrigan Maguire, Christian Century http://nobelprize.org/peace/laureates/1976/corrigan-cv.html
Extractions: Nobel Peace Prize Winner - 1976 From Les Prix Nobel en 1976 , Editor Wilhelm Odelberg, [Nobel Foundation], Stockholm, 1977 In September 1981 Mairead married Jackie Maguire, widower of her sister Anne, who never recovered from the tragic loss of her children and died in January 1980. Mairead is step-mother of Mark, Joanne, and Marie Louise, and mother of John Francis (b. 1982) and Luke (b. 1984). She has continued her work with the Community of Peace People, advocating a nonviolent resolution of the Northern Ireland conflict in speaking engagements and writings. Among other projects, the Peace People organise summer camps in other European countries to provide a setting in which young Catholics and Protestants from Northern Ireland can come to know one another. The Peace People also have continued the outreach to prisoners and their families.
Peace 1976 Betty Williams, mairead corrigan. Betty Williams, mairead corrigan. half 1/2 ofthe prize, half 1/2 of the prize. United Kingdom, United Kingdom http://nobelprize.org/peace/laureates/1976/
Extractions: HOME SITE HELP ABOUT SEARCH ... EDUCATIONAL Betty Williams Mairead Corrigan 1/2 of the prize 1/2 of the prize United Kingdom United Kingdom Founder of the Northern Ireland Peace Movement (later renamed Community of Peace People) Founder of the Northern Ireland Peace Movement (later renamed Community of Peace People) b. 1943 b. 1944 The Nobel Peace Prize 1976
Peace People mairead corrigan Maguire s letter to Guardian and Irish News Peace Peoplemairead corrigan Maguire, Kevin Cassidy, Ann Patterson, Mark Chapman and http://www.peacepeople.com/
Extractions: Nonviolence is at the centre of the Peace People's approach to building a just and peaceful society. As the quote below suggests, we mean much more by this than simply the absence of physical violence. We draw our inspiration from historical figures such as Mahatma Gandhi and Martin Luther King. While the history of Ireland often seems to have been dominated by violent conflict, there have also been many examples of nonviolent campaigns. These include: Arms and the Man Peace People Chairperson Kevin Cassidy symbolically decommissioning weapons in Belfast. ( full story Picture courtesy of Newsletter's David Young. "Nonviolence is a respect for life and for the individual. That is to say, nonviolence is not a method of non-aggression (as it is often considered), but rather a way of life, and a way of understanding the relationship of human beings to their fellow beings and with nature" Adolfo Perez Esquivel
Mairead Corrigan Maguire In October 1977 Betty and mairead were told they had received the 1976 prize, This biographical essay about Máiread corrigan Maguire was excerpted from http://www.peacepeople.com/MaireadByJohnDear.htm
Extractions: "If we want to reap the harvest of peace and justice in the future, we will have to sow seeds of nonviolence, here and now, in the present." Belfast, 1976! The height of "The Troubles." From 1969 to 1998, over thirty-four hundred people were killed in a brutal war stemming from British colonial interests, revolutionary republicanism, and age-old, oppressive religious bigotry and fanaticism. But after a year of tumultuous political negotiations, a breakthrough settlement was reached on Good Friday 1998, bringing Northern Ireland to the Easter dawn of peace. Suddenly, what was once deemed unimaginable, unthinkable, indeed impossible, is now indeed possible and probable. A new future stands on the horizon of Ireland -a vision of peace. As that 1976 photograph testifies, thousands of ordinary people throughout Northern Ireland, mainly women, have been calling for an end to the killings and a future of peace since the Troubles began. The 1976 "Peace People" movement organized the largest nonviolent demonstrations in the history of Northern Ireland -at the time of the greatest number of killings. At the heart of this courageous peace movement stood a young woman named Máiread Corrigan Maguire. Máiread was thrust into a leadership position in the wake of tragedy. On August 10, 1976, two of her nephews and one of her nieces, all little children, were killed on a Belfast street comer. A British army patrol shot and killed an IRA gunman, Danny Lennon, whose car then plowed into the sidewalk, killing the children, and severely injuring Mairead's sister Anne, who died several years later. In a land soaked with blood, their deaths came as a severe shock. Suddenly, thousands of people began to say, "Enough is enough. The killing and violence have to stop." With Betty Williams and Ciaran McKeown, Máiread organized weekly peace marches and demonstrations that instantly brought out over half a million people throughout Northern Ireland, as well as in England and Ireland. They also co-founded the Community of the Peace People to continue their peacemaking initiatives.
Nobel Peace Prize Laureate Mairead Corrigan Quotes, links and short biography of mairead corrigan Maguire from Ireland whowas awarded the Nobel Peace Prize in 1976 for efforts to end the violence in http://www.peaceheroes.com/PeaceHeroes/maireadcorrigan.htm
Extractions: A description of Mairead Corrigan Maguire written by Joan Baez: "The breath of God ran through her like a fair summer breeze. She was a smile. She was a prayer. She was endlessly brave, going into the streets and homes of the "the enemy" unarmed and with cheerful countenance. No evil could envelop her or even touch her. I'm sure she is all those things still. She will hate to read this, because she is also self-effacing, like some other saints. God bless you, Mairead Corrigan. And God bless the brave women of Ireland who, for a brief but exceptional moment in time, waged mass nonviolent warfare in one of the most violent countries in the world." (excerpted from Baez' autobiography, And A Voice To Sing With) In 1976, Mairead Corrigan and Betty Williams and a journalist called Ciaran McKeown organized a series of peace marches in Northern Ireland after three children of Corrigan's sister Anne were killed by a gunman's getaway car. Tens of thousands turned out. Catholics and Protestants marched together.
Mairead Corrigan Maguire Biography of mairead corrigan Maguire. mairead corrigan Maguire. On August10, 1976, a car chase between IRA and British troops through Belfast, http://scu.edu/ethics/architects-of-peace/Maguire/homepage.html
Extractions: @import url("http://scu.edu/ethics/architects-of-peace/better.css"); var gMenuControlID=0; var menus_included = 0; var jsPageAuthorMode = 0; var jsSessionPreviewON = 1; var jsDlgLoader = '/access/loader.cfm'; var jsSiteID = 1; var jsSubSiteID = 493; var kurrentPageID = 24092; var gShowKeywords = 0; var gHaveKeywords = 0; var js_userID=0; // > The Jesuit university in Silicon Valley The Markkula Center for Applied Ethics Return to Web format About This Site On August 10, 1976, a car chase between IRA and British troops through Belfast, Northern Ireland, led to an accident in which two of Mairead Corrigan Maguire's nephews and one of her nieces were killed. Her sister, distraught over the death of her children, took her own life several years later. The incident led Maguire, a Catholic, and Betty Williams, a Protestant, along with newspaper reporter Ciaran McKeown, to found Peace People, a pioneering organization in the movement to end sectarian violence in Northern Ireland. They shared the 1976 Nobel Peace Prize for their work. Maguire continues to work for global nonviolence as honorary life president of Peace People. Resources for Teachers and Students Reflections on Working Towards Peace
Mairead Corrigan Maguire - Resources For Teachers And Students Prepare mairead corrigan Maguire was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize in 1976 afterhaving Read mairead corrigan Maguire wrote an original essay for the http://scu.edu/ethics/architects-of-peace/Maguire/lesson.html
Extractions: @import url("http://scu.edu/ethics/architects-of-peace/better.css"); var gMenuControlID=0; var menus_included = 0; var jsPageAuthorMode = 0; var jsSessionPreviewON = 1; var jsDlgLoader = '/access/loader.cfm'; var jsSiteID = 1; var jsSubSiteID = 493; var kurrentPageID = 24092; var gShowKeywords = 0; var gHaveKeywords = 0; var js_userID=0; // > The Jesuit university in Silicon Valley The Markkula Center for Applied Ethics Return to Web format About This Site Prepare: Mairead Corrigan Maguire was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize in 1976 after having helped organize a series of peace marches in Northern Ireland. These marches, where tens of thousands of Catholics and Protestants marched together in support of peace, were initiated as a nonviolent response to the killing of her sister's three children by an IRA gunman. She is one of only a dozen women to have been awarded the Nobel Peace Prize, and her biography can be read on the Nobel Site.
Mairead Corrigan Inspires Struggle, Hope For Irish Peace mairead corrigan, founder of The Peace People and former Nobel Laureate, mairead corrigan was one of the first of a new breed of Irish social activists; http://www.ibiblio.org/prism/mar98/mairead.html
Extractions: about The Prism ... other sites by Kathy Worboys T he airport was crowded on the humid mid-August day and crammed tight with freckled, fair-skinned children, burnt and peeling from weeks in the sun. Wall-to-wall people left little room for movement, hardly enough for breathing. We had been in this same position exactly six weeks earlier, though that had been a happier time. It had been a day of anticipation and excitement, a day when a young girl stepped off an airplane and entered a brand new world. She had arrived to cheers and greetings from a family she had never seen, and was now preparing to depart, amidst tears and prayers and promises, from a family she had learned to call her own. The program that brought Joan to us is called Project Children. It is a program which gives people like Joan Rooney a chance to see the world as it should be, and which gives people like me the chance to see the world as it can be. We cried that day at the airport. We promised to write, and to include her in our prayers. We watched the plane taxi down the runway, and then we went home: home to our backyard pool and our white picket fence, home, where we could lock the doors, and retreat into safety. Later that night, I turned on the news and came face-to-face with a close-up of Joan, crying, as she returned to her own family. I cried with her that day, for all of them. While we sat, safe and secure in front of our television, they were re-entering a world of dirt and grime and guns, and anything but safety. Yet through it all we were left with the hope that people like Joan would strive for a time when they could fulfill the prophecies of a card she left for us. It read, "You helped us experience the meaning of peace, true brotherly love, and life without fear. You helped us become the hope for a future peace in Northern Ireland."
AllRefer.com - Mairead Corrigan (Social Reformers) - Encyclopedia AllRefer.com reference and encyclopedia resource provides complete informationon mairead corrigan, Social Reformers. Includes related research links. http://reference.allrefer.com/encyclopedia/C/Corrigan.html
Extractions: By Alphabet : Encyclopedia A-Z C Related Category: Social Reformers Mairead Corrigan u u n] Pronunciation Key Williams , who also witnessed the incident, joined with Corrigan to form the Peace People Organization, a movement of Catholics and Protestants dedicated to ending sectarian fighting in Northern Ireland. For their work the two women were awarded the 1976 Nobel Peace Prize. Content on this web site is provided for informational purposes only. We accept no responsibility for any loss, injury or inconvenience sustained by any person resulting from information published on this site. We encourage you to verify any critical information with the relevant authorities. About Us Contact Us Privacy Links Directory ...
Notre Dame Archives Index BOW003 ABOW A1064 Audio (Cassette) Belfast College 1976/1203; ABOW A1064Audio (Cassette) corrigan, mairead Peace People of Belfast 1976/1203 http://archives.nd.edu/findaids/ead/index/BOW003.htm
Extractions: Archives ABOW David Bowman: Audio-Visual Material ABOW A1038 Audio (Cassette) : Peace Women: What's It All About? 1976/0902 ABOW A1039 Audio (Cassette) ABOW A1039 Audio (Cassette) : PBS Women program, Sandra Elkins re. Northern Ireland 1976/1024 ABOW A1040 Audio (Cassette) ABOW A1040 Audio (Cassette) : McNeill - Lerher Show - C. McKeown, G. Fitz 1976/1005 ABOW A1040 Audio (Cassette) ABOW A1040 Audio (Cassette) : McNeill - Lerher Show - S. Winshester 1976/1005 ABOW A1040 Audio (Cassette) : PBS TV, Robin McNeill re. Northern Ireland 1976/1005 ABOW A1041 Audio (Cassette) : ABC Directions: Peace Movement in Northern Ireland 1976/1212 ABOW A1041 Audio (Cassette) : C. McKeown, David Bowman SJ, Peter Jennings 1976/1212 ABOW A1042 Audio (Cassette) ABOW A1042 Audio (Cassette) : Eustace, A. 1976 ABOW A1042 Audio (Cassette) ABOW A1042 Audio (Cassette) : PBS - Woman program with Sandra Elkins 1976/08 ABOW A1043 Audio (Cassette) : Betty Williams on Today Show re. Northern Ireland 1977/1122 ABOW A1044 Audio (Cassette) : Davidson, Patricia - Belfast - interviewed re. IRA 1977/04
Mairead Corrigan And Betty Williams, Feminist Press These two women, who were personally affected by the violence in Northern Ireland,found the courage to imagine and organize a peace movement that reflected http://www.feministpress.org/Book/index.cfm?GCOI=55861100535560