Gareth Peirce in moving tribute to Conlon at funeral

‘In the end Gerry Conlon won – the victory was his,’ his solicitor tells mourners

Gerry Conlon was a "victorious human being" who "defeated a mighty foe", his solicitor and friend Gareth Peirce told mourners at his funeral Mass in St Peter's Cathedral in west Belfast on Saturday.

Ms Peirce, at a moving and affirmative ceremony, spoke of the “demons” that possessed Mr Conlon, one of the four who were wrongly convicted of the 1974 IRA bombings at Guildford which claimed the lives of five people.

Speaking at the end of Mass. Ms Peirce recalled the powerful impression Mr Conlon made when he stormed out of the Old Bailey a free man in 1989.

“When he angrily, angrily stated the truth it had an extraordinary effect and made the world understand that innocent men and women had been buried alive in English prisons year after year and it had been allowed. Indeed it had been organised to happen. It was no accident,” she said.

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“So when he shouted out ‘I am an innocent man, my father was innocent, the Maguires are innocent and the Birmingham Six’, he set something in motion that forced the rest of us, the rest of the world, Britain, to hold a mirror up to ourselves and see precisely who we were and what we had done,” Ms Peirce added.

Miscarriages of justice

Ms Peirce also recalled how, even as he approached death, with an oxygen mask over his face, Mr Conlon spoke passionately about the need for action on other miscarriages of justice and how he was deeply concerned for people still in

Guantánamo

prison and in prisons on these islands and elsewhere.

“Life dealt Gerry a pretty poor hand. He was a gambler and gambling was in his DNA but with a poor hand he made a magnificent fist of it. If anyone thinks that this is someone who was beaten or terrified and pushed down forever, that wasn’t so,” she said.

And to loud applause she concluded, "We can say, with all the adversities, in the end Gerry Conlon won – the victory was his." That comment reflected the positive mood of the occasion, a mood enhanced earlier at the Mass when one of the members of the English group Alabama Three sang a powerful version of Will the Circle Be Unbroken, to which the crowd sang and clapped along.

Happiness found

And notwithstanding the talk about the demons that afflicted him, Ms Peirce and the chief celebrant, Fr Ciarán Dallat, also referred to how later in life Mr Conlon, who is survived by his partner Alison, daughter Sara and sisters Ann and Bridie, found some happiness.

Fr Dallat said Mr Conlon lived a life filled with great pain but that “in the last 10 years he found some peace for himself”.

Fr Dallat, who anointed Mr Conlon shortly before his death, told mourners that he was amazed at his “readiness”. He said Mr Conlon told him on his death bed, “I am just waiting for my master to come and take me home.”

He spoke too of how Mr Conlon blamed himself for the death of his father, Giuseppe, who died in prison in 1980 after he was arrested and with the rest of the so-called Maguire Seven was wrongly imprisoned on bomb-making charges.

Paddy Armstrong of the Guildford Four and members of the Birmingham Six including Paddy Hill, helped carry the coffin. Also attending were Tánaiste Eamon Gilmore, former Fianna Fáil minister Éamon Ó Cuív, SDLP leader Dr Alasdair McDonnell and the West Belfast Sinn Féin MP Paul Maskey.

Gerry Moriarty

Gerry Moriarty

Gerry Moriarty is the former Northern editor of The Irish Times