Good Friday
Use attributes for filter ! | |
Celebrations | No traditional celebrations |
---|---|
Observances | Worship services, prayer and vigil services, fasting, almsgiving |
Significance | crucifixion |
Jesus Christ | |
Date of Reg. | |
Date of Upd. | |
ID | 504732 |
About Good Friday
Good Friday is a Christian holiday commemorating the crucifixion of Jesus and his death at Calvary. It is observed during Holy Week as part of the Paschal Triduum on the Friday preceding Easter Sunday, and may coincide with the Jewish observance of Passover.
Israel-Gaza war: The Red Cross's delicate role in hostage crises
... Until the Good Friday agreement for peace and power sharing in Northern Ireland, the ICRC visited members of paramilitary groups who had been imprisoned there...
Sinn Féin ard fheis: Mary Lou McDonald calls for Citizens' Assembly on Irish unity
... In relation to Northern Ireland, Ms McDonald said the generation of politicians who worked on the 1998 Good Friday Agreement " wrote Ireland s chapter of peace"...
Irish unity: Micheál Martin warns UK against changing vote terms
... " The 1998 Good Friday peace agreement states that Northern Ireland s constitutional status cannot change without the consent of a majority of its people...
Cross Border Orchestra of Ireland forging new friendships
... " Growing up in the 1970s and 80s, and as a young teacher in Dundalk in the early to mid-90s, before the ceasefire and the Good Friday peace agreement, I remember being really worried about what I was seeing, " she said...
Omagh bomb service 'testament to community spirit' 25 years on
... It happened four months after the signing of the Good Friday Agreement, the peace deal that eventually brought an end to decades of violence known as the Troubles...
PSNI data breach: Officers looking over their shoulders
... The Good Friday Agreement, which largely ended the violence in 1998, promised reforms to policing...
Varadkar - Blues brother or big mouth?
... I asked if he was talking about joint authority over Northern Ireland shared between the British and Irish governments and he pointed out there was no provision for that in the Good Friday Agreement - but nor was there any provision for direct rule from Westminster, he said, adding: " I don t mean anything specifically...
PSNI Chief Constable Simon Byrne faces questions over major data breach
... Dissident groups opposed to the 1998 Good Friday peace agreement remain committed to using violence to try to bring about a united Ireland and consider the PSNI " legitimate targets"...
Varadkar - Blues brother or big mouth?
By Gareth GordonBBC News NI political correspondent
Say what you like about Leo Varadkar But he knows How To pick his Spot - or in this case his halfway line.
Windsor Park is home to Linfield Football Club and The Northern Ireland team, a stadium known to many devotees as The Shrine .
Perched on The periphery of The loyalist Village area of Belfast, you'd have to be blind to mistake The allegiances of most, if not All , who live in its shadow: The multitude of flags provide a clue if you need one.
The Irish Department of Foreign Affairs asked if The taoiseach, Ireland's Prime Minister , could visit and Linfield happily agreed - A Sign of Changing Times if ever there was one.
And so Leo Varadkar became The First taoiseach to visit Windsor Park .
Mr Varadkar loves a Photo Op . He was once accused of treating a visit to west Cork " as A Day out to Jurassic Park".
His day out at Linfield was a Photo Op with knobs on. The Party he leads, Fine Gael , are still known disparagingly by some as The Blue Shirts.
Still, The Sight of The Prime Minister of Ireland holding up The Blue shirt of Linfield with his name emblazoned across The back was Photo Op gold.
But This Was a game of two halves. Suddenly he turned defence into attack and talked about a Plan B - and this wasn't The merits of 4-4-2 versus 3-5-2 in football speak.
Metaphorical hand grenade?With The Linfield board Looking On , - not to be confused with The transfer window.
If that opportunity is missed, said Mr Varadkar, " then I do think at that point we have to start having conversations about alternatives, about Plan B".
I asked if he was talking about joint authority over Northern Ireland shared between The British and Irish governments and he pointed Out There was no provision for that in The Good Friday Agreement - But nor was there any provision for direct rule from Westminster, He Said , adding: " I don't mean anything specifically. "
And so he left it there, having lobbed over an inviting cross which will look to many unionists like a metaphorical hand grenade.
Paisley's 'Big Mouth ', Allister's 'meddling'Cue outrage from predictable quarters. " Leo Varadkar needs to mind his own business, stay in Dublin and keep his nose out of NI affairs, " said Sammy Wilson , The Democratic Unionist Party MP.
Ian Paisley MP accused The taoiseach of having a " Big Mouth ".
Jim Allister accused him of " meddling".
Leo Varadkar has been a convenient bogeyman for unionism before. - a claim he denies.
But that relationship seemed to have softened when he
Of course, Mr Varadkar also pointed out on The Windsor Park pitch that The Solution he preferred was Plan A - The Restoration of The Stormont institutions.
But that will require a big move by The DUP, whose dilemma is brought into sharp focus by The taoiseach's comments about Plan B.
Question: Is Northern Ireland 's constitutional position threatened more by what Jim Allister calls " The union-dismantling protocol" or by The lack of a functioning government which inevitably leads some to talk about Plan Bs?
Before Leo Varadkar kicked off in south Belfast, The DUP leader Sir Jeffrey Donaldson denied that The Party was split over a return to Stormont.
But his in which he accused some within The Party of briefing against it tells Another Story .
'Sheer frustration'So is it true that The fractures exposed two years ago when Arlene Foster was deposed have never healed?
Not exactly, according to one who was on The side of her nemesis, Edwin Poots , at that time.
" I would say those wounds have healed But there's possibly a new cut and that is between those who want to return to Stormont and those who don't, " they said.
" I just can't understand why he put pen to paper. I can only guess it's out of sheer frustration. "
And it's true that unarguably The two figures who make an early return to Stormont most difficult for Mr Donaldson are two of his allies, Sammy Wilson and - perhaps most of All - Lord Dodds.
Another DUP figure who is not in The Donaldson camp says those two DUP veterans 'Him', being Sir Jeffrey.
I asked him This Week how The DUP could possibly get from a position where Lord Dodds said The Windsor Framework The Party 's seven tests, to a place where they could even be contemplating a return to power sharing in The autumn without looking like they'd climbed Down - or split.
He replied that The Paper The DUP had put to The government on The Windsor Framework " was collectively agreed by our party officers and that, of course, includes Lord Dodds".
Own goal or winner?As for Mr Varadkar, it remains to be seen where he goes if, as looks likely, there is no Stormont return in The autumn.
One figure from The Business world who has met him often said: " From my experience he always behaves like he's completely disinterested. " He accused Mr Varadkar of " not being fully engaged" - unlike his predecessor, Michael Martin who, this person said, approaches things " in a really gentle and sensitive way".
" I remember one meeting at The End of an admittedly busy day for him when he just appeared slumped in his seat like he didn't really care, " The Business figure said.
" At The End of The Meeting what was important to him was The photo. "
This Week , Mr Varadkar scored again in The photo-op stakes. Own goal or winner? Either Way it looks likely to go to penalties.
Related TopicsSource of news: bbc.com