Honorable Mention / 2015 / Press / Feature Story

Independent under the skin

Occupation, nationalism and struggles with identity plague our world’s history. In Ireland
in particular, hundreds of years of British rule – which is argued to be the longest war
of occupation in the world – has produced generation after generation of
independent-minded Irish who have fought for their national identity. Their names are
related to infamous organizations, such as the IRA and other pro-independence
organizations. Even if there is a treaty of truce, these women and men remain in the fight
to achieve their dream of independence.

Their tattoos tell the painstaking story of their lives, fallen friends, past actions.
Their bodies bear indelible writings of an ideal and the human price paid to conquer it.
Every drop of ink under their skin carries the memory of ancestors and comrades who died
in this invisible war. Much has been written about them, especially in the seventies and
eighties, during a series of attacks that seemed to never end, and in the collective
conscience they are considered to be terrorists and subversive, but little – or almost
nothing – is really known about them. This photographic account is an insight into their
world, and it serves as a proof of adamant willingness to not give up, but to continue to
fight for an Ireland that they will be able to call their own.