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The British Gaelic
Olivier Donnars / Le Pictorium
LePictorium_0234439.jpg
Mask of the Irish St. Patrick's Day parade with inscriptions in Gaelic. In the predominantly Protestant east of Belfast, the Turas Association offers Gaelic language courses and training programmes to a British Protestant audience.
The British Gaelic
Olivier Donnars / Le Pictorium
LePictorium_0234438.jpg
Workshop for children in Gaelic-Irish language, in the premises of the Turas association, in Belfast-East, with a Protestant majority. The association offers courses and training programs in the Gaelic language to a Protestant public.
The British Gaelic
Olivier Donnars / Le Pictorium
LePictorium_0234437.jpg
Workshop for children in Gaelic-Irish language, in the premises of the Turas association, in Belfast-East, with a Protestant majority. The association offers courses and training programs in the Gaelic language to a Protestant public.
The British Gaelic
Olivier Donnars / Le Pictorium
LePictorium_0234436.jpg
Workshop for children in Gaelic-Irish language, in the premises of the Turas association, in Belfast-East, with a Protestant majority. The association offers courses and training programs in the Gaelic language to a Protestant public.
The British Gaelic
Olivier Donnars / Le Pictorium
LePictorium_0234435.jpg
Workshop for children in Gaelic-Irish language, in the premises of the Turas association, in Belfast-East, with a Protestant majority. The association offers courses and training programs in the Gaelic language to a Protestant public.
The British Gaelic
Olivier Donnars / Le Pictorium
LePictorium_0234434.jpg
Workshop for children in Gaelic-Irish language, in the premises of the Turas association, in Belfast-East, with a Protestant majority. The association offers courses and training programs in the Gaelic language to a Protestant public.
The British Gaelic
Olivier Donnars / Le Pictorium
LePictorium_0234433.jpg
Workshop for children in Gaelic-Irish language, in the premises of the Turas association, in Belfast-East, with a Protestant majority. The association offers courses and training programs in the Gaelic language to a Protestant public.
The British Gaelic
Olivier Donnars / Le Pictorium
LePictorium_0234432.jpg
Workshop for children in Gaelic-Irish language, in the premises of the Turas association, in Belfast-East, with a Protestant majority. The association offers courses and training programs in the Gaelic language to a Protestant public.
The British Gaelic
Olivier Donnars / Le Pictorium
LePictorium_0234431.jpg
Workshop for children in Gaelic-Irish language, in the premises of the Turas association, in Belfast-East, with a Protestant majority. The association offers courses and training programs in the Gaelic language to a Protestant public.
The British Gaelic
Olivier Donnars / Le Pictorium
LePictorium_0234430.jpg
Workshop for children in Gaelic-Irish language, in the premises of the Turas association, in Belfast-East, with a Protestant majority. The association offers courses and training programs in the Gaelic language to a Protestant public. On the right, its founder, Linda Ervine, a British Protestant who fell in love with Gaelic.
The British Gaelic
Olivier Donnars / Le Pictorium
LePictorium_0234429.jpg
Workshop for children in Gaelic-Irish language, in the premises of the Turas association, in Belfast-East, with a Protestant majority. The association offers courses and training programs in the Gaelic language to a Protestant public. On the right, its founder, Linda Ervine, a British Protestant who fell in love with Gaelic.
The British Gaelic
Olivier Donnars / Le Pictorium
LePictorium_0234428.jpg
Colour chart in Gaelic language. In East Belfast, with a Protestant majority, the Turas Association offers courses and training programs in Gaelic language to a Bretanic Protestant public.
The British Gaelic
Olivier Donnars / Le Pictorium
LePictorium_0234427.jpg
Workshop for children in Gaelic-Irish language, in the premises of the Turas association, in Belfast-East, with a Protestant majority. The association offers courses and training programs in the Gaelic language to a Protestant public.
The British Gaelic
Olivier Donnars / Le Pictorium
LePictorium_0234426.jpg
Workshop for children in Gaelic-Irish language, in the premises of the Turas association, in Belfast-East, with a Protestant majority. The association offers courses and training programs in the Gaelic language to a Protestant public.
The British Gaelic
Olivier Donnars / Le Pictorium
LePictorium_0234425.jpg
Workshop for children in Gaelic-Irish language, in the premises of the Turas association, in Belfast-East, with a Protestant majority. The association offers courses and training programs in the Gaelic language to a Protestant public.
The British Gaelic
Olivier Donnars / Le Pictorium
LePictorium_0234424.jpg
Workshop for children in Gaelic-Irish language, in the premises of the Turas association, in Belfast-East, with a Protestant majority. The association offers courses and training programs in the Gaelic language to a Protestant public.
The British Gaelic
Olivier Donnars / Le Pictorium
LePictorium_0234423.jpg
Workshop for children in Gaelic-Irish language, in the premises of the Turas association, in Belfast-East, with a Protestant majority. The association offers courses and training programs in the Gaelic language to a Protestant public.
The British Gaelic
Olivier Donnars / Le Pictorium
LePictorium_0234422.jpg
Gaelic learning board. In East Belfast, a predominantly Protestant area, the Turas Association offers Gaelic language courses and training programs to a British Protestant audience.
The British Gaelic
Olivier Donnars / Le Pictorium
LePictorium_0234421.jpg
Workshop for children in Gaelic-Irish language, in the premises of the Turas association, in Belfast-East, with a Protestant majority. The association offers courses and training programs in the Gaelic language to a Protestant public.
The British Gaelic
Olivier Donnars / Le Pictorium
LePictorium_0234420.jpg
Workshop for children in Gaelic-Irish language, in the premises of the Turas association, in Belfast-East, with a Protestant majority. The association offers courses and training programs in the Gaelic language to a Protestant public.
The British Gaelic
Olivier Donnars / Le Pictorium
LePictorium_0234419.jpg
Workshop for children in Gaelic-Irish language, in the premises of the Turas association, in Belfast-East, with a Protestant majority. The association offers courses and training programs in the Gaelic language to a Protestant public.
The British Gaelic
Olivier Donnars / Le Pictorium
LePictorium_0234418.jpg
In East Belfast, a predominantly Protestant city, the Turas Association offers courses and training programs in the Gaelic language to a Protestant audience.
The British Gaelic
Olivier Donnars / Le Pictorium
LePictorium_0234417.jpg
Linda Ervine, a Protestant, founded the Turas Association in East Belfast, which offers courses and training programs in the Gaelic language to a Protestant audience in the heart of the British Quarter.
The British Gaelic
Olivier Donnars / Le Pictorium
LePictorium_0234416.jpg
Linda Ervine, a Protestant, founded the Turas Association in East Belfast, which offers courses and training programs in the Gaelic language to a Protestant audience in the heart of the British Quarter.
Warrenpoint, border town of Brexit
Olivier Donnars / Le Pictorium
LePictorium_0223921.jpg
In Warrenpoint, a small seaside town in Northern Ireland, on the banks of the Newry river estuary. The river forms a border for a few kilometres. On the opposite bank is the Republic of Ireland.
Warrenpoint, border town of Brexit
Olivier Donnars / Le Pictorium
LePictorium_0223920.jpg
In Warrenpoint, a small seaside town in Northern Ireland, on the banks of the Newry river estuary. The river forms a border for a few kilometres. On the opposite bank is the Republic of Ireland.
Warrenpoint, border town of Brexit
Olivier Donnars / Le Pictorium
LePictorium_0223919.jpg
In Warrenpoint, a small seaside town in Northern Ireland, on the banks of the Newry river estuary. The river forms a border for a few kilometres. On the opposite bank is the Republic of Ireland.
Warrenpoint, border town of Brexit
Olivier Donnars / Le Pictorium
LePictorium_0223918.jpg
In Warrenpoint, a small seaside town in Northern Ireland, on the banks of the Newry river estuary. The river forms a border for a few kilometres. On the opposite bank is the Republic of Ireland.
Warrenpoint, border town of Brexit
Olivier Donnars / Le Pictorium
LePictorium_0223917.jpg
In Warrenpoint, a small seaside town in Northern Ireland, on the banks of the Newry river estuary. The river forms a border for a few kilometres. On the opposite bank is the Republic of Ireland.
Warrenpoint, border town of Brexit
Olivier Donnars / Le Pictorium
LePictorium_0223916.jpg
In Warrenpoint, a small seaside town in Northern Ireland, on the banks of the Newry river estuary. The river forms a border for a few kilometres. On the opposite bank is the Republic of Ireland.
Warrenpoint, border town of Brexit
Olivier Donnars / Le Pictorium
LePictorium_0223915.jpg
In Warrenpoint, a small seaside town in Northern Ireland, on the banks of the Newry river estuary. The river forms a border for a few kilometres. On the opposite bank is the Republic of Ireland.
Warrenpoint, border town of Brexit
Olivier Donnars / Le Pictorium
LePictorium_0223914.jpg
In Warrenpoint, a small seaside town in Northern Ireland, on the banks of the Newry river estuary. The river forms a border for a few kilometres. On the opposite bank is the Republic of Ireland.
Warrenpoint, border town of Brexit
Olivier Donnars / Le Pictorium
LePictorium_0223913.jpg
In Warrenpoint, a small seaside town in Northern Ireland, on the banks of the Newry river estuary. The river forms a border for a few kilometres. On the opposite bank is the Republic of Ireland.
Warrenpoint, border town of Brexit
Olivier Donnars / Le Pictorium
LePictorium_0223912.jpg
In Warrenpoint, a small seaside town in Northern Ireland, on the banks of the Newry river estuary. The river forms a border for a few kilometres. On the opposite bank is the Republic of Ireland.
Warrenpoint, border town of Brexit
Olivier Donnars / Le Pictorium
LePictorium_0223911.jpg
In Warrenpoint, a small seaside town in Northern Ireland, on the banks of the Newry river estuary. The river forms a border for a few kilometres. On the opposite bank is the Republic of Ireland.
Warrenpoint, border town of Brexit
Olivier Donnars / Le Pictorium
LePictorium_0223910.jpg
In Warrenpoint, a small seaside town in Northern Ireland, on the banks of the Newry river estuary. The river forms a border for a few kilometres. On the opposite bank is the Republic of Ireland.
Warrenpoint, border town of Brexit
Olivier Donnars / Le Pictorium
LePictorium_0223909.jpg
In Warrenpoint, a small seaside town in Northern Ireland, on the banks of the Newry river estuary. The river forms a border for a few kilometres. On the opposite bank is the Republic of Ireland.
Warrenpoint, border town of Brexit
Olivier Donnars / Le Pictorium
LePictorium_0223908.jpg
In Warrenpoint, a small seaside town in Northern Ireland, on the banks of the Newry river estuary. The river forms a border for a few kilometres. On the opposite bank is the Republic of Ireland.
Warrenpoint, border town of Brexit
Olivier Donnars / Le Pictorium
LePictorium_0223907.jpg
In Warrenpoint, a small seaside town in Northern Ireland, on the banks of the Newry river estuary. The river forms a border for a few kilometres. On the opposite bank is the Republic of Ireland.
Warrenpoint, border town of Brexit
Olivier Donnars / Le Pictorium
LePictorium_0223906.jpg
In Warrenpoint, a small seaside town in Northern Ireland, on the banks of the Newry river estuary. The river forms a border for a few kilometres. On the opposite bank is the Republic of Ireland.
Warrenpoint, border town of Brexit
Olivier Donnars / Le Pictorium
LePictorium_0223905.jpg
In Warrenpoint, a small seaside town in Northern Ireland, on the banks of the Newry river estuary. The river forms a border for a few kilometres. On the opposite bank is the Republic of Ireland.
Warrenpoint, border town of Brexit
Olivier Donnars / Le Pictorium
LePictorium_0223904.jpg
In Warrenpoint, a small seaside town in Northern Ireland, on the banks of the Newry river estuary. The river forms a border for a few kilometres. On the opposite bank is the Republic of Ireland.
Warrenpoint, border town of Brexit
Olivier Donnars / Le Pictorium
LePictorium_0223903.jpg
In Warrenpoint, a small seaside town in Northern Ireland, on the banks of the Newry river estuary. The river forms a border for a few kilometres. On the opposite bank is the Republic of Ireland.
Warrenpoint, border town of Brexit
Olivier Donnars / Le Pictorium
LePictorium_0223902.jpg
In Warrenpoint, a small seaside town in Northern Ireland, on the banks of the Newry river estuary. The river forms a border for a few kilometres. On the opposite bank is the Republic of Ireland.
Warrenpoint, border town of Brexit
Olivier Donnars / Le Pictorium
LePictorium_0223901.jpg
In Warrenpoint, a small seaside town in Northern Ireland, on the banks of the Newry river estuary. The river forms a border for a few kilometres. On the opposite bank is the Republic of Ireland.
Warrenpoint, border town of Brexit
Olivier Donnars / Le Pictorium
LePictorium_0223900.jpg
In Warrenpoint, a small seaside town in Northern Ireland, on the banks of the Newry river estuary. The river forms a border for a few kilometres. On the opposite bank is the Republic of Ireland.
Warrenpoint, border town of Brexit
Olivier Donnars / Le Pictorium
LePictorium_0223899.jpg
In Warrenpoint, a small seaside town in Northern Ireland, on the banks of the Newry river estuary. The river forms a border for a few kilometres. On the opposite bank is the Republic of Ireland.
Warrenpoint, border town of Brexit
Olivier Donnars / Le Pictorium
LePictorium_0223898.jpg
In Warrenpoint, a small seaside town in Northern Ireland, on the banks of the Newry river estuary. The river forms a border for a few kilometres. On the opposite bank is the Republic of Ireland.
The walls of Belfast
Olivier Donnars / Le Pictorium
LePictorium_0205370.jpg
A flag of the red hand of Ulster, symbol of the Loyalists, floats in a predominantly British district of East Belfast. In this northern Irish city, Brexit only revives the old wounds of the two communities, British and Irish, which continue to count their deaths in their respective neighbourhoods.
The walls of Belfast
Olivier Donnars / Le Pictorium
LePictorium_0205369.jpg
Mural fresco of the Young citizen volunteers, a youth organization of the Ulster Volunteer Force (UVF), a Northern Irish paramilitary group, in East Belfast, which is predominantly British. In this northern Irish city, Brexit only revives the old wounds of the two communities, British and Irish, which continue to count their deaths in their respective neighbourhoods.
The walls of Belfast
Olivier Donnars / Le Pictorium
LePictorium_0205368.jpg
Mural painting by the Ulster Volunteer Force (UVF), a Northern Irish paramilitary group, in East Belfast, which is predominantly British. In this northern Irish city, Brexit only revives the old wounds of the two communities, British and Irish, which continue to count their deaths in their respective neighbourhoods.
The walls of Belfast
Olivier Donnars / Le Pictorium
LePictorium_0205367.jpg
Mural painting by the Ulster Volunteer Force (UVF), a Northern Irish paramilitary group, in East Belfast, which is predominantly British. In this northern Irish city, Brexit only revives the old wounds of the two communities, British and Irish, which continue to count their deaths in their respective neighbourhoods.
The walls of Belfast
Olivier Donnars / Le Pictorium
LePictorium_0205366.jpg
Mural fresco by the Ulster Volunteer Force (UVF), a Northern Irish paramilitary group, in East Belfast, which is predominantly British. In this northern Irish city, Brexit only revives the old wounds of the two communities, British and Irish, which continue to count their deaths in their respective neighbourhoods.
The walls of Belfast
Olivier Donnars / Le Pictorium
LePictorium_0205365.jpg
On Newtownards Road, in Belfast is predominantly British, the "freedom corner" is in fact a succession of mural paintings to the glory of the various loyalist and unionist paramilitary groups. In this northern Irish city, Brexit only revives the old wounds of the two communities, British and Irish, which continue to count their deaths in their respective neighbourhoods.
The walls of Belfast
Olivier Donnars / Le Pictorium
LePictorium_0205364.jpg
In West Belfast, in the British quarter of Shankill. In this northern Irish city, Brexit only revives the old wounds of the two communities, British and Irish, which continue to count their deaths in their respective neighbourhoods.
The walls of Belfast
Olivier Donnars / Le Pictorium
LePictorium_0205363.jpg
In West Belfast, in the British quarter of Shankill. In this northern Irish city, Brexit only revives the old wounds of the two communities, British and Irish, which continue to count their deaths in their respective neighbourhoods.
The walls of Belfast
Olivier Donnars / Le Pictorium
LePictorium_0205362.jpg
In West Belfast, in the British quarter of Shankill. In this northern Irish city, Brexit only revives the old wounds of the two communities, British and Irish, which continue to count their deaths in their respective neighbourhoods.
The walls of Belfast
Olivier Donnars / Le Pictorium
LePictorium_0205361.jpg
In West Belfast, in the British quarter of Shankill. In this northern Irish city, Brexit only revives the old wounds of the two communities, British and Irish, which continue to count their deaths in their respective neighbourhoods.
The walls of Belfast
Olivier Donnars / Le Pictorium
LePictorium_0205360.jpg
Social housing in the British district of Shankill. In this northern Irish city, Brexit only revives the old wounds of the two communities, British and Irish, which continue to count their deaths in their respective neighbourhoods.
The walls of Belfast
Olivier Donnars / Le Pictorium
LePictorium_0205359.jpg
Social housing in the British district of Shankill. In this northern Irish city, Brexit only revives the old wounds of the two communities, British and Irish, which continue to count their deaths in their respective neighbourhoods.
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