Jumat, 04 Maret 2016

Why Harvey Thomas has forgiven the IRA bomber

Why Harvey Thomas has forgiven the IRA bomber who nearly took his life in the 1984 Brighton Bombing

By Dan Wooding, Founder of the ASSIST News Service
smaller Harvey Thomas after his rescueNASHVILLE, TN (ANS – Feb. 28, 2016) — Many years ago, while I was still working for the Sunday People, a large tabloid in the British newspaper mecca of Fleet Street in London, I received a threat from the IRA (Irish Republican Army) for something I had written.
It was a very scary moment for both myself and my family, and fortunately nothing came of it, but this was nothing compared with what Harvey Thomas, a senior adviser to British Prime Minister, Margaret Thatcher, experienced when he was nearly killed by an IRA bomb.
Harvey, who once again attended the recent NRB International Christian Media Convention in Nashville, Tennessee, was in bed at 2:54 am on October 12, 1984, when an IRA bomb exploded in the bathroom of room 629 of the seafront Grand Hotel in Brighton, England, on the final night of the annual Conservative party conference.
The bomb took out a massive section of the hotel and almost killed Thatcher and her cabinet.
It was later discovered that IRA explosives expert Patrick Magee planted a 100-pound timed bomb in the hotel with the intention of assassinating the Prime Minister and her Cabinet who were in residence for the 1984 Conservative Party conference.
Newpaper report on Brighton BombingThe bomb failed to kill Thatcher or any of her government ministers, but five people, however, were killed, and 34 injured. They included Conservative Member of Parliament (MP), Sir Anthony Berry, and Parliamentary Treasury Secretary John Wakeham’s wife, Roberta. Sir Donald Maclean and his wife, Muriel, were in the room in which the bomb exploded. Lady Maclean was not killed in the explosion, but later died of her injuries, and Sir Donald was seriously injured.
The other victims killed by the blast were Eric Taylor and Jeanne Shattock. Several more, including Margaret Tebbit -- the wife of Norman Tebbit, who was then President of the Board of Trade -- were left permanently disabled. Thirty-four people were taken to hospital but recovered from their injuries.
Amazingly, Harvey Thomas, who fell through several floors after the explosion, survived.
When Magee was caught, he was sentenced to eight life terms in 1986 with the recommendation that he serve a minimum of 35 years but he was released in 1999 under the Good Friday Agreement, which was a major political development in the Northern Ireland peace process of the 1990s.
Now Harvey Thomas, who has since been made a Commander of the British Empire (CBE) by Queen Elizabeth, has forgiven the IRA bomber, met with him several times, and even had him as a guest in his London home.
In an extraordinary interview at a previous NRB convention in Nashville, Tennessee, he shared his story with me.
Marlies and Harvey Thomas at NRB 2016“I was directing the conservative conference for Margaret Thatcher in 1984 and at about three o’clock in the morning, the night before her speech, a bomb went off five feet under my bed and I was blown up through the roof of the hotel, fell three floors, and was buried under ten and a half tons of rubble for two and a half hours,” he recalled.
“Finally, they dug me out without a bone broken. Five of my friends were killed in that bomb. The bomber was an Irish Republican Army man called Patrick McGee. He was caught about a year later and sentenced to eight life sentences for five murders and three attempted murders, one of them was me.
“Then in 1998, fourteen years afterwards, I was really convicted by God while I was speaking at a meeting in Louisville, Kentucky, on reconciliation. I felt that I should write to him and say that I forgave him. So I wrote to Patrick McGee and I said, ‘I’m a Christian and I forgive you for what you did.’ I told him that could only speak on my own behalf as ‘I have no right to speak on anyone else’s behalf.’
“And he wrote back and we began corresponding with each other. He’s a highly educated man who has his doctorate in philosophy from the University of Ulster in Belfast. Then I went over to see him when, finally, all of the rest of the Irish prisoners were released in 2000.
“We talked for hours and then he came over to England and talked to my family in my home and he had breakfast together with us. He told my two daughters, and my wife, ‘I can’t believe I’m here as a friend having tried to kill your daddy and (to my wife) your husband.’
“We have become very good friends and now, once or twice a year, we try to do a seminar together on reconciliation. He is very much affected by Christian things. He’ll say to me, ‘Keep praying for us,’ and ‘the friends in America haven’t stopped praying for me have they?’”
I then asked Harvey Thomas to give some background as to why the Irish Republican Army had been waging war against the British.
“The brief story is that we, the British, have treated the Catholics in Ireland and those who support a nationalist complete Ireland, abysmally for 200 years,” he said. “I mean in Northern Ireland you couldn’t become more than a sergeant in any uniform. You couldn’t do anything and it’s been very bad.
“In addition, there were riots in the streets of Northern Ireland so the British Army in 1976, in a thing called ‘Bloody Sunday’ shot and killed 14 unarmed Irish demonstrators. Four of those were Pat’s friends and Pat said at the time, ‘Look, enough is enough. I will join the Irish Republican Army and I will go to war with the British government.’
Patrick Magee“During one of our meetings, I asked Patrick about the bomb in Brighton which was an attempt to kill Margaret Thatcher and her cabinet, and he said, ‘I didn’t think of it as killing people, because you lose a little of your soul every time somebody’s hurt because of your actions. It’s like being a captain of a submarine. You put a periscope up you see an enemy aircraft at war you say “my job is to sink that aircraft carrier.” So that’s the way I looked at the Grand Hotel.’”
I then asked Harvey Thomas, who was in Nashville again with his wife Marlies to run the Fellowship of European Broadcasters (FEB) booth at the convention, what he had learned through all of this and he replied, “I think the most important thing I’ve learned, or realized, is first of all and it took me 14 years to understand, was the meaning of the Lord’s prayer: ‘Forgive us our trespasses as we forgive those who trespass against us.’ In that verse in Matthew, Jesus goes onto say, ‘If you don’t forgive others, I won’t forgive you.’ It’s a very strong verse. I had to realize that I had to forgive and that’s the first step in reconciliation.
“One friend of mine, who’s a very senior politician, wrote to me and said he was very badly injured in the bombing and his wife was made a quadriplegic through it. In his letter he said, ‘Don’t you realize there has to be repentance before forgiveness?’ And I wrote back and said, ‘Actually it doesn’t. Between man and man, forgiveness is the instruction. Between man and God, yes, there has to be repentance of man before God can forgive. But this is between man and man and mankind and mankind.’
Margaret Thatcher after Brighton Bombing“So we still correspond and he still doesn’t forgive and I understand that. I have no criticism of him.”
Since that interview, I have met up again with Harvey, with whom I once worked in the offices of the Billy Graham Evangelistic Association in London, England, on several occasions and he told me some time back that he had watched the hit movie, “The Iron Lady”, and was surprised to see that in the first scene of the film, he was being carried out covered from head to toe in dust, from the Brighton hotel.
He said he brought back memories of that terrible night that he nearly lost his life, but also he remembered how he was able to forgive the bomber. What an example to us all!
I would like to thank Robin Frost for transcribing this interview.
Photo captions: 1) Harvey Thomas speaking from his hospital bed after his miraculous rescue. 2) Front page of a British newspaper about the IRA bombing. 3) Marlies and Harvey Thomas at this year’s NRB in Nashville. (Photo: Dan Wooding) 4) Former IRA man: Patrick Magee (Getty) 5) An emotional Margaret Thatcher after the bombing. 6) Norma and Dan Wooding on a reporting assignment for ANS (Photo: Brian Seltzer).
Norma and Dan Wooding at MovieguideAbout the writer: Dan Wooding, 75, is an award-winning winning author, broadcaster and journalist who was born in Nigeria of British missionary parents, and is now living in Southern California with his wife Norma, to whom he has been married for more than 52 years. They have two sons, Andrew and Peter, and six grandchildren who all live in the UK. Dan is the founder and international director of ASSIST (Aid to Special Saints in Strategic Times) and the ASSIST News Service (ANS). He has worked as a senior reporter for two of Great Britain’s largest circulation newspapers, and is also the author of some 45 books.
** You may republish this or any of our ANS stories with attribution to the ASSIST News Service (www.assistnews.net).

Tidak ada komentar: