MARGO HARKIN: 12 DAYS IN JULY Director: MARGO HARKIN 60 mins, UK, 2002, Digital, F-Rated Book cinema tickets Watch on Watch on IFI Home Produced by Fionnuala Sweeney The annual marching season sees the resumption of political tension between Protestants and Catholics in Northern Ireland. In the late ‘90s, a return parade from Drumcree Parish Church through a Catholic area of Portadown provided a key focus of conflict between the two communities. Margo Harkin gained access to the two disputing parties – the Orange Order and the residents of Garvaghy Road, a small catholic enclave on the parade route – to film this compelling account of the events, which were to become so significant in forging a change in the political climate. The film revealed the deeply held convictions of two polarized communities arising out of the Drumcree crisis and foreshadowed the future that could be faced in Northern Ireland if the fragile peace process continued to falter. This film is screening as part of Margo Harkin: Radical Witness. Director: MARGO HARKIN 60 mins, UK, 2002, Digital, F-Rated