PI Week 12 March 19 - March 25, Sisters of the Lodge

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PI Week 12 March 19 - March 25, 2011 Sisters of the Lodge

Programme Information New this week Sisters of the Lodge Page 3 Sisters of the Lodge is an hour long authored documentary by Alison Millar into the inner workings of the Association of Loyal Orange Women of Ireland Rodney s Farm Page 6 In this two part documentary, farmer Rodney Elliot traces the dramatic changes that have taken place in farming in Northern Ireland through the story of his own family and the farm he grew up on. Highlights of Magee v Bute Page 8 BBC Sport NI will have highlights of Brian Magee s clash against Lucian Bute In the fourth programme of the BBC Radio Ulster series In The Footsteps, on Sunday, March 20 at 1.30pm, Lynda Bryans goes on a quest to better understand the philosophy of Francis Hutcheson. 2

Sisters of the Lodge Sisters of the Lodge is an hour long authored documentary by Alison Millar into the inner workings of the Association of Loyal Orange Women of Ireland Sisters of the Lodge, Monday, March 21, BBC One NI at 9pm Sally Forsythe, Star of Dromore Lodge LoL 66 Filmed over the course of a year Sisters of the Lodge is an hour long authored documentary by Alison Millar on the inner workings of the Association of Loyal Orange Women of Ireland, an organisation that until now has carefully guarded its secret rituals and ceremonies. For the first time since its formal foundation one hundred years ago, by a Mrs Johnstone from County Cavan, the Association welcomed outsider Alison into their lodge rooms in order to dispel the myths about the sisterhood through unprecedented access to their ceremonies and private beliefs. Alison s fascination began early. Growing up in a rural protestant community in Northern Ireland vivid images of the Orange Women, famed for their legendary tray bakes, became etched on her mind. Thirty years later her 3

(left to right) Alicia & mother May Dixon, Iris McAlister, Christina Dixon, Star of Dromore LoL 66 memories of the ladies wearing their fancy Ireland, and Grand Secretary Joan Beggs, hats and handbags as they walked behind the Alison was to discover that filming in the Orangemen on the 12th July came lodge meetings would prove more difficult. flooding back prompting her to embark Initially informed that because she was not on a journey to discover the sisterhood s a `sister she would not be allowed to film place in a more modern, secular world. Had an actual lodge meeting Alison was promised that the sisters would reconstruct the Orange ladies become more than tea makers for the men? And what really later what went on for the cameras. This happened behind closed doors? proved to be a staple of the film with Alison constantly trying to enter the private meetings but more often than not having to Growing Up in a rural protestant community I used to make a picnic and go settle on eavesdropping from an adjoining to the field with my granny to see the local anteroom where their buffet was laid out! Orangemen. I remember seeing the ladies with their fancy hats and handbags. I often Over the course of the year Alison wondered what ever happened to them? criss-crossed the highways and byways of said Alison Millar. the countryside following the activities of various lodges and individual members. Though welcomed by Olive Whitten, MBE, But it was in the Star of Dromore WLOL the Most Worshipful Grand Mistress of that Alison encountered the full spectrum of Orangeism. The steadfastness of its members was evident in the unstinting attendance of Sally Forsythe, one of the founding members and stalwarts of the Association who hadn t missed a meeting in over 60 years! Being an Orange woman was central to Sally s life. I just look forward every month to going. They come from all parts with a bit of news. We are a small group but very friendly, says Sally Forsythe. At the other end of the scale Alison came face to face with the next generation of Orange women, meeting one of the rising stars, 23 year old Alicia Dickson whose father and mother had shared with her the history and values of Orangeism from an early age. 4

Star of Dromore Lodge LoL 66, Orange Women s Association I didn t join the `Orange just because my mother was in the `Orange but, as a young person, when I saw the women, there were always smiles on their faces and they always carried themselves well, dignified, and because of what it stood for, so I decided to sign the dotted line and join up, says Alicia. filmed for the first time ever on camera. She witnessed first-hand some of the secret rituals and ceremonies of the order and was invited by the sisters in Coleraine to attend one the highlights of their year - an `Orange Ball. Olive explained to Alison that this was an ancient ritual that had never been seen before, let alone filmed. all my years of making documentaries, the Orange ball has to be one of the oldest and most unusual things I have ever filmed. What emerges from the year Alison spent with the Sisters Of The Lodge is a compelling insight into a deeply fascinating and secretive organisation. As her journey progressed Alison was given unprecedented access to the hierarchy of the organisation and allowed to ask questions about its secret rule book Alison Millar says: This was one of the most fascinating rituals that we filmed. It involved swords, lit candles, a portrait of the queen and a whispering sequence. In Sisters of the Lodge was made with the Support of BAI - The Broadcasting Authority of Ireland. It is on Monday, March 21, BBC One NI at 9pm. 5

Rodney s Farm In this two part documentary, farmer Rodney Elliot traces the dramatic changes that have taken place in farming in Northern Ireland through the story of his own family and the farm he grew up on. Rodney s Farm starts Monday, March 21, BBC One NI at 7.30pm Rodney Elliot tells the story of farming in NI There has been a revolution in farming. In just three generations agriculture in Northern Ireland has been transformed from a collection of small family farms to large specialised businesses. Rodney s Farm is a new two-part documentary in which Fermanagh dairy farmer Rodney Elliott traces the dramatic changes that have taken place in farming in Northern Ireland through the story of his own family and the farm he grew up on. BBC Northern Ireland viewers last saw Rodney Elliott in Wanted Farmers which followed him over the course of three years as he sold his family farm in Fermanagh to set up a brand new dairy in the American state of South Dakota. Today he milks 1500 cows three times a day, employs a staff of over 20 and produces more milk in a day than he made in a year when he first started milking cows in 1981. Like many emigrants, since moving to South Dakota Rodney has become curious about his family history. His own children have embraced the all-american life and he wants them to understand where they came from and what sort of people they are descended from. He wants them to appreciate their farming heritage and to realise that the type of farm he runs today is 6

radically different to the farm he inherited in Northern Ireland in the 1980s, which is in turn very different to the way his grandfather farmed the land in the years after the second world war. In the first programme Rodney arrives back in Fermanagh to the farm he grew up on, now owned by his sister and her husband. He knows very little of his family s history beyond the fact that his grandfather bought the farm at Drumgoon in 1946 at a time when farming was at a crossroads. With the help of his family and his father s old farm accounts books Rodney begins to piece together the story of how farming has changed since the Elliotts first arrived at Drumgoon. A visit to Brookeborough farmer Leonard Percival, who still uses horses on his farm, is a step back in time to the days when a farmer, his wife and children did all the farm work themselves. They kept a wide range of livestock: chickens, a few cows, sheep and pigs as well as growing their own crops. It was a time when horses were a farmer s best friend and most cherished asset; a way of life that started to change when tractors replaced horses and the Government forced farmers to rationalise and specialise. Rodney s own beginnings in farming came at a momentous time for the industry in the early 80s. The future looked rosy for a young man with big ambitions. The 1990s and BSE changed all that. Farming went into a spiral of decline that eventually led to Rodney s decision to leave Northern Ireland for good. Rodney Elliot pictured on one of the antique tractors Weaving archive film from the 1940s through to the 1970s alongside Rodney s own journey of discovery, this programme tells the story of how farming went from small subsistence farms to enormous agribusinesses like Rodney s in South Dakota. Rodney has always been intrigued by why his grandfather, a chemist, gave up his career in Dublin to take up farming in middle age. In programme two he sets about finding out more about the Elliotts and their connection to the land. His search leads him to do a bit of digging in the County archives. With the help of a genealogist, an historian and a member of the aristocracy he pieces together not only the story of his own family but of the house he grew up in, Drumgoon Manor. The second world war led to an dramatic change in farming. In the two centuries before that it had hardly evolved at all, but as Rodney discovers, war, depression, famine and landownership shaped his family s history and that of all tenant farmers across Ireland. Drumgoon Manor may have only been in the Elliott family for a couple of generations but the story of those who came before them reveals the changing nature of land use, and land ownership. Rodney Elliott has proved to be a compelling and popular figure for BBC Northern Ireland s audience. This two part documentary reveals Rodney s farming and personal roots, a story that will strike a chord with any of us who have ever contemplated our own heritage. 7

Highlights of Magee v Bute BBC Sport NI will have highlights of Brian Magee s clash against Lucian Bute Boxing Special, Sunday, March 20, BBC One NI, 10.45pm Boxer, Brian Magee Brian Magee s clash with undefeated IBF super-middleweight champion Lucian Bute takes place in Montreal, Canada on 19 March and BBC Sport NI will show highlights from the fight the following night. Starting at 10.45pm on BBC One NI Stephen Watson introduces the action from the Bell Centre in Montreal, Canada. John Duddy joins Stephen at ringside to comment on the action as Belfast man Magee takes on Romanian born Bute in Magee s first fight outside Europe. Thirty one year old Bute has a 100% record, with 22 of his 27 wins coming by knock- Stephen Watson presents highlights from the Bell Centre, Montreal out, while Magee has lost three times in his 38-bout pro career. Jim Neilly will be on commentary for BBC NI s highlights package. Boxing Special, Sunday, March 20, BBC One NI, 10.45pm 8