In 1981, as a visiting priest assisting the formally appointed chaplain in the
Maze Prison Faul was seen to play a critical role in ending a republican
hunger strike. Faul had understanding for
Bobby Sands and those of his fellow republican prisoners who joined him in refusing food.They came from a very oppressed class of people who suffered ferocious discrimination, and the burning our in the
Falls Road in August '69 was a very big thing with them ... They felt that their people were defenceless and they had to do something about it. .... There was internment first of all, ill-treatment, torture, sensory deprivation techniques ... and that didn't end until '79. They felt they were representing their people in all of that.With a sense of that "these men were beating us at our own game", as a priest he also appreciated, within a faith that worshipped a "
crucified criminal" and gloried in the "passions of the
martyrs", the emotive power of the prisoners decision to starve themselves. After some hesitation, Faul concluded that the hunger strike was not "a valid political protest". It was not a negotiating lever to win the restoration of
Special Category Status for republican prisoners. Rather, for the Provisional leadership, it was "about drawing attention to death and big funerals" in the hope of maximising
Sinn Féin's electoral gains. Persuaded that a previous hunger strike had been 24 – 48 hours from a British capitulation, Sands, had been "conned by his own crowd". After he and three other men had died in May 1981, and the "Brits" had conceded to one of the demands, that in recognition of their special status republican prisoners be allowed to wear their own clothes, Faul regarded Sinn Féin as being "gravely at fault":They were having a good time, Sinn Féin. The money was rolling in, political support was building up. They were getting members elected to the
Dáil. They had the big funeral for Sands. They were having a great time politically. They could feel it building up and they had a
by-election coming up in
Fermanagh/South Tyrone, They wouldn't stop it.In Paris at the beginning of July, Faul, together with
Kieran Doherty's mother Margaret, tried to persuade the French government to intervene and pressure the British to make concessions. Following the death of fifth striker,
Joe McDonnell, on July 8, Faul returned to Ireland and organised a meeting of prisoners' relatives. He argued that
Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher had shown she would not be moved, and the families agreed with Faul to meet with
Gerry Adams in the hope of finding a way to end the protest. Adams, however, was to report that the remaining strikers rejected the terms on offer from the British government as a betrayal of those who had already sacrificed their lives. After four further deaths, Faul persuaded the next of kin to take their men off the strike when they became unconscious. By 6 September, six men had been moved to the hospital wings where they could be fed, and the four final holdouts agreed to end their protest on 3 October. In 1993, Faul described his role in the hunger strikes for a BBC "Timewatch" documentary. == At odds with republican and nationalist leadership ==