Wilson has been credited with applying ideas of
Liberation Theology. In their concern for the poor and for the liberation of the oppressed, these comprise a
Christian theological approach that engages in
socio-economic analyses and endorses social and political activism. In
An End to the Silence (1985), Wilson embraced the "fresh thinking of liberation theology". Given the "low intellectual level of political and religious discussion" in Northern Ireland, he suggested that "the idea of the Christian religion or philosophy could be a liberating force" had been essentially foreign. Within the churches, the prevailing view remained that "forgiveness and love can only be exercised when a firm framework of law and order has been established by the state's military and police". It is unclear as to how far Wilson himself read in the work of those theologians who, in
Latin America, promoted the liberationist
"preferential option for the poor". His close friend and biographer (
Des Wilson: A Voice for the Poor and Oppressed) Wilson, however, did refer to the Latin American experience. He was moved, for example, to juxtapose
Archbishop Óscar Romero of El Salvador, an icon for liberationists following his assassination in 1980, to
Mother Theresa. Wilson had personally hosted Mother Theresa in 1972 and, until she withdrew them in 1975 under pressure, he believed, from his church superiors, had supported the continuing presence of her
Missionaries of Charity from
Kolkata. Nonetheless, he remarked:We could see the difference between the two people. Mother Theresa was content to pick up the sad pieces left by vicious political and economic system and got she
Nobel Prize while Romero, who attacked the causes of misery as well as picking up the pieces, was shot in the head.Wilson also claimed that, in "refusing to condemn those Christians who took arms in their struggle for justice", he followed the example of Brazilian archbishop
Hélder Câmara. Wilson maintained that the right of oppressed and disadvantaged communities to create institutional alternatives (alternative education, welfare, theatre, broadcasting, "theological and political discussion, public inquiries and much else”) extended to “alternative police and alternative armies”. He claimed that what the British government was doing in Northern Ireland was "unjust, vicious and degrading", and there was "no way out of this impasse except by some kind of force": He might hope for some kind of non-violent direct action but he could not condemn those who choose something more radical. but refused invitations to condemn the IRA or other paramilitary groups active in Northern Ireland. Condemnation, he argued, does not advance the practical task of the pacifist: to "do whatever is possible to prevent war happening, try to lessen its impact while it is going on, [and] try to stop it". Condemning one party, particularly that which challenges a government that has the resources to make peace if it wants to, is "an intellectually lazy way to assert one's own respectability while changing nothing". Wilson did not believe that Catholic moral teaching "forbade people to fight against a bad government that would not be reformed". What was needed in a Church, that was not itself pacifist (as a schoolchild he recalls being taught to revere
General Franco as a soldier of Christ), was a new "theology of pacifism". This would have to do more than simply satisfy the needs of "an oppressive government or of people seeking undemanding respectability". But the "reality" remained:we have a small group of men driven to take up arms against their oppressors. It doesn't matter if you are talking about the
I.R.A., the
U.D.A., or anybody else. If you get close enough to these men you discover they are the type who wouldn't have taken up arms unless they were driven to it, unlike the soldiers taking up arms as a professions, or the politicians who use violence to further their own political ends.In the mid-1970s, Wilson did "get close" to two leading West Belfast loyalists: UDA spokesman
Sammy Smyth, who as community worker had participated in a number of cross-community, and cross-border, projects and events; and
John McKeague, a founding member of the
Red Hand Commando who, in prison, had mounted a hunger strike to protest the
Special Powers Act. According to Wilson, in 1979, both loyalists had joined a Protestant delegation to
Tomás Cardinal Ó Fiaich to assure him that should the Pope extend his visit to Ireland by crossing the border to the cathedral city of
Armagh, he would "not only be left alone but would be treated with respect". Costello, a leader of the
Irish Republican Socialist Party and of INLA, its armed wing, was assassinated in October purportedly by a member of the
Official IRA from which he had originally split. For
Sinn Féin, and reputed PIRA, leader
Gerry Adams (at whose wedding he had officiated) Wilson expressed "tremendous respect". Adams he regarded as "one of the very few people who could actually bring a military campaign into a political campaign".
Support for Sinn Féin In the 1980s, defying the bishops' proscription of Sinn Féin, Wilson defended the right of "practising faithful Catholics" at the ballot box to "vote that their government should be disciplined by the vote if possible and by force of arms if necessary". That the force of arms proved necessary is a position Wilson maintained publicly. Speaking in 2004, at the funeral of
Joe Cahill, Wilson explained that this had been the lesson the former PIRA Chief of Staff, and "the people of his tradition", had been taught by "a one-way history of horrors". Their virtue (Cahill was key supporter of the Adams-
McGuinness political strategy) was to recognise that, although not to be avoided, war should be "stopped at the earliest possible moment." While criticising the actions of the security forces and blaming the state for creating the conditions for war, Wilson did not himself hazard a defence of actual PIRA operations. He did not seek to explain how campaigns of assassination and of lethal bombings advanced "a fight against bad government". Nonetheless, together with his dissent from the Church on "divorce, the papacy and education", Wilson's in-principle acceptance of "the armed struggle" defined him for Sinn Féin's
Danny Morrison as "a priest of the people" (
An Phoblacht 22 April 1982). There was not the same embrace for fathers
Denis Faul or
Pat Buckley who, despite themselves highlighting the same injustices the republicans cited in their defence, condemned their violence, including the sacrifice of life in the
1981 hunger strike. == Mediator ==