In 2006, they joined four other female Nobel laureates to found the Nobel Women’s Initiative, promoting peace, women’s rights and other causes. A reported 25,000 people made it to Woodvale Park, Belfast for the rally but it was not only the size of the rally, but the geography, which made it historic.

A counter rally was organised but it was overwhelmed by the sheer number of people chanting for peace.These threats did nothing to hinder the work of Williams and Corrigan, however, and the next rally, organised for 28 August, was an even bigger success. Sinister threats were scrawled on gable walls and on roadways and an arson attempt at Williams’ home was foiled when a group of local men ‘chased off a group of youths who were standing outside the house carrying petrol bombs.’The rally on 14 August attracted an estimated 2000 people – mainly women. She kept up her local peace work with admirable strength.In 1976, three innocent children were killed in a shooting incident in Belfast. Januar 1944 in Belfast, Nordirland) ist die Mitbegründerin der bisher einflussreichsten Friedensbewegung Nordirlands, der Community … Deutsch Wikipedia. Betty Williams — (geborene Elisabeth Smyth; * 22. On Saturday at the rally she ‘sought her out and stood beside her.’ From that week on, the two women organised together. In: Michael Neumann. Beltz & Gelberg. Noch im selben Jahr 1976 erhielten Betty Williams und Mairead Corrigan für ihre Arbeit den Friedensnobelpreis - die erste in einer langen Reihen von Auszeichnungen. — participants in the first Peace Women march in Belfast were assaulted, accused of collaborating with the British — but the momentum behind the movement ebbed, and there were disagreements among the three leaders over strategy and funding.

Corrigan’s sister committed suicide in 1980 and in September 1981 she married her late sister’s widower, Jackie Maguire. Elizabeth Williams (née Smyth; 22 May 1943 – 17 March 2020) was a peace activist from Northern Ireland. Betty was joined by the dead children's aunt, Mairead Corrigan, and together they founded the peace organization the Community of Peace People.Betty Williams had a Protestant father and Catholic mother, a family background from which she derived religious tolerance and a breadth of vision that motivated her to work for peace. https://www.thefamouspeople.com/profiles/mairead-maguire-7002.php 1992. Woodbury. Kerner, Charlotte.

Mairead Corrigan and Betty Williams: Making Peace in Northern Ireland.

Mairead Corrigan and Betty Williams Modern Peacemakers: Amazon.de: Susan Muaddi Darraj: Bücher Betty Williams, right, with Mairead Corrigan in Oslo, Norway, in 1976 after receiving the Norwegian People’s Peace Prize for founding a peace movement in Northern Ireland.

Betty was joined by the dead children's aunt, Mairead Corrigan, and together they founded the peace organization the Community of Peace People. Doch den Nobelpreis erhält man, so Williams, nicht für das, was man schon gemacht hat, sondern für das, was man machen wird. But there was no civic reception organized for them, and they even had to submit to searches at security barriers in the street.”In her acceptance speech, Ms. Williams said that “the deaths of those four young people in one terrible moment of violence caused that frustration to explode, and create the possibility of a real peace movement.”There were no such public declarations, however, after Ms. Williams and Ms. Corrigan returned to Belfast, and the Troubles, from the Nobel ceremony, greeted by what was said to be a disappointing crowd of only about 2,500 people.

Holl, Karl.

The Feminist Press. Deutsch, Richard. The gunman had himself just been shot, fatally, by pursuing British soldiers.The dispatch continued: “For a while there were kisses and hugs as the two women walked Belfast’s main street.