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On March 26, 2001, The Belfast Telegraph published the following
letter on its editorial page. The image of the phoenix in the letter also
inspired the poem "The Righteous Man." The Editors The Belfast Telegraph 124-144 Royal Avenue Belfast BT1 1EB Northern Ireland, United Kingdom Dear Friends: As a friend and admirer of Oversight Commissioner Tom Constantine and the descendant of a member of the Royal Irish Constabulary who was so proud of his affiliation that it is inscribed on his gravestone in County Waterford, I have taken a keen interest in the progress of the implementation of the Patten Reforms. The Royal Ulster Constabulary is the descendant of my great-grandfather's old outfit so I care about what happens to it and I'm not happy about the role that politics have imposed on it in your society any more than my great grandfather was about what politics turned the RIC into in the late 19th and early 20th Centuries. I have been fortunate; I've lived all my life in communities where the police were not dragged into such entanglements -- entanglements that drove a wedge between them and those in the community who most need to be able to trust them. Much as I would like to be, I am not there with Professor Constantine overseeing and certifying the reform. But I would like to offer, as a small contribution, my suggestion on how to bury one of the bones of contention. The Police Service of Northern Ireland needs a new emblem -- one that is not associated with the past. Let me commend to you the Phoenix, the magical bird that arises reborn out of the ashes of the conflagration. Yours truly, TERRY O'NEILL
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