WHEN I DROPPED OUT of Queen's University to join the Belfast
Community Circus, I wasn't being rebellious, I was accepting a
different assignment.
It was October '89 and I had been in Belfast for a month as a junior
year abroad student, when I walked out of the Student Union to see a
small sign posted on a tree advertising a circus workshop at a nearby
church. Ignoring the time and my Irish literature class, I headed over
to the church hall where I opened the door to a roomful of kids walking
on stilts, trying to juggle, spinning plates, and tossing diabolos.
I told the long-haired Australian man in charge that I had been in a
children's circus club in Virginia. Mike welcomed me in, took me around
to meet some of the kids and explained what the Belfast Community
Circus was all about.