The Catholic Falls and the Loyalist Shankill neighborhoods are the sites of most of the city's murals and the iconographies are identifiably different. Loyalist murals tend to be recognizably militaristic, including weapons, men in black hoods, and emblems of power such as badges or shields. Murals we saw on the Falls tended to represent symbols of oppression and/or liberation including this one of Frederick Douglass who is also quoted:
"Perhaps no class has carried prejudice against color to a point more dangerous than have the Irish and yet no people have been more relentlessly oppressed on account of race and religion."