Andy Pollak is a journalist, editor, writer and commentator focusing on cross-border cooperation in Ireland. He led the Centre for Cross Border Studies, and served on the board of the Glencree Centre for Peace and Reconciliation.
Pollak was born in Ballymena, County Antrim, and largely brought up in London. His father, a Czech citizen of German-speaking Jewish descent, lost his editor's job and was forced to flee Czechoslovakia after the Communist takeover in 1948. His 1951 book, Strange Land Behind Me, tells the story of his 11 years between being badly wounded fighting for the International Brigades in the Spanish Civil War in 1937, through adventures and imprisonment in the Balkans and India, to his escape from Prague. Pollak's mother, Eileen Gaston, from Ballymena, had gone to Prague to teach English after the Second World War.[1] [2] He received a history degree from the University of Sussex in 1969.
After graduation, Pollak spent some time travelling and working in England, France, Canada and Latin America. He returned to Ireland in 1972, and worked for a period with Hibernia magazine and then as a sub-editor with The Irish Times. He continued to work as a journalist in Dublin, London and Mexico City. In Belfast he worked for BBC Northern Ireland as a reporter (1978–1980), the Irish Times as a reporter (1981–1985) and as editor of the Belfast cultural and political magazine, Fortnight (1981–1985). In 1986 he co-authored (with Ed Moloney) a biography of DUP leader Rev. Ian Paisley.
In 1992–1993 he was coordinator of the Opsahl Commission (chaired by the Norwegian human rights lawyer Torkel Opsahl), an independent 'citizens inquiry' into ways forward for Northern Ireland.[3]
He was the founding director of the Centre for Cross Border Studies, with offices in Armagh and Dublin (1999–2013). Before that he was a Dublin reporter, religious affairs correspondent, education correspondent and assistant news editor with The Irish Times from 1986 to 1999.[3] He also contributes to the Irish Independent, Belfast Newsletter, The Belfast Telegraph and the Dublin Review of Books.
During his time as director of the Centre for Cross Border Studies, he also edited the Journal of Cross Border Studies in Ireland, and was secretary of Universities Ireland (the all-island university presidents' network) and the all-island Standing Conference on Teacher Education North and South (SCoTENS). He was a board member of the Glencree Centre for Peace and Reconciliation from 2014 to 2020. From 2016 to 2023 he was a board member of Places of Sanctuary Ireland, which works to welcome and integrate refugees, asylum-seekers and other vulnerable migrants.
A blogger, he publishes 2 Irelands Together, commenting on Northern Irish and cross border issues.[4]
In 2019 he co-authored, with the former Northern Ireland deputy first minister and deputy SDLP leader Seamus Mallon, 'Seamus Mallon: A Shared Home Place'.
Pollak is married to radio producer/presenter, voice coach, chair of Fishamble Theatre Company and Eurovision 1981 presenter Doireann Ní Bhriain. The couple have two daughters, Sorcha Pollak (Irish Times journalist and author of New to the Parish, about recent immigrants to Ireland) and Grainne Pollak (project manager of Safe to Create, which aims to provide safer working conditions for workers in the arts in Ireland).
Pollak is member of the managing committee of the Unitarian Church in Dublin.