Monday, 28 April 2025

Pockets of Unity


In these darkest of times
We release the same heartbeats
In every breath there lies a song 
I believe in a common  purpose
Capitalism is the enemy
The poor are punished 
And the rich are rewarded
May our diversity unite us
Create a richer tapestry
Remember Black lives matter
Palestinian lives matter 
Womens' rights matter
Lbtqi+ rights matter
No human is illegal
No hierarchies of power 
There is no master race
Lets bow to mother nature 
War is hate, Love is love 
It’s hard to fathom sometimes
That some forget tenderness 
The riptide that washes away pain
Share the kindness of solidarity 
Stand against hate and inequality 
Pierce the walls that divide us
Giving love, without demand
On a raft of dreams filled with hope
Rowing along with magical dream
The final frontier of hunanity fails 
When hatred takes us over  
So never ever discriminate
Release your innate goodness
Sowing justice, uprooting division 
A harmony that stirs souls to life, 
An unspoken truth that feels right
In a unsettling strange world
Amidst an attic of nightmares
We can rebuild the world
Rediscover beautiful coexistence 
TillIing the ground, with might
Don't be afraid to be different
In the shadows of emotion 
Keep on plantings seeds . 
Find beauty in simplicity 
Be resilient like a flower
Beyond melancholic forces 
The clouding puzzles of life
Allow peace to grow strong
Let go of puddled emotions 
Fill your soul with Dhikr.
In the stillness of night
May you be filled with peace
Allow dark thoughts that pour
To dissiipate and fade forever
Find the gift of someones smile
The twinkling eyes of peace
Step forward with time 
With pulsating perspiration
Destroy the darkness
The plethora of fear
Like a beacon,,a torch aglow
Brimming with passion 
Beyond shadows mischief
Love with every heartbeat.

Friday, 25 April 2025

Remembering Polish-Jewish painter, printmaker and revolutionary Jankel Adler (26 July 1895 – 25 April 1949)


Polish-Jewish avant  garde painter, printmaker and revolutionary, graphic artist Jankel Adler was born into a large orthodox Jewish family on 26 July  1895 in Tuszyn, near Łódź, Congress Kingdom of Poland, then client state of the Russian Empire (now Poland).  and was the seventh in a family of ten children. 
He studied engraving in Belgrade in 1912, then art in Barmen and Düsseldorf until 1914. During the First World War he was conscripted into the Russian army but returned to Poland in 1918, becoming a founder-member of Young Yiddish, a Łódź-based group of painters and writers dedicated to the expression of their Jewish identity, the first of the many avant-garde artistic groups with which he would be associated. In 1920 he moved to Germany, meeting Marc Chagall in Berlin, then returned briefly to Barmen, before settling two years later in Düsseldorf, where he joined the Young Rhineland circle, became friendly with Otto Dix and helped found the International Exhibition of revolutionary artists in Berlin. 
In the 1920s he joined the activities of left-wing avant-garde groups in Düsseldorf, Cologne, and Berlin. His intense engagement with wall painting during this period influenced his painting technique, which involved scratching patterns into a mixture of oil paint and sand.  
In 1925 Adler's Planetarium frescos were well received and he exhibited widely. Six years later, in 1931, as a Professor at the Düsseldorf Academy, he formed an important friendship with Paul Klee, who had a profound influence on his style.

Jankel Adler  The Artist (1927).


During the 1920s and the early 1930s, his individual artistic manner crystallized, organically combining elements of cubism, primitivism, expressionism, and "Neue Sachlichkeit." At the same time, he often incorporated images of Jews, Jewish inscriptions, and kabbalistic symbols into his compositions by making use of the cards of the mezuzah and fragments of prayers.
Sabbath was made in 1927/28 during the artist's brief period of success in Düsseldorf. At that time he was at the center of a small Jewish art community that probably included Düsseldorf lawyer Joseph Gottlieb. 

Jankel Adler Sabbath, 1927-28


Jankel Adler - The cat breeder, 1925J


 Adler’s political stance could be described as a kind of anarchist communism, from which nothing was further than submission to a Leninist party discipline that was already dominating the KPD the major far-left political party in the Weimar Republic at that time. And before the Reichstag elections in March 1933, he joined fellow  leftist artists and intellectuals, in signing an Urgent Appeal against the rise of fascism and for communism.
His life turned dramatically with Hitler’s rise to power. As a modern artist, a member of radical  groups and especially as a Jew, he faced persecution under Hitler's regime which took power in 1933. In that year, two of his pictures were displayed by the Nazis at the Mannheimer Arts Center as examples of degenerate art, and Adler left Germany, staying in Paris where he regarded his exile consciously as political resistance against the fascist regime in Germany. 
In the years that followed, he made numerous journeys to Poland, Italy, Yugoslavia, Czechoslovakia, Romania and the Soviet Union. He also spent time in Paris, working at Atelier 17. In 1934 his work was included in the Exhibition of German-Jewish Artists' Work Painting - Sculpture - Architecture , mounted by German refugee art dealer, Carl Braunschweig at the Parsons Gallery, Oxford Street (5-15 June 1934), organised in response to such Nazi discrimination. 
The  Nazis seized 25 of his works from public collections two of his works were displayed at the Mannheimer Arts Center as examples of degenerate art in 1933. nd a number were displayed in the infamous Entartete Kunst (Degenerate Art) exhibition, mounted by the Nazis in Munich in 1937.
 In the same year, he worked with the printmaker Stanley William Hayter at the experimental workshop Atelier 17 in Paris, also meeting Picasso, who became the second major influence upon his style.     
In 1939,at the age of 45, his long abhorrence of Nazi aggression saw him join the  Polish free Army  which was assembled in France in early 1940, and with them fled the advancing German troops via the Brittany port of St. Nazaire. He arrived in Scotland, penniless and in poor health, and after a brief time in a camp, was discharged soon afterwards. 
He found temporary accommodation with a minister in Coatbridge in North Lanarkshire, about 10 miles east of Glasgow, moving shortly afterwards to the famous port city on the River Clyde, known for its rich industrial and shipbuilding heritage, where he remained until the summer of 1942. 
Once again, he faced the uncertain task of attempting to rebuild his life, career and reputation in a foreign land, this time in a country where he was completely unknown. Adler,  thoughby now an experienced refugee, was nothing if not resilient, and upon arrival set to work with such 'a furious determination',that in the short time remaining to him, he not only completed a large body of new work, but also established himself as a painter of reputation and influence in his third and final host country. and in  Glasgow,  he became  one of a number of other influential refugees escaping Fascist oppression. who enhanced the artistic life of the city. 
He exhibited his work at the New Art Club, established by J D Fergusson and was associated with the Scott Street Art Centre established by David Archer as a meeting place and resource centre.
 rejection of figurative manner and transition to symbolic abstraction. 
A number of his works created in this period treated "Jewish themes" and reflect his understanding of the Holocaust (as in Two Rabbis, 1942; Museum of Modern Art, New York). 


Adler's resilience and creativity found new life in Britain, where he became a key figure in the émigré artistic community. In Glasgow he was befriended by Estonian-Jewish émigré sculptor Benno Schotz, through whom he renewed his friendship with Josef Herman, a fellow Polish artist who had moved to Glasgow in 1940. ‘It was with Jankel that I could share my more intimate fears’, Herman recalled later with gratitude. ‘These were years of fears. Both of us were Yiddish-speaking, we were both from Poland, hence we could look into each other’s faces with understanding. In the company of others we were a conspiracy of two.
Kindred spirits, they supported each other emotionally, Herman’s presence in Glasgow undoubtedly helped Adler recover his strength and resume activity as an artist.and they  became two of the most influential members of the Glasgow New Art club, founded by J. D. Fergusson 
Adler arrived at a powerful and eloquent final phase in his career. The undertow of tragedy running through these images must have intensified in 1942 when Herman was told, by the Red Cross, that his entire family had been exterminated by the Nazis in the Warsaw Ghetto. 
Herman suffered a total breakdown and, according to his future wife Nini, ‘Jankel Adler stepped in and nursed Josef through those weeks with maternal tenderness. Was it perhaps to heal them both.
Jankel Adler's 'Orphans' 1941 is a poignant painting which shows Adler and his friend  Josef Herman. 
Adler gifted the work to Herman, who kept it all his life. 


The Estonian-born Jewish sculptor Benno Schotz organised a private exhibition of Adler's work in his own studio in 1941 and Adler also exhibited 24 works at Annans' Gallery in June the same year.
The Mutilated was painted in London  in  1942 during heavy bombing and reflected, he said, his admiration for "the behaviour of Londoners under great stress and suffering, only then could humanity be seen at its best".


 In October 1942 Adler contributed a short article 'Memories of Paul Klee' to Cyril Connolly's Horizon and in December of the same year, Schotz and Herman organised an exhibition of Jewish Art at the Jewish Institute, South Portland Street, in the Gorbals, Glasgow. This included work by Adler, alongside both British Jewish artists including David Bomberg and continental European Jewish artists, many associated with the Ecole de Paris, including Chagall, Modigliani and Soutine, as well as by the curators themselves.    
In 1942 Adler also stayed briefly in the artists' colony in Kirkcudbright in South West Scotland, in order to prepare for his upcoming solo exhibition at the Redfern Gallery in Cork Street, London (June-July 1943), organised by German émigrée art dealer Erica Brausen and with a catalogue introduction by the influential art historian and critic Herbert Read. 
After moving to London, in 1943 he applied for British citizenship, hoping to bring his daughter and mother to live with him, but his application was rejected. Adler shared a house with 'the two Roberts', the painters Colquhoun and MacBryde, whose style he greatly influenced, and their wider circle. 

 Jankel Adler still life 1943


Painted in 1943 during the Second World War, Beginning of the Revolt is an essentially tragic and anarchic view of the human condition that closely relates to No Man's Land of the same year in the collection of the Tate Gallery, London. 

Jankel Adler No Man's Land 


Underpinning Adler’s painting Beginning of the Revolt  is an intensely organized structure and carefully composed response to the turmoil of his time. Here, a raven, symbol of death and sadness, has come to roost among the amputated, mutilated branches of a rootless, dead tree. 
Where there was previously life there is now desolation. The muted palette heightens the ghostly bleakness of the scene, conveying a sense of silent despair.  
The title of the painting, however, suggest resilience and revolt– despair and desolation will not lead to defeat. Death will lead to rebirth and new beginnings.

Jankel Adler Beginning of the Revolt 


In 1944 he participated in a group show in German émigré Jack Bilbo's Modern Art Gallery and also had two solo exhibitions at Gimpel Fils, Studies in Tempera for Kafka's Works by Jankel Adler with Watercolours and Drawings, in spring 1947, followed by a second show in 1948. In the same year, An Artist Seen from One of Many Possible Angles, with illustrations by Adler, was the first publication from Polish-born Francziska and Stefan Themerson's avant-garde Gabberbochus Press.
It was only after the war, in 1945, that he learned bitterly that all eleven of his siblings had been killed by the fascists. In 1945 the collector James (Jimmy) Bomford lent Adler Whitley Cottage, situated on his farm at Aldbourne, near Malborough, in Wiltshire, where the artist spent his final years.
It was there on 25 April 1949 - a day after hearing of the rejection of his application for naturalisation, probably because  had described himself as an ‘anarchist’  and depressed  and frustrated by the process that  at he suffered a heart attack and died  in poverty aged only 53. 
The Marlborough Times reported that ‘he had endeared himself to quite a few who came to know him,and were impressed by his genial disposition and gentle character’. He was buried in the Jewish cemetery in Bushey, Herts, but his memory lives on. and like all great artists his vision is unique and instantly recognisable.While his achievements during his life deserve full recognition.  
Extensive materials relating to his time in Britain are held in the archives of the National Galleries of Scotland, as well as the Tate Archive. His work is held in UK collections including Aberdeen Art Gallery, Glasgow Museums Resource Centre, Pallant House Gallery, Swindon Museum and Art Gallery and Tate Britain, as well as in international collections in Australia, Germany, Israel and the USA. 

Two Figures, 1944, by Jankel Adler 


Monday, 21 April 2025

Starmer's Crocodile Tears for Pope Francis


.Pope Francis, the reform-minded Roman Catholic leader whose papacy marked a number of firsts, has died at 88 the Vatican announced on Easter Monday. 
 “Dearest brothers and sisters, with deep sorrow I must announce the death of our Holy Father Francis. At 7:35 this morning, the Bishop of Rome, Francis, returned to the house of the Father,” Cardinal Kevin Farrell, Camerlengo of the Apostolic Chamber, said in a statement.  The pontiff had been diminished by a series of health issues in recent years and was using a wheelchair for some of his recent public appearances. In February 2025, he was hospitalized with severe bronchitis and pneumonia in both lungs. 
While I have detached from religion decades ago I still appreciate what it means to those who believe. Pope Francis death today is sad news  amd it’s incredibly symbolic that the Pope passed away  just the day after Easter,  the holiest celebration of resurrection and new life.
Francis  Francis, who was born Jorge Mario Bergoglio in Argentina, and was the first Jesuit pope and the first native of Latin America,  whose  liberal views marked a noticeable break from more conservative predecessors 
Sir Keir Starmer has said he is "deeply saddened" to hear of the death of Pope Francis . 
The Prime Minister said he joins "millions around the world in grieving the death of His Holiness Pope Francis". 
He commended the Pope's leadership in a "complex and challenging time for the world and the church", describing it as "often courageous" yet always coming "from a place of deep humility".  He said: "His tireless efforts to promote a world that is fairer for all will leave a lasting legacy. On behalf of the people of the United Kingdom, I share my sincerest condolences to the whole Catholic Church."  
Starmer said Pope Francis was a "pope for the poor, the downtrodden and the forgotten", adding: "He was close to the realities of human fragility, meeting Christians around the world facing war, famine, persecution and poverty. Yet he never lost the faith-fuelled hope of a better world."
Starmer continued: "That hope was at the heart of his papacy. His determination to visibly live out his faith inspired people across the world to see afresh the church's teachings of mercy and charity. With his death, we are reminded once more of his call to care for one another across different faiths, backgrounds, nations and beliefs."
The hypocrisy of Starmer offering this condolences re Pope Francis is astounding,  releasing crocodile tears. A man who proudly declared his atheism suddenly claims to be “grieving” alongside “millions around the world” for a pontiff whose spiritual leadership he doesn’t even subscribe to. Pope Francis stood for the exact opposite of everything Starmer represents.
I am not religious but Pope Francis's legacy is one of peace and the futility of war, a man steantsdfast in his support for Palestinians.A truly global leader  who spoke to and for the dispossessed,  and those long ignored by the Catholic Church.with humility and courage .From a completely irreligious standpoint, he brought a humanity and empathy to the papacy that was much needed.
Born Jorge Mario Bergoglio in Buenos Aires to Italian immigrants, his election in March 2013 was historic on many fronts: he became the first Latin American pope, the first Jesuit, and the first to take the name Francis, a deliberate homage to St Francis of Assisi, the saint of humility, peace, and care for the poor. His choice of name was an early signal of the kind of papacy he intended to lead: stripped-back, compassionate, and radical in tone.
He spent his papacy championing the downtrodden. Whether it was washing the feet of Muslim refugees, standing in solidarity with victims of clerical abuse, or urging the world to confront environmental and economic injustice, Francis embodied the Gospel’s call to compassion.
Pope Francis was unafraid to wade into politics, publicly feuding with United States President Donald Trump over immigration and rebuking U.S. Vice President JD Vance, a Catholic convert, over apparently instrumentalizing a theological point for migration policy.
He made climate a moral issue.  “The Earth… looks more and more like an immense pile of filth.”  Not metaphor. A wake-up call.  He framed pollution as sin— and Earth care as sacred.
He ripped economic injustice to shreds. “Markets shape destinies instead of serving needs.”  He didn’t just defend the poor. He exposed the system.
A pontiff who broke tradition and described Israel as a terrorist entity and called for a ceasefire right up to his dying day. He had courage,compassion and  was thoughtful and generous.
His final message: a call for a Gaza ceasefire. “This is cruelty. This is not war,” he said after Israel killed 7 children in Jabalia. 
Pope Francis made nightly calls to Christians trapped tim Gaza. during Israel's genocidal campaign. He lamented the “death and destruction” taking place   and called Gaza’s suffering “a dramatic and deplorable humanitarian situation.” Even prior to this, he called it what it is — a slaughter, a terror, a betrayal of humanity. He spoke for the children bombed,the families destroyed and for the people of Palestine. 
As recently as January 2025, he called the situation in the Gaza Strip “very serious and shameful,” saying in remarks delivered by an aide: “We cannot in any way accept the bombing of civilians.” 
Humanity has lost a friend in the passing of Pope Francis,his death is terrible for the world's most marginal people.  I can't imagine the Catholic church allowing another Pope like this again, not for a long time. 
He was unique,,truly principled man of the people whose kindness and humanity transcended his faith. He stood up for the weakest against the people who tried to oppress them. and  promoted a world that was fairer.
In direct contrast Starmer is an unlikable, dour, duplicitous, thin-skinned, po-faced, sanctimonious, morally  void,  nauseating hypocrite, devoid of empathy or compassion, the antithesis of fairer. Who has stated Israel had the right to cut power and water in Palestine.Who continues to sell arms and give intelligence to a country committing a genocide. Who is now causing poverty, to the elderly, sick and disabled, through welfare cuts, Who has  torn all humanitarian thought and common decency from  the Labour Party .All  his words spew with insincerity.
The Pope was everything Starmer is not. Rest in peace, Pope Francis. May you  rot in hell Keir Starmer. Much love and solidarity to all  opposing genocide.❤️🙏🏻

Sunday, 20 April 2025

A Short History of the Hot Cross Bun .


Image: Emily Duffin

The hot cross bun, a cherished Easter symbol in the UK and worldwide, carries a tale woven through centuries, shrouded in mystique and tradition. While its origins remain clouded in history’s fog, it is said that the journey of the hot cross bun begins in the 14th century at St Albans Abbey. 
According to legend, Brother Thomas Rocliffe, a 14th-century monk, crafted the first spiced bun adorned with a cross to feed the poor on Good Friday, the end of Lent,  giving birth to a tradition that would endure for generations.
While there are  few written records or recipes, and the origins of the hot cross bun are uncertain, some maintain that we can trace its roots to the crossed bread that was made by the ancient Greeks, while ithers suggests that we might better look to the ancient Jewish custom of sharing unleavened bread (made without yeast) at Passover.
 Across many cultures ordinary bread has long been made special, often with the addition of dried fruits or other sweeteners, to mark important festivals.Think of the dried-fruit-studded Panettone at Christmas or the Easter Colomba bread from Italy.
Some historians maintain that the hot cross bun dates back to pre-Christian times when special currant bread was baked in honour of the Saxon goddess of spring  and fertility, Eostre. Eostre was a voluptuous blonde maiden, always depicted surrounded by little birds, bunnies and other baby animals, as well as spring flowers. https://teifidancer-teifidancer.blogspot.com/2021/04/the-pagan-roots-of-easter.html
As spring arrived, the pagans would celebrate a month long festival of the transitioning time from winter entering into spring. Cross Buns were baked for the spring festival to celebrate this Goddess. The four quarters of the cross on top of each bun were said to represent the phases of the moon, while the cross itself symbolised rebirth after winter.   
Eaten hot and perhaps dipped in a layer of honey, these sumptuous cakes were fitting for the hopefulness and abundance that comes with the change in seasons.  it is from these Eostre celebrations that we even get the word Easter, and perhaps along with the hot cross bun, the holiday’s association with eggs and the Easter Bunny,
When Christianity became Britain’s main religion, pagan ways were banished – including those of Eostre. Leaders of the Christian faith soon realised they could incorporate the celebrations of Eostre into their own religion, which also featured a celebration of their own at a similar time of year.
 Although the actual reasoning behind the Eostre celebrations wouldn’t be carried over to the Christian ways, the buns the pagans used were. The cross would now symbolise the cross Jesus was crucified upon, and not the four phases of the moon.The spices in hot cross buns are said to represent the spices that were used to embalm Christ after his death. Early Christians also believed the cross kept away evil spirits and helped the dough rise. 
Ancient Egyptians used small round breads topped with crosses to celebrate the gods. Later, Greeks and Romans offered similar sweetened rolls in tribute to Eos, the goddess of the morning, and to Eostre, the goddess of light, who lent her name to the Easter observances. The cross on top symbolized the horns of a sacrificial ox. The English word bun is a derivation of the Greek word for ceremonial cakes and breads, boun. 
In the Middle Ages, home bakers marked their loaves with crosses before baking. They believed the cross would ensure a successful bake, warding off the evil spirits that inhibit the bread from rising. This superstition gradually faded, except for marking Good Friday loaves and hot cross buns, only to be replaced by another one.
This time the loaves and buns were hung from the ceiling like sausages. It was believed that the bread would never mold and would provide protection against evil spirits and illness until the following Good Friday when the loaves and buns would be replaced. 
In the event of illness, a portion of bread could be removed from its string and crushed to a powder, which was incorporated into water for therapeutic effect. During the same period, Jews hung bread and a container of water from the ceiling to ward off cholera. They believed its power was so strong that one loaf in one house would protect the community. 
Spiced buns were banned when the English broke ties with the Catholic Church in the 16th century.People who disobeyed this law could be punished and sent to prison. However, by 1592, Queen Elizabeth I relented and granted permission for commercial bakers to produce the buns for funerals, Christmas, and Easter. They were considered sacred and confiscated from anyone caught baking them at home and then given to the poor.
By the 18th century, English street vendors sold “hot cross buns” on Good Friday. witnessing its rise to prominence in London’s food scene. This period saw the bun becoming a fixture of the capital’s culinary landscape, celebrated in nursery rhymes and literature, symbolising the city’s bustling street life and diverse culinary offerings. In Britain, people exchanged hot cross buns with friends on Good Friday and said, “Half for you and half for me, between us two good luck shall be”.
The hot cross bun’s fame was not confined to the British Isles; it spread across the globe, carried by the winds of colonialism and trade, adapting to new cultures and tastes.
Soon,some  people believed these Good Friday buns had magical powers. Some hung them from kitchen rafters, believing they would never go mouldy. They kept them for protection against evil or illness. If someone felt sick, they crumbled part of an old hot cross bun into water, hoping it would cure them. Others placed buns in their grain stores to keep pests away.  These beliefs might sound odd today, but they were part of daily life for many.  
Who doesn’t love Hot Cross buns? When you smell a fresh batch of these buns, you’re sharing an experience people enjoyed centuries ago. Ancient Egyptians, Greeks, Romans, Saxons, medieval monks and 18th-century street sellers all had their versions of spiced, crossed bread. Each group gave the buns its own meaning, from honouring   pagan gods to celebrating Christ’s crucifixion and resurrection.
Have  just  had  4 sweet and sticky dough buns, with lashings of butter, and  a few  chilly  flakes,very  filling and tasty.  Happy  Easter/ Pasg  Hapus.Spare a thought for those suffering in Palestine who are denied food, water and safe shelter 
There’s a school playground rhyme about Hot Cross Buns, sung while clapping in time to the rhythm of the words. A childhood favourite for generations. And it goes like this:

“Hot Cross Buns!  Hot Cross Buns!  One and penny, two a penny, 
Hot Cross Buns!  If you haven’t got a daughter,  give them to your sons. 
One a penny, two a penny Hot Cross Buns!”  

Excerpted from The Bread Baker’s Guild “Breadlines

Friday, 18 April 2025

A Good Friday reminder.

 

A Good Friday reminder, Keir Starmer said Israel was within its rights to deprive desperate Palestinians of food,water,and electricity. A heinous war crime. Now,this man,with as much substance as diahorrea,wishes Happy Easter but stays silent as Palestinian children burn to death. 
Wishing all else a great day, and a wonderful Easter weekend to everyone who celebrates. 
Remember Jesus born in the city of Bethlehem was a Palestinian revolutionary living under an oppressive Roman colonial rule, who was with the marginalized and the oppressed, the shunned and the ignored - was considered a threat because he taught us to love. Not to destroy, murder, mutilate and hate.
We as Muslims, Christians, or non-believers should learn from his justice and love for fairness. We should think that if he were alive today, he would stand with the Palestinian people against injustice, genocide,
Palestine may be occupied, but its spirit is free. The world may try to silence them, but the Palestinian voice echoes louder with every passing day.
Domestic and international public opinion irrefutably supports and stands in incontrovertible solidarity with Palestine. Yet another Easter that the zionists will spoil and desacrate just as they spoiled and desacrated many Ramadans.. We have been crying for Palestine for more than 500 days. The enemies of humanity will never be able to defeat us.
May this Easter bring you peace, joy, and the strength to continue striving for a more just and equitable world. and the promise of new beginnings and a free Palestine, from the rivers to the sea.
Israel’s apartheid will fall. From its ashes, a single state will rise, where all people live in dignity, as they did before 1948 Muslims Jews and  Christians living in peace. 
Blessings to you and your loved ones!

Tuesday, 15 April 2025

As Liverpool Marks 36 Years Since the Hillsborough Disaster That Killed 97 Fans, The Fight For Justice Contnues

 


April 15 will always remain one of the most sombre days in English football. On this day in 1989, 97 Liverpool  fans went to a game of football and tragically never came back. The terrrible events of that day at Hillsborough remain as heartbreaking now as they were 36 years ago. 
In  Liverpool today hundreds of people came together  earlier at the Hillsborough memorial at Anfield to mark the 36th anniversary of the Hillsborough disaster,  at 3.06  the time the FA Cup semi-final  with Nottingham Forest at Hillsborough, was halted, that touched so many lives and changed the face of English football forever. At  the  same time  the city's bells tolled 97 times.in tribute to each victim, fwhich  was followed by an instrumental version of ‘You’ll Never Walk Alone’. 
The remembrance was be led by the Lord Mayor of Liverpool Richard Kemp, who was be joined by Liam Robinson, leader of Liverpool Council.  Similar tributes took place on Sunday (13 April) before Liverpool’s Premier League fixture against West Ham United at Anfield, where both teams laid wreaths at the stadium’s Hillsborough Memorial.
Arne Slot and Virgil van Dijk were among those to lay wreaths at the Hillsborough Memorial outside Anfield, joined by the coaches and captains of Liverpool’s women’s, U21s and U18s teams. A period of silence was observed ahead of first-team training at the AXA Training Centre later in the day.  And clubs in the Premier League and beyond showed their support for the Hillsborough families and survivors while honouring the 97.  That saw many of Liverpool’s rivals, including Everton, Man United, Arsenal and Man City, all post tributes on X.
In the run-up and the immediate aftermath of the 3pm kick-off, a crush at the Leppings Lane end of the "neutral" stadium resulted in the worst ever disaster to befall a British sporting event. As well as those killed, hundreds more were injured while thousands suffered emotional and psychological trauma as a result of their experience. 
The families of the victims, who have campaigned tirelessly ever since, say the truth of what happened that day and crucially the role of senior officers within South Yorkshire Police has never been satisfactorily explained.  
Football was blighted by hooliganism in 1989 and this provided the main focus of the policing operation rather than the welfare and safety of the fans. The venue was a poor choice for the occasion. There was a well-known "bottleneck" at the Leppings Lane end caused by the slow old-fashioned turnstiles. Some 38 people had been injured in a crush at the ground in 1981.  
As the excited crowds built up close to kick-off, a senior officer radioed the match commander, Chief Superintendent David Duckenfield, who was overseeing his first major match, asking him to authorise the opening of the exit gates allowing fans to get into the ground without passing through the creaking turnstiles. He agreed. But by this time the number of people inside the "central pens" of the terrace was also beginning to mount dangerously. 
Crucially police did not steward the entering fans into the relatively empty side pens. Instead some 2,000 supporters eager to watch the match piled into the already crammed central area where a perimeter fence guarded against the threat of a pitch invasion.  
Incredibly, as people started to suffocate, the match got under way, and desperate pleas for help were drowned out by the excitement of the game. Fans attempting to climb the anti-hooligan fences were forced back by officers. Limited relief came only when the two narrow gates on to the perimeter track were opened. The game was abandoned after six minutes by which time fans were on the pitch, fashioning stretchers out of hoardings to transport the injured and dying towards medical help. But of the 42 ambulances that were summoned to the ground only three made it on to the pitch. Here paramedics faced chaotic scenes described by one as "bedlam"
Official medical cover that day was provided by St John Ambulance volunteers.  Few victims received even rudimentary help opening airways. Many of the injured were laid on their backs rather than in the recovery position. There were no doctors to confirm who was dead and who still had a chance of survival as the bodies were left in piles. Only 14 of those who died ever made it to hospital. The remainder were taken to the ground's gymnasium where they were photographed and the images shown to grieving relatives who were denied access to their loved ones.
.Lord Justice Taylor was appointed by Douglas Hurd to conduct a Home Office Inquiry into the disaster, the Inquiry opened on 15th May and made an interim report on 1st August 1989.  Taylor found that hooliganism played no part in the disaster. The real cause was the overcrowding and the failure of police control. The South Yorkshire police had been responsible for the match security at Hillsborough. He castigated senior officers of the South Yorkshire police and commented on the police orchestrated campaign against the Liverpool fans.  
The South Yorkshire Police had form when dealing with ordinary workers and miners during the 1984-85 Miners strike. The South Yorkshire Police really never accepted that their mismanagement of the game had been the primary cause of the disaster. There were numerous oversights and mistakes by Taylor including the failure to question the FA’s decision to use Hillsborough, the Sheffield’s club failure to sort the bottleneck that was Leppings Lane and the medical care administered at the ground in the immediate aftermath of the tragedy. However his main findings that the police were responsible were important.  The South Yorkshire Police settled some compensation claims for very low amounts and treated the matter as being closed.
Of the 97 people who died, 37 were teenagers, most still at school, many attending their first ever away football match supporting Liverpool. Seven of the dead were girls and women, including one mother, Inger Shah, whose children Becky and Daniel were teenagers at the time. Twenty-five were fathers; altogether, 58 people lost a parent in the disaster.
Many survivors still struggle to come to terms with the mental and physical wounds of the incident. It's so horrible  to think of going to a match and not returning, never mind it being covered up and being blamed for the tragedy as well. From the onset survivors of Hillsborough  spoke of how they were intimidated and threatened by  police and left feeling traumatised, accused of wasting police time because they did not like their evidence, because it did not fit into their versions of the event. 
The Police, the Conservative Government of the time, the Stadium management and the press, all  colluded to keep us from what actually happened at the tragedy that was Hillsborough, they were lied about, especially  by the police, the scum newspaper, the dead were vilified and labelled,  and demonised. Thatcher's Conservative Government created a culture of impunity, who needed a partisan police force, because they wanted to protect their own self interests Remember too, that 164 police officers lied, 14 of whom were awarded millions of pounds of compensation between them, the Hillsborough familres have not recieved a penny. Also since this terrible occasion some Police Officers were even  promoted to senior positions.
The propaganda pumped out in the first two years after the disaster coloured public opinion. The Scum newspapers ‘The Truth’ headline, falsely pointing the finger at Liverpool fans, set the tone. The coroner’s dismissive verdict was an official endorsement of the lies. The dead, their fellow supporters who tried to save them and the bereaved were dehumanised, demonised and dismissed with the complicity of the state, .the Police, the Conservative Government of the time, the Stadium management and the press,  all  of whom colluded to keep us from what actually happened at the tragedy that was Hillsborough.

 
 Kevin McKenzie editor of the Scum at the time , sanctimonious git supremeo, sanctioned the making up of 'quotes'  he then  repeated the same lies time and time and again, a pathetic , wretched individual who only made  half apologies in order to further his own self interests. Shame , shame, shame.  
Because of this, The S*n, as it is referred to in Liverpool, became an instant target. 36 years on and the paper remains unwelcome in the city, the effect of which has led to big supermarkets and small newsagents all over no longer stocking it. 
Remembrance is thus not only conducted as a vigil for the lives lost, nor the want for it to be rubber stamped in the history books. It is an inherently political act and one which seeks to build solidarity with campaigns fought on similar lines elsewhere. It  is crucial that there is accountability and transparency in public life. 36 years on it is only natural for people to pursue justice. 
97 lives unlawfully stolen. An innocent city vilified.Serving police officers colluded to cover up the truth about their colleagues unlawfully killing 97 innocent football fans..Abuse ongoing and neverending. The evil lying culprits free and clear. And still the brave souls who remain fight the fight for justice! 
Despite those who passed at Hillsborough being found to have been unlawfully killed, only one person has ever been successfully prosecuted relating to the disaster., the stadium safety officer, Graham Mackrell, was fined £6,500.  He failed to ensure there were enough turnstiles to prevent large crowds from building up outside the Leppings Lane end of the ground. There were just seven turnstiles open for over 10,000 supporters.
In 2019, former Chief Superintendent David Duckenfield, who ordered and subsequently lied about the opening of exit gate C – the gate opposite the tunnel to the overfilled pens – was found not guilty of manslaughter by gross negligence. 
Duckenfield, who was match commander at the fatal semi-final, was found to have been grossly negligent by the jury at the 2016 inquest. However, this wasn’t decided a criminal court case and, when he was prosecuted for gross negligence manslaughter, the 2019 jury acquitted him of criminal charges.  In addition, solicitor Peter Metcalf and retired police officers Donald Denton and Alan Foster were accused of altering police statements and helping to cover up police failings. 
Their trials collapsed on a technicality.  Conn explained: “Three police officers were charged with an offence called perverting the course of public justice, through a process of amending the statements of police officers after the disaster.
 I stand with families calling for a full Hillsborough Law to fix our broken justice system. A Hillsborough Law is a package of new laws that aims to ensure other bereaved families do not go through the same painful experiences as those who lost loved ones at the Hillsborough Stadium disaster, on April 15 1989 and who had to fight for years against the lies and obfuscation of the different organs of the state in their pursuit of justice. 
The bill is intended to include a statutory duty of candour on public servants, backed by criminal sanctions, to force them to tell the truth during all forms of public inquiry and criminal investigation.  The package also includes a provision for a parity of legal funding for ordinary people forced to take on large institutions following tragic events, so that bereaved families have access to public funding in the way that those who lost loved ones in Sheffield on that fateful day were not.  
Sir Keir Starmer has repeatedly promised - including twice in speeches at the Labour Party Conference in Liverpool - that his government, if elected, would bring in a Hillsborough Law in full. The bill was included in his new government's first King's Speech in July last year. The Prime Minister said the new legislation would be ready by April 15 this year, to time with the 36th anniversary of the disaster. That now will not happen.  This is because when those who have campaigned so hard for the Hillsborough Law saw the changes that had been made to the bill by government officials last month, they were appalled, with some of the key measures said to have been watered down to a point where the families and the campaigners could not support it.
Observers of Keir Starmer’s career as the Director of Public Prosecutions could be forgiven for holding suspicions of a man with his track record. From the police killings of Jean Charles de Menezes and Ian Tomlinson to the persecution of Julian Assange, Starmer’s history often shows him siding with powerful interests against victims of injustice. If the Hillsborough Law is abandoned, it will leave no ambiguity about the fact that it is those interests his government serves.
In Margaret Aspinal's  words  whose 18-year-old son James lost his life in the disaster,  a “watered down” version of the law would be “no use” and must be introduced “in all its entirety”.
Keir_Starmer do the right thing and follow through on your promise. It is the bare minimum families deserve.Imagine actually having to fight for a Law that requires the authorities to simply tell  the truth in any and all official investigations, inquests and inquiries.The Hillsborough Law must be passed in full. No compromises. No half-measures. The Government must do the right thing and pass a Hillsborough Law that is fit for purpose. 
Hillsborough's continued relevance has helped to expose other great historical injustices, even when people's capacity for shock regarding the behaviour of those charged with protecting society is diminishing.  From the hacking of a missing murdered schoolgirl's phone, to the surveillance of Stephen Lawrence's family, to the free rein that Jimmy Savile was afforded to abuse a seemingly endless list of vulnerable children, to Orgreave and the Shrewsbury pickets, questions remain about the conduct of some of those whose job it was to protect and serve.
On this raw emotional day my thoughts remain with the survivors and those affected by the tragedy as the city of Liverpool comes together to mark this sad occasion. Never forget the 97 and the  far  too  fight for justice. Today, I  am  also  reminded that the tragedy  of Hillsborough  transcends the boundaries of fandom and club loyalty, and irrespective of our rivalries, we are all human.
One of the most famous Hillsborough photographs was of Liverpool fan Dave Roland sitting alone in the stadium on the day of the tragedy. Dave sadly died of coronavirus in April 2020.


Here is a touching poem by Carol Ann Duffy about the Hillsborough disater.

Poem for the Hillsborough disaster - Carol Ann Duffy

The Cathedral bell, tolled, could never tell;

nor the Liver Birds, mute in their stone spell;

or the Mersey, though seagulls waild, cursed, overhead,

in no language for the slandered dead...

not the raw, red throat of the Kop, keening,

or the cops' words censored of meaning;

not the clock, slow handclapping the coroner's deadline,

or the memo to Thatcher, or the tabloid headline...

but fathers told of their daughters; the names of sons

on the lips of their mothers like prayers; lost ones

honoured for bitter years by orphan, cousin, wife-

not a matter of footbal, but of life.

Over this great city, light after dark;

truth, the sweet silver song of the lark.

Wednesday, 9 April 2025

Marking the 77th Anniversary of the Deir Yassin Massacre,

 

Today, as the world witnesses Israel's genocide in Gaza, we mark 77 years since Zionist forces committed the Deir Yasin massacre. The military and political developments that preceded and followed it made it a turning point in the 1948 Nakba, ( Catastrophe in Arabic) Israel’s project of ethnic cleansing in Palestine. and a symbol for Zionist plans to uproot and forcibly evict Palestinians from their towns and villages:
More than 750,000 Palestinians, about half of the Arab population  in Palestine at that time, were forced out of their homes and lands during the Nabka and saw Palestinian villages wiped off the map. in places like Yassin, Lydda, Tantura  by the hands of Zionist para-military groups like Haganah, that later formed the core of the Israeli Defense Force, Ergun and the Stern Gang. to establish the state of Israel. 
Events like  this  are at the core of the Palestinan peoples  national struggle. But in many ways, that experience pales in comparison to the calamity now unfolding in Gaza.  The 1948 founding of Israel was founded with the Nakba, a series of atrocities that ethnically cleansed Palestinians from their homeland. 
During Israel's "war of independence," Palestinians were driven from their homes, never to be allowed to return. Hundreds of towns were razed; villagers were massacred. Their very existence on the land was nearly wiped from history as Israel built new towns over the ruins.  This devastating event is given almost no attention in  history books or by the mainstream news media but is essential in understanding the ongoing violence in Israel-Palestine and the Middle East in general.  
On  the 9th  of April  1948 one month before the State of Israel was declared,. Commanders of  the Ergun (headed by future Israeli Prime Minister Menachem Begin,) and the Stern Gang attacked in the early hours of the morning Deir Yassin, a village at the western entrance of Jerusalem containing 750 Palestinian residents. 
By the time  the villagers realized the intensity of the terrorist attack, hundreds were already dead, the Zionist militia  murdered over 250 - 360 Palestinian villagers in cold blood mainly women, children and the elderly. and wounding  many others. Many of the bodies were tossed  in the village well,  and 159 captured women and children  were paraded  through the Jewish sectors of Jerusalem. Cases of  rape, displacement, mutilation, and destruction were also  documented.
What happened in Deir Yassin prepared the ground for the ethnic cleansing of 70% of the Palestinian people. The same ethnic cleansing that occurred then is unfortunately going on today. In 1948 they used direct massacres, but today they use airstrikes in Gaza and shoot innocent young Palestinians in the West Bank.
Deir Yassin was not an isolated incident; such a heartbreaking tragedy was flagrantly carried out in conjunction with “Plan Dalet.” Based on a policy of ethnic cleansing and terror, “Plan Dalet” was implemented by the Haganah to force Palestinians to flee their homes and to destroy their villages with the deliberate intent of establishing the State of Israel on Palestinian soil.
Deir Yassin was not the only Palestinian town where massacres took place,  nearly 70 others happened during the 1948 Nakba others  included: Balad Al-Sheikh, Saasaa, and Saliha to name but a few. Deir Yassin would become one of those ingrained in the mind of Palestinians forever. 
Then, like now, Israel’s allies allowed it to happen. International law are meaningless unless they apply to everyone. For Palestinians and their supporters, the massacre is a symbol. that marks  their deep sense  of dispossession. It is remembered as the pivotal onset of the 1948 Nabka. Deir Yassin is the "other shoe that fell," sparking over 750,000 to flee from their homes, 80 percent of the population at that time, from their homes so that Israel, a colonialist settler state, could be created on their land.Over two million scattered in a far-flung diaspora today, in what remains at the heart of the Israel/Palestine conflict. 
The village  lay outside of the area assigned by the United Nations to the 'Jewish State'. It had a peaceful reputation, the Deir Yassin villagers had signed a non aggression pact with the leaders of the adjacent Jewish Quarter, Giv'at Shaul and had even refused military personnel from the Arab Liberation Army from using the village as a base.An Israeli psychiatric hospital now lies on the ruins of Deir Yassin, the remainder of which was bulldozed in the 1980s to make way for new settlements  and incorporated as a neighbourhood of Jerusalem. These streets shamefully carry the names of the Irgun militiamen who carried out the massacre.
77 years later the Deir Yassin massacre still remains an important reminder of Israel’s systematic measures of displacement, destruction, dispossession, and dehumanization.In keeping with Simon Wiesenthal's observation that "Hope lives when people remember," the suffering of the Jews has been rightly acknowledged and memorialised. But there are few memorials for Palestinians who died in 1948 and since. .
Their history, in which the massacre at Deir Yassin is a very significant event, has been largely buried and forgotten. And yet, like the descendants of the victims in Armenia (1915-17), in the Soviet Union (1929-53), in Nazi Germany (1933-45), in China (1949-52, 1957-60, and 1966-76), and in Cambodia (1975-79), the descendants of Palestinians want the world to remember what they suffered, what they lost and why they died. The grandchildren of those responsible for the Deir Yassin massacre are now massacring Gazan children, this has always been the true face of Zionism
The calculated efforts by Israel to completely erase the history, narrative and physical presence of the Palestinian people will not be simply ignored or forgotten. It also serves to ask ourselves the question what  turns a victim into an abuser,a bully that keeps blaming its victims? And over the years we've been taught many things, that invasion was not invasion, occupation was not occupation, apartheid was not apartheid,ethnic cleansing was not ethnic cleansing,and that land theft was not land theft and Palestine was not Palestine.
But many years later the Palestinian peoples collective voice can still be heard from the refugee camps of Lebanon, Jordan and Syria, to the towns of the West Bank and Gaza, to the ghettos inside the Israeli green line. This determination and resilience has earned them respect and support of an increasing number of people around the world. Despite the humiliation and pain of their  occupation, you can't kill their  indomitable spirit and struggle.
Sadly  however Israel is committing a genocide live-streamed on TVs and still claims to be the victim. and the zionist terrorists mark the anniversary of the savage, genocidal Deir Yassin massacre with yet another savage, genocidal massacre  killing the same number of Palestinians in Shuja'iya in Gaza, after 16 nonstop months of massacres  while the world silently, passively watches.

Ghosts of Deir Yassin - Phil Monsour featuring Rafeef Ziadah-


The writing on the hands are the names of the original villages in Palestine that these people were ethnically cleansed

Ghosts of Deir Yassin

They pretend that it’s forgotten

But somewhere small flowers grow

On the weathered stones of destroyed homes

Somewhere the light’s still in the window

You see that we are rising our day is surely coming

No longer in the shadows

Of the ghosts of Deir Yassin

They change the names on the signs

But it’s in our hearts these words are written

Of the children who don’t know their homes

They will walk the streets from which they are forbidden

You see that we are rising our day is surely coming

No longer in the shadows

Of the ghosts of Deir Yassin

Tuesday, 8 April 2025

Thatchers Gone - Now Lets Bury Thatcherism



Despite all the gushing plaudits  and tributes dedicated to her, after former UK Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher   died  on  8 April 2013 when the entire establishment made extensive efforts to fabricate a national mourning, portraying her as some sort of hero. street parties spontaneously broke out across the country. fireworks were lit. there was dancing in the street. Ding-dong the witch is Dead blasting out of stereos.  
Thatcher has since gone down in history as one of the most anti-working class Prime Ministers in Britain's history., and  twelve years after the death Grantham’s most infamous daughter many of us are still unable to forgive her for the devastation she wrought to our communities, the damage  she caused to our industries, our whole way of life. 
Margaret Hilda Roberts was born in Grantham, England, in 1925. She was the first woman president of the Oxford University Conservative Association and in 1950 ran for Parliament in Dartford. She was defeated but garnered an impressive number of votes in the generally liberal district. In 1959, after marrying businessman Denis Thatcher and later giving birth to twins, she was elected to Parliament as a Conservative for Finchley, a north London district. 
During the 1960s, she rose rapidly in the ranks of the Conservative Party and in 1967 joined the shadow cabinet sitting in opposition to Harold Wilson’s ruling Labour cabinet. With the victory of the Conservative Party under Edward Heath in 1970, Thatcher became secretary of state for education and science.  
In 1974, the Labour Party returned to power, and Thatcher served as joint shadow chancellor before replacing Edward Heath as the leader of the Conservative Party in February 1975. She was the first woman to head the Conservatives. Under her leadership, the Conservative Party shifted further right in its politics, calling for privatization of national industries and utilities and promising a resolute defense of Britain’s interests abroad. 
Thatcher angered some people even before she was prime minister. While working as education secretary in 1971, the government stopped schools giving free milk to schoolchildren aged 7–11.  Labour and the press branded her “Mrs Thatcher, the Milk Snatcher”. The name stuck.  
She also sharply criticized Prime Minister James Callaghan’s ineffectual handling of the chaotic labor strikes of 1978 and 1979.  In March 1979, Callaghan was defeated by a vote of no confidence, and on May 3 a general election gave Thatcher’s Conservatives a majority in Parliament. The next day  as the  UK’s first female prime minister,  Thatcher immediately set about dismantling socialism in Britain.
Her belief in individual responsibility and minimising government intervention became known as Thatcherism. The policies she brought in caused destruction to Britain’s industrial, social and political landscape.
While prime minister, Thatcher championed free-market policies, believing the economy would benefit from less government control. She sold many government-controlled businesses, a process called privatisation. Under Thatcher, the financial industry ,banks, stock traders and others  benefited massively. The Canary Wharf financial district was built in London’s former docklands with help from her government, despite the protests of locals on the Isle of Dogs.
Between 1979-1981, Thatcher’s radical deflationary policy destroyed 2,000,000 jobs, with many of those being in the north. Destroying Britains manufacturing sector, which still hasn’t recovered. She raised interest rates to 15%, making ordinary home owners who were already suffering, unable to pay their mortgage. Leading to swathes of poverty.
In 1983, despite the worst unemployment figures for half a decade, Thatcher was reelected to a second term, thanks largely to the decisive British victory in the 1982 Falklands War with Argentina.
However Due to her right to buy scheme, and the subsequent lack of affordable housing being built - Thatcher was instrumental in the housing crisis that we all face today. She abandoned the post war consensus, and allowed - for the first time - privatisation to occur in the NHS. A practice that has stood the test of time, continuing through successive governments.
She fought against the miners, not giving a hoot, or an inch of compromise, then put her sights on our welfare state, whilst leaving an entire generation to be thrown on the scrapheap.She privatized numerous industries, cut back government expenditures, and gradually reduced the rights of trade unions.
Being kind, she was just a sower of destruction,  not  an ounce of compassion within her, a creator of mass unemployment too, a fosterer of division with her cruel policies. A liar too, about Hillsborough, who also bombed retreating ships.While systematically eroding the notion of a welfare state that cares for people from cradle to grave, Thatcher boosted the coercive power of the state. This was most obvious in the Miners’ Strike, during which she characterised the miners as ‘the enemy within’ and sanctioned massive police brutality against pit communities, 
In 1984, coal mining was a government-controlled industry. Thatcher wanted to make it more profitable, and quickly, so she decided to close 20 mines. This led to a year-long strike by miners and their trade unions becoming one of the most inspiring but bitter class struggles in British history. In classic Thatcher style, she refused to change her mind. "I am not a consensus politician. I'm a conviction politician,” said Thatcher in 1979. 
Her crusade against the unions was inhumane.She fought against the miners, not giving a hoot, or an inch of compromise. She had secretly and cynically prepared for battle by stockpiling two years’ worth of coal before announcing the closures. And she was hellbent on defeating “the enemy within” by any means necessary, even if it meant turning the full force of the state against its own people. 
For the first time in a postwar national strike, British police were openly used as a political weapon.Paramilitary riot police placed mining communities under total siege. A scab workforce was organised to break the strike, and billions were spent to keep the power stations running without coal. The full weight of the courts was used to sequestrate the funds of the miners' union and break its resolve. Civil liberties were forgotten as miners were beaten and arrested even when standing still. Agent provocateurs and spies were deployed. State benefits were withheld in order to starve the miners back to work. And the media was used to  churn out a Niagara of lies against the miners.What had begun as an industrial dispute degenerated into a clash of ideologies and civil class war. For twelve months, the miners and their families held out against  unprecedented onslaughts and unimaginable hardships in order to save jobs and preserve communities.
The pit closure programme was carried through remorselessly. It tore the guts out of the industry and out of the mining communities. The mining industry was decimated. The strike  may have been defeated but years later I remember the courage and sacrifice made during this bitter struggle and the spirit   of revolt they unleashed, and those who remained defiant to  the end, and acknowledge the miners who were arrested and locked up on trumped up charges.The communities that never fully recovered from the financial blow of the strike. 
Those who fought for the survival of a humane society here in Wales and across Britain, and a vile government under  Thatchers direction who used the powers of the state in almost all its entirety to defeat the miners and to teach the whole working class a lesson. Closing the pits caused the loss of thousands of jobs, devastating mining communities in Wales, Scotland and northern England.It was economically more viable to keep pits open than to shut them down, but she went ahead and did it anyway, purely to crush the NUM.
Her promotion of massive cuts, deregulation and privatization inspired other enemies of the working class like US President Ronald Reagan. Before she had even taken office, Soviet journalist, Yuri Gavrilov, dubbed her the "Iron Lady", another nickname which has stuck until today.
Then there was her approach to Northern Ireland which demonised resistance to the British imperialist state and bolstered discrimination against Catholics.I can't forgive or forget how she  refused to negotiate with hunger strikers led by Bobby Sands and  allowed Republican prisoners starve to death in Northern Ireland’s H-Block prison. In October 1984, an Irish Republican Army (IRA) bomb exploded at the Conservative Party conference in Brighton. Thatcher narrowly escaped harm.
Thatcher left behind a record of cruelty and ruthlessness not only in Britain but also in such far-flung places as El Salvador, Grenada, Argentina, South Africa. In these places and more she unleashed British military power against peoples fighting for justice and dignity, or she backed the violence of the U.S. government in doing the same. Thatcher forged a close political and military alliance with the U.S. under presidents Reagan and Bush Sr, and while she shafting all and sundry she still managed to be friends with right wing dictators like Pinochet and P.W Botha.
Her whole twisted ideology was to try and tear up the post 1945 consensus and privatise our public services, sell of our nationalised industries, whilst smashing up Trade Union rights, embarking on a systematic  path of of destruction. Carving up the land, shifting  the balance of social economic wealth between the rich and poor, very much  detrimental to the latter.
Thatcher outraged the LGBTQ+ community when she introduced "Section 28" which banned the "promotion of homosexuality" by local authorities. At the height of the AIDS pandemic, the law encouraged anti-LGBTQ+ discrimination and stigmatization, particularly in schools.
She was also responsible for the selling off of thousands of council houses and 20 state-controlled companies including British Telecom; the vicious attacks on Trade Union rights.
It was because of her constant attacks on weaker members of society ( yes she was a bully) that I was drawn to movements that helped protect these people and the  poor from a government deaf to reason and blind to compassion. I noticed who her friends and allies were, her support for fascist like  repressive regimes ( South Africa, Chile) and the hidden hands of big business and corporate power backing her in the shadows. I began to see what she and her party stood for as evil, plain and simple. 
At the time , I was daily incensed by her actions in particular with her devastating attack on the miners who dared to take her on. She chose to crush them and anybody else that stood in her way. I remember the bitter summer of 1984 when mining  communities were battered and beaten.  Where she utilised the police and the powers of the state in brutal fashion. Her attempts to turn our country into fortress Britain with her constant undermining of our civil liberties. So we marched  and took to the streets determined to get rid of this horrible woman who proudly declared that she was not for turning, not prepared to listen. 
Despite this in 1987, an upswing in the economy led to her election to a third term, but Thatcher soon alienated some members of her own party because of her poll-tax policies and opposition to further British integration into the European Community. 
Massive anti-Thatcher riots erupted in 1990 when she introduced the hated "poll tax" which forced the poor to pay the same as the rich for local services. Many refused to pay the tax altogether and the controversy was a major factor leading to her demise..The eventual abandonment of the charge represented a  great victory for the eighteen million non-payers of the poll tax and in the process reduced the ‘iron lady’ to iron filings.
In November 1990, she failed to received a majority in the Conservative Party’s annual vote for selection of a leader. She withdrew her nomination, and John Major, the chancellor of the Exchequer since 1989, was chosen as Conservative leader. 
On November 28, Thatcher resigned as prime minister and was succeeded by Major. Thatcher’s three consecutive terms in office marked the longest continuous tenure of a British prime minister since 1827. In 1992, she was made a baroness and took a seat in the House of Lords
In later years, Thatcher worked as a consultant, served as the chancellor of the College of William and Mary and wrote her memoirs, as well as other books on politics. Though she stopped appearing in public after suffering a series of small strokes in the early 2000s, her influence remained strong.
In 2011, the former prime minister was the subject of an award-winning (and controversial) biographical film, The Iron Lady, which depicted her political rise and fall. Margaret Thatcher died on April 8, 2013, at the age of 87.
Despite her pulse stopping, she is still hated and always will beI.  can never forgive her. She remains one of the most divisive figures to have emerged, responsible for creating misery and suffering to millions, while selling of what belonged to the people.She was callously indifferent to the suffering of those she made jobless or snubbed as she set out to destroy entire industries in an appalling act of political and social vandalism
Sadly her  awful legacy lives on, in the toxicity that is carried on by those  still here spreading the same stinking doctrine as  hers. The scars and pain she caused remain as the rich get richer and the poor, poorer. 
In  the 1980's  both Ronald Reagan and Margaret Thatcher allowed the richest to buy all our Public Resources, then the billionaires used all the money stolen from you to buy the Government. That is how we got to the hell we have now. The witch might be dead, but the stench of Thatcherism still unfortunately, fills the air, her dark legacy still daily spread, 
Thatcherism continues to shape  all the mainstream political parties, to varying degrees, to this day. Sir Keir Starmer has invoked her and she was Kemi Badenoch's political heroine and her political heirs are trying to extend the damage she did in ways she only dreamed of with the same destructive policies impacting on the lives of millions of working class and poor people.
Sir Keir Starmer and Rachel  Reeves are Margaret Thatcher's greatest political achievements  after  war  criminal  Tony Blair  that  is. They are tthe guardians of her neoliberal legacy. working  for the oligarchy and not for the people, Starmer has turned the Labour party  into  one of War, Genocide, Continuity Thatcherism, Wealth and Corporations - we need to build an opposition to it that represents the people not the powerful.
From benefit  cuts to the economy,  to  his stance on  the genocide of the Palestinian  people who doesn’t hate Keir Starmer  in  the  same  way  we  hated Thatcher? When I see Starmer  smile, and his  lackeys  smile I see Thatchers smile. her sneer, her total lack of compassion. It's amazing how many Starmerites who probably despised Thatcher are prepared to adopt Thatcherism under Starmer.
he legacy of Thatcherism.One of aggression and authoritarianism, that leaves me to bitter this day. Sell off everything we own, devalue and demean any human impulse other than greed, refuse to behave as if society is a thing, let alone a place we have to live, stare in wonder at the abject mess you've made of a once great country.
Back in Thatcher's day we had a right wing press that supported and colluded with her, but many diverse coalitions of resistance bought about the end of her time in power, today we have the internet and with it the rise of alternative forms of social media. We can beat the those like  her  again, outside all is not lost, when they try to push us down , we must push back, and united we can again defeat them. 
Hubert Humphrey once said  that “the moral test of government is how that government treats those who are in the dawn of life, the children; those who are in the twilight of life, the elderly; and those who are in the shadows of life, the sick, the needy and the handicapped.
We  must carry on fighting for a fairer, more just society and as  the  banner  says  below ' Thatchers Gone- Now Lets bury Thatcherism ' and will  add Thatcher's  awful legacy once for all.




Saturday, 5 April 2025

Springtime's Joy


Many things speak to me of spring
Petals unfurling, seedlings awakening,
Multi-colored wildflowers rising defiantly
Spreading their beauty with abandon,
Butterflies gently hovering, bees buzzing 
The scent  of cut grass  perfuming the day,
The song of a blackbird calling for a mate
Blubells  and tulips blooming, a joy to the heart,
Cherry blossom, pink flowers of sweetness
Swallows returning, soaring theough  the sky,
Raindrops dancing, mother earth renewing
More sunlight reducing tension, stress,
Overnight precious new buds arrive
After long periods of  bleakness,
A touch of hope's presence clearly felt
As springtime magic releases delight,
Despite the worlds troubles and woes
That can uncomfortably tear within,
The sight and sounds of  this season
Brings peace and make my heart sing.

Tuesday, 1 April 2025

Silence for Gaza, by Mahmoud Darwish (penned in Arabic in 1973)

 

Since  October 7, 2023, the terrible ongoing violence against innocent civilians in Gaza   which has resulted in the deaths of over 50,200 Palestinians.
Supposedly in response to Hamas’s attacks, in the name of “self-defense”, the far-right extremist Israeli government did not take the time for reflection, mourning, or negotiations for the release of hostages.  Instead, they immediately sought “revenge” as a cover for land theft, while collectively blaming and punishing the entire population of Gaza, including countless children, for Hamas’s actions. 
The corruption and brutality of this genocidal vengeance has been unprecedented, atrocious, tragic, and infuriating. The ongoing incremental dispossession of the Palestinian people has reached a crescendo, where Palestinian civilians are being murdered while  being denigrated as “human animals”, “terrorists” or “terrorist supporters.”  This is not war. It is genocide.  Every person, regardless of their background, deserves freedom, opportunity, dignity, life, love, and nourishment. 
Eid has  just been celebrated , while many of us live in comfort and enjoy a range of dishes at this time, please keep people of Gaza in your minds and escalate our efforts for them.  For over 30 days, not a single sip of water, a bite of food, or medicine has reached Gaza. For two million people, half of them children. No electricity, no equipment  to  remove the rubble .No aid, no fuel, no supplies, nothing.. The situation is really really desperate and the catastrophe in Gaza is worsening unimaginably by the minute.
Israel has bombarded and destroyed water containers, ambulances and hospitals.. Many  are still living in tents. How the fuck are people gonna survive. This isn’t war. It’s extermination. To those who care, keep  talking  about  Palestine.
Give hope to the oppressed.keep calling for the Palestinians suffering  to  end They must be allowed to  survive.  Sttand in solidarity with the people in Gaza, the West Bank, and all of Palestine. It is part of our collective responsibility to never waiver on their rights, work to end this genocide, and demand their liberation from Israel’s settler-colonial apartheid regime. 
Since 2003 I   have often been  left feeling anger and shame, tinged  with  great  sadness, but  at  the same time throughout this  painful  period  I have been consciously seeking out and reading words by Palestinian authors and poets.They  have  bought me  much  strength. 
Mahmoud Darwish   was born on March 13, in 1941, in al-Birwa in Galilee, a village that was eventually occupied and later razed by the Israeli army. Because they had missed the official Israeli census, Darwish and his family were considered “internal refugees” or “present-absent aliens.”
Darwish is feted as Palestine’s national poet for his words expressing the longing of Palestinians deprived of their homeland, which was taken by Zionist militias to make way for present-day Israel, whose words have left an indelible mark on Arabic literature. 
His poetry gave voice to the pain of Palestinians living as refugees and those under Israeli occupation for nearly a century. The beauty of his poetry lies in its rich language, blending personal and collective histories with poignant reflections on love, loss, and the quest for belonging. His legacy continues to inspire readers with its profound humanity and lyrical grace. Here's a  timeless ode to Gaza from this Palestinian literary giant, The relevance to today's circumstances is unbelievable. It's as if it was written yesterday.

Silence for Gaza, by Mahmoud Darwish (penned in Arabic in 1973)   

Gaza is far from its relatives and close to its enemies, because whenever Gaza explodes, it becomes an island and it never stops exploding. It scratched the enemy’s face, broke his dreams and stopped his satisfaction with time. 

 Because in Gaza time is something different.   

 Because in Gaza time is not a neutral element.  

 It does not compel people to cool contemplation, but rather to explosion 
and a collision with reality.   

 Time there does not take children from childhood to old age, but rather makes them men in their first confrontation with the enemy.    

Time in Gaza is not relaxation, but storming the burning noon. Because in Gaza values are different, different, different.    

The only value for the occupied is the extent of his resistance to occupation. That is the only competition there. Gaza has been addicted to knowing this cruel, noble value. It did not learn it from books, hasty school seminars, loud propaganda megaphones, or songs. It learned it through experience alone and through work that is not done for advertisement and image. 

Gaza has no throat. Its pores are the ones that speak in sweat, blood, and fires. Hence the enemy hates it to death and fears it to criminality, and tries to sink it into the sea, the desert, or blood. And hence its relatives and friends love it with a coyness that amounts to jealousy and fear at times, because Gaza is the brutal lesson and the shining example for enemies and friends alike.  

Gaza is not the most beautiful city.    

Its shore is not bluer than the shores of Arab cities.   

Its oranges are not the most beautiful in the Mediterranean basin.  

Gaza is not the richest city.    

It is not the most elegant or the biggest, but it equals the history of an entire homeland, because it is more ugly, impoverished, miserable, and vicious in the eyes of enemies. Because it is the most capable, among us, of disturbing the enemy’s mood and his comfort. Because it is his nightmare. Because it is mined oranges, children without a childhood, old men without old age and women without desires. Because of all this it is the most beautiful, the purest and richest among us and the one most worthy of love.   

We do injustice to Gaza when we look for its poems, so let us not disfigure Gaza’s beauty. What is most beautiful in it is that it is devoid of poetry at a time when we tried to triumph over the enemy with poems, so we believed ourselves and were overjoyed to see the enemy letting us sing. We let him triumph, then when we dried our lips of poems we saw that the enemy had finished building cities, forts and streets. We do injustice to Gaza when we turn it into a myth, because we will hate it when we discover that it is no more than a small poor city that resists.   

We do injustice when we wonder: What made it into a myth? If we had dignity, we would break all our mirrors and cry or curse it if we refuse to revolt against ourselves. We do injustice to Gaza if we glorify it, because being enchanted by it will take us to the edge of waiting and Gaza doesn’t come to us. Gaza does not liberate us. Gaza has no horses, airplanes, magic wands, or offices in capital cities. Gaza liberates itself from our attributes and liberates our language from its Gazas at the same time. When we meet it - in a dream - perhaps it won’t recognize us, because Gaza was born out of fire, while we were born out of waiting and crying over abandoned homes.   

It is true that Gaza has its special circumstances and its own revolutionary traditions. But its secret is not a mystery: Its resistance is popular and firmly joined together and knows what it wants (it wants to expel the enemy out of its clothes). The relationship of resistance to the people is that of skin to bones and not a teacher to students. Resistance in Gaza did not turn into a profession or an institution. 

It did not accept anyone’s tutelage and did not leave its fate hinging on anyone’s signature or stamp.  It does not care that much if we know its name, picture, or eloquence. It did not believe that it was material for media. It did not prepare for cameras and did not put smiling paste on its face.  

Neither does it want that, nor we.   

Hence, Gaza is bad business for merchants and hence it is an incomparable moral treasure for Arabs. 

 What is beautiful about Gaza is that our voices do not reach it. Nothing distracts it; nothing takes its fist away from the enemy’s face. Not the forms of the Palestinian state we will establish whether on the eastern side of the moon, or the western side of Mars when it is explored. Gaza is devoted to rejection. .  hunger and rejection, thirst and rejection, displacement and rejection, torture and rejection, siege and rejection, death and rejection.

Enemies might triumph over Gaza (the storming sea might triumph over an island. . . they might chop down all its trees).    

They might break its bones.   

They might implant tanks on the insides of its children and women. They might throw it into the sea, sand, or blood.    

But it will not repeat lies and say “Yes” to invaders.   

It will continue to explode.    

It is neither death, nor suicide. It is Gaza’s way of declaring that it deserves to live.

 [Translated by Sinan Antoon From Hayrat al-`A’id (The Returnee’s Perplexity), Riyad al-Rayyis, 2007]

They say cities are measured by their buildings, but Gaza is measured by its ability to rise after every catastrophe. This tent is not just fabric; it is a condensed homeland, a suspended memory, a defiance that refuses to bow. And around it, everything is destroyed, everything has ended-except for the will to endure, the flag that refuses to fall, and the spirit that will never die.
Amidst the heavy veil of siege, through the sharp pain of grief, and the deep scars of loss, the  Palestinian  people  rise, unyielding, on the wings of resilience. Their voices,  powerful, with steadfastness as their armor, their courage burns brightly, a flame that the world must acknowledge, a call that cannot be ignored. Palestinian is a love for land, self, and  one another. A testament to the best of humanity. As Mahmoud Darwish once said: "On this land, there is something worth living for... It was called Palestine, and it became Palestine."
To  all the resilient souls of Gaza, the mothers who bury their pain, the children who smile through rubble, the fighters who defend with faith alone. Your courage  and strength  will  endure, destined to be celebrated forever.Palestine will be free  from the rivers to  the sea. Two earlier appreciation   on  the poet Mahmod  Darwish  can  be  found here.