James Berry was born in Boston, Jamaica on 28 September, 1924 . One of six children. his parents were subsistence farmers,
and he enjoyed an early life of rural rhythms and experiences. By the age
of ten, however, the young writer began to feel frustrated by what his
village could offer. “I began to be truly bewildered by my everyday
Jamaican life,” he remarked in a Horn Book piece quoted in Authors and
Artists for Young Adults. “I felt something of an alien and an outsider
and truly imprisoned.”
Indeed, rural Jamaica provided Berry with few opportunities.
Though
eager to learn about the wider world, the boy had access to few books.
He had to share his single school text with all the other members of his
family. But, through Bible stories and traditional folk tales, the
young writer began to nurture what he described in the Horn Book as an
“inner seeing,” who had “an inner life that could
not be shared.ranged from the lyrical to the caustic, but almost all of them intimately caught the speech patterns of his native Jamaica.
Berry helped to enrich and diversify the capacities of the English
language, making conversational modes of West Indian expression, which a
previous generation would have considered exotic or barely literate,
normal and easily understood. In doing so he gave literary
respectability to forms of language increasingly heard in the streets
and playgrounds of multicultural Britain”
When he was 17, during World War II, Berry went to work in the United
States. But he resented the treatment of blacks there, and returned to
Jamaica after four years. After opportunities in the West Indies had not improved, in 1948 , as past of the Windrush generation
Berry decided to try his luck in London. Working and attending school at
night, Berry obtained training as a telegrapher, and worked in that
field for more than two decades. At the same time, he began to write
short stories and stage plays. and became involved over the years with many social and cultural organisations in North London, including being sessions organiser for the Carribean Artists Movement.
He became a much loved poet , helping to enrich and diversify the capacities of the English
language, making conversational modes of West Indian expression, which a
previous generation would have considered exotic or barely literate,
normal and easily understood. In doing so he gave literary
respectability to forms of language increasingly heard in the streets
and playgrounds of multicultural Britain. In 1976 he compiled the anthology Bluefoot Traveller and in 1979 his
first poetry collection, Fractured Circles, was published. In 1981, he then won the Poetry Society’s National Poetry Competition, the first poet of
West Indian origin to do so. He also edited the landmark anthology News for
Babylon (1984), which was considered “a ground-breaking publication because its
publishing house Chatto & Windus was ‘mainstream’ and distinguished
for its international poetry list”.
A pioneering writer and activist, his powerful poem ' Outsider’ was influenced by
his own experiences of racism and urgently seeks action for equality.
Each stanza questioning ‘If you see me’ is direct criticism and evoked
pathos at the lack of education, acknowledgement, and action against the
racism embedded in the UK. Sadly so relevant to this day. Black lives matter
Outsider - James Berry
If you see me lost on busy streets
my dazzle is sun-stain of skin,
I'm not naked with dark glasses on
saying barren ground has no oasis:
It's that cracked up by extremes
I must hold self together with extreme pride.
If you see me lost in neglected woods, I'm no thief eyeing trees to plunder their stability or a moaner shouting at air: it's that voices in me rule firmer than my skills, and sometimes among men my stubborn hurts leave me like wild dogs.
If you see me lost on forbidding wastelands, watching dry flowers nod, or scraping a tunnel in mountain rocks, I don't open a trail back into time: it's that a monotony like the Sahara seals my enchantment.
If you see me lost on long footpaths, I don't set traps or map out arable acres: it's that I must exhaust twigs like limbs with water divining.
If you see me lost in my sparse room, I don't ruminate on prisoners and falsify their jokes, and go on about prisons having been perfected like a common smokescreen of mind: it's that I moved my circle from ruins and I search to remake it whole.
Born on Septermber 19. 1921 in Recife, Brazil, Paulo Freire was a philosopher, educator and
activist who developed a
radical approach to transforming how we approach education. While he
was born into a middle class family, Freire’s father died during the economic depression of the thirties, and
as a young child, Freire came to know the crippling and dehumanizing
effects of hunger which ad a radicalising and transformative effect upon him. Freire saw himself being forced by the
circumstances to steal food for his family, and he ultimately dropped
out of elementary school to work and help his family financially. It was
through these hardships that Freire developed his unyielding sense of
solidarity with the poor. From childhood on, Freire made a conscious
commitment to work in order to improve the conditions of marginalized
people.
He recalled in Moacir Gadotti’s book, Reading Paulo Freire,
“I didn’t understand anything because of my hunger. I wasn’t dumb. It
wasn’t lack of interest. My social condition didn’t allow me to have an
education. Experience showed me once again the relationship between
social class and knowledge” Because Freire lived among poor rural
families and laborers, he gained a deep understanding of their lives and
of the effects of socio-economics on education.
Freire became a grammar teacher while still in high school. Even then
his intuition pushed him toward a dialogic education in which he
strived to understand students’ expectations. While on the Faculty
of Law in Recife, Freire met his wife, Elza Maia Costa de Oliveira, an
elementary school teacher and an important force in his life. They
married in 1944 when Freire was 23 and eventually had five children,
three of whom became educators Gadotti asserts that it was Elza who
influenced Freire to intensely pursue his studies, and helped him to
elaborate his groundbreaking educational methods.
Between 1947 and 1962
he developed effective dialogical methodologies for educating adult
illiterates; Freire developed his thinking during a long career teaching Portuguese
in secondary schools and literacy campaigns. Later he was appointed as
the director of the Department of Education and Culture of the Social
Service in the Brazilian state of Pernambuco.
It was here that he
started working with illiterate poor people. His results were so
impressive that he was invited to become director of the national
literacy programme. He set out to establish 20,000 cultural learning
circles throughout Brazil, for which he planned to import 35,000 slide
projectors from Poland. However he was forced to flee his native Brazil following a military coup in 1964.
Freire drew upon Catholic liberation-theology and Marxist
ideas to
forge a concept of popular literacy education for personal and social
liberation. So formidable was his work that the Harvard Educational
Review published a recapitulation of his formative essays in 1999.
Freire wrote his seminal book Pedagogy of the Oppressed
while in exile in Chile while working with
the democratically elected Allende government which fell to a
CIA-manufactured coup. He spent the next 15 years in what he called
exile, working at Harvard University and for the World Council of Churches in
Geneva, organizing and writing books for social justice and he remains a touchstone figure for social
justice and equality activists in the global North and South. after a military coup in April
1964, Freire after being imprisoned as a traitor had to flee from Brazil. He returned to Brazil in 1979, joined the Workers’ Party and
became Sao Paolo’s Secretary for Education in 1988.
Over a lifetime of work with revolutionary organizers and educators, Paulo Freire created an approach to emancipatory
education and a lens through which to understand systems of oppression
in order to transform them. He flipped mainstream pedagogy on its head
by insisting that true knowledge and expertise already exist within
people.Pedagogy of the Oppressed. which was originally published in 1968 (in Portuguese, in 1970 first
English translation) but has been reprinted and translated numerous
times and has become a source of inspiration for people throughout the world.
It is a
profound statement of faith in humanity and a challenge for us all to
consider our place, our responsibilities and our actions on the
humanisation-dehumanisation spectrum. His philosophy, compassion and
commitment inspire real (but searingly realistic) hope for the oppressed
in all societies. Freire's work
has taken on much urgency in the United States and Western Europe,
where the creation of a permanent underclass among the underprivileged
and minorities in cities and urban centers is increasingly accepted as
the norm.
Paulo Freire was highly critical of traditional formal models of
education which he argued made people dependant in much the same way as a
commercial bank does. Students are treated as if they were empty bank
accounts in which the teacher can make deposits. Under this `banking
concept` of education, "knowledge is a gift bestowed by those who
consider themselves knowledgeable upon those whom they consider to know
nothing".
This results in a dichotomy between teacher and students: the
teacher talks and the students listen. As a consequence, both are
dehumanized. Freire’s analysis of traditional education is similar to
the critique developed by Ivan Illich in his book Deschooling Society (1971).
Freire asserted that education can never be neutral. Either it is an
instrument for liberating people or it is used to dominate and
disempower them. To avoid being a tool of oppression, education needs to
involve a new relationship between teacher and students as well as with
society. The difference is not to be found in the curriculum contents
or the enthusiasm of the teacher, but in the pedagogical approach.
He
found that people were more motivated to learn how to read and write if
the experience gave them insight into the power networks to which they
are subjected. Freire urged teachers to identify and use key political
words, which he labelled as `generative themes` because they generated
discussion.
A key concept in Freire`s approach is conscientization, meaning
the ways in which individuals and communities develop a critical
understanding of their social reality through reflection and action.
This involves examining and acting on the root causes of
oppression as experienced in the here and now. This goes beyond simply
acquiring the technical skills of reading and writing. It is a
cornerstone to ending the culture of silence, in which oppression is not
mentioned and thereby maintained. Existentialism was another significant influence on Freire’s philosophy.
Freire believed that human beings are free to choose and thus
responsible for their choices.
While on one hand, Freire did very much
take into account the historical context created by the legacy of
slavery in Brazil, he never believed the historical conditions
determined the future for him, his students, or Brazilian society. On
the contrary, Freire espoused the existential belief that humans need
not be determined by the past. When Freire taught literacy classes, he
not only taught his students how to read and write. Freire shared
conscientização and, with this, the awareness that his students were
free to choose the life they created for themselves.
In what he referred to as the `archaeology of consciousness`, Freire
identified three different levels of political awareness: magical
consciousness, naïve consciousness and critical consciousness. It was
the role of the educator to foster a process of dialogue and liberation
that would enable citizens to reach critical consciousness.
Whilst the unpacking of the relationship between the oppressor and the oppressed is at the core of his work; his related concepts of dialogical (or problem-posing) and anti-dialogical (or banking education) are also crucial. His warnings regarding oppressive traits such as cultural invasion, false generosity and manipulation explain, the cultural disconnect and distrust that
typifies many student-teacher relationships.
Whereas Freire saw both humanization and dehumanization as real
choices for mankind, he saw only the former as man’s true vocation.
Thus, he saw the relationship between the oppressor and the oppressed (in all contexts) as dialectical contradictions
that must be resolved if liberation (for both) is to occur. The
“lovelessness which lies at the heart of the oppressors’ violence” can
only be defeated by acts of love from the oppressed.
However he warns that the values of the oppressor can instead become housed
in the oppressed, which may, in turn, lead them to aspire to become
oppressors themselves. In the oppressor, the oppressed see the very
model of manhood, to which they should aspire. Thus they view
themselves in purely individualistic terms, fail to see their position
as part of a group and have a “fear of freedom”. For Freire, the
resultant false consciousness meant that the “great humanistic and
historical task of the oppressed: (is) to liberate themselves and their
oppressors as well”.
One way in which the oppressor-oppressed relationship is maintained is through the use of prescription.
This is where one ‘man’s choices or opinions are forced upon another,
thus depriving him of a voice and forcing him to accept the oppressors
worldview. This can lead to self-deprecation where the
oppressed feel that they do not have opinions of value and have low
feelings of self-worth. The oppressed feel unable to act against the
oppressor but all too frequently practice horizontal violence
instead against their neighbours.. In time, the oppressed may come to
evict the negative self-concepts that they house within them.
Freire was recognized worldwide for his profound impact on
educational thought and practice. He received numerous awards including
honorary doctorates, the King Balduin Prize for International
Development, the Prize for Outstanding Christian Educators in 1985 with
Elza, and the UNESCO 1986 Prize for Education for Peace . In
1986, Freire’s wife, Elza died. He remarried to Ana Maria Araújo
Freire, who continues with her own radical educational work. On May 2, 1997, Paulo Freire died of heart failure at the age of 75.
Friers influence is still hotly debated in Brazil. Having been
posthumously made a Patron of Education in 2012, an ally of far-right
president Bolsonaro, tried (and failed) to have the title stripped from
Freire in 2018 (Lima, 2019). Pedagogy of the Oppressed was
banned in apartheid South Africa, parts of Latin America and, in 2010 in
Tucson, Arizona by right-wing policymakers who prohibited texts that
‘promote the overthrow of the US government’ (Rodriquez, 2018). ‘Pedagogy’ was one of the texts used on an ethno-studies programme
taught to Native Americans and Chicanos, and the books ‘were seized from classrooms right in front of students’, who learned first-hand about
oppression (Bernstein, 2012).
Friere's methods, which used critical dialogue and consciousness-raising
are not only applicable in his country of origin (Brazil) but are widely
used by a whole generation of social and development workers working in
deprived neighbourhoods across poor and rich countries alike, and continues to wield
enormous influence on research and educational practice across the
world as a tool for social change.
More important than all of the recognitions Freire received and the
scholars he influenced, Freire’s life was his most significant legacy.
His life’s example continues to inspire. He created the conditions by
which thousands of people, the children and grandchildren of former
slaves, could learn to read and write, learn about their agency and
freedom, and learn to love.
Here is a link to a pdf annivesary od Frier's acclaimed book :-
My heart truly bleeds Boris Johnson who has "misery etched upon his face" and is reportedly worried about money according to embarrassing reports recently.
Close
allies of the Prime Minister have described an unhappy Number 10 as Mr
Johnson attempts to deal with endless crises - claims dismissed by
Downing Street.
They also claim Johnson 56, and fiance Carrie Symonds, 32, are "worried about money" and fear they will not be able to afford a nanny.
Prior to taking the top job, his combined wages as an MP, his £275,000 per year Daily Telegraph column and lucrative speaking engagements, he was earning more than £350,000 a year.
The Prime Minister's wages amount to around £150,000 per year, far above the average UK salary but seemingly not enough to keep the pair happy.
A source told the Times newspaper "Boris like other prime ministers, is very very badly served. He doesn't have a housekeeper, he has a simple cleaner, and they're worried about being able to affoed a nanny. "He's stuck in the flat and Downing Street is not a nice place to live. It's not like the Elysee or the White House where you can get away from it all because they're so big. Even if he or Carrie want to go into the rose garden they have to go through the office."
Whether he has really been grumbling or not, it doesn't hurt to point out how ridiculous and over privileged and out of touch from society he actually is, he is just a shameless arrogant pampered egomaniac. Boris Johnson is not skint just a brazen hypocrite, who has been spoilt throughout his entire life, all he and the Tories only really care about are themselves and their rich friends and backers. I care as much for him as he does for the majority of the hard working people of this country, which is nothing.
He sold a £3.75m home in September last year which would have seen him making £700,000 in profit. He still owns one property with his ex wife and he and Carrie own a £1.3m house outight and has a net worth of £3,1m. As our country faces the possibility of another lockdown due to his incompetence, lets not forget this is a prime minister who has spent more time on holiday than any of his recent forerunners, possibly than all of them put together, if you average it out for a single year, setting of for his many jaunts at times of national crisis.
I have no sympathy or appreciation for him, after all still gets lots of benefits thrust upon him, by his friends in big business, unlike the low paid, unemployed, state pensioners, single parents, disabled, unpaid carers or asylum seekers who have to face undue hardships every day of their lives. And lots of others can't afford to pay a nanny either, and after ten years of Tory austerity can't afford to put food on the table, and as winter approaches let alone put the heating on.
What follows is a tribute to Chilean Political Singer and activist Victor Jara murdered by brutal dictator Augusto Pinochet's troops on this day 16th September 1973. This followed the military coup on 9/11/73 which overthrew the democratically elected government led by Salvador Allende.
For the next 20 years, Pinochet suspended democratic rule in Chile, presisding over an oppressive, sadistic military junta that completely reversed Allende's socialist economic programs, banning unions and privatizing state programmes such as social security, hunting down all manner of dissidents and imprisoning tens of thousands.
Víctor Jara was born to a peasant family. His mother taught him to sing,
but by age 15 he was orphaned and on his own. After a brief sojourn in
seminary and a stint in the army, he turned to a career in music and
theater. He became a director, putting on plays ranging in style from
the classical to the experimental. Eventually, his love for music drew
him away from the theater, and by 1973, was one of Chile’s big music stars. A cross
between Bob Dylan and Woody Guthrie, he was unashamedly left-wing;
writing popular protest songs about social inequality and the plight of
the working man. He was an integral part of the Nueva Canción movement (New Song) movement, a movement of Latin American musicians
who blended Spanish and indigenous folk music to create a genuine music
of the people.
With the folk boom in full swing in the United States,
markets around the world were being flooded with commercialized versions
of "protest music." Nueva Canción was a conscious alternative,
folk in the truest sense. Among people increasingly angry about their
country's rising poverty and subjugation to US interests, Nueva Canción
found home. Jara himself summed it up the best: "US imperialism
understands very well the magic of communication through music and persists
in filling our young people with all sorts of commercial tripe. . . .
The term 'protest song' is no longer valid because it is ambiguous and
has been misused. I prefer the term 'revolutionary song'."
So when the right-wing Pinochet regime seized power in a
bloody coup, they made sure Jara, 40 at the time, was one of the first to be detained. Transported
to the Chile Stadium, Jara found himself in a vision of Hell. One of 60
torture centers that sprang up around Santiago in the days following
the coup, the Chile Stadium was notorious for its cruelty. Detainees
were forced to sit in the bleachers without food or sleep, watching as
people were randomly pulled out and executed on the pitch. Occasionally,
guards would turn their machine guns on the crowd and unleash a random
spray of bullets, sending bodies tumbling down onto the playing field.
A
lifelong rebel, Jara responded to his incarceration by composing new
songs and singing them to his fellow prisoners to keep their spirits up.
Unsurprisingly, he soon came to the attention of the camp commander,
who made a seemingly magnanimous gesture: Placing a guitar on a table in
the middle of the stadium, he invited Jara to come down and play to the
crowd. Naively, Jara agreed.
What happened next would be etched
on the minds of those who saw it forever. The moment he sat at the
table, Jara was pinned in place by the nearby guards. The commander then
cut off his fingers and mutilated his hands to mush. Some witness claim
he used an axe, others the butt of his rifle. The outcome was the same.
With Jara’s hands a bloody pulp, the commander screamed at him: “Now
sing, you motherf—er, now sing!”
In response, Jara pushed himself
to his feet. With infinite calm, he reportedly walked to the nearest set
of bleachers and said, “All right, comrades, let’s do the senor
commandante the favor.” Then he began to sing.
He sung unsteadily,
with a wavering voice, the anthem of the UP—the political party whose
members lay in piles at the bottom of the bleachers. As his voice began
to steady, an incredible thing happened. Across the stadium, prisoners
who’d had no food or sleep, prisoners who’d been tortured or threatened
with death, all rose to their feet and began to sing with him. For a
fleeting moment, the guards could only watch in amazement as their charges joined in
with Victor Jara for his final song. A volley was fired and Jara fell dead. Then another was aimed into the
bleachers at those who’d accompanied him in song and bodies tumbled down
the inclines.”
Allende was last seen on the 15th of September when he was left abandoned by a roadside , only for his body to be discovered a day later. When his wife Joan went to identify his dumped body, it was riddled with 44 bullets. Over 3,000 other political prisoners would suffer a similar fate,
during Pinochet's murderous, CIA - supported tenure, Chileans suspected
of being dissidents would be similarly rounded up and "disappeared"
never to bee seen or heard from again.
Such was Victor Jara's
power though his voice will never die. It resonates through the ages, a
beacon, that we should not forget, standing strongly against oppression.
In his lifetime, the Chilean folksinger Victor Jara became the voice of Chile's dispossessed. He became a symbol for their aspirations of equality and a figure of hope to progressive movements worldwide.
He has also been remembered not only in Latin
America's folk tradition, but by artists the world over. The Clash, U2, and
even 80s popsters Simple Minds who have paid tribute to Jara in their songs.
And faced with the emnity of the world, and the unending resistance of the Chilean people, Pinochet's distatorship withered away in the late 1980's and with democracy restored to Chile, Victor Jara, could finally be properly remembered by his compatriots, which saw the stadium in which he was murdered being renamed after him and on 3rd December, 2009, Jara, at last given a full funeral in Santiago.
Chile’s junta might have silenced Jara’s voice, but not his music or legacy. He has been remembered not only in Latin
America's folk tradition, but by artists the world over who have paid tribute to Jara in their songs. Only recently James Dean Bradfield, the former leader of the band Manic Street Preachers, dedicated his new album, Even in Exile, to the life of Victor Jara. “If
you just focus on his (Victor Jara) death, you ignore the journey, you
ignore the ambition, you ignore the songs, and you kind of ignore
Chile”, said the Welsh artist in a long and informative interview with
BBC Culture. Bradfield discovered the Chilean artist through the music of The Clash and the movie The Missing, but when actually listening to Jara´s songs, he was struck by the way he delivered a political message. Here in Wales there has also been a festival (El Sueno Existe)
of music and dance every two years in memory of Jara. Whose incarceration, mutilation, and brutal murder has come to symbolize the tragic cruelty of the Pinochet regime.
His wistful, Manifesto, the last song he wrote, released posthumously, feels like an eerie premonition of his death:
The song is considered his testament, the manifesto of what it means to be a revolutionary artist.
As tyrants fall away, history remembers the heroes and the martyrs.
The military burned many of Jara’s master recordings, but Jara’s wife Joan Jara took some recordings out of the country.
American folksinger Phil Ochs,
who had met Jara in Chile, was devastated by the killing. He helped
organize a memorial fundraiser called “An Evening With Salvador Allende”
in New York in 1974. The same year, a Soviet astronomer named an
asteroid after Jara.
Others paid tribute to Victor Jara, including Pete Seeger and Arlo Guthrie who wrote and recorded a tribute to the singer-activist with the song, “Victor Jara,” from the 1976 album Amigo.
Guthrie wrote the music and Adrian Mitchell provided the lyrics with
each verse focusing on Jara’s hands that officials would break:-
Victor Jara of Chile
Lived like a shooting star
He fought for the people of Chile
With his songs and his guitar
And his hands were gentle
His hands were strong
Victor Jara was a peasant
Worked from a few years old
He set upon his father's plough
And watched the earth unfold
And his hands were gentle
His hands were strong
When the neighbours had a wedding
Or one of their children died
His mother sang all night for them
With Victor by her side
And his hands were gentle
His hands were strong
He grew to be fighter
Against the people's wrongs
He listened to their grief and joy
And turned them into songs
And his hands were gentle
His hands were strong
He sang about the copper miners
And those who work the land
He sang about the factory workers
And they knew he was their man
And his hands were gentle
His hands were strong
He campaigned for Allende
working night and day
He sang take hold of your brother's hand
The future begins today
And his hands were gentle
is hands were strong
The bloody generals seized Chile
hey arrested Victor then
They caged him in a stadium
With five thousand frightened men
And his hands were gentle
His hands were strong
Victor stood in the stadium
His voice was brave and strong
He sang for his fellow prisoners
Til the guards cut short his song
And his hands were gentle
His hands were strong
They broke the bones in both his hands
They beat his lovely head
They tore him with electric shocks
After two days of torture they shot him dead
And his hands were gentle
His hands were strong
And now the Generals rule Chile
And the British have their thanks
For they rule with Hawkers Hunters
And they rule with Chieftain tanks
And his hands were gentle
His hands were strong
Victor Jara of Chile
Loved like a shooting star
He fought for thee people of Chile
With his songs and his guitar
And his hands were gentle
His hands were strong
Reprinted from:- The Apeman Cometh - Adrian Mitchell Jonathan Cape, 1975
This ballad was later set to music by Arlo Guthrie, which you can hear here :-
What was so dangerous about Jara
was that his songs were such a integral part of a struggle of millions who were fighting
to win their basic human dignity -- the very same
people over whom Pinochet ruled with an iron fist until his deposition in 1990.
Scottish folk musician Dick Gaughan said it very frankly: those who say that "music
and politics should not be mixed . . . [should] tell that to the CIA and their
thugs who murdered Jara because his repertoire didn't suit their interests."
The great band the Clash mentioned earlier referenced Jara in their song Washington Bullets from their 1980 album Sandinista!
Along with those killed by Pinochet's military rule which finally came to an end in 1990, and the thousands murdered, 28,000 people had been tortured. The details of Jara's torture and death were finally revealed by a Truth and Reconciliation Commission created by the new government of Patricio Aylwin. But it was not until July 2018 that eight former military officers were sentenced for killing Jara, to just 15 years each.
Pinochet would be cremated
for fear of his grave becoming vandalized. With his remains, the notion of Pinochet as anything other than a ruthless tyrant were scattered to the wind, his legacy that of a brutal dictator; Jara's, though is that of a people's
troubadour. Pinochet ground thousands into poverty; Jara sought to lift them
up. Pinochet's legacy reminds us of just how vicious the force of reaction can be. Victor
Jara though is remembered as an artist, martyr and hero whose music has and will continue to inspire us to fight against
it.
Though Víctor Jara died a brutal death under a brutal regime, his songs
are not all about the horror he witnessed. They are also about the hope
and courage of people who stand up to those who use violence to sustain
injustice. He said, Song is like the water that washes the stones,
the wind which cleans us, like the fire that joins us together and lives
within us to make us better people.
Long after his death his cultural influence still resonates. Here is Jara’s last poem, Estadio Chile/ Chile Stadium which was smuggled out in the shoe of a friend.
Chile Stadium
In this small part of the city.
Five thousand.
How many of us are there in all
In the cities and in all the country?
Here we are, ten thousand hands
Who plant the seeds and keep the factories running. So much humanity,
hungry, cold, panicked, in pain,
Under moral duress, terrified out of their minds!
Six of ours lost themselves
In the space of the stars.
One man dead, one man beaten worse than I ever thought
It was possible to beat a human being.
The other four wanted to free themselves of all their fear.
One jumped into the void.
Another beat his head against the wall.
But all had the fixed look of death in their eyes.
What fear is provoked by the face of fascism!
They carry out their plans with the utmost precision, not giving a damn about anything.
For them, blood is a medal.
My God, is this the world You created?
Is this the product of your seven days of wonder and labour?
In these four walls, there is nothing but a number that does not move forward.
That gradually, will grow to want death.
But my conscience suddenly awakens me
And I see this tide without a pulse
And I see the pulse of the machines
And the soldiers showing their matronly faces, full of tenderness.
And Mexico, Cuba, and the world.
Let them cry out this ignominy!
We are ten thousand fewer hands that do not produce.
How many of us are ther throughout our homeland?
The blood of our comrade the President pulses with more strength than bombs and machine guns.
And so, too, will our fist again beat.
Song, how hard it is sing you when I have to sing in fear.
Fear like that in which I live, and from which I am dying, fear.
Of seeing myself amidst so much, and so many endless moments
In which silence and outcry are the tragets of this song.
What have never seen before, what I have felt and what I feel now
Will make the moment break out...
Christy Moore with Declan Sinnott - Victor Jara
I think I am passionate because I am full of hope.
—Víctor Jara
We fear for our lives For our children and our lovers For our country and our friends, As the wind dies slowly It's pale murmour calling, And sun drenched blossom closes weary eyes The mourning drone of flies cluster by the trees, And swooping swallows whisper in the skies The once golden apples lie fallen on the ground. The old thrush sings his solitary song And summers no longer by his side, Though its memory keeps calling Among the haunting sadness that envelopes us Shadows fusing, clouds drifting by, As Autumn makes way, words still outpour And Birds fly to warmer climes, Close the window, fasten the door As the days grow cold, sit by the fire, When the morning comes tumbling down Don't forget to keep wearing your masks.
Today, most of us are aware, that we are currently in the grips of a mental
health crisis. An epidemic. killing indiscriminately, especially the
young .One in four people in the UK will experience a mental health
problem each year. Every year organisations and communities
around the world come together to raise awareness of how we can create a
world where fewer people die by suicide. 10 September 2020 marks 17 years of World Suicide Prevention Day.
This
day observes the commitment to remove the social stigma that surrounds
discussions on suicide This year it is focusing on the theme of connection and working together to prevent suicide. For people who are feeling vulnerable or distressed, having a strong sense of connection is an important part of suicide prevention. Connection can come in many forms, we can connect with friends and family, have connections through activities, or with nature and the arts.
Being distracted from suicidal thoughts and engaging in activities to take time away from the difficulties can also help to lift the mood for those with suicidal thoughts at whatever level or intensity. For those of us not feeling distressed, being able to make connections with someone we think may be struggling, to give someone the opportunity to share with us how they are feeling, can really help.
The most challenging conversations to have are usually the ones we
need to have the most. Talking about suicide makes it more real, but
choosing silence is not the answer. Approximately eight hundred thousand individuals commit suicide globally each year.. Every life lost to suicide is a tragedy.And we know that suicide is preventable, it’s not inevitable. In 2019, suicide numbers reached a 16 year high in the UK
after experiencing a steady downward trend since 2003. With more people
both attempting and committing suicide each year, it is more urgent
than ever that we keep the conversation open and honest about suicide.
Suicide
is a human issue. When we start to look at it as such, it opens the
door for better conversations and the normalisation of treatment in
society. Suicide can affect anyone regardless of race, ethnicity,
religion, socio-economic background, gender and age. No-one is immune.
It is a hard number to swallow, but around 81 per cent of suicidal people
tell someone what they are going to do and when they are going to do
it. It is time to get honest about suicide prevention. If many who
attempt suicide give some clue or warning, then we need to look out for
the signs. Statements like "You'll be sorry when I'm gone," "I can't see
any way out,"- no matter how casually or jokingly said - may indicate
serious suicidal feelings.Too often, suicidal people are left at the mercy of
these thoughts; they seek help too late and then need to wait even
longer for an appointment.
If
you are worried someone is suicidal, it is okay to ask them directly.
Research shows that this helps - because it gives them permission to
tell you how they feel, and shows that they are not a burden.
Once
someone starts to share how they are feeling, it is important to
listen. This could mean not offering advice, not trying to identify what
they are going through with your own experiences and not trying to
solve their problems.
But not being okay is still widely stigmatised. And governments can still make better, more ambitious plans to prevent suicide.We should not forget that mental illness doesn't discriminate, touching the lives of people in
every corner of society - from the homeless and unemployed to builders
and doctors, reality stars and footballers. and within the monopoly-capitalist nations, mental-health disorders are the
leading cause of life expectancy decline behind cardiovascular disease
and cancer.
In the European Union, 27.0 percent of the adult population between the
ages of eighteen and sixty-five are said to have experienced
mental-health complications.
Recent estimates by the World Health Organization suggest that more
than three hundred million people suffer from depression worldwide. And
it is important to note that most of the medications currently
available fail to manage symptoms at all.
Suicide and suicide attempts can have lasting effects on individuals
and their social networks and communities. The causes of suicide are
many, and it is important to understand the psychological processes that
underlie suicidal thoughts, and the factors that can lead to feelings
of hopelessness or despair.
Suicide behaviours are complex, there is no single explanation of why
people die by suicide. Social, psychological, and cultural factors can
all interact to lead a person to suicidal thoughts or behaviour. For
many people, an attempt may occur after a long period of suicidal
thoughts or feelings, while in other cases, it may be more impulsive.
Despite some excellent media guidelines produced by Samaritans and
Mind, journalists often still revert to outdated language and
stereotypes when reporting suicide. There is a difficult balance between reporting known facts and
introducing elements of the story into the public domain which may
encourage others to emulate what they have read, as is described in the
Werther effect - so called because of the spate of imitational suicides
that were said to have taken place after the publication of Goethe’s
novel The Sorrows of Young Werther. Research carried out across the
world over the last five decades shows that when specific methods of
suicide are reported – details of types and amounts of pills, for
example – it can lead to vulnerable people copying them.
Young
people in particular are more influenced by what they see and hear in
the media than other age groups and are more susceptible to what is
often referred to as suicide contagion.
We should not describe a suicide as ‘easy’, ‘painless’, ‘quick’ or
‘effective’, and we should remember to look at the long-term
consequences of suicide attempts, not forgetting the significant
life-long pain for those left behind when someone does take their own
life.
It is also important to bear in mind that reports of celebrity deaths
carry greater risk of encouraging others to take their own lives, due
to the increased likelihood of over-identification by vulnerable people.
A recent study, which examined news reports covering the suicide of US
actor Robin Williams, identified a 10% increase in people taking their
own lives in the months following his death. This emphasises the
responsibility that we all have when it comes to talking about suicide.
We often read speculation about the cause of suicide, linking a death
to a previous event such as the loss of a job, the break-up of a
relationship or bullying. It is impossible to say with any certainty why
someone takes their own life. As the Samaritans state: ‘there is no simple
explanation for why someone chooses to die by suicide, and it is rarely
due to one particular factor.’Suicide is often the culmination of a complex set of factors.
Covid-19 has affected us all in different ways and brought new or
increased challenges for many. But there has also been a positive impact
of new connections, often with neighbours and within communities. I
hope that exploring connection on this World Suicide Prevention Day will
help us all think about how we can reach out and offer connection,
helping ourselves and others who may be struggling.so we would like to
share some helpful tips and information for those who might need it.
Together we can work to raise awareness of suicide prevention and how we
can create a world where fewer people die by suicide.
If
you are worried someone is suicidal, it is okay to ask them directly.
Research shows that this helps - because it gives them permission to
tell you how they feel, and shows that they are not a burden. Once
someone starts to share how they are feeling, it is important to
listen. This could mean not offering advice, not trying to identify what
they are going through with your own experiences and not trying to
solve their problems.
Let’s all make a habit of checking on
each other. Check on your strong friends today. Check on your
struggling friends. Don’t be fooled by smiles or tough exteriors. Pain
can manifest itself in many ways and have many different faces. Check
on yourself too. If you are struggling, please know that there are
resources available. And, know that there is no shame in needing help.
The world needs you to stay. The world needs us to help each other find
our way back to being okay.
Here are some useful helplines :-
Samaritans: 116 123 (free, for everyone, 24/7)
Somewhere To Turn( free, online peer support and signposting service)
CALM: 0800 585858 (free, for men, 5pm-midnight)
PAPYRUS: 0800 968 4141 (free, for young people, 9am-10pm Mon-Fri, 2pm-10pm at the weekend)
On September 8, 1893 Chilean writer, modernist poet and anarcha feminist poet Teresa Wilms Montt is born in Viña del Mar, Chile, the second of six daughters of Federico Guillermo Wilms Montt y Brieba and Luz Victoria Montt y Montt, both of whose families were members of the commercial and political elite of Chile during early first years of the 20th century, Teresa Wilms' education was at the hands of a strict governesses, who trained her in all the subjects and duties necessary for a search for a suitable husband.
However, since early childhood, she rebelled against the values and teachings of her class, which did not accommodate her free and creative spirit. A talented pianist, singer and writer of lyrics, skills that she was drawn upon the exhibit at the endless round of social gatherings of her class, it was at one of those events, held in the family mansion in the summer of 1910, where she met the young Gustavo Balmaceda Valdés – a family member of the late president José Manuel Balmaceda, who was eight years older than her and worked for the internal revenue service.
Despite opposition from both families – Teresa being only seventeen years old and her parents had refused her permission to wed – she married Gustavo Balmaceda, later giving birth to two daughters. However, her free spirit and intellectual pursuits, which brought her into contact with other men, provoked Balmaceda's jealousy, marital tensions and ultimately its breakdown. Balmaceda's work also took the family to far-flung parts of Chile such as Valdivia and Iquique from 1912 to 1915, and led to periods of prolonged loneliness for Teresa that nevertheless proved very fruitful for her creatively.
It was during these years she turned to the writing of intimate diaries and sustained close friendships with a number influential artists and intellectuals, such as the poet Victor Domingo Silva. It was during her stay in Iquique that she was published for the first time under the pseudonym 'Tebac', and it was there that she first encounter feminist and anarchist ideas, inspired by the speech of the Spanish feminist Belén de Zárraga and the Chilean Luis Emilio Recabarren, and her meeting with anarchists and syndicalists.
The discovery in 1915 of her affair with Balmaceda's cousin, Vicente Zañartu Balmaceda, led to the men of the Balmaceda Valdés family deciding to have her confined to the Convento de la Preciosa Sangre which was more of an asylym / prison . There, she continued to keep her diary and, depressed, made her first suicide attempt on March 29, 1916. In June 1916, the Chilean poet and anarchist Vicente Huidobro helped her escape from the convent and together they fled to Buenos Aires where she found freedom, both as a woman and as a writer. She began collaborating on the magazine 'Nosotros' (We) along side the like of fellow poets Gabriela Mistral and Ángel Cruchaga Santa María and joined the circle around writers such as Victoria Ocampo, Jorge Borges, and the feminist-fashionista 'Pele' Pelegrina Pastorino. In 1917 Wilms Montt published her first two books – 'Inquietudes Sentimentales' (Sentimental Concerns), a set of fifty poems that enjoyed overwhelming success among the Argentine capital's intellectual circles, as did her second book, 'Los tres cantos' (The Three Songs), in which she explored eroticism and spirituality.e with the magazine Nosotros, which also published work by Gabriela Mistral and Ángel Cruchaga Santa María.
In August 1917, her 20-year-old lover Horacio Ramos Mejía, committed suicide in front of Wilms Montt, and she left for New York City to collaborate with the Red Cross during World War I, but, after being accused of being a German spy, she was refused entry and was deported to Spain. There, she joined Madrid's bohemia and intellectual circle, befriending writer such as Joaquín Edwards Bello, Gómez de la Serna, Enrique Gómez Carrillo and Ramón del Valle-Inclán, going on to become the muse of the artist Julio Romero de Torres. In Madrid, which was to become her base from then on, she published a further two works under the pseudonym Teresa de la Cruz, which were widely praised by Spanish literary critics: 'En la Quietud del Mármol' (In the Stillness of Marble; 1918) and 'Anuarí' (1919). The first is an elegy of lyrical tone, composed of 35 fragments, with death as the central motive. Written in the first person, she focused her interest in the mediating role of the love of life. 'Anuarí', meanwhile, was a tribute to her dead lover Ramos Mejía.
During a visit to Buenos Aires, in 1919, she published her fifth book, 'Cuentos para hombres que todavía son niños' (Tales for Men Who Are Still Children), in which she evoked her childhood and some of her later relationships, in stories of great originality and fantasy.
She was a very very beautiful woman and a poet of the highest calibre. Unfortunately, this is news to much of the world Described by fearful right-wing critics as "embodying sexual aberrance and social prophesy", she embraced the anarchist ideas that were sweeping through the industrialised world in the late 19th and early 20th centuries and took part in the aggressive anti-capitalist discourse that advocated full social revolution.
She continued to travel through Europe, visiting London and Paris, and it was in the latter in 1920 that she was reunited with his daughters after 5 years of separation, through the efforts of her diplomat father. However, shortly after their departure, she plunged into a deep depression , her soul broken and became seriously ill and during this crisis she consumed a large dose of Veronal,and after a long period of agony, died on December 24, 1921. She was only twenty-eight years old ,leaving behind a life full of intense and painful experiences, but also a writer who lived a tumultuous , rebellious life who refused to conform to societies rules and the expectations of her time and surroundings and left behind a great body ofwork that deserves to be recognized, but sadly her life is mostly forgotten. in her country and in the world, but at least is remembered in the 2009 film "Teresa: Crucificada por amar" by director Tatiana Gaviola.
In the last pages of her diary, she wrote:"Morir, después de haber sentido todo y no ser nada..." (Dying, having felt everything and being nothing ...) Teresa Wilms Montt - In the Stillness of Marble And when the sun spills out diamonds upon the world, then I breathe in all the flowers, I see you in all the trees,
and I possess you tumbling, intoxicated with love, on the lawns of fragrant grass. And when the moon gives its humble blessing to men, I see you gigantic, silhouetted by the sharp edges of a lightning bolt; I see you enormous, confused with the immortal, scattering your indulgence over the world, soothing the desperation of so many suffering castaways; I breathe you in the atmosphere, I imagine you in the mystery, I extract you from nothingness. It seems to me that the world was only made to help me evoke you, and the sun to serve me as a lantern over the rugged path.
Shadow boxing in a daily wasteland
Ruled by conglomerates and monopolies,
That steal and feed on our dreams
Wllfully with ideological mission.
Murdoch's laughable beacons of free press
Destroying wisdom, mocking aloud,
Relentless manipulators of truth
Scapegoating minorities, and refugees,
Spreading toxic words of poison
About those fleeing poverty and war,
Keeping the public enslaved, on a diet of lies
Propelling deceptive propaganda,,
Five billionaires own 80 % of the UK press
To serve their own right wing agendas,
Try to keep society divided
Fooling credulous victims of bias,
Slinging smears and mud on anyone
Who dare challenge the chicanery,
Others demand a revision of values
Wake up and choose to light a fuse,
As paradigm shifts perception
Rejecting now what they fear,
Time to overthrow the media oligarchs
Among rustling, leaves of change,
Creating a culture that feeds on empathy
Freedom triumphs and democracy awakens,
Sabra صابِرة is the Arabic word for patience, forbearance. It's also a Palestinian name for the prickly pear cactus that was used as hedgeing round village homes and gardens, as well as food in hard times.The name was adopted in Hebrew by early Jewish settlers in the land that became Israel, in 1948.It then became sobriquet for those hardy frontiersmen themselves - some content to co-exist with Arab neigbours, some more predatory.
One of the oldest known prepared foods in human history, hummus is claimed by multiple Middle Eastern nationalities.For Israelis, Lebanese, Syrians, Egyptians, Jordanians, Palestinians, Turks and Iraqis, hummus is a culinary icon and a staple of their diet. Hummus has also become a global food commodity, manufactured and sold everywhere. The Sabra Hummus that can be found on the shelves of Tesco, Waitrose, Sainsbury's etc was founded in 1986 by Zohar Norman and Yehuda Pearl[9] as Sabra-Blue & White Foods.The company is now owned jointly between PepsiCo and the Strauss Group, a multinational corporation and Israel’s largest food and beverage company. While it may taste good, I personally love hummus, the Strauss Group materially supports and sends care packages to the Golani Brigade of the Israel Defense Forces, a fact that was once stated on the company’s website but has since been removed due to pressure from pro-Palestine groups. Even by the abysmal human rights standards of the IDF, the Golani Brigade is particularly brutal: since its inception, the Brigade has carried out countless human rights violations against Palestinians — particularly in Hebron and in the siege on Gaza (Operation Cast Lead) from 2008-2009 — including arbitrary murders, assaults, detentions, home invasions, and arrests of children.Their members have been known to use horrific imagery on t-shirts, such as a pregnant Palestinian woman in a sniper's cross-hairs, with the slogan “one shot, two kills”.
Furthermore, the Brigade’s role as an occupying force violates international law: Israel’s occupation of the West Bank and Gaza, the construction of Israeli settlements in the West Bank, and its 1967 annexation of East Jerusalem are all illegal according to the United Nations. Simply put, when you buy Sabra hummus you are supporting war and oppression. For many Palestinians, the Occupation is a painful and constant reality, in light of this the campaign to boycott Sabra is situated within a broader international movement to hold Israel accountable for human rights abuses and abolish its “three-tiered system of oppression: colonialism, occupation, and apartheid.” In 2005, Palestinian civil society called for the boycott of, divestment from, and sanctions of Israeli state institutions as a nonviolent strategy to pressure Israel to comply with international law and universal principles of human rights. Modeled after the successful South African anti-apartheid campaigns of the last century, the BDS movement aims to highlight the immoral and illegal occupation of Palestinian land, and to stigmatize the many human rights violations that continue to be an everyday reality for many Palestinians. Since 2005, dozens of companies, university student governments, workers’ unions, churches, and other organizations have publicly joined the BDS campaign by changing their institutional policy and practice to adhere to its goals, and to encourage boycotting products such as Sabra hummus and raise awareness of other companies like this that are complicit in Israel's continued human rights violations in Palestine. Boycotting brands is one of the easiest ways to convince retailers across the world to stop selling products from companies profiting from Israeli occupation.. A full list of what to boycott can be found here.
The connection between Sabra hummus and human rights abuses is not weak ; is is as plain as day. Support the boycott of Sabra hummus. There are other cheaper, more ethical alternatives. The movement worked with anti-apartheid South Africa it can work again today.
As a weapons system designed for the Cold War, the case for Trident is non-existent in 2020.
Nuclear weapons are wrong – strategically, morally and financially.
Yet, despite peoples long-standing opposition to their obscene presence, MPs inside the House of Commons
decided the UK will renew its nuclear deterrent system writing a
blank cheque to base another generation of nuclear weapons in Scotland’s
waters.
But CND believe Britain should not possess a weapon whose only
purpose is to threaten the whole of humanity. Each warhead has 8 times
the explosive power of the bomb that destroyed the Japanese city of
Hiroshima in 1945. That bomb alone vaporised human flesh within a half
mile radius and fatally burned thousands miles from the epicentre.of mass
destruction. Instead of the billions of pounds squandered the cost could be
better spent on infrastructure, education, combating climate change and helping fund the NHS without threatening the lives of othersBritain, let's not forget is a signatory to the Nuclear Non- Proliferation Treaty, and gas made an unequivocal undertaking to accomplish the total elimination of its nuclear arsenal, but the decision to replace Trrident would run counter to our Treaty commitments, cost billions of pounds, escalate, rather than secure, Britain's real security.
As MPs return to parliament tomorrow. Let's make sure that the first
thing they have think about is the existential threats of nuclear
weapons and climate change.
Write to your MP to raise concerns about the existential threats of climate change and nuclear war
Nuclear annihilation and climate catastrophe are the two biggest
threats to human existence. This has been confirmed by the atomic
scientists that maintain the Doomsday Clock: this year its hands were
set at 100 seconds to midnight.
Britain should be a world-leader in tackling climate change, but also in the disarming of nuclear weapons, urgent action is needed, as the risk of disaster has never been greater. Urgent action is needed but our government continues to prioritise war and weapons over the future of our planet. Write to your MP to raise concerns about the existential threats of climate change and nuclear war.
Urge your MP to put pressure on the government to step up the response
to the climate emergency, to stop Trident replacement and to sign the
Treaty on the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons.