Saturday 20 August 2016

Ken Loach and the Spirit of 45 - the last great socialist victory in Britain and me prostate


At times Mrs Belgo Geordie maks the comment that her hubbie is a right gadgie, getting' awld! * Like, he can remember Second World War. She is sure that when he was a bairn he was collecting' bits of shrapnel outta bomb sites and swopping' em for old copies of Viz. Sigh. Hennies can be right cruel to a man when he's down! It were the Dandy! An'niver shrapnel! Why aye we knew they were bits of Nazi planes an' it were fifteen year after when the war finished there were still bomb sites in Newcastle. Aye and slums. The baby bairns school I went to still had a bomb shelter. Filled with rubble, it were a dark cave smellin' of piss where we'd dare one another to go in and take a gander at the dead bodies trapped inside. Although Newcastle dinna take the pasting of London, and not Clyde or Coventry, it were bombed and there were folk killed. Even then in the early sixties there were still rationing of sorts, least things hard to come by. Yer knew there were men who had lost their minds due to being in the war. They shuffled along locked in their own private hell, or drank in a way to forget, not to have a good time. And we niver understood the cost they and the women who kept industry going, paid in war service.


Noo, in 1945 I were not even a twinkle in me dad's eye or as he liked to put it not even " A blurry fart at wrong time." Boot the Second World War left its mark on me life. Me Ma was a Land Army girl and me dad was a communist resistant who escaped Europe an' ended oop in Royal Navy on a small corvette. The Second World War fooked oop both their educations. Different countries same result. In North Shields, schools were closed more often than not. In Belgium, in May 1940, the Germans invaded and me dad left school and became a resistant, ending oop in a Spanish concentration camp before escaping to England in 1943. At end of war me Mam were pregnant with me sista and me dad a train wreck about to happen, who could never return to his country to live - boot remained hard left, anti fascist and against nationalism and war.

Clem Attlee
Goodbye Mr Churchill
They wanted peace but on the terms for which they fought the war. So it were in Britain a socialist revolution occurred through the ballot box. You look at pictures of that time and yer can see folk wanting a change. In a landslide victory - Labour swept aside Winston Churchill; an electorate vowing never to return to the poverty and unemployment of the between the wars years depression. This election shaped post war Britain and for a time made it a better place for nearly all. Ken Loach has crafted a 90 minute documentary revisiting  this event; then its legacy and the cruel and unnecessary dismantling of the post war peoples' dream of having more of a say in a better future - replacing it with greed. Me dad was allus cynical that the radical nationalisation of industry, transport, utilities would pave way to jobs. He saw the same class of rulers take over the process and not the working man or woman. Boot he loved the formation of the national health. So mooch, he trained as a nurse and worked in it till he died. As a family, we saw benefits like council houses with good sanitation, our own room and a garden. That did not cost an arm and a leg to rent. It cost next to nowt to catch bus to school. We had school dinners. Free doctor and dental care. And oop to the 1970s there was work in industry, on the trains and buses, in the merchant marine. There were family holidays to beach (day trips). Sanatoriums for recuperation. And the awld did not end oop in poor house or as tramps. The hospitals were clean and well stocked. A lot of bright working class bairns like that bloody Ted Hughes, went to university. This were our parents dream for the future. No more class. No more poverty. No more wars. Boot as this doc shows, the dream, flawed, unravelled and one Margaret Thatcher then drove a stake through its crumbling heart.
Eileen Thompson nurse and socialist

Ray Davies miner and steel worker
Mr Bevan

A Scouser lad - Sam Watts
What you see now is only a shada of the dream the war generation held. In some ways it were their children, my generation, who dinna' have the strength of keeping up the ideals. We gave into the 'good life' the American dream of consumerism. We dinna pass onto our bairns that you can fight capitalism and win in the ballot box. That unions were good in that they unified people to a common purpose where social justice was not joost a catch phrase boot an example of living and creating a better life for all. So this is reminder of the spirit of that time and of people like Aneurin Bevan who was able to radicalise a country without bloody revolution by being a politician with balls and a big vision. It were a pleasure to watch this and listen to folk interviewed and to hear where they thought it went wrong. And they are still candlelight in darkness, small but fierce flames of hope. And Ken Loach? Bloody class warrior to his core. For that, his humanity, his persistence in telling and retelling the story without losing hope of what happened once could happen again, we should all be grateful. Inspiring and deeply moving. Im off to raise me red flag...

See:
https://www.theguardian.com/film/2016/oct/15/ken-laoch-film-i-daniel-blake-kes-cathy-come-home-interview-simon-hattenstone

This is an exceptional piece about Mr Loach and what drives his film making and a typical typo from the Grauniad

*I had ta visit yon specialist doc this year as me prostate was giving me gyp. He gave me the science saying a man's prostate should be size of a walnut. Mine, having had a good feel and taken pictures was like the mandarin below. Not cancer but enlarged and making peeing like a tap with a bung washer.
Naw thus is what a prostate should look like
Naw when I say a doctor specialist- I had ta watch him like a rheumy eyed hawk because he wanted to turn inta a Mister. This is when a friendly bedside manner doctor morphs inta a green, blood stained gowned butcher who wants ta take to yer using sharp cutty things to disect yer pip! He had that look when he was talking to oos and I kept me back to the door and desk between us. He said, use the image of yon bit of fruit- all he would do is remove the segments leaving the skin. Almost boring, he could do a whole fruit bowl and not break sweat! Pay off would be for me ta pee like an eighteen year old after a night out on eight pints and a curry. We agreed he might make a filum of the inside of the BelgoGeordie bladder, but no, it would not be a submarine piloted by Raquel Welch and he would not pay for Big Al to fly out and hold me hand.
The Belgo Geordie one -copyright BG
And what doos this has to do with Mr Loach's finest film? I was seen through the public system boot if I wanted to hand over a load of money I could go private and have me mandarin gutted at same time. To quote another doctor from "Spirit of 45". They hoped it would never come to arriving at hospital gates and being asked if you have private insurance and if not, you were dumped off stretcher and left to crawl back home. Those times are just about here. I put me name on waiting list for public system. I'll wait me turn. So where is the spirit that fed the 1945 revolution? As Mr Bevan said about the National health Service - it will exist as long as folk are prepared to fight for what is right. Sounds as sensible today as then. Off to peel a mandarin- niver liked cracking walnuts anyhow!
**All photographs were taken using a box brownie and taking stills from Mr Loach's film; so copyright is his like and the memory of the people who shot the original newsreel footages- except for the photos of the Belgo Geordie prostate before and after enlargement and ageing. Aye bonny lad, live long enough and it happens to us awl.

Saturday 13 August 2016

Libs Hate the Inner West - Pictorial Musings from Sydney Newtown Postcode 2044

"Everybody wants to touch me
Everybody wants a feel
Everybody wants a piece of something that's real"

PAUL KELLY

On the way home with me report card
By Sydenham station a stopped an' mopped me brow







Great big skies!!!!

Fossil on the streets or leftover from biennial
Diversity challenge in Newtown
The local curawong greets the dawn


Moost be Florence an doont blow it oop, its pixilated
I came, I saw, I destroyed


Houses emptied, ready for demolition
West Connx is replacing these





Newtown Wall-Art

Saturday 6 August 2016

The Great Soul of Siberia: Book Review: Siberian Tigers and Sooyong Park

It's been a bit 'Animal Farm' in the Belgo Geordie household as of late! I'm talking' about reading and thinking, rather than we've taken up farming' or owt. Although, it's been a lot more blurry quiet since the Belgo Geordie cat went and turned oop his claws an' whistled last post on us. But no, I have hit a rich vein of books lately about animals and mostly top of the chain predators at that. There was the deeply satisfying novel "Wolf Border" by Cumbrian lass, Sarah Hall. A story around the re-release of wolves into northern England or the Borders-not that I think of that wild area as being England or Scotland. Its Border Lands. Beautiful, remote and with its own history and code of justice. A place where yon wolves would fit right in. The main protagonist in the novel, a wolf expert, is as single minded as the animals she champions. A rare read! Then there was a sheeps book also from Cumbria "The Shepherd's Life" by James Rebanks-Sort of fitted well alongside a CD by Kathryn Tickle "Northumberland Voices". Especially the title track which is about the borders sheep farming community. (Yes, I know sheeps are not top of the food chain, despite 'Silence of the Lambs'. The ones in this book are only grass killers) - but Mr Rebanks book is the stuff about nature head up against modernisation and a reminder of why working with nature remains essential to our world. Lastly, I'm immersed in "H is for Hawk' by Helen McDonald and her managing grief while training a goshawk in Cambridge, England. It is an emotional belly ripper and deeply engaging in thought and substance.

Now as a nipper, I wanted to be Gerry Durrell but without the belly. I liked Kes the book and film. I spent a lot of time in the company of birds and animals-even working a short stint at London Zoo. Boot as a teen wurkin on me scowl, it fell away about the time I hit a brick wall at school and a subject called physics (not ta mention new math, what were wrong with the old one like? It worked if you had enough fingers and were canny at counting). Belgo Geordie were a bit of a dunce in understanding matter that didn't seem to make sense when standing still, I was always left feelin' I'd bin left a bit short changed an' its taken me fifty odd years to catch oop. I can read book on physics an' oonderstand a page or two. Time moost be relative!

Anyhow, it were this book "The Great Soul of Siberia" that provided unexpected readin' pleasure and hours of head scratching and the use of the word bugger to express deep and thoughtful emotions. "Coop a' tea our Geordie?" "No Mrs Belgo, not at moment! I'm just contemplatin' what it would be like being eaten by three fully grown Siberian Tigers when all I've lived on in a hole in the ground over a Siberian winter is a couple of balls of rice a day and a few nuts." "Alreet then pet, sing out when you want a brew then!".
Pissing on the beach to mark its territory
If there is ever a man to admire then it would be after reading this book, Sooyong Park. In the days of 'instant I want it now' footage, this is a man who approached Tiger spotting with the guile of a buddhist monk crossed with a tax accountant. He gave his life to spending months at a time buried underground or on a cold platform above the tree line (and above tiger reach). In a hide on animal trails that the tiger hunted. Logic being they would come that way searching dinner. He studied every paw print, left over kill (how they eat a kill is deft-like a gourmet), pissed on branch, bit of hair on a favoured rubbing tree and the scratch marks reaching high up into the canopy. But mainly he sat still underground in the cold for months on end in the hope that he might see and film a bit of Siberian Tiger in its natural environment. Behaving as it would when it knows its not being filmed by David Attenborough (you know farting, picking its nose, scratching its balls or when pissing up against a tree, considerin' yon French philosophers) - Mr Park wanted his presence to be as invisible as it could be. This included having minimal scent and mostly (except where he was grassed up by a rowdy bunch of field mice in his hide) he succeeded. And succeeded in getting to know so much about this impressive animal that if it were ever to become extinct from its habitat then this is a fair record of how much a loss it would be on the Siberian eco system and landscape.
Tiger in contemplation: Satre or Montaigne?
The book is part philosophy, spirituality and a love fest for the tiger, an' this is an impressive book. So much so, that when I heard there were a filum about it I looked up the documentary "Siberian Tiger Quest" by Wigan born black bear expert Chris Morgan. This covered Mr Park's work and he features in it as mentor to the media savvy but for me, annoyingly reality type TV presenter Mr Morgan. "In two weeks I will learn all it has taken Mr Parks years to learn and without being buried under Siberian dirt, snow and tiger droppings or using cameras made from old coke bottles tied up with rubber bands and made to look like part of the Siberian landscape." Boot, The bits with Mr Park showing some of his skills to yon lad green behind ears is worth the watch. And it has good footage from Mr Park's years of patient study and jammy Wigan lad even got some film of a tiger on one of his hidden cameras.

These tigers have survived in this habitat by being suspicious (rightly) of folk. To the point they find cameras and destroy them. And niver, niver forget time nor place! Mr Park had to work hard to make them ignore him and his cannily constructed tracking and filming equipment. One of the best pieces in the book is where courtesy of those pesky field mice, a family of three tigers including the beautifully named mama tiger 'Bloody Mary'  curiosity, turns to suspicion, to full blooded search and kill anger against a perceived threat. They nearly dig Mr Park out of his hide. Three large, angry cats jumping' up and down on a thin piece of ply covered in dirt, blankets and leaves. Inevitably it shatters with one large paw belonging to an astonished tiger poking into the nothingness of the hide's interior. It produces what must be a massive understatement in "You haven't lived unless you feel a fully grown Siberian Tigers breath against your frozen cheek"-while you lie still with a scrabbling, well armed claw just above your head looking to scoop you out like a whelk. All the time pretending you are just a harmless middle aged Korean man who probably should have stuck to studying literature all those years ago. Mr Park still does not have a coherent explanation why he wasn't dug out, gutted, filleted into human jerky and bone polished other than at some stage Bloody Mary decided to call off the attack. Rice ball farts, three months of unwashed underwear mabe? I can imagine Blood Mary sayin' in Tiger like "Cum on bairns, it smells a bit Roker Park down there. Lets go find some fresh racoon dog to snack on before big match."
Newtown tiger-off King Street

The documentary is also worth seeing in that it confirms what comes across in his book. Mr Park is a very humble man with a deep love for the tigers he encountered and the country they live in. His description of the Siberian landscape in all its seasonal changes, its flora and fauna, its indigenous peoples, is poetic, inspiring and in the vein of Dersu Uzala*. But more importantly it is his homage to the special place tigers hold in this region and like Sarah Hall's book on wolves, he is of the view if you take away the top of the chain predators and the eco system distorts and loses direction. Sadly the poaching accounts for some of the tigers he studied. But at the heart this book is a remarkable family of intelligent cats. With complex and affectionate family relationships. The king tiger, solitary - roaming large areas of territory, playful when encountering his mates or cubs that are his but if not from his brood or a rival male - then deadly. For those who believe people are smarter, better than other life forms. This story shows how little merit this viewpoint holds. Imagine surviving in Siberia on your human wits alone. How much we would lose should theses impressive animals become extinct. I wonder what Mrs Belgo would say to a small orange and black fluff ball called Sib to replace the departed mog? Better go and sheer a few sheep, an' feed the raptor some noisey field mice. Bloody wolf - on roof howling' at moon again!

All pics except last from Mr Park's book.
* Dersu Uzala: see magnificent film by Akira Kurosawa based on the novel by Vladimir Arsenyev set in Siberia in the early 20th century.