Saturday 7 December 2019

A Wurld gone wrong (A Geordie's lament) Dedicated ter Jimmy Forsyth, photographer of the people for the people, and a review of Scotswood Road- photographs of Jimmy Forsyth



A Wurld gone wrong


All photographs are by Jimmy Forsyth and his alone
Politics! What’s that yer ask?
A shovel, now that has a use
Boot wurds, joost rabbitin’ on
Like what difference durst it make
A man, or woman who promises owt
Boot delivers nowt, yet promises oos
Tha future were nivvor brighter
With thems at helm
What future ever turned oot brighter?
Tell oss tha canny lad, canny lass

Aah were a communist
When we were promised a revolution
Labour, when it would feed, clothe and educate our bairns
Take care of the sick, the owld and all thems
Tha canna care fer themselves

Boot now?
A spuggy’s fart
Has more taste
Than them words spilled
Like clatter, blether and yatter
If theres nowt ter sustain them
Boot dreams tha niver deliver

Nae, I have not turned on me own
Just the blethering
The fear ter say what is reight
And what is wrong in this world
Ter call oot thems that is destroying
The real future, the one we should
Wurk ter create
For our bairns, their bairns
An’ all life as we know it
That sustains this wurld 
And makes it a better place

Aye, politics! Tread lightly marra
Thas blurd, thas sinew and byen
Beneath yer feet
The dreams of working men and women
Calling oot fer yer ter listen
They fought for joostice, jobs, dignity
We owe them respect
We owe them wot we have now
We are in the future they claimed

The Willows? Blurry stupid name fer a high-rise
Aye, politician, them too
Yer promised a future
Then took it away, bit by bit
And what yer gave them

Were nowt boot sorrow
Were lies built on lies
Driftin’ like caustic snow
Burying our hopes

Aye, politician
Yer call me, an owld commie,
A dinosaur living in the past
Yet, here I am
Shoulder still ter barricade
I still brae
Reivin’
Fighting
In this world gone wrong


Poem written Christchurch, New Zealand, November 2019

Review of Scotswood Road:

Jimmy Forsyth photographer, born in Wales 13 August 1913; died in Newcastle 11 July 2009.  A mariner, fitter and joiner he arrived in Newcastle looking for wurk in 1943. And although blind in one eye from an industrial accident and unable to find wurk most of his adult life, he turned to photography - as much as anything to capture the dying breaths of his community around the Scotswood Road in the late 1950's - early sixties - my urban Newcastle. He niver went back ter Barry in Wales. And he niver married. And he said he never had ter go far from Scotswood Road ter find images an' folk ter have a good crack with.

In 1986 Bloodaxe published a collection of Jimmy Forsyth's photographs of which these images were taken. Although Jimmy believed as a socialist, his photographs should be free, if yer use them acknowledge his work.  Copyright is Mr Forsyth's estate so treat this with respect - for if any man deserves Geordie respect it is Jimmy Forsyth. He caught an recorded an era of the working class community destroyed by T Dan Smith and the developers greedy for money, disguising what they did as improving the living conditions of working folk. Did it bollocks. One form of poverty was replaced by another where community was the loser. A price still being paid oot terday. These were days of big extended families that looked out fer one another. 

Mr Forsyth frying an egg circa 1957
Man and dog and benedict peas 1957
Towards the end of his life, a life well lived, he had over 40,000 images of which these are but a small fraction. An archive of an era. Nowt romantic about what he saw. Poverty boot also pride and a sense of being. Characters, yer could read their lives in a picture. Although he claimed to be an amateur photographer, he was more than that. He had heart and a love of folk, common folk. Aye, he were recognised before he died, but mostly his was a labour of love and a passion for socialism and the community in Scotswood, that had adopted him as one of their own.  He was a son of Scotswood and its pictorial historian and social commentator. That he were. Aye, a taff who found it hard to understand the locals when he first came to Toon. Who would have thought! Boot he saw the link between working communities, how people grafted quoting his father working on railways in Barry "If you can't work, starve...if a man can't earn his salt he shouldn't bloody have it!" Aye, when there were jobs and Jimmy had a lifetime struggle following industrial injuries and losing the sight of one eye. Not a level playing field. His were not an easy life.He said he sometimes sold a picture fer half a crown. Get away! It bought him another roll of film. Boot he did not expect sympathy or charity. Jimmy Forsyth left school at 14. Did an apprenticeship in the depression and there was no work, so went to sea as a lot of working lads did. 
The four just Geordie men - see the same pose, the pride aya and two flat caps, a fat dog but no whippet and waiting fer pub ter open
Aye boot, what he chronicled were the demolition of old Newcastle. The streets of narrow terraced houses and the coming of the high rise tenements - lonely acres in the sky where folk lived in isolation and went quietly mad or scared to venture out when lifts stopped working. Ironically from 1993 he lived out his life in one such block 'The Cedars'. Oxymoron of a name! Like The Willows captured in one of the photos above. Boot he survived because every day he were out in streets taking photographs chin-wagging with folk. In his Guardian obituary (Aye Jimmy lad you were recognised as a national treasure in the pointy heads newspaper the Grauniad). " The planners actually believed that they could build communities but instead the community was scattered to the four winds, people were sent to far-flung estates, and a community was lost forever." Aye, and he might of added to cheap, poorly built estates that were inadequately maintained. The terraces were bad, don't get me wrong, slums in many cases boot also house maintained and scrubbed ter within an inch of their lives.  Boot modern, high rises with flats the size of shoe boxes, where if folk in number ten farted, it were heard by all those in nearby flats through thin walls/ceilings. Thems were not an answer and sold working folk short. An' T Dan had the gall ter call Jimmy Forsyth "a philosopher of great significance." Blurry Nora Mr Smith, yer were not worthy ter address the great man. Jimmy Forsyth were humble boot he were an inspiration. Yew were a turncoat ter yer community- rippin' oos of blind. See the documentary on this from Amber Collective. The dirty dealing of Labour at the expense of their communities while trying ter claim they were bettering the lives of folk who voted them in. A shameful history of local politics.
1959 Pine Street - this were not unlike the North Shields terraces my mum's family grew up in 
What Christmas used her look like in 1958, blurry mog looks hopeful for a bit of tinsel
 Jimmy records when this photo were taken most houses still relied on gas lighting- no electricity that we take fer granted now. Aye, I still remember threadbare, stiff linen sheets like gun metal in winta, freezing me little man bollocks off- nae wonder they dinna wan ter drop like! I slept curled like a foetus around me hottie. An' I remember Christmas's joost like this. Small tree, artificial from Woolworths hung with a few baubles that broke if yer were careless (I was), paper chain decorations made at school with paint and glue, tinsel and one present each. The old man got old spice talc fer his smelly feet. By God his feet were smelly - particularly when he removed his imitation leather shoes and toasted his feet in front of coal fire with his woollen socks smoulderin'. Aye, oos bairns would run oot inta icy wind joost ter breathe an dry retch.


Laurel Street 1956 - these were hard times - pub on right boarded up
This girl (Mrs Joan Curry) on left could be my mum a Geordie belter and look at those slippers- sexier than ugg boots
Put on yer best frock fer a picture, Park Road 1959
Aye, I have sum photo's of the girls in ma's extended family dressing posh joost like this. Boot the smiles said they would put yer in yer place if yer were daft enough ter be forward. And they would get a beltin' from their ma if they got mud on their frocks, socks and shoes. I got me lugs pulled, me head whacked fer being cheeky...and a boy from likes of these booter would nae melt like! Tell me ma. of course they did and she would side with them even over the biggest fibs.
Aye, an old fashioned Geordie - and old salt
Aye, I remember being told off by likes of a Geordie dressed like this. Nowt outta of place and so stiff they creaked as they moved boot with a fist like iron if yer spoke oot of turn. And fast. A whippet crossed with an Armstrong piston. Yer didn't give sooch a man cheek if yer dinna wan' ter see stars.

Launching a ship, the North Star, a passenger ship on the Tyne, Wallsend 1961- looks like an allotment
Aye the boats have all but gone. Blurry royalty would cum oop north ter launch ships Geordies built. Still, they took the jobs away and didn't leave oos a better wurld.
Capstan, definitely stunted yer growth girls
Mr Forsyth on the skyline amongst the demolition
Jimmy's most recognised photograph says it all Newcastle when all was black and white and the snow in 1958- aye I remember the winter of 1963
These are grand memories from Mr Forsyth. I wait the publication of a book with all 40,000 photographs. Hint, hint Bloodaxe. I keep Jimmy's spirit alive in me own photography. Following the political changes in me community of inner west Sydney and across the regions of New South Wales. Pictures of activists, the old commies still turning out fer May Day. Looking through Mr Forsyth's pictures remind me where I come from. And I, fer one am proud of Jimmy Forsyth. Aye, there is only one Jimmy Forsyth and his memory and legacy lives on. I dedicate the above poem ter a great man! 

https://www.theguardian.com/artanddesign/2009/jul/16/obituary-jimmy-forsyth

Friday 29 November 2019

Compassionate conservatism: Plllleeease! Pass the bucket I may have to put my finger down my throat

Aye it had me scratching mee noots, enough tee draw blisters even like, joost thinking this were summat serious oop fer consideration.  Droog test them on welfare, tell em how ter spend the pittance tha is newstart - while ignoring yer can't live on it. "Gets folk off benefit" said the leader of the National Benevolent Party. He thinks they are joost lazy! leaners on the rort! Should be taking part in gig economy- riding bicycles, delivering hot food for a few dollars a run. Wurk fer a canny capitalist franchise - Wage Theft Is Oos. 

Aye boot wait there's more. Give money ter the money lenders, particularly them that puts wads of cash inter party coffers. CEO of bank caught doin' wrong thing?Pension him off with a squillion. And go tut!tut! While promising' ter do summat in the never, never. Boot bash them bad unions of hairy legged thugs that dare her ask for safety on building sites, on wharves, in work-places. Today, yer should be able to go ter yer work-place and expect ter clock-off alive. As fer climate change, reduce the regional fire services. Let the mine owners and coal rule the land, fer they are lifters extraordinaire. Nay, they're busy working fer oos - nae taxes for them man!  Stop talking daft or we will ban yer from talking at all! We're aboot quiet Australians, thems that have nowt ter say and don't ask oos ter explain why we're crap at governing in government. We like the silent mob!
Labor review

So Labor has had its review of last election. An' wot have the good folk on left, the part-time progressives coom oop with?. Ter win Government yer have ter lie and sell yer soul. Durst not scare the electorate, particularly Morrison's cadres of the silent Australian. Durst nae talk of greedy folk, the spongers of public wealth an' call em for what they are - the destroyers of our future. 

Aye, it were the same in ter unions. A review were more: let's do more of the same boot call it summit different. Nay comrades. We need ter shift how we think, act and where we put our resources. Our members. The folk we represent. Remember them Labor? Not the factions or the merchants of spin, compromise and empty promises. Aye we are top against big issues - boot where is the debate let alone leadership? When were the last time we felt inspired by our political leadership? Gough? Albo has become the shadow of the tory fighter he one proudly was. "I fight tories, that's what I do." Not so obvious now. Penny Wong is the more inspiring...or even Adam Bandt.





Belgo were so incensed and demoralised by recent goings on in progressive circles and this new breed of Australian loved by neoliberals. So he pulled out a pencil, sharpened the tip and pressed down on a scrap of paper (Tasmanian organic) ter compose poetry. Grim times indeed.

                 I am the quiet Australian

                          I am the quiet Australian

                          This is what I believe

Aye, it were cracker! Said it all and more. Well, I were on a roll like. Sat on a bench in Christchurch an' had another go.

                I am the noisy Australian

I am a noisy Australian
Well
Australians are noisy
Take cockies, pies or
That bloody Wattle bird
That rattles me bedroom window

We like a racket to get us going

So, do not go gentle into
  That extinction rebellion
Rage, protest and shout
In amongst the red dust
Against the dying of life 

We are the noisy Australians
Hear us squawk and roar

We care
We shout
We are
Hitting a street near you 
Real soon

A quiet Australian!
Scomo, 
Seriously? 

Weel, I thought I'd slammed it. Two sides ter the coin. Aye, it weren't in me beloved Northumbrian, boot there are times a man moost craik with other folks. Carefully, I wiped the nib of me pencil an poot it away. School protesters are part of the noisy Australians as are the knitting nannas...as fer them anarchists, silence is deadly. Make noise folks, its yer right ter have yer say about gormless Morrison and his cronies. I mean they close parliament when biggest bush fires are building oop, and it is only December. Then Morrison jets out on his holls. Leadership? What's that? The Christmas Turkey leading the charge on conveyor belt ter oven. Baste oop lads! More stuffing anyone? 

Aye, compassionate conservatism, making sure the pish is warm before letting it spray on those below. This is no time fer silence boot we have our work cut out when Labor is not listening...and some unions have forgotten it is their members they represent. While unions that do represent their members are being fleeced by draconian punishments as wage theft increases and yet another report comes oot saying folk can't survive in the gig economy other than working all hours. Aye, we're going backwards towards economic slavery. Get angry young uns!

building-watchdog-wins-first-case-under-new-anti-picketing-laws-20191206-p53hl7.html

Sad day in Liverpool with Hillsborough verdict. Yer ask who is responsible if not the man in charge on the day? And all the lies told as ter why it were fault of football fans...Thatcher were never held ter account fer the vile slurs she made. No wonder the grief of families that lost folk that day still burns today. 



Posters from the streets of Newtown and the inner west

Friday 4 October 2019

Bowraville: How long does injustice go on? Twenty nine years and still ongoing

 This contains mention of people deceased. With respect.
Particularly an injustice that could be resolved.
"The families have been let down by the justice system. It's very nice for society to say that all victims are treated equally. Unfortunately in this situation I do not think this is entirely correct. I am a homicide detective. I'm not a do-gooder, or bleeding heart. however, race and to a lesser degree socio-economic factors have impacted on the manner in which these matters have been investigated...the families know the reason...They said "It's because we are Aboriginal." Transcript to parliamentary inquiry. Evidence from former Chief Inspector Gary Jubelin.

Colleen Walker Craig, 16. Clinton Speedy-Duroux, 16 and Evelyn Greenup, 4. Three Bowraville children murdered in-between September 1990 and February 1991. Colleen's body has never been found but her clothing was.

Dan Box's book 'bowraville' published in 2019 follows on from the podcast and is a powerful indictment of Mr Jubelin's statement. Read, listen and be informed. See below:

https://www.theguardian.com/media/2016/may/23/australias-serial-dan-box-on-the-making-of-true-podcast-bowraville

This rally on a hot Sunday in September outside Sydney Town Hall was an opportunity for family to again, put this in the public domain. Injustice, how long? Two hundred plus people came, listened and marched and families asked us to remember. That injustice has a price. Sorry business has eaten through the families involved. Black lives matter. Yet it is a hard thing to believe for these families. Twenty nine years and the blood from this sore still spills red into our red dirt land.


Belgo and Mrs Belgo were humbled being here. I thank the families who organised this, I acknowledge the people who came for the time spent. I also want to pay respect to Gary Jubelin who was present. Australia need people with this level of integrity. Although he would dispute it, he is a hero as are the families and their commitment to finding Colleen and keeping this in our thoughts. What do they want? Justice. What have they got? Fuck all!
The families spoke from bruised hearts


Youth taken on a mantle

Held it all together and kept his voice going the entire march, a hero



Mr Jubelin
Socialist Alliance - no Greens, no Labor but MUA were there


The combined families all power and love to them
And not forgetting others injustices

And they do and should

https://www.abc.net.au/news/2019-10-06/jody-gore-release-domestic-violence-indigenous-aboriginal-women/11570042

Sydney September 2019


Saturday 14 September 2019

Women's protest 14 September 2019 Sydney: Abortion illegal in NSW: How can this be?

This is the truth, the whole truth and nowt boot truth...choice means choice
And I get to make my own decisions!
 1970s New Zealand a woman's right to choose and a men rarely taking any responsibility in contraception were hot topics. As were the religious zealots telling folk they were murderers fer even debating issue. So ter see this issue again dominating the NSW parliament is sad, retrogressive and disrespectful ter the rights of women ter choose. And I say choose. If yer don't want this then that is your right, boot don't impose religious values on oos secular folk. It is worth remembering in 1970s New Zealand it were well off, often religious families sending their daughters ter Australia fer a termination. As always with religious folk, the hypocrisy is mind blowing. I don't see many of those getting their kaks in a knot oot there working with abused children. And I do see some of the institutions they worship at being named and shamed at Royal Commissions and fighting the good fight ter not address abuse within their ranks. Not ter compensate the bairns who were abused by priests, pastors, religious homes, lay volunteers the list goes on. Belgo Geordie was one of those mites and never, ever received even acknowledgement, an apology or owt from yon Catholic Church. I was six years of age. Where is yer rage aboot that? And where I was incarcerated, St Vincents orphanage in Newcastle Upon Tyne, I were not a lone scrap of abused misery. Boot, I were told it were me own fault like fer being six with a 'doorty mind' and sick in the head ter make sooch stoof oop. Aye, tha explains the nightly nightmares oontil I were twelve, the oot of control teenager who hated authority, the adult with as mooch knowledge on wot were a health intimate relationship...aye, I have nee truck with religion as the salvation, or the righteousness believing it can impose choices on oother lives. Sort oot yer own hoose! Heal those yer almost destroyed before trying ter make women stay criminals fer terminations because all life is sanctified. Bollocks because yer don't practice what yer screech.
You go young uns, you're our future
Aye and again in this abortion debate it is the buffalo men of righteousness leading the charge on abortion legislation telling women what they can and can't do. Step back and let women decide. This is what emancipation and equality looks like. As ever, it is pleasing ter see te young uns oot in force. Boot this were sedate- a lot of conversations, women talking ten women young and old. Boot 1000 attended and there were menfolk there, the usual socialist alliance and left youth wanting me ter buy oop issues of Red Flag. Tall tree from CPSU were there as were a few other unionist women. As always I was there with me MUA support credentials, boot on me own. Come on me old commo mates, this is one to get out be counted on and give our silent support that the rights of women and our young women in particular continue to grow.

Unambigious

Conversations on the grass in the sun and lots of intergenerational presence




Blokey quiet support.
And across the road people being religiously reasonable...
Over the road were half a dozen protesters showing their usual churchy tolerance to diversity. Like many speakers said. If you don't want an abortion, then don't have one but don't impose your narrow view on others unless you walk the walk. Take a leaf from sum of the religious sisters addressing social injustice, poverty and the consequences of those religious and capitalist men screwing oop the world and creating a future of despair and subjugation for our daughters. Yer not pro-life (for life). Orthodox religion, based on fairy tales of paradise, is and has always been anti-life and pro suffering. Enough! We want change, not more of the same.