Sunday, 22 December 2024

FRUITS OF THE MARAZION QUAKER LIBRARY (12) - SHEILA HANCOCK (2022) 'OLD RAGE'

 Jo Wren, a Quaker Elder at the Marazion Meeting House, donated a copy of Sheila Hancock's latest book to our Marazion Quaker library a couple of weeks ago, saying that since Sheila was a Quaker her story should be of interest. Jo had just finished reading her own copy and was impressed. I have now finished reading these 258 pages and agree. This is a work that many will find inspiring. Joan Bakewell, reviewing the book in the Guardian, wrote: 'Her gift for directly communicating the open-heartedness and spirit of adventure with which she confronts her life ... is the stuff of bestsellers'. 


Sheila was born in February 1933 and is now 91 years old. 'Old Rage' is structured around diary entries from January 2016 to June 2021 which serve to relate events from her life during that period and present her commentary on national matters that are shaping the wider world. Within all this, there are many reflections back to other episodes in her past - these are the thoughts of an octogenarian weaving together the threads of her long life. The book, however, starts in November 2020 when Sheila receives the official communication from Downing Street telling her in strictest confidence that she has been recommended for the honour of DBE - she will become a Dame of the British Empire if she accepts the offer. 



Sheila Hancock, aged 90


I was hooked straightaway. Sheila writes: 'I feel sick with inadequacy. A lifetime of getting away with it does not merit reward ... Should I turn it down? It's hardly in keeping with my Quaker belief of equality.' I am thinking: Please, please, do turn it down - as Benjamin Zephaniah did'. I turn to Wikipedia and discover that Dame Sheila had accepted the honour. Alas! I return a little disappointed to the story of her recent and past life - but then I am a paid-up Republican and a proper 21st century socialist in the Corbyn tradition. I find in later pages that Sheila loves the royal family and has no time for Corbyn. Well, we are all shaped by our experiences and influences. And there's still much to admire, enjoy,

Wednesday, 11 December 2024

REVOLUTIONARY NONVIOLENCE - WITH THANKS TO MILAN RAI, NOAM CHOMSKY, AJ MUSTE, AND PETER LE MARE

Milan Rai is nearly 60. I have come to appreciate him through his work over the last seventeen years as editor of Peace News, the newspaper I used to sell on the corner of Carfax in Oxford on Saturday mornings in 1968 and 1969 as a member of the Oxford University Peace Action Group. In September this year he wrote his editorial goodbye:

'I first bought, and started selling, Peace News when I was at school. Its vision of revolutionary anarcha-feminist nonviolence has had a deep and lasting impact on me.

It has been an enormous honour to have been co-editor, with Emily Johns, and then the sole editor of PN. Emily, you’re a star. 17 years have flown by.

It has also been an honour to be the first sole editor of colour.

I’m so glad to have carried the banner of revolutionary nonviolence alongside Emily, Emma Sangster and Gabriel Carlyle and, earlier on, Claire Poyner, Rebecca Dale, Nik Górecki and John Mcallister. I’m grateful to Ippy and to all the previous PN staff for having built the paper and for having kept this show on the road.'


Milan Rai



Milan Rai had earned his credentials as a nonviolent activist:

Rai first became politically active in the campaign against Pershing II and Ground Launched Cruise Missiles - nuclear weapons scheduled to be deployed in Western Europe in the late 1980s.

Along with fellow activist Maya Evans, he was arrested on 25 October 2005 next to the Cenotaph war memorial in London, for refusing to cease reading aloud the names of