Monday 26 October 2009

Yes, I know it's too long ...

Somehow peace, reconciliation and Coventry have never sat easily together in my mind. It’s not that I’ve noticed more unrest here than in other cities, just that I haven’t noticed much harmony either.

But appearances can be deceptive. In fact the city’s face was mutilated beyond recognition when a war-time air attack destroyed more than 4,000 homes, countless factories and the iconic St Michael’s Cathedral on November 14th 1940, reducing Coventry city centre to rubble.

And ever since the Luftwaffe’s destruction of the Cathedral that night, Coventry has been quietly focused on the path of peace. Now the Peace & Reconciliation Gallery, part of the impressively revamped Herbert Museum, asks us the big question. Is forgiveness really possible after such an overwhelming atrocity?

The exhibition is built around a few poignant objects juxtaposed with spoken and written witness accounts. The handwritten diary entries of the Cathedral Provost, scribbled down immediately after the bombing, can be read and handled. His mellow prose gives an insight into the stoic reaction to destruction, not to mention ironic humour at the ‘excessiveness’ of the Daily Express’s reporting. (They claimed that the Provost himself had helped to put out 30 incendiary bombs).

Then you spin round and see a German military map of Coventry highlighting the places to be taken out in red.

A recording of Provost Howard’s speech on Christmas Day 1940 loops, urging the people of Coventry ‘hard as it may be, to banish all thoughts of revenge.’ His words led to the setting up of an international ministry of reconciliation at the Cathedral which gradually and arduously transformed itself into a site of peace. Connections were made with other ruined cities across Europe. The shell of the ruined Cathedral still stands as a perpetual reminder and inspiration to visitors: a space where forgiveness can be renewed time and time again.

Linking the objects and words are the personal stories of Coventry people who survived the attack. It was 11 hours until the all clear sounded, with no way of knowing what had happened to loved ones, homes and neighbourhoods. Snapshot accounts of survivors, spoken voice and on the page, vividly capture what it was like to live through that night.

The exhibition is fully interactive. It continually nudges us with the question of forgiveness versus revenge and then asks us to make up our minds whether the Provost was right.

We all know the answer. Seventy years on, the message of forgiveness is still rippling out from the ruined shell of St Michael’s Cathedral into the wider world. It’s a solid symbol of both atrocity and the well of forgiveness that must spring from it, encouraging us to value understanding and tolerance and share our horror of the impact of violent acts of war.

Wednesday 21 October 2009

In the alembic

My new blog is out there today. Designed for astrologers but as jargon-free as I can make it. It could be a commentary on the astrological backdrop to our changing times. It could be other things as well and that sounds just fine. A blog evolves through time and experience and this one isn't starting off with a full-blown mission statement.

Later on there may be more about ascension and an astrological route map through the ascension process ahead of 2012.

Lost you? Yes, it's not just the London-bound Olympics that will burst through into mass consciousness in this notable year. Uranus in Aries squares Pluto and we will be facing more hair-tearing social and economic challenges than transporting contestants and spectators round the marshlands.

The process of ascension is only well-known within so-called 'new age' circles but I hope through this blog to join up some of the dots and show how small and positive changes within our lives and attitudes are being driven by much more fundamental energetic changes within our universe.

(Scratch that - too much like a mission statement - Ed.)

Tuesday 20 October 2009

blogging it

Blogs are our new store fronts (see Karen Bishop if you're wondering - she can expand on this jargon).

So while I'm sifting through my passions en route to discovering my heart's desire blog thread, I'll be keeping this random blog space updated with my process and meandering train of thought. Possibly.

So many passions and not enough writing time. It needs to be something personal but not private and something that matters but not too much. Cutting edge but not so sharp that someone decides to uncover my (admittedly uncertain) identity and sue me.

Tuesday 6 October 2009

ephemera wonderwall

Looking at all the magazines arrayed wall to wall, floor to ceiling, lining the newsagent's copious shelves, I'm overcome with the trivial sensation that I don't want to read, browse, or even look at, ANY of this stuff.

Cover lines and pics jump out and biff you between the eyes, shouting %$£*& - all wrapped up the same. Looking at 'em is just a deja vu - last week's output ... twisted, regurgitated.

Is there anyone out there in the land of publishing looking, feeling or acting DIFFERENTLY today? Pushing a few buttons maybe, expanding a few horizons or just giving the reader what they DON'T want? Just for an experiment you understand.

Is there anyone who's stepped out of the zeitgeist, albeit temporarily, and seen the future?

If it's the stuff lining my newsagent's shelves, it's just history.