Past, present and future by Cally Phillips
In the fast paced
world of cyberspace jokes, fashion and interest seems to change at breakneck
speed, so perhaps it’s ridiculous of me to suggest that we all cast our minds
back to ten years ago yesterday. But
that’s what I’ve just done in my latest ebook from advocacy publisher Guerrilla
Midgie Press ‘We Couldn’t Stop the war…’
Because on
03/03/03 a Worldwide Act of Theatrical Dissent took place. And I was part of
it. You may have been involved too (or
you may have completely missed it. Life’s like that isn’t it!?) It was called the Lysistrata Project and the
aim was to raise awareness of the impending war against Iraq. It hadn’t happened yet but it was, we were
beginning to realise by that date, ‘inevitable’ So we did what little we could.
Spoke out about it. In our communities and spreading out round the world. Did
it stop the war? Of course not. But ten
years on I note that the Royal Court Theatre are about to do what we did 10
years ago in Dumfries. Which is get a bunch of writers together and present
some dramatic work reflecting on the war. Imitation is the sincerest form of
flattery I suppose. I bet their budget and their reach and response will be
bigger and better than we ever got. I bet they get more revenue than we earned
for our charity event. But we were there first and we did what little we could.
We said This is not in my name. And if you want to take a trip into the past
then please download the ebook. It’s
potentially interesting as pieces of dramatic writing but also has some small
value as capturing a moment in social history. It’s the sort of thing that
prior to the ebook era would just get lost in the mists of time. Put it on your
ereader and you give it a chance of a new life!
Available in ebook and paperback formats |
One good thing
about the present is that we now have ways of getting this sort of
protest/advocacy writing out there to a wider audience. We can’t stop wars and
maybe we can’t change minds but we can bear witness. This is what I strive to do through advocacy
publishing.
My current
advocacy ‘cause’ is the Top Ten
FairTrade Flash Fiction Festival which is being held online during
FairTrade Fortnight. I’ve heard
Fairtrade described as ‘a marketing ploy’
being rebutted as ‘political’ and
dismissed as ‘the green welly brigade.’ I dispute that it’s just something which nice
middle class ‘developed world’ people are using as this year’s fashion
statement. They may be true for some but
that’s not why I care about it. I advocate for it because I believe it’s a just
cause. It’s fair. At the most simple level (which is usually the one I operate
at). I’ll admit, I have no more kudos or
credentials with the FairTrade ‘establishment’ than I have with mainstream
publishing and for sure if I got in with
the in crowd more people would hear my voice, but it’s the words that are
important not my voice. I bear
witness because it’s all I can do. I put it out there and hope that others will
pick up the baton. I’ve no right to hope that, but I feel it’s my
responsibility to do it. Why?
John Lennon’s Imagine is a powerful song for me in
this respect. ‘You may say I’m a dreamer…’
Fiction is based
on counterfactuals (what if’s) and I’ve long had a ‘fictional’ thought (not yet
developed it into fiction.) I think:
What if it’s just a quirk of fate or luck that I was born who I was and not
someone in the developing world destined for exploitation? I get pretty antsy
when I feel that my rights are being abused (as I’m sure do you) so it seems
hypocritical to simply dismiss people who might, if the dice had fallen another
way, be me and I be them.
Imagine if we all
woke up one morning and had a life change. Imagine if I was suddenly growing
cotton, or bananas or eking out a living in the coffee plantations. Would I
want the person who’d got my life to give a damn about my living and working
conditions? Yes I would. And I’m guessing you would too. We spend so much of
our time banging on about ‘our’ rights but I’m not sure we think that much
about the people whose rights we exploit in order to have these rights. Hard fact but true. Many of our ‘rights’ come
at the expense of the ‘rights’ of others. And with rights comes
responsibilities.
I have this
fictional thought that the world would be a better place if people were twinned
at birth. Like they do with towns. What would the world be like if each of us
in the developed world twinned with someone in the developing world. If we were
responsible for each other on a personal level. How differently would you act
then? Well, I don’t have a named ‘twin’
but I feel a responsibility to the ‘unknown’ twin and I try to live my life on
a daily basis appreciating that I’m the privileged twin and I have a
responsibility to make the most of every moment of my life and to do whatever I
can to make the life of my less privileged twin that little bit better. Because
I could be them, and they could be me.
And it’s in that spirit that I set up the online festival. Just my way
of trying to raise an issue and offer people a chance to ‘have their say’ to
‘engage’ and do so in a creative way. I
know to take the rough with the smooth and as I write this, it is falling on
pretty stoney ground. It seems people
are more interested in the retirement of the Pope or horsemeat in their burgers
(or to be honest about jokes on these topics.) Even Richard III in the car park
is old hat now. So why should anyone bother to put themselves out for FairTrade
eh? Let alone look back and reflect on
the ‘war on terrorism.’ This is the world we live in. Real and virtual.
We are all happy
to take the advantages of this global wired world, but what about our
responsibilities? To each other, to past, present and future. I’ve often been accused of being too ‘serious.’
I no longer apologise for that. My twin’s life doesn’t allow for a lot of
trivia after all. Their condition is pretty ‘serious’. And what we do in the present will affect the
future. WARNING. I’m about to say
something unfashionable. Not for the first time. Perhaps if we used social
media in a more serious and responsible way we’d get more out of it? It’s a tool. And we are the users. Cyberspace
is a big, big place. You can talk but
you can’t guarantee anyone’s listening. Any more than you can guarantee sales
of your publications. Nor does any of us
have any right to expect an ‘audience’ however much effort we put in. Certainly we have less right to that (in my
opinion) than a banana worker has to earn a fair and living wage for a very
hard day’s work. It’s easy to be
selfish. And self obsessed. But at least we
are free to use the internet and to publish. Millions still aren’t. So is it not up to each
and every one of us to find a way to make what we say count? Perhaps if we
think more about our responsibilities and less about our rights we’ll use our
skills in a more fruitful way? Just a thought.
The way we engage
with the present will inform how the future pans out but essentially it’s an
uncertain commodity. In one sense we’re all equal in the lottery of the future.
For me the immediate future sees three plays to format and publish by next
month. And then once more organising the 2nd Edinburgh ebook
Festival for August. An event to which you are all invited. It will be serious, it will also be funny, but
if I’m doing my job right it won’t be trivial. It will offer a chance for
writers and readers to ‘meet’ and to ‘engage’ and open channels of
communication for everyone with a smartphone or computer. Our ‘twins’ won’t get
a chance to come to this festival, but you can – it’s a privilege we have. So it might be worth some of
your precious time. It might be worth flagging up as a ‘priority.’ Your ‘twin’ can’t be there, but you could
stand in for them because I’m betting they’d love to have the opportunity to
virtually be in Edinburgh talking about reading and writing this summer instead
of knocking their pan out for below poverty wages and wondering why none of us
care if they are treated fairly or even bombed to oblivion.
If you want to find out more about Guerrilla Midgie Publishing click HERE
Or more about my other work HERE
To buy We Couldn't stop the war Amazon Kindle, or Kobo (epub)
Comments
We didn't change anything? We showed that, together, we can make a huge fuss. It's a beginning. I hope Cameron couldn't take us into Iran by telling lies as easily as Blair took us into Iraq.
On the subject of Fairtrade and smartphones, a poet friend of mine, Emma Ako (do google her), is doing wonderful things campaigning about the use of conflict minerals from the Congo in smartphones - one of the hidden sides of the digital revolution (rather, not hidden at all, just one of the other things our society chooses to wholesale ignore like other forms of consumer-led exploitation). If I may, I'm going to include a poem in my comments because it's about many of these issues, and especially on your incredibly important point of the essentiality of advocacy - we hear all the time that evil wins when good people say nothing and somehow we accept that as an adequate statement when the truth is that if we say nothing we lose our right to be called good.
Keep up the fight.
Murder does not begin with piles of glasses,
Gases, gates and railway tracks
Or the clack clack clack of a million boots in tune
Or the phosphorous perfume of the jagged ack ack ack
The weapons stash
Or lives mown down, the slash of knives, the twisted iron fence
Or gashes carved in innocence.
Murder begins with not wanting to cause offence,
Politely keeping up pretence,
Ignoring what they say for dulce and decorum’s sake,
Murder begins with the proffered hand you shake,
The gift you take,
The offering to heal the rift because the coffin’s beckoning
And the clink of coins in coffers
Making conscience-cleansing reckonings.
Murder begins with parental pacifist cajoling,
With smiles kept because the camera’s rolling,
The old man’s ignorance unmentioned for another year.
Murder begins with the lie that it was different then.
Murder begins with the lie that those who do nothing we can still call good.
Murder begins with the lie that anger’s worse than apathy and indifference,
That one voice cannot make a difference,
Murder begins with the lie that it’s a social crime to be pedantic,
That hatred’s just semantics,
That a joke is just a joke
And words are less than sticks and stones,
That peace is worth the price you pay
That nothing’s worth the fight today
And you should only speak if you’ve got something nice to say
Think twice today
The mercury is high today
The sun is bright today
There’s no clouds in the sky today
So bite your tongue before you give advice today
Just because there might one day
Be someone, perhaps, someone not yet born, in a war torn land you couldn’t point to on a map lying watching her dreams go out one by one like the stars disappearing behind the mortar smoke at night one day
Because you made this one small oversight today.
Murder begins with the neighbour who sees my curtains pulled and mutters scrounger.
Murder begins with words you file away as fact
And ends with acts you laid down years before as laziness and tact.
Murder begins with you, listening to this poem, as the first line blurs
And ends with piles of glasses,
Gases, gates, and railway tracks
And tomorrows you laugh off today because they’re simply too absurd.
And a fine poem, Dan.
But counterexamples exist - I'm thinking of some of the best African writers - so maybe it's a question of skill, emotional range, (ugh, that dread word) depth.
And the Iraq war - with thousands of others I did a sit-in for amnesty, wrote letters, signed petitions - all useless. Bush and Blair should be tried for war crimes.