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Daily Archives: February 21, 2010

Spanish anti-fascist poet rehabilitated at last

Posted on February 21, 2010 by petrel41
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This video says about itself:

Perhaps the best known work of the poet Miguel Hernández is a poem called “Nanas de cebolla” (“Onion Lullaby”), a poem in which Hernández replies to a letter from his wife in which she told him that she was surviving on bread and onions. In the poem, the poet envisions his son breastfeeding on his mother’s onion blood (sangre de cebolla), and uses the child’s laughter as a counterpoint to the mother’s desperation. In this as in other poems, the poet turns his wife’s body into a mythic symbol of desperation and hope, of regenerative power desperately needed in a broken Spain.

From the BBC:

Spain to recognise civil war poet Miguel Hernandez

By Sarah Rainsford
BBC News, Madrid

The Spanish government says it will formally recognise one of the country’s best-known poets as a victim of the dictatorship of Gen Francisco Franco.

It will present the family of the poet, Miguel Hernandez, with an official letter rehabilitating his memory.

Hernandez was imprisoned as a traitor 70 years ago for supporting the Republicans in the Spanish Civil War, and died in prison at the age of 31.

The family applied for his rehabilitation under a 2007 law.

The decision to rehabilitate him comes as Spain marks the centenary of the poet’s birth with a series of events.

“We have always lived with this sadness, and finally we have cleansed his memory,” the poet’s daughter-in-law, Lucia Izquierdo, told the BBC.

“We wanted his image restored as a poet of the people, and a great man.”

‘Onion Lullaby’

The family applied for the rehabilitation under Spain’s Historical Memory Law, passed in 2007 to recognise the victims on both sides of the Civil War, and during Franco‘s rule.

Hernandez never took up arms, but he staunchly supported Republican forces

According to Spain’s justice ministry, 237 people had been recognised under the law out of 831 applications received up until October 2009, with 17 cases refused.

Ranked alongside Federico Garcia Lorca and others as one of Spain’s finest poets, Miguel Hernandez was from a poor, peasant family.

A staunch Republican, many of his poems depict the horror of the Civil War.

He was arrested and imprisoned in 1940, when his family say he refused on principle to sign a confession and apology in return for permission to go into exile.

“He was never a traitor, he was always on the side of justice,” Ms Izquierdo said. “It is frightening to think what they did to him.”

“He never took up arms, but they were against him because he defended Spain with his pen,” she added.

“His legacy is some of the most beautiful poetry we have. His unjust death deprived us of more.”

Gen Franco commuted the death penalty against the poet to a 30-year sentence, but Hernandez died soon after when he contracted tuberculosis, which went untreated in harsh prison conditions.

Many of the poet’s most moving works were written in prison, including the famous “Onion Lullaby“.

He addressed that poem to his wife when he learned she and their child were surviving on nothing but onions.

The poet’s family did not request compensation from the state for his treatment, as it could under the 2007 law – only his rehabilitation.

They are now preparing an appeal to the Supreme Court to get the original death sentence against him annulled and clear the last black mark against his name.

Every year on February 28 the Spanish region of Andalucia celebrates its national day. It also pays homage to Blas Infante – the father of modern Andalucia, who died for his belief in a radical, federal region. As the military coup took hold in 1936 he was rounded up by the falange and shot. Four years later a judicial death sentence was handed down to justify his killing – a verdict that still stands to this day: here.

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Posted in Economic, social, trade union, etc., Human rights, Literature, Medicine, health, Peace and war | Leave a reply

Egyptian women’s anti-discrimination protest

Posted on February 21, 2010 by petrel41
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This video says about itself:

The fourth annual PEN World Voices Arthur Miller Freedom to Write Lecture was presented by Egyptian novelist, psychiatrist, and activist Nawal El Saadawi.

From Al Jazeera:

Cairo protest over anti-women vote

Activists say the decision to bar women from the Council of State is discriminatory

Dozens of Egyptian women and human rights activists have staged a protest in Cairo against a recent decision that bars women from holding judicial positions.

Thursday’s protest came after the Council of State’s association voted on Monday by an overwhelming majority against the appointment of women as judges in the council, an influential court which advises Egypt’s government.

Up to 80 women showed up at the protest with most of the activists holding up posters that read in Arabic: “This is a black day for Egypt’s history.”

Britain: Unison women’s conference 2010: Delegates lined up on the final day of the conference to share their own heart-rending experiences of domestic violence: here.

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Posted in Crime, Economic, social, trade union, etc., Human rights, Literature, Women's issues | 1 Reply

Australian racist Pauline Hanson becomes immigrant

Posted on February 21, 2010 by petrel41
1

This video says about itself:

Aug 1998 Exclusive behind-the-scenes access to Pauline Hanson and her ‘One Nation’ party. Produced by ABC Australia. Distributed by Journeyman Pictures.

By Simon Butler in Australia:

Pauline Hanson to become a migrant

21 February 2010

When the anti-immigration politician Pauline Hanson was asked if she was a xenophobe in a 1996 interview on Sixty Minutes, she famously responded: “please explain”. Now, with the news that she intends to become an immigrant herself, it seems she doesn’t understand the word “hypocrite” either.

The former One Nation leader told Woman’s Day that she intended to move from Australia to Britain.

Nick Griffin, leader of the ultra-right British National Party, also campaigns against immigration. But he told the February 17 Sydney Morning Herald he makes an exception in Hanson’s case.

“She would not be a sponger. We would regard her as a good addition … as [Britain's] most recent immigrant, she will be very welcome if she wants to join and become involved”, he said.

Unison women’s conference 2010: Anti-fascist organisations must highlight the anti-women views of the BNP as part of their fight to defeat the far-right, delegates have urged: here.

Ex-welfare minister Frank Field has been labelled more BNP than Labour following an astonishing outburst on BBC Radio 4′s Today programme: here.

Gordon Brown officially apologised this week for the shameful and barbaric chapter in this country’s chequered history which saw the shipping of thousands of British children to Australia and elsewhere as part of the child migrant programme: here.

THE Orange Order has refused to disassociate itself from a leading member who is due to stand as a BNP candidate in the Westminster election: here.

Welcome, the ironically titled latest feature by French director Philippe Lioret, is an intelligent antidote to the ongoing drum-beat of government and media dehumanisation of undocumented immigrants in France and internationally: here.

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Posted in Economic, social, trade union, etc., Film, Racism and anti-racism, Women's issues | 1 Reply

Australian Aboriginal singer Ruby Hunter dies

Posted on February 21, 2010 by petrel41
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This music video is called Ruby Hunter – Let My Children Be.

From Green Left Weekly in Australia:

Ruby Hunter 1955-2010

21 February 2010

Aboriginal singer-song writer Ruby Hunter passed away on February 17. Her music dealt with her personal history, Indigenous struggles, and social and women’s issues.

Along with her partner Archie Roach, Hunter was a member of the musical collective, the Black Arm Band.

On February 1, the Labor government compulsorily acquired the land of the Ilpeye Ilpeye town camp, establishing a new benchmark in opening up areas presently controlled by Aboriginal communities for unrestrained capitalist exploitation: here.

Australian rock journalist Lillian Roxon: here.

Australia: Fiona Foley’s work is intense, vibrant and tackles issues of racism, sexism and history head on. Forbidden is the first retrospective of her art practice, which covers over 20 years: here.

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Posted in Economic, social, trade union, etc., Human rights, Media, Music, Racism and anti-racism, Visual arts, Women's issues | 2 Replies

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