Stop,Look,Listen…my weekly selection of favourite films, books and events to get you out of the house

Watch….Shirley Valentine (1989), written by Liverpool playwright Willy Russell and starring Pauline Collins. Living in Liverpool in the 80s as I did was to be part a cultural renaissance for working class writers. TV drama led the country with programmes such as Brookside and Boys from the Blackstuff which commented on the decline of that great city and the many ways that people fought back. Shirley Valentine, like many of Russell’s plays, spoke to working class women who had become wives and mothers but felt they personally had missed out on their dreams and aspirations. Even today it still comes over as modern, reflecting women’s real lives and far more interesting than many other newer dramas, including the dreadful Mamma Mia, which offer reactionary female roles of women behaving like men over sex and end with marriage (to rich men) as still being what women really really want. Highly recommended.

Go to Cat and Mouse, a play addressing some of the major themes of Britain in 2014. The writers, Raymond Savage and Shirley Diver, say; “We decided to write it because we wanted to say something about the fat cats at the top and the dreamers at the bottom…To say something about greed, power, the I’m-all-right-Jack attitude we live in today.” Its on 16/17/18 January at the Kings Arms in Salford. Entrance only £5!!

Listen again….to the Today programme broadcast on 2 January. In the programme the erudite John Pilger comments that we do not live in an age of information but a media age. Guest editor, singer/songwriter PJ Harvey, tries to put the information back in a really interesting mix of commentary, music and poetry to reflect the issues that she (and I) think are crucial in society today, including censorship, torture and the morale of the NHS. PJ Harvey included the voices of the victims of torture and traced its role from Northern Ireland in 1971 with the story of Liam Shannon to Shaker Aamer who, in 2014, is on hunger strike in Guantanamo Bay, the last Londoner there. A poem of his called They Fight for Peace was read out at the end of the programme. You can listen again at

Get involved…2014 is the year of the European elections and, whilst having little or no faith in the system, I do want Nick Griffin of the BNP to be chucked out as an MEP for the north west. Hope not Hate are organising the campaign against him and this month they have a meeting to get people involved. It will be on the weekend of 18/19 January. Further details see

Celebrate…the birthday of Richard Strauss, he is only 150! In the north west we are lucky to have some of the finest orchestras in Europe and in this programme Strauss’s Voice you can hear them all. Over the next two months at the Bridgewater Hall you can explore some of his best known works featuring his songs with orchestra. It kicks off this week on Thursday. Do not be put by the snobbery surrounding classical music in this country, you will be pleasantly surprised by the informality at the Bridgewater Hall and the wide range of people that attend the concerts. Pricewise it is a bit steep, cheapest tickest are usually about £14, but we are talking about the best conductor (Mark Elder) and the most fantastic orchestras and singers.

Posted in anti-cuts, drama, feminism, films, human rights, Ireland, labour history, Manchester, music, NHS, North of Ireland, Socialism, Uncategorized | Tagged , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Reasons to be cheerful in 2014!

lila brik

Many people feel isolated and depressed about the constant onslaught on our civil society by the Con/Dem government but you can do something about it! There are plenty of campaigns to get involved in. Here is my selection for 2014……

Living in the north with a Labour dominated council is like being in a one party state. Whilst publicly blaming the Tory government for the cuts they are making they gleefully sack workers, privatising public services and imposing council tax on some of the poorest people.
Opposition to these councils has not come from the bigger, more well-known organisations such the Peoples Assembly but it is locally based organisations with activists linking up with the people who are being most affected by the cuts.

This was noticeable on the 5 November anti-austerity events in the Greater Manchester area. The Peoples Assembly had produced flashy leaflets to rise the masses but Tameside against the Cuts showed the way in taking the protests to those people who need an organised group to defend them against benefit cuts. Made up of Green Party activists and unemployed people they have organised pickets of the Job Centre, workfare organisations, shops that use claimants instead of paid workers and also picketed Council meetings over the abuse of Council tax.

TAC are not alone in their use of direct action, there are other good examples in the Bedroom Tax campaign and Salford against the Cuts.

Tameside against the Cuts

Tameside against the Cuts

The Frack Off campaign in the northwest has taken off at Barton Moss as local people have challenged the rights of Igeus to pursue the rush for shale gas. Activists, with the support of the local community, have camped out to highlight what is going on there. Support for them is growing but a high level of police has seen increasing arrests. They are calling on people to show their opposition to fracking and to join the next demo on 12 January. For further details see

Barton Moss Day of Action -photo thanks to Salford Star

Barton Moss Day of Action -photo thanks to Salford Star

Support local radical press...including the Salford Star and Manchester Mule. They are run by volunteers, with little money apart from donations, and stand alone in exposing the corruption in political life.Read them and if you can send them a fiver. If you are involved in a campaign such as Keep Our NHS Public it is very difficult to even get a letter in your local paper, never mind get a reporter to one of your events. We can use social media but there are still many people, particularly poor people, who have no access to the internet, so we need to look at other ways of contacting people, including old media such as paper leaflets and slogging around estates distributing them.

Various NHS campaigns across the Greater Manchester area. Small groups of people leafletting hospitals, opposing the closure of Trafford A&E, protesting at the threats to mental health beds, going to desultory Clinical Commissioning Groups meetings, holding public meetings. It is inspiring to be part of these campaigns but we need more people to get involved. Also why are the union members and staff in these hospitals, GP surgeries, not active in at least trying to save their own jobs? I understand their despair but are they really going to stand around whilst their jobs are cut, their wages reduced and they end up working for Virgin? Join KONP at

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Stop,Look,Listen…my weekly selection of favourite films, books and events to get you out of the house

Watch.Silence (2012;DVD) …Eoghan, a sound recordist, returns to Ireland after 15 years of working abroad, to record silence in remote places away from the life of people and their sounds. But, as he travels around some of the remoter parts of the island, he meets people and places that remind him of his past and the people he left behind. Not much happens in the film and we only get glimpses of Eoghan’s life but the film forces you to become involved in the importance of land, history and people. It did not make me want to throw up my urban lifestyle, but it did remind me of my own family’s history in rural Ireland, where people and land are so intrinsically linked. A good film to start 2014 with!

Support the Cuban/Miami Five….five Cuban men were arrested in Miami in 1998 whilst trying to stop terrorist attacks against Cuban people. Since 1959, nearly 3,500 Cubans have died in terrorist attacks carried out by Miami based terrorist organisations, including the 1976 bombing of a Cuban airliner which killed 78 people, and a series of hotel bombings in the 1990s aimed at destroying the island’s economy and tourism industry. The Cuban government sent agents to Miami to infiltrate and monitor the groups. At the request of the US government, the information they gathered was passed to the FBI in 1998. But instead of arresting the terrorists, the FBI used the information to identify and arrest the five anti-terrorists on September 12, 1998 in Miami, where they were illegally held in solidarity confinement for 17 months. An unfair trial and harsh prison sentences resulted in terms of between 15 years to double life for the men. As extra punishment, visitation rights for two of their wives have been denied and visa requests for other members of the families severely restricted. Human rights organisations have condemned the unfairness of the trial and the treatment of the families. Amnesty International has described the treatment of the Five as “contrary both to the standards for the humane treatment of prisoners and to a states’ obligation to protect family life.”
Furthermore, in June 2011, a Freedom of Information request revealed that the US government had secretly paid journalists to write prejudicial articles in the media at the time of the trial and therefore undermined the ‘defendants’ entitlement to a fair trial.
In London on 7-8 March 2014 an International Commission of Inquiry will be held to hear first hand testimony from family members, Cuban victims of terrorism, legal experts, international jurors, human rights campaigners, academics and politicians.
Support the petition at
Find out more at

Sign the petition against Amazon… calling for a living wage for its workers. The petition is not just about wages, its about the poor treatment of workers by a multimillon pound company. Over 45,000 people have signed the petition, it has featured in the Guardian but Amazon have not responded.To sign the petition go to

Read about… political activism amongst working class women in Political Women 1800-1830 by Ruth and Eddie Frow. They wrote it in 1989 to remind people that it was not just during the 1984/5 Miners Strike that working class women had been involved in political struggle, but there was a long history of struggle by women. Ruth and Eddie were radical historians, for them history was a tool to promote working class struggle, not a means to pursue an academic career. In this book they compiled previously unpublished source material and used the words of the women themselves to show their political commitment. Many of the struggles they highlighted from this period are still current today, including opposing government censorship, the right to protest, and women and their role in trade unions. It is now out of print but you can buy it from

Posted in anti-cuts, book review, Communism, feminism, films, human rights, Ireland, labour history, Socialist Feminism, trade unions, Uncategorized, women | Tagged , , | Leave a comment

Stop,Look,Listen…my weekly selection of favourite films, books and events to get you out of the house

WatchNebraska..life is not all black and white and a seemingly simple story of an older man’s belief that he was won a million dollars forces a family to confront their feelings about each other. Woody(played by Bruce Dern) is in his 80s. Over the years he has spent more time boozing with his mates than with his wife and sons. He is now determined to get the million dollars and give it to his family to make up for his misdemeanours over the years. The road trip with his sons is funny and sad, sometimes at the same time. It says a lot about poor people in the USA and those people who live in small towns and lead ordinary lives. I loved it because of its honest depiction of the relationship between the father and his sons. The film is shot in black and white and the scenery of this part of America provides a wonderful backdrop to the story. Highly recommended.

Go to an alternative xmas event...at the Rochdale Pioneers Museum on Wednesday 18 December, 6.30-8pm. Volunteers have spent the year transcribing the first minute book of the Pioneers and they will talk about its contents. You will also have the opportunity to transcribe a page as well as indulging in Xmas refreshments. To book a place please call 01706 524920.


Support the anti-fracking protest at Barton Moss
….a blockade of IGas’s site where the local community are trying to stop trucks bringing in more equipment. This week there have been several arrests by the police, including a pregnant woman and a disabled man. Protestors are concerned about the heavy handed action by the police. See their website for further info see

Go see….Teabags and Tears by Karen Woods, 18th January 2014, 7pm at the Moston Miners. Karen Woods is from North Manchester and her novels are grounded in working class life and the choices that women have to make to get by. She has written five novels and this play is based is on based on one of them. They are not cosy reads and the stories are raw and gritty whilst showing characters that are as complex as you would get in any novel by Jeanette Winterson or Zadie Smith. Teabags and Tears takes on the issue of domestic violence as the main character Sandra Partington decides she will no longer be a victim and seeks revenge on her husband and sister.

Support the NHS…and the Campaign to defend Mental health services in Bolton Salford Trafford. The are opposing the closure of 29 adult beds and the centralisation of all elderly mental health beds for Bolton, Salford and Trafford at Woodlands in Little Hulton with the loss of 25 older age beds.You can help by joining them to petition 11.30 – 1pm on Sat 11th Jan in Eccles Precinct by Cash Converters, Sat 18th January in Farnworth outside post office: Sat 25th Jan in Bolton, by Fred Dibnah statue.
Please sign their petition at
You can make a donation to the campaign by sending a cheque made out to Bolton TUC marked as for the Save our NHS campaign, Trade union office, Trust Headquarters, Bury New Road, Prestwich, Manchester M25 3BL

Find out about…student protests and their support for some of the poorest workers on their campuses. I came across this internet based news programme run by students and showing some of the demos that have taken places at the London Universities as the authorities use the police to stop protests. see And to find out about the campaign by the workers on the campuses to get better pay and conditions see It is great to see students supporting the rights of some of the lowest paid workers, workers in this case from Latin America. la victoria a los trabajadores (victory to the workers!)

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Stop,Look,Listen…my weekly selection of favourite films, books and events to get you out of the house

WatchWhat Would Jesus Buy?….organised by Manchester Film Co-operative at the Kings Arms. This is a documentary produced by Morgan Spurlock of Super-size Me fame so it should be entertaining! Join Reverend Billy and the Church of Stop Shopping on a cross-country, holiday revival tour as they exorcise chain store cash registers and discuss the “Stop Shopping Gospel” with families suffering from the “Shopocalypse”.The film takes the viewer into the homes of families as they max out their credit cards to live up to the Consumer Ideal of Christmas, while also telling personal stories from those who remember the holidays as a simpler, less commercial, and more joyful time. Interviews with labor rights experts, historians, and spiritual leaders reveal how the consumerisation of the holiday season over time taught Americans they can only show love for their children by purchasing toys made by other children in overseas sweatshops.

Donate…money or your story about the miners strike….a new film is being made to commemorate the 30th anniversary of the Miners Strike. See (Still) The Enemy Within uncovers the hidden story of these remarkable people and their role in the Great Miners Strike of 84 – 85. It looks at a country at war, and the ordinary men and women who were forced to step on to the stage of history to fight for their communities.

Can you afford Xmas…join the People’s Assembly national day of action against austerity on December 14th starting at midday at Piccadilly Gardens and top of Market street. “In Manchester we will be joining our groups, networks and individuals together to say ‘Austerity kills Christmas”’.
Join the anti-austerity choirs from across the city, musicians and mass leafleting with the facts on tax dodging and the impact of austerity.
Our friends in Occupy are leading with “Elf not Wealth” and we will go mobile, visiting our local tax dodging shops. Come dressed for Christmas, panto characters or Dickensian – you get the picture – we want to be very visible and loud!

Buy…. Past Present Future, the stories and writings of women asylum seekers. This is the latest book from Women Asylum Seekers Together (WAST) with stories of the real life experiences of women asylum seekers, before and after they come to this country. Juliet Stevenson, actor, says in her introduction to the book:”This is a remarkable book. The women who write in the were terrorised in their countries of origin and then silenced in the windowless world of the UK asylum system. But here, in these pages, they are not represented by others, nor interpreted, nor spoken for or about. They find their own words to give shape to their lives-memories, loves, losses, longings, lucid fragments of experience which speak of struggle and courage. Here too are haikus, folk tales, plots and poems.” It only costs £4!

Look atAlbert Adams exhibition at Gallery Oldham. Albert came from a poor mixed race family in South Africa and was forced to leave the country in order to study to be an artist. He lived in Britain most of his life, but his paintings reflected his politics and deep concern about his homeland. Working as a teacher and lecturer in London he was not a commercial artist, preferring to produce political art not just about apartheid, but injustice across the world including Afghanistan, Iraq and Darfur. During the last years of his life he marched in the 2003 Stop the War demonstration and produced art reflecting the misery of the situation in Iraq, you can see his depiction of the notorious Abu Ghraib prison in the exhibition. This exhibition shows just some of the 70 works he bequeathed to Salford in his will. Highly recommended.

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Book review; How a Century of War Changed the Lives of Women by Lindsey German

how

Published by Pluto Press. ISBN 976 0 7453 3250 5

Turning on the television it seems this country is obsessed with war. If its not past episodes of Allo, Allo or Dad’s Army there are constant documentaries about the Nazis. Next year is the centenary of the First world War and already the Tory government has given millions to making sure that their version of the conflict gets centre stage.

So it is good to see a leftwing history book about war and how it has affected women in particular. It is written by a political activist, Lindsey German, and so we get an insight into the dynamics of political movements. Lindsey was one of the founders of the Stop the War campaign and gives an insiders view on why it started and the particular characteristics of the organisation. But there is a major flaw in this book……..

The conflict in Northern Ireland had a massive effect, not just on those people living on the island of Ireland, but also shaped the politics of this country in the 1970s and 1980s. Yet in this book there is no reference to it and it is hard to understand why. Maybe because the women concerned do not fit into Lindsey’s analysis of women and war/peace. Or perhaps she cannot fit the Irish struggle into her analysis of how conflict has put women at the centre of peace campaigning? Going to Northern Ireland at that time was going to a war zone. It was a frightening place and for the women who lived there their choices were limited. Women did play a major role in the republican communities including volunteering as soldiers in the IRA. Their choice was a challenge to those of us who were anti-war. But their choices were shaped by the society they lived in. So for some women this century has not allowed them the opportunity to choose peace, but has pushed them into taking a combative role.
women in ireland

Absent from this book is any reference to the Irish community in Britain, a community that is here because of Britain’s continuing role in our country, even after the peace process. That relationship has had a profound effect on British society, and particularly the democratic rights of every protestor from the ordinary law to the terrorism legislation.

Many people were involved in the campaign against Britain’s occupation of Ireland from left wing organisations such as the Labour Committee on Ireland and the Troops Out Movement to my own community organisation, the Irish in Britain Representation Group. Trade unions sent delegations to Ireland to witness human rights abuses and to call for a negotiated settlement.

IBRG badge

IBRG badge

Today the Irish community is not so visible and the shortlived economic revival in Ireland meant that many Irish (including second generation) could return home and get jobs. The peace process has ended the war and so-called “normal” politics have returned to Northern Ireland, even if the British are still in charge.

Two years ago I was asked to speak at a meeting in Oldham which had been organised by activists in the Asian community who were concerned about the use and abuse of the Terror legislation.

In 1974 the Prevention of Terrorism Act was rushed through Parliament by a Labour Government. They said it was to deal with the increased activity of the IRA in Britain following the bombs in Birmingham. It effectively silenced the Irish community for at least seven years and led to many innocent people being imprisoned for crimes they did not commit, the most well-known being the Birmingham 6. Many Irish people, at least 80,000 a year, were stopped for no reason at ports and docks as they travelled to Ireland.

Birmingham 6

Birmingham 6

It did not just affect Irish people, many people who were active on Ireland were caught up in this “war on terror”. That included councillors, MPs, journalists etc. The Irish community through IBRG, through the P.T.A. Repeal and Welfare Association and individual campaigns did challenge the way the legislation was enforced. We were appalled that people could be held for 7 days without charge and without access to a solicitor.

Our campaign involved organising meetings in our community to inform people about their rights under the legislation. We supported people who were held and got them legal support. A leaflet was circulated with information about the PTA.

The meeting in Oldham was important for the Asian community as I see the same thing happening to their community as ours. Only the legislation is much worse as people can be held up to 28 days.

In this book Lindsey explains how one of the interesting aspects of the Stop the War movement was the role of Muslim young women and the way in radicalised them. But I remember at the time, in 2003 in Manchester, watching the arrival of many young Muslim women with their religious leaders and that made me feel very uncomfortable.

stw2

And I wonder where those young women are now, I do not see them on the marches against the cuts or the big NHS march that took place in Manchester recently. Maybe they are “keeping their heads down” because of the growing Islamaphobia and the threats felt because of the political situation globally? Never mind the day to day problems of, getting an education, getting a job, living a fulfilled life.

A century of war certainly did change the lives of women but it was not the same for all women on these islands. Lindsey’s book is a good starting point but in the end it is down to the women themselves, be they Irish, Asian, Muslim or Mancunian to tell their own story.

Here are some links for further reading….
Across the Water by Mary Lennon, Marie McAdam and Joanne O’Brien. Published in 1988. A unique collection of oral history of the lives of Irish women in Britain.

Mother Ireland – a documentary that was banned at the time because it included an interview with IRA volunteer Mairead Farrell who was murdered by the SAS in Gibraltar in 1988. See

The Wearing of the Green written by radical historian and activist Michael Herbert. A history of the Irish in Manchester. Buy from redflagwalks.wordpress.com

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Posted in anti-cuts, book review, feminism, films, human rights, Ireland, Irish second generation, labour history, North of Ireland, Palestine, peace campaigns, political women, Socialist Feminism, trade unions, women, young people | Tagged , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Stop,Look,Listen…my weekly selection of favourite films, books and events to get you out of the house


Watch...Utopia..a new film by John Pilger; a journalist committed to telling stories about people without power. In this film he returns home to Australia and tells the story of the First Nations people ( the Aborigines), a story he has been following for the last forty years. theirs is an appalling history of genocide, imprisonment and the theft by the state of their children. Pilger asks how this has happened and why it continues to happen in a seemingly rich and developed nation. Many people compare the way the Aborigines have been treated with the apartheid regime of South Africa; the shocking statistics of state murder and suicide confirm their status as second class citizens. But this is not a film about victims. Pilger shows how Aborigines have a proud history of standing up for themselves as workers and as members of an ostracised people. Utopia is a compelling and compassionate film which is typical of John Pilger, a man with a true sense of justice. Highly recommended.See it at Cornerhouse

Remember…before the Miners Strike in 1984-85 Thatcher pushed through a series of anti-trade union legislation to stop workers defending their rights at work and their ability to act in solidarity with other strikers. In 1983 the Stockport Messenger group in Warrington broke a closed shop agreement with the trade union, the National Graphical Association, and when six trade union members took strike action they were sacked. I worked in Liverpool at the time and members of the local government union, Nalgo, travelled to the picket line to support the workers. They came back with stories of how the police viciously attacked the pickets, a scene that became a common experience throughout the 80s as trade unionists tried to defend their jobs and conditions. It is thirty years since the dispute and, even though we had a Labour Government for 13 years, all the anti-trade union legislation is still the law in this country. The Manchester and Salford NUJ have organised a meeting to remember the strike on Thursday, 12 December, 7pm, Mechanics Institute, 103 Princess Street, Manchester M1 6DD.
The Messenger, the State and the NGA: what lessons can we learn for today

Find out about… northwest painter Charlie Shiels. Local filmmaker John Crumpton has made a short film about Charlie as he travelled down to London for his first exhibition.See

Support local theatre.Over the Garden Fence by Haylo Theatre on Friday December 6th at Three Minute Theatre. A two woman show exploring memory, life and family.”Join Annabelle as she rediscovers her Grandmas past, meet gossiping neighbours and listen to tall tales of the “escaped turkey” and “the runaway dog”. Doors open 7pm, for further details see

Read... A Celebration of Kersal Moor by Alice Searle. Kersal Moor is on the edge of Salford and this book is a fascinating history of this part of the northwest. For me, Kersal Moor, is the place where in 1838 over 30,000 met to listen to Chartist leaders calling for the right to vote. But Alice reminds us that the moor also important for a history that goes back to Neolithic man, that it is a local nature reserve and has an interesting and varied vegetation. In this small book, with only 39 pages, we are taken on a stroll through history, poetry and nature. It is well written, with many interesting photos and maps, as well as poems and copies of historical documents. Alice traces an important part of our history, reminding us that we need to protect this hidden gem. As Alice says;”May it continue to be a place to walk, to dream and relax away from the stress and the noise that surrounds it. May the people of Kersal remember its history and forever protect this unique patch of land.” It costs only £3!! Buy it from Alice at aosearle@gmail.com

Posted in anti-cuts, book review, films, human rights, labour history, Manchester, trade unions, Uncategorized | Tagged , , | 1 Comment

Stop,Look,Listen…my weekly selection of favourite films, books and events to get you out of the house

Watch Anno 1790(DVD)..a historic drama made in Sweden and set in 1790. I knew nothing about Swedish history when I started watching this series which is not just a foreign drama but is a insight into the way in which the ideas of the French revolution influenced people across Europe and the world. The main character is Johan Gustav Dåådh a former army doctor who has survived the Russo-Swedish war of 1788-1790 and has been inspired by ideas of republicanism and wants to live in a freer society. Sweden at this time has a feudal monarchy. Johann struggles with his ideas of changing society without going down the road of revolutionary struggle having experienced war and its cruelties. It is fascinating to watch a drama that shows individuals struggling with big ideas and trying to live a better life whilst challenging a repressive regime. Sounds familiar………..Highly recommended.

Find out about…. trade union iconography on a guided tour at the Peoples History Museum. They have a very impressive collection of trade union banners so it should be an interesting tour. A Cornucopia of Surprises is on 6 December 2013, 14:00 – 15:00, duration 60 minutes. Booking advised, please contact 0161 838 9190 or info@phm.org.uk

Help save...mental health wards..at a time of growing despair in society about the future it is frightening that the response of Greater Manchester West Mental Health NHS Trust is to consider proposals to close one of the three adult mental health wards at Bolton and another at Salford both to be replaced by community care, details of which have not been given. It would centralise all elderly mental health beds for Bolton, Salford and Trafford at Woodland in Little Hulton with the probable reduction in the number of those beds. A campaign meeting has been set up; Don’t close mental health wards for Saturday 7th December 12 -.130pm. Bolton Town Hall, Lancaster Suite. Further details karen@reissmann.fsnet.co.uk

Read about...Peterloo in this pamphlet Rise Like Lions; The History and Lessons of the Peterloo Massacre of 1819, written by local activist Mark Krantz. The best history is written by people who are political activists and this short history of Peterloo confirms my view. It is well written, readable and captures one of the most significant episodes in the history of this country. It shows why Manchester at that time was a hotbed of dissent and it also explains why the government was determined to take a stand against a growing politicised working class that was no longer prepared to accept second class status. Mark captures the hopes and dreams of the activists of 1819 and, as an activist himself, shows that in 2013 people need to show the same level of courage and determination. Buy it, it costs only £2!, from the publishers Bookmarks see

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Stop,Look,Listen…my weekly selection of favourite films, books and events to get you out of the house

Watch... a documentary – the Stuart Hall Project. Hall created what we now know as cultural studies. No, not about studying Coronation Street, but about the way in which culture influences and shapes society. It is not easy nowadays to see the effect that Hall, a Jamaican, had in the black community in Britain and in creating the concept of multiculturalism. His book Policing the Crisis (19780 attacked the moral panic of the Government which stereotyped young black men as inherently criminal rather than understanding the estrangement they felt as part of British society. In this new documentary by John Akomfrah we find out why Hall became such an important intellectual beacon on the British left. Akomfrah uses a mixture of segments from the television, family photographs and film and specially filmed material with an underlying Miles Davis soundtrack. Hall was a man of ideas and it is great to see a film that will hopefully inspire more people to ask questions about the kind of society we live in. Director Akomfrah will attend a Q&A session after the screening. Highly recommended.

Go see... And still they dance.. a film by Musheir El-Farra. From cultural theory to one of the most vibrant political movements; the Palestinian struggle. In 2005 a group of young Palestinian folk dancers from the northern refugee camp in Jabalia toured the north of England. It was not just about entertainment but they educated audiences about their lives in a refugee camp under Israeli occupation.
Musheir El-Farra is Chair of Sheffield Palestine Solidarity Campaign and
director of And Still They Dance. He will introduce the film and take
questions after the screening. Proceeds from selling the DVD will go to supporting children’s projects in Gaza, Palestine.

Friends Meeting House, 6 Mount Street, Manchester, M2 5NS.

7pm, Thursday 21st November 2013

For more information contact Linda on 07985 624968 or see

Look at…. Archive City an exhibition about: “the showing of a selection of images as a way of thinking about urban spaces”. This sounds a bit pretentious for a collection of photographs and films about cities but the most interesting aspect of the exhibition for me was the stunning photos by Edith Tudor Hart. She escaped 1930s Austria as a political refugee and ended up living in the Rhonda Valley in Wales. A Communist, her photos of the miners and their families in the Rhonda valley showed a proud community marching for their right to work. From Wales she moved to London and again she documented the lives of the poor as shown in these images of unemployed men wearing medals won in the First World War as they trudged through the streets of London seeking work…women at East End markets searching through the clothes for a bargain…and a glimpse of Vienna where she fled from..a man selling fruit on a street with barbed wire and maybe policemen/soldiers guarding the peace. And what a setting, the Manchester School of Art building is an architectural gem. Find out more see

Oppose blacklisting... …. TUC Day of Action on Blacklisting, 20 November. The Blacklist Support Group (BSG) is calling on all supporters, Trades Councils and trade union branches to organise local events for the TUC Day of Action on Blacklisting. In Manchester it starts at 7:15am – Manchester Town Hall protest against NG Bailey – organised by BSG – speakers include blacklisted workers: Graham Bowker, Colin Trousdale, George Tapp.
What does blacklisting mean? See my post at

Buy ethically for xmas…….at the Manchester Peace & Craft Fair on Saturday 30th November at the Birch Community Centre, Brighton Grove, Manchester – opposite Platt Fields Park. Buy Nepalese treasures; exquisite Palestinian glass and ceramics; handmade jewellery and much more. There will be music and refreshments and the opportunity to browse the campaign stalls.

Go and see a xmas show.... with a difference… Burjesta Theatre in The Poisoner’s Progress ” A bittersweet romance of all things sugary… …As the night unfolds in the style of an advent calendar!!”The Casa Hope Street, Liverpool, L1 9BQ Friday 29th and Saturday 30th November, Sunday 1,t and Monday 2nd December
All shows start 7.30pm – Adults only –
£5 – reserve tickets on 07913 449 396 or pay on the door
* Please note after the show on Monday 2nd December there will be a Q & A with writer/director Mikyla Jane Durkan who will have just completed 120 days of ‘sugar-free living’ to speak about the effects of sugar on our western diets and its promotion by the food industry.

And finally don’t forget….Women’s History Conference 23 November at 3Minute Theatre. Organised by the North West Labour History Group. Join in the discussions about what is our history as women, historians, singers, writers….speakers include Alice Nutter, Claire Mooney, Lindsey German, Louise Raw, Sonja Tiernan, Michael Herbert, Rae Street and Nick Wilding. Further details see...

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Stop,Look,Listen…my weekly selection of favourite films, books and events to get you out of the house

WatchGloria(2012) She is a divorced woman in her late 50s and is looking for someone to share her life and love with. Set in Chile the past events of the dictatorship are alluded to and we get glimpses of the present student unrest in the country. There are many women like Gloria who have spent most of their lives bringing up their children as single parents and are now returning to the dating scene to find a partner to share their lives. Gloria does meet a man, Rodolfo, who seems to want to get to know her and throw off his ex-wife and dependant grown-up children. But can he really be the equal of such an independent and free spirited character? Unusual in this film are the sexual scenes between older people and the honesty of both characters in their drive for sexual fulfilment. Paulina García as Gloria is sensational and gives us a hero that is not a victim but a complex and humane person, determined to live a full life. See it at

Find out aboutWomen in Democracy..an open day at the WCML as part of the Parliament Week, a series of events across the country “celebrating women’s contribution to democratic life”. Women still do not make half of all MP’s..should we, women and democrats be concerned about this situation? Does anyone, apart from the parties themselves, really believe that we have a democratic system in this country? The growth of membership of organisations such as Peoples Assembly, Left Unity as well as single issue groups such as Keep Our National Health Service Public show that people do want a better society to live in but the big question is; how are we going to get it? In this exhibition we can look back at a time when women did believe in the political process, they did have hope for the future…..and maybe it will inspire more women/men to get involved in an issue, if not a party, to build a better society……….

Support the Salford Star….alongside the growing disillusionment felt by people towards the political parties is the decline of the newspaper industry and its role in the democratic process of challenging the status quo including the government (local and national) as well as big business. If you are involved in a campaign that is not linked to the main political parties then getting any publicity for your events is very difficult if not impossible. There are exceptions to that including the Morning Star, Manchester Mule and the Salford Star. The Star is brilliant for local news, it dishes the dirt on Salford Council and its Mayor and it is extremely well written, very well informed and community based. Living through these depressing times it is also good to read a paper that is funny and insightful. But the Star does not have any rich backers, isn’t likely to get any mainstream funding and depends on donations. So go along to their social on Thursday, November 21st, there’s going to be a fundraising benefit, jointly for the Salford Star and George Tapp, who was horrifically run over while on a protest against blacklisting in the building trade, suffering two broken legs and a fractured skull.
The theme of the night is Nineteen Eighty-Four, reflecting the weird doublespeak world we’re now living in. There’s going to be speakers on the theme, including Salford Star contributor, Nigel Pivaro, and community film makers Reel MCR; plus top Salford poems from Words Escape Me, and entertainment from special guests still to be announced.
The Nineteen Eighty-Four night will happen at Cheetham Hill’s ace Asian restaurant, Saffron’s, and the £10 entrance (£5 cons) will include a free meal.

JoinAction for Rail Campaign ,the TUC and rail industry trade union led campaign, that fights cuts to jobs and services and campaigns for a national integrated railway under public ownership. This week marked the 20 anniversary of the privatisation of the railways and this animation shows why we need to support their campaign see

Listen toGlory Days the new CD by Sarah Gillespie. More personal than national politics. Love the lyrics…but it’s hard loving a man who thinks monagamy is a type of wood...her songs delve into the our deepest needs for love and companionship, to be better people and to live in a happier world. Highly recommended.

Posted in anti-cuts, feminism, films, political women, Salford, trade unions, Uncategorized | Tagged , , , , | Leave a comment