Chuka Umunna visits Ealing North

Steve invited up and coming Labour MP Chuka Umunna to be the guest speaker at Ealing North Labour’s annual dinner on 12th January. He is the Shadow secretary of State for Business, Innovation and Skills, Vince Cable’s opposite number, though he has a keen ambition to be in his shoes (political shoes and not dancing shoes).

Chuka praised the Parliamentary Labour Party for the work it was doing behind the scenes to move the government into a more caring position and that many of the decisions they are making were originally Labour suggestions. He said that there was much to be done to help small businesses to get moving in the economy as it is and that he was making every effort to do that. He also praised Steve for being one of the only MP’s to make him feel at ease in Westminster since he arrived there 18 months ago.

Steve also praised Chuka by saying “I think we may have seen the future of the Labour Party here in Perivale.

The Dinner was held at Enterprise Lodge in Perivale and was also attended by MP’s from adjacent constituencies and the leader of Ealing council amongst other supporters.

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EALING GAZETTE – NOVEMBER 2010

There’s a rhythm to the Parliamentary and constituency year that is as settled as the seasons and the time of Advent allows us to look forward to Christmas and the New Year in a suitably reflective state of mind. Before the evenings lengthen and the shadows of Autumn close in on us there are many milestones on the Ealing road that have become settled and reassuringly familiar.

The solemn Act of Remembrance at the eleventh hour of the eleventh day of the eleventh month is observed with dignity and solemnity at the Greenford War Memorial and none of us there present could be other than agonisingly aware that two young Greenford men have now been lost to us – one in Iraq and one in Afghanistan.

The Greenford Branch of the Royal British Legion organises the Armistice Day commemorations with the immense skill born out of many years of practice and a heartfelt commitment to honouring and assisting those who have served and those who serve today.

The Remembrance Sunday parade was immense this year and a huge turnout of Members of the Greenford Branch, cadet groups, Scouts, Guides, St.John Ambulance, the Police, Greenford Rotary Club, local Councillors, led by the Deputy Mayor, and TA units stretched almost all of the way from the Legion to the Greenford Hall.

The Rev.Neil Richardson of Holy Cross Church led the prayers and he was flanked by the Rev.Dr.Jennifer Smith of Ealing Green Methodist Church and Fr. Tom Daly from Our Lady of the Visitation. The Salvation Army band played and Charlie Doherty and Bryan Binning as Officers of the Greenford Branch of the RBL declaimed the Exhortation and the Kohima epitaph.

The mood was sombre but the Legion did the armed forces proud and if this wasn’t the biggest ever Parade then I’d be very surprised indeed.

By co-incidence the Shree Jalaram Mandir between the Legion and the War Memorial were celebrating their 10th.Anniversary on Remembrance Sunday and it to the immense credit of the trustees and devotees that they decided to link their anniversary with the Act of Remembrance.

Hot drinks were supplied by the temple and a number of the Trustees joined us at the Legion for the formal thanking of the Parade Marshall and all those who had taken part.

The President of the Board of Trustees Rajni “Raj” Kiroya spoke after Harry Greenway (former MP for Ealing North), Cllr. John Gallagher (Deputy Mayor) and the current MP. Raj gave what was one of the best received speeches that it has ever my privilege to hear.

His theme was the integration that the Shree Jalaram members practiced and how they have not just made a home in this country but have also chosen to respect our traditions and to give back to the community by their honesty and unshakeable traditions of hard work and family values.

The Devil and Mr.Casement.

Jordan Goodman,Verso.

The Devil and Mr CasementEveryone knows something about Sir Roger Casement. Whether it is his emergence from a U-Boat in Tralee Bay just before the 1916 Easter Rising, his execution at Pentonville, his exposure of the genocidal brutality of King Leopold in the Congo or even the vicious campaign by the British establishment to destroy his reputation by smears before they hanged him; everyone knows something and most have an opinion.

This book concentrates on one aspect of Sir Roger’s life that has not been so thoroughly chronicled – his humanitarian work in the Putumayo region of the upper Amazon and the truly satanic figure of Julio Caesar Arana.

This is not an easy book to read, for all that it is very well written and manages to cover one of the most horrific incidents of the late 19th and early 20th Century in terse and well substantiated prose.

It is hard to read because it is almost beyond the capacity of the mind to accept the reality of the decades of horror that Arana and his family were responsible for.

This is a book that has much to say of the interminable border wars between Peru and Colombia. It tells of the history of the demand for rubber that led to the deaths of more than 30,000 of the Huitoto and other indigenous peoples of the Putumayo and it tells of what hell a man may make of paradise when he operates without sanction or conscience.

After Casement’s triumph in the Congo, in which he forced King Leopold of the Belgians to surrender his personal empire the size of Europe to his own government, he became an official of the Foreign Office and held consular rank. Although ever more moved by the situation in his own homeland of Ireland he was the man to react to stories of a horror beyond imagination that began to emerge from visitors, particularly the engineers Walter Hardenberg and Walter Perkins, of a living hell that had been created.

The native peoples of upper Amazonia had met their first Europeans at the end of the 19th.Century. By the middle of the 20th.Century the few who remained turned to abortifacients in an attempt to end their very tribal existence on earth. Race suicide was far better a prospect than that which the Europeans had wrought.

The stories that reached London told of a vast rain forest reached only by river in which the Arana family held absolute sway and under whose lash the indigenous peoples were forced to tap wild rubber trees and carry bales heavier themselves to the riverside collection points where the material could be shipped on to – principally – Great Britain.

Arana and his brother Lizardo held more than the power of life and death over this tragic people. They mutilated and tortured for amusement – one example tells of a Huitoto man tied to a stake while pistoleros gambled on who could first shoot off his penis – they raped, flogged and burned the majority of an entire peoples. Above all they gave these people no hope at all of any possible betterment in their lives. From childhood they harvested the rubber until they died of exhaustion or torture. Unable to cultivate their own food they became wholly dependent on those who would drive them to death and near extinction.

Jordan Goodman manages to maintain a clinical detachment but the volume and variety of the horrors must have made him sleepless and the effect on Sir Roger Casement was dramatic. He agreed to gather evidence for a Parliamentary enquiry and worked with the Anti-Slavery and Aborigines’ Protection Society to expose the sadistic dictator of the Putumayor who gave his name to the scars that constant lashing ripped the skin with – the mark of Arana.

There are heroes in this book. Casement, obviously, but also diligent and humanitarian MPs and consular officials who were determined to end this horror.

Sir Edward Grey comes out well and the British Empire actually did seek to apply standards of civilisation and decency by negotiation and example.

There are villains. Arana looked like the Devil and acted in a way that only a soul-less being could contemplate. He also presented himself in London to defend himself of the charges when they were finally laid and became politician of some standing in Peru. The extent of the blood on his hands is beyond calculation but he played the misunderstood capitalist bring the benefits of modernity to a Godless and backward race until he finally dies as recently as 1952.

Just as the brutal colonial Dutch employed platoons of Japanese executioners as there were too many heads to cut off unaided the Arana family employed Barbadians as enforcers and overseers. The fact that Barbados was part of the British Empire allowed the Foreign Office to intervene and – ultimately – to damn the dictators by public exposure and condemnation. Goodman wryly points out that colonial harvested rubber plantations in India and Malaya actually ended the economic rationale for the vast slaughterhouse that men made of the Putumayo but Sir Roger Casement’s personal commitment and health destroying energy cannot be underestimated.

He was stripped of his Knighthood on the night before his execution but he wore the jewel with more distinction and justification than did many others. This book tells of the horror of Julio Caesar Arana but also of the nobility of spirit of a great humanitarian; Sir Roger Casement.

Coolly written without emotion it tells a terrible tale but should be read by anyone who knows only of the more often chronicled aspects of Sir Roger Casement’s life. It should also be read as a belated tribute to the people of the Putumayo who lost their way of life and their very wish to live when they met the civilised European.

Ealing Gazette. January 2010

Some would say that an MP gets quite enough experience of pantomime at Westminster but one of the uttermost joys of the Christmas season is the chance to see the finest thespian talent that Ealing North can offer in their Yuletide finery.

We are very fortunate to have an embarrassment of theatrical talent in the north of the borough and I tend to plan my Christmas social life around the various presentations on offer.

The Raglan Players in Northolt are superb but they offered no pantomime this year and the famous Greenford Light Opera Company (GLOC) gave us a brilliant “Hello Dolly” earlier in the year but cries of “He’s behind you” haven’t been heard since they put on Jack the Ripper.

The St.Mary’s Players in Hanwell have become very professional (for amateurs) lately and their “Sleeping Beauty” was well worth waking up for and the HEOS (Hanwell and Ealing Operatic Company) “Jack and the Beanstalk” at the Greenford Hall was a masterpiece of the art.

However; into every life a little rain must fall and the downpour is normally orchestrated by the Holy Cross Players from Greenford who have written, produced and performed their own productions for about twenty years to my knowledge.

For some reason a strange tradition has emerged in which the local Member of Parliament is required to make a fool of himself in a walk on part and, on the final night, to be either soaked with buckets of water, smothered in cake mix, splattered by custard pies or even sloshed with shaving foam.

Although I am the victim on these occasions I thoroughly support the tradition and feel that it is every free-born Englishman and woman’s right to see their MP bucketed or pied.

This year’s panto. was – possibly – Rapunzel. The script was created with a mixture of low cunning and high farce by Tony Jordan and seemed to me to have rather too many references to expenses for my taste but the audience loved it and I surrendered to the ritual assault with as much good grace as a man can muster when he has three platefuls of shaving foam on his head.

I cherish the amateur dramatic tradition that we have nourished in Ealing North.

As someone who has a considerable distaste for twitter and tweeting I relish the human contact that panto engenders and I see a group of ordinary people creating something quite extraordinary as an alternative to a dystopic world in which all communication is conducted electronically at a distance and life lived vicariously.

One of the curses of modern society is the isolation of the individual who may be communicating across the globe but never speaks to the person next door and the grand old tradition of Christmas pantomime is a cheering reminder that creativity does exist, human contact can be made and that people can come together socially.

No doubt I will be seen as hopelessly out of date by the Facebook generation but there is a lot to be said for flesh and blood encounters and I know what I prefer.

I doubt that the “Gazette” will ever run a poll on the comparative attractions of twitter versus theatre but, if ever they do, my vote goes to the real people.

Daring to Dream – Daring to Shine

Steve was interviewed on Saturday 9th January by 10 year old Megan after the final performance of the pantomime “Rapunzel” by Holy Cross Players.

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