You forgot that I was a seed

The photo (not mine) is from Herefordshire. The rich red earth apparently lies dormant now. But anyone with any gardening task to do knows that this is the time to plant seeds. Which brings to mind the couplet written in 1978 by the Greek, gay, poet Dinos Christianopoulos in The Body and the Wormwood: whatContinue reading “You forgot that I was a seed”

Bella Ciao: a tale of two songs

This is more a song for 25 April than to be discussed as we approach 25 December, but nevertheless, here goes.   Few songs are better known than the song Bella Ciao,  best known as a marching song by the Partisans.   A recent film Bella Ciao – Song of Rebellion traced the “obscure origins” of theContinue reading “Bella Ciao: a tale of two songs”

Silicosis killing Rajasthani stoneworkers

Visitors to Rajasthan in India see its palaces and houses of pretty red and pink sandstone. Yet the work of quarrying and cutting that stone is costing workers their lives. On October 18th, on the outskirts of Jaipur, I participated in an important consultation on Business and Human Rights in the Mining Sector organised byContinue reading “Silicosis killing Rajasthani stoneworkers”

Pregnant pause over the pregnant man

In 1970, Saatchi & Saatchi famously designed an advertisement for the Health Education Council. It showed someone who was clearly a man, clearly pregnant. Would you be more careful if it was you that got pregnant? it asked. In 2022, Saatchi & Saatchi posted an update in response to the US Supreme Court’s Ruling inContinue reading “Pregnant pause over the pregnant man”

“They are only nameless because you do not know their names.”

I have just finished rewatching the film Persian Lessons. There is no actual Farsi/ Persian spoken, apart from at the very end. In fact, the whole film involves a suspension of disbelief. Set in a concentration camp, a small bedraggled man (we know him as Reza) finds ways to survive. He “teaches” Persian to oneContinue reading ““They are only nameless because you do not know their names.””