Thursday 18 September 2014

On Scottish Independence in German for the Westfalenpost

As usual, I'm at the centre of world events and my thoughts on the referendum in Scotland appeared today in the Westfalenpost. You will note that I express no preference, and restrict myself to speculating on the effect on my region if Scotland becomes independent.

Article in Westfalen post

Sunday 7 September 2014

Celebrating 70 years since St Pol was liberated from the Nazis

Hebweb has an article about Hebden Royd's visit to our twin town, St Pol sur Ternoise, which highlights the role of a soldier from Hebden Bridge had in its liberation seventy years ago and the excellent oil painting that St Pol presented to Hebden Royd on our last visit in May commemorating the moment when British troops entered the town.

Hebweb article

The article was written and posted before we went to St Pol, so I should mention some of the things we did when we were there from 2 - 4 September.

This included a visit to Siracourt, a village near to St Pol, which includes the remnants of a wartime V1 bunker, that I was encouraged to clamber over with former mayors Cllrs Boggis and Dixon. The Allies dropped more bombs on this little village than anywhere else in Europe and, as a result,  no V1s (the forerunner of drones) were launched at England from the site before its destruction. Walking over it was a very sombre experience, particularly as the bombing killed many of the Soviet slave labourers who built the facility and one could still see impressions of their boots in the concrete.

After the war, the village was reconstructed in a beautiful contemporary style. Its Catholic church, in particular, is a remarkable and very beautiful space, that demonstrates what can be done with wood and concrete and a good imagination working on a human scale. The wooden roof of the church arches inwards like a boat, towards a multi-coloured stained glass arch behind the alter. On either side, statues from the obliterated medieval church have been fixed to the wall. The curved skeleton of the church is constructed out of concrete and looks - though this may sound paradoxical - very attractive. The mayor's office is behind the local school, which educates 7 and 8 year olds, who then move on to other premises in a nearby village.

At the ceremony in St Pol's Salle de Fete that night, Hebden Royd was presented with a detailed DVD recounting St Pol's war experiences. This included a description of the heavy bombing of St Pol by the RAF in 1943, which resulted in substantial loss of civilian life. It was good and right to be liberated from the Nazis but the cost in terms of innocent people was high. I think I speak on behalf of the whole council in saying that the DVD is a remarkable historical record and the product of very thorough and painstaking local research.

I also had the great honour of being introduced to a member of the French resistance from St Pol. There was a translator handy, so I was able to convey the deep admiration that I have for his bravery.

During the day, I laid three wreaths on behalf of Hebden Royd: one for those who died in the fighting at the beginning and end of the war, one for those in the town who were killed by the allied bombing and finally one commemorating the railway workers who died during the war. Needless to say, I was, and continue to be, very moved by the visit.

Wednesday 27 August 2014

Caroline Gooding's obituary from the Guardian

Please read the following obituary of a former colleague, whose work to realise the rights of disabled people continues. Caroline did not just have an outstanding mind, she was also a very nice, very modest person.

Caroline Gooding's obituary by Bob Niven

Sunday 24 August 2014

Your Ideas on Local Planning Rules, Please

If you live in Hebden Bridge, Mytholmroyd, Cragg Vales or any of the surrounding hilltop settlements, please contribute to this thread on hebweb asking for ideas for our neighbourhood plan.

The plan brings together Hebden Royd Town Council with Blackshawhead, Erringden, Heptonstall and Wadsworth parishes in our most ambitious partnership. All will be explained if you read the post!

http://www.hebdenbridge.co.uk/forum/2014/072.html

Tuesday 5 August 2014

Resistance to the War: The Independent Labour Party in Hebden Royd and the Sowerby Division in 1914 -15


Fenner Brockway, Editor of the ILP newspaper, Labour Leader, 10 September 1914 

This article explores the history of the Independent Labour Party (ILP) during the years 1914 and 1915, in the area now covered by Hebden Royd Town Council. To do so, it sometimes goes wider and considers the politics of the Sowerby Parliamentary Division, the forerunner of Calder Valley constituency, because local ILP activity often took place on a divisional, rather than at a local branch level. Before reading it, it is worth bearing in mind that the British Expeditionary Force was a volunteer army before 1916 and no one was forced to serve in it before then. So there were no conscientious objectors until 1916. Those who opposed the war in 1914 and 15  expressed their opposition by refusing to take part in recruitment campaigns and arguing for an early peace settlement.
The ILP was once the largest democratic socialist party in Great Britain; it co-founded the Labour Party and remained affiliated to it until 1932. It is managed, then as now, by the National Administrative Council (‘the NAC’), a decision-making body that acts in accordance with members’ wishes.
The Sowerby Division Labour Representation Association (‘Sowerby LRA’) was the embodiment of the Labour Party within the Sowerby Parliamentary Division. At the time, the Labour Party was an electoral pact between the trade unions and socialist societies and parties, including the ILP, dedicated to winning independent working class representation in council and parliamentary elections.
The ILP in the West Riding
The ILP’s connections in the West Riding and East Lancashire were particularly strong. It was founded in Bradford in 1893. The ILP’s first treasurer was John Lister of Shibden Hall, Halifax. Philip Snowden, MP for Blackburn in 1914, started his political life in Keighley ILP. It held its ‘coming of age’ conference in Bradford  in April1914.  And there was a delegate from Hebden Bridge ILP present, a Mrs J Wheelhouse. It seems likely that she was Nancy Wheelhouse, a fustian machinist, who lived in Eton Street, with her husband, Joseph, also a fustian worker and executive member of Sowerby LRA.
The ILP in the Upper Calder Valley in 1914 
Mrs Wheelhouse was not a lone voice in Hebden Royd or the upper valley. Records show that during the period immediately preceding WW1, and just after war was declared, there were ILP branches in Luddendenfoot, Mytholmroyd, Hebden Bridge, Charlestown, Todmorden, Ripponden and Sowerby Bridge. The minute book of Sowerby LRA makes reference to an ‘ILP institute’ in Hebden Bridge, but nothing is known about its location, size or longevity.



The ILP responds to the War

When war was declared on 4 August 1914, the ILP took a firm stance in opposition to it. Its newspaper, the Labour Leader ran a statement on its front page which readWorkers of Great Britain, you have no quarrel with the workers of Europe. They have no quarrel with you….This is not your war. It is the war of the British ruling class, of  the German ruling class, of the French Ruling Class and of  the Austrian ruling class….Down with the war!’

Subsequent editions and pamphlets spelled out a series of political aims to rid Europe of future wars. These included:
·         An end to ‘secret diplomacy’
·         Peace on non punitive terms
·         Condemnation of the influence of private profit in the arms industry
·         The creation of a united states of Europe and international courts of arbitration
The National Administrative Council immediately declared that the ILP and its branches would not help recruit volunteers for the war. On 24 September 1914, Labour Leader announced on page 7 that  a conference of ILP branches representing Huddersfield, Halifax, Sowerby, Holmfirth and Dewsbury Parliamentary Divisions had passed “a resolution…. unanimously and enthusiastically ….. endorsing the policy of the National Administrative Council”. Two days later Sowerby LRA resolved ‘that we as an executive cannot see our way to take part in any recruiting but allow each individual member to use their own discretion’. In doing so, it expressly rejected the Parliamentary Labour Party’s position seen in the minutes below.



So, in substance, Sowerby LRA took the same position at the time as the ILP. This anti-war spirit was reflected nationally by the resignation of ILP member Ramsay MacDonald as Chair of the Parliamentary Labour Party (effectively, leader of the Labour Party) because it decided to vote for ‘war credits’ (i.e. funding the war). He was replaced by Arthur Henderson, who was not an ILP member, and who later served in the coalition war cabinet in 1915. In time, Sowerby LRA would move away from the local ILP branches and towards the position represented nationally by Henderson.
Sowerby LRA breaks with the ILP
During 1914 and most of 1915, the local ILP branches and Sowerby LRA appear to have maintained apparent unanimity about the war.
Indeed, in early 1915, Hebden Bridge ILP remained defiantly optimistic. Undeterred by recruitment fever, the branch held their ’annual business meeting’ at the Trades Club (reported in the Hebden Bridge Times on 12 March 1915). The report says ‘the branch has had a very successful year. ‘Mr (sic) N Wheelhouse’ was elected auditor. Apparently,
'a vegetarian supper was served, which consisted of the following: tomato and nut soup; vegetarian pies with potatoes, roasted in butter; mock salmon steaks; macaroni cutlets; savoury gravy. Mr W Robertshaw, of Eastwood, was the caterer’.
The picture of vegetarian pacifists enjoying a meal together in the Trades Club may sound strangely familiar, but we should recall that Nancy and the others were working people likely to have only a rudimentary formal education.  They were also likely to have been the odd ones out in a town that was sending more and more recruits to the front.
So, the pressure to change must have been immense. Eventually, on 24 October 1915, the Sowerby LRA executive broke with the ILP. The minute book reads: ‘Resolved that as an executive we take part in the joint Labour recruiting campaign.” Perhaps as a face saver, and compromise with ILP comrades, it continues ‘resolved that this executive press upon the Labour party to oppose conscription unless it is accompanied by the conscription of all the material wealth of the country’. ‘Mr Ogden JP’ (the Labour Party parliamentary candidate at the time) ‘then addressed the delegates present’. Did Ogden attend to help assert Labour Party pragmatism over the ILP’s anti-capitalist pacifism, or was he there co-incidentally to address the meeting on another matter? Whatever happened, afterwards we know that ‘tea was provided ….in the Trades Club Hebden Bridge by the Club Committee. After, In the Evening an enjoyable Smoking Concert was held in the Trades Club’.

Even if the ILP was no longer dominating Sowerby LRA politically, it still continued to be the most outspoken source of views that were widespread in the Labour movement and perhaps amongst some upper valley Liberals as well. These views were expressed by the Hebden Bridge Labour and Trades Council in1915, in its annual statement to the Hebden Bridge Times:
The nations of Europe have been plunged into the greatest war the world has ever known. Militarists and diplomats have succeeded in bringing this awful calamity upon the nations without consulting the workers in any of the countries involved….We sincerely trust that the war will end militarism and secret diplomacy; that it will destroy forever the accursed profit-making armament rings; and that democracy will assert its power in demanding that international disputes shall in future be settled upon the lines of reason and arbitration, common sense and justice.
They were echoed at Eastwood, where the Liberals, in their first annual meeting after the declaration of war, discussed ‘the ending of the dismal system of secret diplomacy…the abolition of private profits out of armaments construction, and…the establishment of a permanent court of arbitration to which all international disputes shall be referred’.
All of which would have been familiar sentiments to the ILP branches in the upper valley, and in particular to that inveterate ILP annual meeting attender, Nancy Wheelhouse.
Cllr Jonathan Timbers (ILP)
Note on sources
This paper explores the history of the Independent Labour Party in Hebden Bridge, Mytholmroyd and Cragg Vale, during the years 1914 and 1915. Because evidence is sketchy, it goes even wider and considers the Sowerby Parliamentary Division, the forerunner of Calder Valley constituency. However, national ILP sources have been consulted to find out more about the politics of the ILP, as local records are almost entirely silent as to the views of Hebden Royd’s ILP-ers.
Thanks to Calder Valley Constituency Labour Party and Independent Labour Publications for permission to reproduce primary sources. Thanks also to my friends, Mike Crawford and Barry Winter (ILP), for their advice on the text. I dedicate this piece to Mrs Nancy Wheelhouse and the thousands of other comrades from the ILP who worked to make peace and social justice a reality, without seeking office or thanks.

 

Sunday 3 August 2014

Reflections on World War One - My Speech at Hebden Royd's Commemoration Event today

(The photo above shows Dorothy Sutcliffe and friend leafing through Mike Edwards's meticulous new 'Roll of Honour' for the area. I am in the background between them)

I want to make three points during this reflection on World War One:

·        Firstly, that WW1 is not really history at all, not quite yet. The personal impact of that war is still felt by living people, some of whom are here today.

·        Secondly,  the world we live in now was born out of WW1 and we still live under its shadow

·        And thirdly, that this commemoration is about everyone who was affected by that war, men, women, children, those who went, those who stayed home, the refugee who fled, those who believed in the war and those who said they didn’t. We also mark the terrible losses suffered, amongst others, by the French, German, Russian, Austrian and Turkish peoples. And the contribution by soldiers from the British and French empires, from the west Indies and Africa, from Algeria and  India and Pakistan, remembering that the first round fired by a soldier in British military service in WW1 took place in Togo, Africa, the soldier’s name, Sergeant Major Alhaji Grunshi

To begin on a personal note, I consider myself to be one of those personally affected by world war one. My half-German grandfather James Timbers died just before I was born, partly from injuries he sustained fighting for the British in the Battle of Mons. To paraphrase the words of the poet Jenny Lewis, writing about her father who served in Mesopotamia,  ‘I’ve spent the rest of my life looking for him’.

I am not alone. Today, we are privileged to have Phylis Walstow with us, who lost her father in 1915, as well as other children of WW1 veterens, including my mother, Roma. Many of them saw at first hand the personal cost of that war and by that I mean damaged minds and damaged hearts, and damaged communities…described by Ted Hughes in his poem ‘Dust as we are’, about  his father, a WW1 veteran,  living with his post-war family in Mytholmroyd:

He had been heavily killed. But we revived him.

Now he taught us a silence like prayer.

There he sat, killed but alive…

And I filled

with his knowledge

                                                After mother’s milk,

This was the soul’s food.

 

And in a sense all of you here today  - even my six year old daughter - live in the shadow of that war.

In drafting this reflection, I’ve tried on several occasions to explain why but found myself inadequate to the task. Luckily, on Friday, the Institute for Public Policy research drew my attention to an essay by the historian Heather Jones, which explains why the war is still relevant to us far better than I ever can. In summary she argues that the Left Right debate about whether WW1 was an imperialist or a patriotic war of defence is beside the point – because of course historically speaking the war was both. It was not primarily a war between Britain and Germany, let’s not forget it started in Serbia and British troops including my granddad Timbers also fought in Italy against  Austrians and Hungarians, others fought in Gallipoli. It began the ruthless occupation practices perfected by the Nazis in the second world war. It lead to the breakdown of multi ethnic and multi religious empires and the creation of ethnic nation states, the arbitrary division of the Middle East and the foundation of the state of Israel . Looking at Al Jazeeri and the Observer this morning, I wondered if WW1 was entirely over yet.

The war also left us with three great positive ideas – largely from those who opposed it – that now dominate politics and the economy in the UK and the world. The creation of an international court of arbitration to stop disputes from spiralling out of control – we call it the UN – and a ‘league of Europe’ or ‘united states of Europe’ – we call it the EU – and finally, free trade, though how free it is actually in practice these days is sometimes hotly debated.

To turn to my third and final point:  today, we commemorate all those who lived through world war one, and in particular the early stages of the war, as there will be further commemorations in 2016 and 2018 to mark the later stages of the conflict. So one of the things we should focus on today is the extraordinary story of the mass mobilisation of volunteers in the United Kingdom in the early stages of the war. Incredibly, the UK avoided conscription until 1916. So there was no conscientious objection to the war until then, although there was certainly opposition to it, locally as well as nationally. I have written a slim piece about that, which you can pick up for free, if you want to, at the back. Primarily though, people supported the war, largely, though not always, I believe, for idealistic reasons, which go well beyond patriotism, or what the Minister of Hope Baptist Church described in this place, in 1915 as ‘devilish jingoism’. They believed that through self-sacrifice they could end all wars. In the words of the Hebden Bridge Times from 6 August 1915, ‘we took up arms to ensure that even the strongest power shall not be free to disregard treaties…and that even the weakest power shall be at liberty to live its own life’. In other words, they went to war to create a civilised international order, where the strong protect the weak against aggressors, and the force of international agreement would in future prevent all war. Their hopes were betrayed, but that is another story

Let me begin to conclude with their words, which you can read in Mike Crawford’s powerful account of the experiences of local soldiers in the first few weeks of the war. They were written by Lieutenant Owen from the second battalion the Duke of Wellington’s regiment at the end of September 1914:

“I have not met a single man (or horse) of the English, French or German armies who is not dying for the war to finish!...if all goes well, we ought to win the victory which swallows up all strife, like Waterloo; and that ought to keep peace for say 50 years. By that time I think the really universal feeling against war will make soldiers a thing of the past’.

You can buy Mike’s book at the back. I recommend it highly.

Finally, let me draw your attention to my charities:  chosen with WW1 in mind. The St Augustine centre in Halifax which does many things but primarily helps asylum seekers and refugees, is something I am passionate about, along with the Archbishop of York, the Right Reverend John Sentanu, who said “If we could replicated this in every community, the country would be a different nation.”. We had many refugees in this valley in 1914 and 15, from Belgium, but then they were welcomed, and employers who exploited them were criticised. The status of refugees has worsened somewhat over the last century, even though there are considerably fewer around today than in WW1. I am no preacher but I think the words of St Matthew Chapter 25 verses 34 and 35 are apposite:  ‘Come, you who are blessed by my Father; take your inheritance, the kingdom prepared for you since the creation of the world. 35 For I was hungry and you gave me something to eat, I was thirsty and you gave me something to drink, I was a stranger and you invited me in’.

My other charity is Combat Stress, that was set up after WW1, to provide counselling for veterans with PTSD or ‘shell shock’, as it was known then. Too many are still coming home with no help or support, some end up out on the streets, all too frequently their families find them too difficult to cope with and break up. You would have thought that abandoning our veterans was a practice that would have ended soon after the eighteenth century, not something that persists in the twenty-first. Sadly not.

I thank you for your generous donations, remembering the number of refugees out there in a world that is still at war and the trauma that many veterans are left with, confronted by so much senseless death and suffering. These are amongst the long shadows that WW1 leaves us with.

Saturday 12 July 2014

Re:cycling - Memories of Le Tour

Great day! Lots going on (on the ground and above our heads), not least Mytholmroyd Gala and the world record bunting I helped to measure along Cragg Road!

And I saw Le Tour from the rooftop of the marvellous White Ribbon Charity (Men against violence against women) which is based on New Road, Mytholmroyd, right above the route.

But I topped and tailed the day in Hebden Bridge giving out leaflets about the town and its festival scene to encourage people to explore what we have to offer throughout the year in the way of shops and entertainment .

The crowds looked genuinely pleased to be welcomed by the mayor with a guide to the town.



Later on, at the end of the day, they were taken aback, amused and then excited that the local mayor was leafleting them as they sat in Calder Holmes Park watching the race on the big screen in the sunshine.

People rushed up to me to take selfies on their Smartphones. One lad from Manchester said, 'The Mayor of Manchester wouldn't do this! I'm gonna walk right up to him and show him this photo and tell him he should do this too!'

One daft young twit tried to grab the chain because he wanted to wear it, but I dissuaded him. He announced, 'One day that chain will be mine' and I said' No, it won't be because it isn't anybody's. You only wear it as a gift for a year to honour others, not yourself'...which is quite good for me, off the cuff, so to speak.

Very pleased that someone from Liverpool (?) tweeted: Respect to Mayor of Hebden Royd who made his way thru spectators in the hub with chain, distributing leaflets re Hebden & exclaiming virtues - Leaving of Liverpool

Stephen Curry, a local businessman and community activist, who has stood against me in elections, also tweeted: Impressed to see initiative taken by Mayor @JonathanTimbers to get out among visitors with Welcome to Hebden leaflets'

I take that as a big compliment. After all, the role is about promoting the area. It's the area and the chain that's special, not me! But it's still nice that my efforts were appreciated because the next day, I lost my voice!

Thursday 3 July 2014

Radio Mayor Recycled Mayor

Gave an interview on recycled radio today, with my mate, Creedy, at 11am.

Bit awkward at first, then I relax and blah blah blah blah can't stop me.

Click on this link and go to the box which says 3 July 11 am, then click 'play'. You also get to hear my daughter, Sophie.

Tuesday 1 July 2014

Spare mayor

On Saturday, I went to Wadfest up at Old Town (aka known as Wadsworth) where there was a fayre and reception for a mixed age bike ride from Midgley. My role was to greet people at the finishing line.

Old Town is not part of Hebden Royd. It is a separate parish. With Heptonstall, it is one of the ancient parishes of the area, and the village predates Hebden Bridge by at least three hundred years. So I was chuffed to be invited to prance around in my chain and greet people off the bike ride, even if I had no role as such. Other than to be chain bearer.

The weather was chilly and showery, but we all had a good time and there were lots of interesting tents. My favourite was Wadsworth community bee keepers, who had a fantastic stall, including a hive they could remove the top from, to view the bees through a glass screen. They kept bees not to make honey to sell, but to increase the bee population, which has been declining nationally in recent years.

The Twinning society also had a cake and bake stall. Yum!

Monday 16 June 2014

With Mytholmroyd Station Partnership

On Thursday, I was honoured to speak at the annual meeting of Mytholmroyd Station Partnership, which draws together lots of voluntary groups and businesses, and looks after the station (obviously).

Thanks to the Sustainable Transport Group, I was able to tell the partnership that footfall jn Mytholmroyd has increased by 119% over the decade. As a major business centre (including the international law publishers, Sweet and Maxwell), Mytholmroyd deserves good train connections to help commuters and business travellers who want on-site face to face meetings.

I met the new head of Calder High, Mr A Guy, and the MD (Johann) and marketing assistant (Chloe) of the Mobile Phone Recycling Organisation Ltd, which will give a donation to any charity you name if you collect phones for them. Chloe had been taken on as an apprentice administrator and had subsequently been offered a fulltime permanent role in marketing, so its employment practices look positive too. The company's based in Mytholmroyd ..........

After meeting people, and enjoying a buffet kindly supplied by the partnership, I unveiled a number of new pieces of artwork, one of them drawn and designed by children of Burnley Road Academy. For obvious reasons they don't appear in the photo, which shows me unveiling adult artworks. And very good they are too!

Thanks to new councillor Alex Rudman who took the photo. He said some things about the partnership which are worth repeating, because his words sum up positive impact the group has:

"The work they do is great and I think has encouraged other people to set up similar groups to take pride and ownership in their area................... eg Stubbs Field, canal footpath volunteers , Jane on Midgley Road with her wildflower garden etc."

Thursday 12 June 2014

Nothing about us, without us

On Wednesday 11 June, I chaired my second full council meeting.

I am proud to say that I received unanimous support from the town councillors present - both Labour and Liberal Democrat - for a motion to resource a disability access group in Hebden Bridge, Mytholmroyd and Cragg Vale. The motion expressly referred to the principle of the international disabled people's movement: 'nothing about us, without us' and the town council endorsed this approach.  The group will identify the things that disable people in the local area, so action can be taken to make Hebden Royd accessible.

The group is open to anyone who finds it difficult to use shops and facilities in Hebden Royd because of the way the premises are built or set out - or the way they serve you. In future, I hope the group will also act in an advisory capacity to the town council and Hebden Bridge partnership. I shall also be mentioning it to Royd Regeneration.

The town council has given itself powers to resource the group, the type and amount of resources will be determined by the Strategy and Review Committee as the group develops.

Thanks should go to Susan Quick from the Hebden Bridge Partnership for taking the initiative and setting up a public meeting on 29 May 2014, which attracted a number of people interested in participating in a local access group.

I would also like to thank Cllr Janet Battye for the support she provided.

Mayor Bear - Handmade Parade 8 June 2014

On Saturday, I was mayor bear in Hebden Bridge's Handmade Parade, on the theme of endangered species. To be exact, I was a mayor polar bear.

Kindly, the organisers prepared a costume for me because I was too busy to attend the workshops. I'm pleased to say however that Aeisha, my wife, and Sophie, my daughter, were able to attend and make their own costumes.

This is what we looked like (the three of us dressed in polar bear costume):

I had great fun going around introducing myself to the crowds as 'mayor bear'. I even got a group to give me three cheers!

Lots of people had fun and some of the costumes were stunning, especially the musk ox. You can view a full gallery of photos here.

Aeisha and Sophie really loved the parade. The joy that it gave children in particular was fabulous to watch, and it was a real privilege to be amongst such skill and energy.

Saturday 7 June 2014

Triple Saturday

Just enjoyed a busy Saturday as mayor! When I woke up this morning, I didn't expect to feel so good about it. It was more a case of 'Oh no, what have I got myself into now!' and 'Am I really up to this?'

But now it's all over, I think it's been wonderful.

The day began at the town hall cafĂ© with local historian Mike Crawford, talking about the WW1 display that will go up for the centenary. I've done some research on the Independent Labour Party (ILP)and local opposition to the war and we were planning how to fit it in without giving undue prominence to the minority who actively opposed the war. For those who don't know, conscientious objection did not occur until 1916, when conscription was introduced. Until then, the army relied on volunteers. The ILP was, by and large, against the war and discouraged people from volunteering to fight. They also argued for a united states of Europe and a negotiated peace. The membership included one Nancy Wheelhouse, a strong minded fustian machinist from Hebden Bridge.

After that it was up to Doddnaze for their music festival. Unfortunately, the heavens opened and there was a downpour of such force that all the drains on the tops burst and a river of water sped down the road that goes down to the valley. I met the organisers including a woman called Kaz and Dave Boardman trying to put a brave face on it, but there was no way crowds of people were going to turn up in that weather. People laughed and joked but there was an obvious sense of disappointment because so much work had gone into the day, with a marquee for the bands, shops and a first aid station around the sodden playing field. I showed my support before Aeisha drove me to Halifax Minster for a fashion show for refugee week, which included people from the St Augustine centre, one of my mayoral charities.

There, I spoke about St Augustine's and introduced the second part of the programme, which included a fashion show of costumes based on nature. Quite stunning affairs, with people dressed as woodland and the like. I'll post some pics when they become available.

So it's been a full day! And tomorrow, it's the Handmade Parade, where I shall be dressed as Mayor Bear!

Friday 6 June 2014

Inaugral Speech at my Mayor-Making on 14 May 2014


It’s an honour to be elected as Mayor of Hebden Royd. Before I say something about the coming year and my charities, I’d like to note my thanks to two people. The first is Karl Boggis, the outgoing Mayor, who has done an excellent job over the last year. His genuine love of meeting and getting to know others, his enthusiasm for the voluntary sector and his good humour as chair of the council has set a benchmark for us all. The second is Cllr Nigel Yorke, without whom I would not be standing here. Nigel, who is one of the most quietly effective members of council, decided that the mayoralty was not for him, and suggested that I might like to do it instead, basically because he doesn’t like showing off, and, as he implied, I do.

One day I hope Nigel changes his mind and becomes mayor. I think he will be great. It is because of volunteers like Nigel that Hebden Royd offers so much to the people who live within it, and I could not imagine a better or more fitting public representative for the area.

Turning to my year in office: the biggest event is obviously going to be the Tour de France, and I shall be doing my utmost to ensure that the town council supports the efforts of local people who wish to use the race to promote Mytholmroyd, Hebden Bridge and Cragg Vale. But to my mind, the most significant event will be the first world war commemoration. Both my grandfathers fought in that war, one of them died just before I was born partly of injuries sustained during active service. For me, WW1 is still a personal matter.

 Unlike some cabinet ministers, I persist with the view that WW1 was the product of an unjust system of international relations. Those who opposed it – dismissed as ‘cranks’ by Jeremy Paxman  in his recent BBC series – have over time been vindicated. Today’s forms of international governance were imagined by the opponents of war back in1914 and 15, including people from Hebden Royd. Free trade – which was another of their key demands – is now the economic status quo in the world at least in theory.

Both my charities are in some way related to issues that derive from that and other wars. The St Augustine Centre, a Halifax based charity, supported by Churches Together, supports refugees and asylum seekers.-, all of whom will have been displaced by terrible events, including war. Many awful things have been said about asylum seekers and refugees over the last decade or so because of the explosion of numbers, caused by climate change, globalisation and because we are still a world at war, with ourselves. Compassion, as the greatest refugee of them all, Jesus, showed, is sometimes the greatest challenge both to authority and to ourselves. The most difficult thing in the world can be to love others. Supporting St Augustines is an opportunity to express our love.

Combat Stress is one of the main charities that deals with armed forces personnel coming back from active service. Up to one in five have post traumatic stress disorder (PTSD). This too is a personal matter for me. My father served in the Royal Navy on Arctic convoys in 1942/3 and clearly suffered from PTSD for many years. I am also a PTSD sufferer, and it has taken me a long time to rebuild my life after the events that caused it. I cannot begin to tell you how unsympathetic people can be to those who have to start out again. How difficult it is to keep on going in the face of disbelief. And how much utterly useless counselling you may encounter when you have PTSD. I shall never forget being offered Freudian counselling through the NHS for my issues. Combat Stress offers the right sort of counselling to those with the condition, so they can stay near the ones they love and rebuild their lives. 

The charity was set up – under a different name - after WW1 because of huge numbers who had gone back into civilian life deeply traumatised. Last year, the charity saw a 57% increase in the number of referrals requiring treatment. Because of the nature of PTSD, and our many recent wars, the numbers are expected to rise dramatically over the next few years.

We should remember how lucky we are to live in Hebden Royd, particularly now when the hills and valleys are so beautiful. Let's ensure that others have the chance to share in our good fortune and celebrate the achievements of this council, whose councillors are all unpaid volunteers working on behalf of the community.

Finally, I would also like to record my thanks to my wife, Aeisha, a very private person, who has approached the prospect of being the mayor’s consort and chauffeur with fortitude and humour. I depend on her a great deal. And she didn’t ask for this role. I think we should all thank her for her forbearance. Thank you.

 

 

First Formal Meal

Attended Mayor of Calderdale, Ann Martin's 'Italian night' in Julio's restaurant in Halifax yesterday, and sat next to Michael and Nikki, the Mayor and Mayoress of Todmorden. I've known Ann for years and characteristically she kept her speech to an absolute minimum (three sentences, I'd say). Turns out that Nikki works in pathology. Apparently, over the last decade, she's examined fewer and fewer bodies from Hebden Royd. I thought that was an interesting medical fact that might also be a sociological one too.

We get on really well together and plan to support one another's charity work. Michael's charities are the Todmorden Hippodrome and Independent Living, Todmorden.

I also had the pleasure of meeting old friends Megan and Tim Swift, Anne and Barry Collins, Margaret and Bob Metcalfe and Mohammed Naaem.

Formal meals aren't really my thing so I popped into the Fox and Goose afterwards and had a chat to Creedy, who plans to set up a community radio station over Le Tour weekend. I said I'd be happy to talk about my charities on air.