Monday, November 4, 2013

Hanging with the leftists in Belgravia

Saturday night we were back to Boisedale and my new favorite cigar bar.  We were to connect with Alex and John.  They brought along two old friends, Roy and Jennie.
Roy and Jennie are partners.  They live half time in London, half time in Melbourne.  Their travel stories were fascinating, including a six month drive from Texas to  Mexico to South America back in the 80's.
Roy is a story teller.  He is of Indian heritage and raised in Ghana and he has strong liberal beliefs.  Since the late 60's he was a loud voice at Speakers Corner in London's Hyde Park.  Speakers Corner is a famous, symbolic location for free speech in London.  See below if you want more information.
We were captivated by Roy.  One moment he would talk about black rights in London and the next he was espousing his love of Judge Judy.  (She tells it like it is)
This is our new life.  Hanging out with the deep thinkers in a London cigar bar.  
I love these experiences, but I have to admit I miss talking to Diane, Stacy and Dave about Stacy's penchant for stepping in poo.




"Speakers Corner has a history based upon democracy and freedom of speech and it is well worth the effort to spend some time listening to the differing points of view on wide ranging subjects - religion to world politics. Couldn't visit London without experiencing this landmark."

"Rude people who are clearly blocking the designated bike path in Hyde Park. Had to get off my bike and walk it through the crowd and no one wanted to move out of the way. Keep your preaching off the bike path please."

A Brief History of London’s Speakers’ Corner


Speakers' Corner - a Poster by Peter Carey ©Tfl from the London Transport Museum collection
Nearly 3,000 years ago, Homer wrote in The Iliad that “to speak his thoughts is every freeman’s right.” But it is only in recent times that that right has been articulated in the declarations and conventions of the United Nations and European Union and in the statutes of modern states.
While Britain’s constitution remains famously unwritten (and it was only in 1998 that Parliament formally adopted its own Human Rights Act), this country has had a tradition of respect for freedom of speech and the right of assembly which has not only shaped its own democracy but has also inspired and continues to influence the development of others.
One of the most powerful symbols of that tradition is to be found on a parcel of land which lies roughly between the site of the old Tyburn gallows and the Reform Tree in London’s Hyde Park. There for over a century men and women, some famous (including Karl Marx, William Morris, Vladimir Lenin, George Orwell, Marcus Garvey and Lord Soper) but most not, have dissented and denounced, canvassed and converted, preached and proselytised, and in so doing given expression to the fundamental rights of citizens to gather together to hear and be heard.
home-image-twoSpeakers’ Corner was itself born out the struggle for civil liberties in Victorian Britain and its establishment was a significant milestone in the development of our democratic institutions.
It occupies a part of Hyde Park where, in the mid-nineteenth century, the Chartists held mass protests against the suppression of the rights of working people, including the right of assembly, and the Reform League organised huge rallies to demand the widening of the franchise.
The Times, reflecting the unease of the establishment of the day, declared after one such demonstration that “it is against all reason and all justice that motley crowds from all parts of the metropolis should take possession of Hyde Park, and interfere with the enjoyments of those to whom the Park more particularly belongs”.
But, reporting on the same event, the radical Reynolds’ Newspaper of 29 July 1866 declared exultantly that despite the attempts of the police and troops to prevent them, “the people have triumphed, in so far as they have vindicated their right to meet, speak, resolve, and exhort in Hyde Park.”
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In the end the Government had to bow to popular pressure. In 1872 Parliament granted the Park Authorities the right to permit public meetings and Speakers’ Corner, already heavy with history, was born. For over a century it has been a focus for protest and debate and the symbol of a free society and a mature democracy.


1 comment:

didi said...

Maybe Roy and Jennie should spend the holidays in the US -- they'd be great Xmas party guests!