Showing posts with label Lambeth. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Lambeth. Show all posts

Wednesday, 10 August 2011

LONDON RIOTS: THE RISE OF THE DISAFFECTED AND JUST PLAIN BAD

This blog is not an analysis of the British riots. It is a brief take on my own experience of living 35 years in a mixed society in South London.

In 1983, I moved from leafy Putney to Lambeth Borough to be nearer the West End. None of my friends lived there, however I was happy. My flat was across the Thames from the Tate Gallery, only three tube stops to Green Park, and I loved the river walk to the London Eye. But by the 1990s, I noticed a change.

Aggression was common. Searching for a hairdresser one day, I entered a shop to enquire the cost of a blow-dry. “Stick with your own kind,” said its black receptionist.

Spitting had increased. But while TB was up 40%, no one thought to educate refugees that the habit is potentially deadly. This not withstanding, the refugees -mainly Somali - were likeable people and a traveller to the Horn of Africa, I would often stop for a friendly chat with them.

By now I was noticing the increasing number of children of ethnic Caribbean origin. I learned that Jamaicans who father many kids are considered virile. They’re called “Baby Farmers” I was informed of someone who knew of a man who had sired thirteen children by seven different women.

I began to clock the youths who gathered outside the tube around five. They wore lots of bling and drove big BMWs, but pushing drugs was the only opportunity for such tragic kids, products of casual sex, often without a birth certificate, and with no educational qualifications.

Blame for current disorder is attributed to government cutbacks on public services, but the benefits system has been milked for years. In the Post Office, I was alone in buying stamps. One day a man in the queue boasted he sent his £300 allowance “right back to de folks in Kingston.”

By 2000 the rise of gang culture was evident. Carried by many, knives were used with impunity. Coming home at 4.30 one afternoon, a neighbour had her face slashed for her mobile phone.

Burly, unmuzzled dogs wearing spiked collars then became the gang weapon of choice. Half a dozen hoodies, parading such animals saw pedestrians scatter. En route to the dentist one morning, I inadvertently stepped in front of a big black man who picked me up by the elbows and lifted me out of his way.

The owners of small businesses along the high street - the Eritrean in the deli, Algerians in the Pound Store, Afghans in the hardware, Pakistanis repairing computers, expressed concern at the growing belligerence. We agreed the root problem was a hole where family life should offer support. But with no father and a rejection of rules for decent behavior laid down by a struggling single mother, many black youths had morphed into ferals existing outside normal community life.

By 2010-11, anger and resentment was simmering, a potent ingredient in the quickening decline being white " low life" telling their kids to “shut up ” and to "fuck off". “Fuck off” said a six year year old boy I saw stealing sweets in Sainsburys. On another occasion, I came upon two teens riding bicycles around the toiletries counter. Yes. Inside the supermarket!

Away at work, the professional minority where I lived missed such goings-on. Or if they knew, their lips were sealed in fear of being called a racist. But the Indians who owned the newsagent knew. They moved to America. The Cockney fishmonger sold up --- ‘ad enough -- he told me - and astonishingly, a mini-cab driver said he was returning to Nigeria (it was safer in Lagos!).

Finally I too decided to withdraw before the in-balance erupted into urban violence and it is with a special sadness I have watched this happen from far away Australia.

Thank you.

Thursday, 8 July 2010

400 YEARS OF RELIGIOUS & ROYAL MEMORABILIA
















What I relish about living in London is the sheer number and variety of fascinating exhibitions on at any one time.

Today I visited the 'Treasures of Lambeth Library', marking the 400th anniversary (1610-2010) of its founding in Lambeth Palace, historic residence of the Archbishops of Canterbury, on the south bank of the river Thames.

I`d expected to find a sea of purely ecclesiastical volumes from the collection of around 6,000 early books and manuscripts lining the Great Hall.

Instead I found myself gazing on such unique items as Charles Ist`s leather gloves (handed to the Bishop of London who attended him on the scaffold), a letter written by Elizabeth I informing the Earl of Shrewsbury of her recovery from smallpox, and the royal physician`s report, dated 1811 referring to the `malady` of King George: `He was so turbulent this morning we had to use restraints”…

Evocative stuff, but the main body of the exhibition is devoted to early books, many lavishly and meticulously illustrated such as the twelfth century Lambeth Bible whose frontispiece to the Book of Genesis is considered a masterpiece of Romanesque art and the pocket-sized MacDurnan Gospels, written in Ireland and gifted to Christ Church, Canterbury by the King of Wessex c.939.

Equally fascinating is the personal prayer-book of Elizabeth I believed to have been designed by Levina Teerlink, the Flemish miniaturist who served as painter to the Tudor Court.

Other key items which caught my eye were an extremely rare Babylonian Talmud, a Byzantine manuscript from Constantinople and papers relating to the reconstruction of St Paul`s cathedral following the Great Fire of London.

Great names from the past jog the memory: there is a set of the works of Aristotle printed in fifteenth century Venice and a nautical chart on vellum depicting the voyages of Magellan in the then known world. Samuel Pepys is among several historic celebrities noted in a book of benefactors.

I could only gaze in awe at such treasures and while to name a single item is almost invidious, I would say the copy of the warrant for Mary Queen of Scot`s execution, signed by Elizabeth I is not to be missed.

Such a unique exhibition will never travel overseas so London visitors are well advised to visit the library before the heavy doors swing shut on 23rd July. open 10.00-17.000 Mon-Saturday.

Images courtesy: www. Lambethpalacelibrary.org

MacDurnan Gospels, 9th century St Matthew`s Gospel.
Prayer-book of Elizabeth I depicting the Queen kneeling in prayer.
Copy of the warrant for the execution of Mary Queen of Scots
signed 8 February 1587
















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