Author: cwhums

Coventry and Warwickshire Humanists Newsletter July 2023

Welcome to the July monthly Newsletter of the Coventry & Warwickshire Humanists. Hopefully, many of you will be planning your activities for the summer. At the time of writing this Newsletter, the weather is hardly like summer and the temporary heatwave of June. However, the horrific scenes around the Mediterranean, especially in Rhodes and Sicily, is frightening. With the temperatures reaching the low to mid 40 degrees the possibility for uncontrollable fires is very apparent. There is no doubt that the issue of climate change is probably the most important problem that we must address. Yet, regardless of the horrific scenes in Rhodes and other Mediterranean islands, it appears that many people in outer London are resisting the expansion of the former Congestion Charge or the Ultra-Low Emission Zone (ULEZ).  Unfortunately, this has provided the government with the opportunity to cut back on its previous commitments for a ‘Green Economy’. It is a very sad situation when a government considers its own popularity and votes over the pressing issue of addressing the pressing problem of climate change.

I apologise for the lateness of this months Newsletter. I have been busy with helping with the graduations at Warwick University. Two weeks of long days. But, it is an enjoyable event to see so many students and their families and friends enjoying the occasion and celebrating the achievements of the students. It does indeed give one a hope for the future.

Brian Goredema-Braid

Chair of Coventry & Warwickshire Humanists

Tel:        07977996363                    Email:    briangb@sky.com

Meeting Thursday 20th July:

This was a very different meeting to previous meetings. The main issue centred around where we are as a group. To question whether we are happy and content with where we are as a group and if there is a need to develop? To also consider the format of our meetings? How do we see our future as a group? Recognising the general age of most of the members. There was an interesting discussion. Issues that were suggested including updating the website and the Facebook page; seeking attendance at Freshers Weeks at Coventry and Warwick Universities; and sending out a questionnaire to seek members views on the current meeting format and suggestions for the future.

The meeting also discussed the recent issue of Kent County Council to have acted unlawfully by refusing Steve Bowen, Chair of Kent Humanists, a place on group A of its Standing Advisory Council on Religious Education (SACRE). Every local authority in England has a SACRE and it is responsible for overseeing RE and collective worship in community schools in the area. Kent County Council will not appeal the landmark High Court judgment that found it unlawfully refused humanist Steve Bowen membership of his local religious education (RE) committee. The Bowen judgment will therefore now stand as UK case law. Humanists UK, which facilitated Steve in bringing the case, welcomed the news.

Adrian Davis provided a summary of Uganda Humanists Schools Appeal. As a result of Uganda’s new anti-gay laws, many countries have made large cuts in their aid to Uganda. The government is trying to offset this by raising taxes and Isaac Newton School has a bill for £12,000, half of which needs to be paid immediately and the rest by September. Anyone who would like to help them through this latest challenge can donate here: https://ugandahumanistschoolstrust.org/donate/

I also raised the disturbing news of thousands of children from 76 Church of England schools across Coventry and Warwickshire being bussed in to mass evangelising ‘worship’ concerts in an out-of-town arena last month. These events were organised by the ‘Alive Praise Party’. More about this later in the Newsletter.

John Goodfellow mentioned the book “Humanly Possible” by Sarah Bakewell. She gave the 2023 Rosalind Franklin Lecture for Humanists UK, which was based on the book, and it is available on YouTube at: https://youtu.be/y7ZPCvbruw0.

Future Events:

As usual, there will not be a meeting in August

Thursday 21st September – AGM – The AGM is due in September. Further information will be sent out nearer to the date. 

Social Event – Saturday 23rd September:  This event will be held from 12.30 pm at Kenilworth Cricket Club, Warwick Road, Kenilworth. We welcome members to invite family and friends to join us with this event. Please contact Andrew Ireland asap to confirm your attendance

Email – andrew.ireland70@gmail.com or telephone 07719545403

Thursday 19th October: The main item at this meeting will be a talk from ‘Hope at Home’ a voluntary organisation that runs a hosting service for people escaping from modern slavery. This should be a very interesting meeting

“SHOCK AS 76 ANGLICAN SCHOOLS SUBJECT CHILDREN TO ‘ALIVE PRAISE’ WORSHIP CONCERT’

Yes, I was quite surprised when I saw this headline in a recent Humanist UK Newsletter. Especially as it concerned children in Coventry and Warwickshire.

‘Thousands of children from 76 Church of England schools across Coventry and Warwickshire were bussed in to mass evangelising ‘worship’ concerts in an out-of-town arena last month. We stated that such events are wholly inappropriate activities for state-funded schools to be carrying out’. (Humanist UK)

Thousands of children from 76 Church of England schools across Coventry and Warwickshire were bussed in to mass evangelising ‘worship’ concerts in an out-of-town arena last month, in a series of American-style concert shows. The ‘Alive Praise Party’, which took place from 15-16 June during the normal school day, saw the schools in the Diocese of Coventry send 9,000 children aged between 7 and 11 to four events. Humanists UK, which campaigns for the phasing out of state-funded faith schools, said such events are wholly inappropriate activities for state-funded schools to be carrying out.

Who’s behind this?

Alive Praise is run by Imagine Ministries, a charity producing evangelical material – resources designed explicitly to convert children to Christianity. A video summary of the event shows thousands of children in a large arena while musical acts and preachers ‘entertained’ by happy-clappy singing and dancing performers from the stage.

Is this kind of thing even allowed?

Disturbingly, even openly evangelical events – intended to turn non-Christian children into Christian disciples – are likely to be lawful, as they come under the banner of ‘collective worship’.

The UK is the world’s only country to require compulsory Christian worship as standard in all state schools. This practice originates in an archaic law from the 1940s which says every state school in England and Wales must hold ‘daily’ acts of ‘broadly Christian’ collective worship, or in the case of faith schools lead children in ‘worship’ that matches the school’s religion.

School evangelism is baked into UK law

Humanists UK campaigns for collective worship laws to be replaced with inclusive assemblies – free from evangelism or attempts to persuade children into (or out of) particular beliefs.

While in some schools the law on collective worship is ignored, or interpreted sensibly as only a vague mandate for school assemblies covering moral topics, when schools do choose to follow the letter of the law (and even when they lead children in acts of nakedly evangelical religious coercion) the law is frequently on the side of those schools, not parents. And regrettably many schools do just this – particularly primary schools, of which around two-fifths are Christian.

However, parents do have strong rights in this arena, and Humanists UK has been actively promoting its comprehensive Guide for Non-Religious Parents on religion in schools, in order to provide helpful advice for navigating the often complex system.

In 2019, Humanists UK supported two Oxfordshire parents whose child was isolated and stigmatised because of the school’s approach to so-called collective worship.

In current law, parents in England have the right to withdraw their children from collective worship. However, many see this is a ‘nuclear’ option as it sees the child effectively excluded from part of the school day. That can lead to children feeling left out or even victimised by their peers. Meanwhile some schools have been known (quite inappropriately) to frown upon parents wishing to withdraw their children in this way. All of this means that collective worship in church schools is still likely to be attended by a significant number of children from non-Christian families.

What can we do about it?

Cases like the ‘Alive Praise Party’ underline that parents have to jump through hoops, even in the most outrageous cases of schools manipulating young minds.

Humanists UK is urging a change in the law, and the abolition of ‘collective worship’ as a requirement in schools. It is also campaigning for an end to faith-based schools and faith-based admissions, as evidence shows these reduce parental choice as to local state schools. Studies show that many families are forced to attend religious schools despite their preferences. Parents then have little recourse when the school imposes highly sectarian collective worship or one-sided RE on their child.

Concerned parents should contact Humanists UK who employs a dedicated campaigner working full-time to address issues around collective worship and faith schools.

Humanists UK Education Campaigns Manager Robert Cann said:

‘No child should be evangelised by their state school, much less 9,000 of them at once. This is an appalling use of public funds and a complete denial of the freedom of belief of these unfortunate pupils and their families.

‘Just this past week the Church of England has announced that it plans to use its schools to “double the number of children who are active Christian disciples” and here it is already trying to put that plan into action. The Government must urgently repeal the laws allowing state schools to behave in this way.

If you know or are aware of a parent whose child attended this or similar events, please contact Robert Cann or Richy Thompson at press@humanists.uk who will provide support.

It would help if local Humanists could keep us informed of any future events.

Understanding Humanism – where do we come from? – With Alice Roberts

Humanists UK has teamed up with broadcaster and scientist Professor Alice Roberts to tell the scientific story of our origins in a brand new animation aimed at primary school children entitled Where do we come from? The video officially launches online today, and is the latest resource from Understanding Humanism, the charity’s programme supporting learning about humanism in classrooms across the country.

In the video, Alice Roberts, who is Vice President of Humanists UK, describes the scientific account of the evolution of the universe, stars, planets, and life in an enlightening and accessible way. The animation should support young people to understand where humanists find wonder in the scientific story of where we come from and in our capacity to look for and find the evidence to back it up.

It also reveals why humanists see something to be celebrated in how such ‘simple’ ingredients can lead to such wondrous results – our ‘thinking, feeling, choosing, caring, dreaming, wondering’ selves.In the video, Alice Roberts, who is Vice President of Humanists UK, describes the scientific account of the evolution of the universe, stars, planets, and life in an enlightening and accessible way. The animation should support young people to understand where humanists find wonder in the scientific story of where we come from and in our capacity to look for and find the evidence to back it up.

The short film was animated by OOF Animation. It will accompany many other resources and activities on Humanists UK’s Understanding Humanism website, designed to raise awareness and understanding of the humanist approach to life. Humanists UK supports teachers and schools to deliver engaging lessons about humanism as an example of a non-religious worldview as part of an inclusive education about religion and worldviews. Its resources are downloaded tens of thousands of times every year.

Director of Understanding Humanism Luke Donnellan commented:

‘Primary teachers often tell us that while an abundance of resources exists on the religious creation stories, it can be harder to find good material on the scientific story of our origins – we wanted to help correct that. We very much hope it will be of value to teachers and parents.’

‘We wanted to create something that didn’t just present the scientific facts, but brought alive the grandeur that can be found in this story of life. That we are all made of stardust; that we are connected to every other living thing on the planet; and that we are lucky to be here and to have the capacities we do. It’s a story that is not yet complete. But as the film acknowledges, the humanist, scientific approach is to keep looking for natural answers to our questions. It may be the children in today’s classrooms who help us to find those answers.’

“Poor” by Katriona O’Sullivan

John Goodfellow brought this exceptional autobiography to our attention at a recent meeting. I am pleased to say, that I also found it to be a fascinating book, especially as it concerns a woman raised in Coventry. Pregnant at 15, and soon to be homeless, O’Sullivan never expected to succeed – but became a leading academic. The author of Poor talks about everything that conspired to keep her down – and her ‘miraculous and rare’ ascent. Since John bought this book to our meeting, Katriona O’Sullivan has been interviewed on BBC ‘Woman’s Hour’ and ‘Book of the Week’ and an article in The Guardian. Raised by addicts, abused, neglected, broke: how Katriona O’Sullivan escaped her fate. This is taken from the article and interview with Emine Saner of The Guardian.

In a lecture room at Ireland’s most elite university, a woman in a hoodie and jeans, her hair in a messy bun, was sorting out some chairs. A student came in and told her that she couldn’t clean in there because a class was about to start. “I know,” the woman told her. “I’m teaching it.” It is one of my favourite moments in Dr Katriona O’Sullivan’s new memoir, not just for the delicious awkwardness, but because, despite O’Sullivan’s path from virtually unimaginable poverty and trauma to a top-level education, it exposes the truth about whom we believe those institutions are really for.
Katriona O'Sullivan in Dublin.

What was funny, but also difficult, says O’Sullivan now, “was that I was struggling at that time with: ‘Who am I?’” She had completed her PhD at Trinity College, Dublin, where she was lecturing in psychology and working in its access programme to encourage people back into education. “There’s a uniform of the middle classes,” she says, and she was wrestling with it (a colleague had even suggested she dress more like them). “I just wanted to be myself. I want to wear my hoops, and my tan, and I think it’s important that we see people who are diverse.” She smiles. “So, I was being brave, going: ‘I’m going to be me.’” The student read that look and saw a cleaner. “That’s the vision they have of a person from the underclass, or a working-class background. I got up and taught my class, and I was amazing, because I’m a good teacher.”

We meet in a hotel bar in Dublin. O’Sullivan, 46, is warm and direct, her accent somewhere between her Midlands upbringing and her Irish home. Her book, Poor, is one of the best I have read about the complexities of poverty and drug addiction. Looking back, you can see how all the elements that enabled O’Sullivan to get out of poverty clicked into place, like the combinations on a lock being turned to free her: teachers who had time to help her, youth workers who had money to support troubled teenagers, education grants, an access programme that encouraged her, and state-funded childcare and counselling. All things that, she points out, either no longer exist or are not sufficiently funded. She puts her motivation way down the list, making the point that it’s a myth that if you only work hard enough, you can achieve anything, because the system works against you – although I think she underestimates her awesome resilience and will.

The individual, she says, “is small in the decisions of their life, and we don’t like that because it suggests we’re powerless. But choice is a myth that’s perpetuated by the middle classes – only a few people really can choose.”

It is almost an accident that her life took this trajectory – it has not been the same for her siblings – and even though her climb brought her to a place that is preferable to where she was, it comes with sacrifices. It can be lonely, she says. “There’s loss that goes with not fitting any more with your family and friends, and not being able to go back and be at ease in whatever shit you were living in.”

At 15, O’Sullivan had left school and was pregnant and homeless; later, she struggled with addiction. Writing the book, she says, “has probably been the best thing I’ve ever done for myself. We live in a world that says: ‘You can be, you can do, you can achieve.’ I knew that wasn’t true, but somewhere, deep down, there was a part of me that blamed myself for failing.” When she was writing, her editor told her she was being far too hard on herself. “It really challenged me to think about how women end up the way I did.”

O’Sullivan grew up in Hillfields, a deprived part of Coventry in the West Midlands, the second youngest of five children. Their parents, Tony and Tilly, were heroin addicts. Home could be a frightening place, where drugs were dealt, and “friends” of their parents were often sprawled on the floor. When she was five or six, she discovered her father, who had overdosed, unconscious, a syringe still stuck in his flesh. He was jailed for selling drugs not long afterwards and she or one of her siblings would be used to smuggle drugs into the prison. While he was inside, one of the men who hung around the family raped her. “Yeah, well, he raped me, too,” said her mother, when a traumatised seven-year-old O’Sullivan told her.
O’Sullivan aged 13, with her mother.

Amid all this chaos, neglect and abuse, school was an escape, and often the only place where she ate. She would like to see universal free school meals now, and recognition of “the fundamental need for kids who are in poverty to be fed in order to engage in education”. But it goes further. “We underestimate the impact of teachers, and we don’t pay enough attention to ensuring they can provide care. You have lack of funding for teaching, lack of time, lack of resources. In the UK, 22% of children are living below the poverty line, which means that there’s a lot of kids, in a lot of schools, who are probably feeling like I did.” In fact, Child Poverty Action Group says 29% of children were living in poverty in the UK in 2021-22.

Poverty has layers. We were probably the most extreme – no food, not washed, nits. Kids don’t want to play with you

One of O’Sullivan’s teachers, Ms Arkinson, showed her not only love, but practical support. O’Sullivan often wet the bed and would come to school smelling of urine: she didn’t have soap, a towel or even a toothbrush at home. Arkinson taught her how to wash every morning in the school bathrooms and kept a stack of fresh pants for her. “She changed my life,” says O’Sullivan, and her eyes well up. “What she did for me lived on for ever. In a child who was really empty, she made me feel OK in myself and that was life-changing.”

At secondary school, it was another teacher, Mr Pickering, who reached her; he saw in O’Sullivan someone who was bright and loved reading (he brought her Jane Austen and John Steinbeck to read). “I really believe that when I was ready, and the supports were in place, the things that I’d experienced in secondary school from him, and in primary school, were part of the reason why I was able to participate in higher education in the way that I did.”

But there were also the people – children, and adults, too – who were repelled by poverty. “Poverty has layers. We were probably the most extreme – no food, not washed, nits. Kids don’t want to play with you, so it’s horrible because not only are you suffering at home, I was also going to school and being on the outside. Sometimes, teachers would treat me that way as well, or expect me to perform in a way that was just beyond me because of what was going on at home.”

There were glimpses of other lives. At three, she remembers her friend next door being given a hug by her mum, and wondering why her own mother didn’t hug her like that. For a short time, she and her siblings were taken into care, where she “got food, and washed”. She always believed she deserved more, but over the years, she says, “hope and belief get eroded”. The effort of survival was exhausting. “As a kid, I was hopeful, vivacious. All kids are – some are quiet, some are loud, but we all have potential. And then as a teenager, with all the shit constantly, in the end, you just lean into it.” There were people, she says, “trying to keep me hopeful, but it’s very hard to battle against a lifetime of poverty and belief within a family. Eventually, it’s like your light goes out.”

As a teenager, she was arrested for fighting and stealing, and was involved in drugs. When she was 15, she got pregnant; the moment she found out, “just knowing that it’s over – any bit of hope, any dreams”. She wanted to finish school, but felt she couldn’t go back, that all the teachers who expected her to fail would be proved right. After she had her son, Pickering turned up at her door and convinced her to sit at least one GCSE, English.

Her parents, although not angry about the pregnancy, told her she could not continue to live in the house with a baby. So, for several months she squatted in an abandoned flat, which became a teenage hangout for drinking and drugs, until social services found out and she was moved to a mother-and-baby hostel, then later to a council flat.

The next couple of years were difficult, dealing not only with the trauma of her own childhood, but also with a baby. We normalise the struggle of life with a newborn for older, middle-class mothers, she points out, “but young mothers are punished for the same thing”. To her horror, O’Sullivan found the pattern of her childhood repeating itself: it was easy to forget the trauma of her life if she was out at pubs and clubs, drinking and taking drugs; desperate for love, she confused it with sex.

Although she wouldn’t necessarily have classed herself as an addict – “I sometimes think: ‘Was it bad enough for me to own the same space that my parents did?’” – she could see the way she was going, and she wanted to stop. “I didn’t want that for my son, and that was horrific. I remember waking up to the fact, living in Birmingham in this council house, no carpet on the floor. I used to buy electric and gas keys on a Monday, and by Friday, it was gone, so it was cold. I remember thinking: ‘I am her, I’m my mam, and this beautiful boy deserves better.”
O’Sullivan and her son outside their Birmingham council house, 1996

Her father was sober by this point. He had gone to Ireland with her mother after skipping bail following another arrest, and he arrived one day to take her son back there with him. “He rescued me. This man, who in some ways was responsible, actually rescued us.”

Not long afterwards, O’Sullivan moved to Ireland, too, to be with her son, believing that if she could escape her surroundings, she could escape her trauma. It didn’t work and eventually she went to a recovery centre. It was the start of getting better, though it would take some years. She was, she writes, “convinced of my ‘place’ in society and I believed that my place was with the underclass”. She couldn’t see further than surviving on benefits, cleaning toilets at a train station for extra money, and finding a man to live with; an occasional holiday might be nice. But one day, O’Sullivan bumped into a woman she knew – also a single mother, who had grown up in poverty – who was studying law at Trinity through an access programme. O’Sullivan marched straight over to the university and asked how to apply.

If getting into Trinity College sounds like a fairytale ending, it was, but it was also difficult. O’Sullivan lacked confidence, and nearly dropped out the week before her exams. Her parents – although her father was sober, her mother was still drinking heavily – relied on her, and she was a lone parent to her son. But she did it, and after passing the access course, she did a degree in psychology and got a first, and a PhD, focusing on addiction.

“It’s like I lived two lives,” she says. “A life up to the point where my mind was opened by education. Prior to that, I had no idea that you could be anything different.” She is furious at the rhetoric around poverty – during the past decade especially – that if someone is poor, it is their own moral failing, and if only they worked harder, they could drag themselves out of it. “What I’ve done is miraculous, and rare, because we don’t have investment. If I was in that situation now, I wouldn’t be here.”

Because I’ve been empowered, I have been able to change my life, my children’s lives. I’m not costly any more to the state

It is society that loses, she points out. “We’re missing talent, vibrancy and creativity. Because I’ve been empowered, I have been able to change my life, my children’s lives. I’m not costly any more to the state. I’m not doing all of the things that happen when you live in poverty. The people who are making decisions are clearly very educated and yet they don’t seem to have the long-term lens on what investing in reducing poverty can do.”

Addiction, too, is seen as a personal failing rather than a complex issue. “There’s nobody I know who is addicted to drugs who planned that,” says O’Sullivan. “Especially for women with addiction, we do not provide enough support and services. My mother was judged so harshly, more than my dad, for being an addict. We need to look at how we moralise around addiction, and poverty.”

Her memoir has transformed how she feels about her mother in particular. She loved her parents, she says, and when they weren’t addicted to drugs or alcohol, they could be wonderful. “I’ve been able to see her in a different light, and re-find her,” says O’Sullivan. In viewing their painful lives as a whole – both had traumatic beginnings, and both are now dead – she found compassion for them. “My dad was sick; my mam was sick. They were mentally unwell. I’m more angry at the way the system treated us than with them.” The healthcare workers who roughly handled her unconscious father or told her drug-addicted mother, who had just given birth on the bathroom floor, that she shouldn’t be allowed to have children; the police who raided the house and treated the children not as victims, but as “vermin”; the social services who sent the children back home to be abused and neglected.

She knew, intellectually, that she wasn’t responsible for her neglect, or the abuse, but the feeling of shame stayed with her. “As if it’s something to do with me. As a kid, when you’re not loved by your parents for whatever reason – and I do believe they loved me, they weren’t able to show it – it becomes: ‘It’s because there’s something wrong with me.’”

For the people who can’t recover from that, it is no surprise that patterns repeat themselves. Even for O’Sullivan, who by any measure is a huge success – happily married with three children, an impressive research career, an expert on access to education, and one of the most remarkable people you will ever meet – that voice is still there, but quieter now. “There will always be a small part of me that just wants to be loved by my parents,” she says, and she apologises for the tears that spring to her eyes. “I think we carry our childhood with us. That’s the long-lasting residue from mine.”

The book helped. She likes herself now. “I think I’ve always liked myself, though. What’s really sad about growing up is that I can clearly remember being a young girl, alive to the world, inquisitive and bright, like all kids are but, unfortunately, I was born in this community where I wasn’t given an opportunity to flourish.” She feels now, nearly four decades on, closer to that girl, before the weight of neglect, predatory men, fear and low expectations crushed her. “Like, I’m alive again.”

(Poor is published by Penguin (£14.99).

Film Preview:

Oppenheimer: Much anticipated and sought after. Almost 3 hours long. During World War II, Lt. Gen. Leslie Groves Jr. appoints physicist J. Robert Oppenheimer to work on the top-secret Manhattan Project. Oppenheimer and a team of scientists spend years developing and designing the atomic bomb. Their work comes to fruition on July 16, 1945, as they witness the world’s first nuclear explosion, forever changing the course of history. Starring Cillian Murphy (of Peaky Blinders fame), Emily Blunt and Robert Downey Jr. At most cinemas 

Barbie: Barbie and Ken are having the time of their lives in the colourful and seemingly perfect world of Barbie Land. However, when they get a chance to go to the real world, they soon discover the joys and perils of living among humans. Apparently, even if you hate the thought of Barbie, you will enjoy this film! Starring Margot Robbie and Ryan Gosling. At most cinemas. (Notice the pink shade?)

My Name is Alfred Hitchcock: A documentary of the ‘Master of Suspense’ re-examining the vast filmography and legacy of one of the 20th century’s greatest filmmakers, Alfred Hitchcock, through a new lens: through the auteur’s own voice. Mainly at Warwick Arts Centre (WAC)

Baato: This documentary film is a deep dive into a way of life that is in the midst of a slow and chaotic, yet inexorable transition. Hoping to sell medicinal plants in urban markets, a woman and her family travel deep into the Himalayas of Nepal as construction of a new motorway starts to transform the mountain landscape. At WAC and Midlands Arts Centre (MAC)

Lady Bird: A re-release of this excellent 2017 coming-of-age films. As senior year comes to an end, Lady Bird must strive to navigate through the ups and downs in her relationships while trying to get into a prestigious college and become popular. Starring Saoirse Ronan and Beanie Feldstein. Mainly at WAC and MAC and some main circuit cinemas

Paris Memories: Three months after surviving a terrorist attack at a bistro, Mia is still traumatized and unable to recall the events of that night. In an effort to move forward, she investigates her memories and retraces her steps. Starring Virginie Efira. Mainly at WAC & Mac

Haunted Mansion: A woman and her son enlist a motley crew of so-called spiritual experts to help rid their home of supernatural squatters. All star cast including Jamie Lee-Curtis, Owen Wilson and a cameo from Danny De Vito. At most cinemas

L’immensita:  A family drama with a transgender subplot set in Rome in 1970. A preteen girl, moves into a new apartment with her family. While her parents struggle in their unhappy marriage, she rejects her name and identity, ultimately deciding to convince everyone that she is a boy. Starring Penelope Cruz and Luana Giuliani. Mainly at WAC & MAC

Joy Ride: Reviews say this is very, very funny! When a woman’s business trip to Asia goes sideways, she enlists the help of her childhood best friend, and 2 other friends. Their epic, no-holds-barred experience becomes a journey of bonding, friendship, belonging and wild debauchery that reveals the universal truth of what it means to know and love who you are. Starring Ashley Park, Sherry Cola and Sabrina Wu. At most cinemas, but mainly at WAC & MAC

Talk to Me: Personally, I am not into horror films myself, but this film has some great reviews. When a group of friends discovers how to conjure spirits by using an embalmed hand, they become hooked on the new thrill — until one of them unleashes terrifying supernatural forces. With Sophie Wilde and Zoe Terakes. I expect it to be at most cinemas and WAC & MAC.

Kakome City: A documentary of four Black transgender sex workers telling their life stories in intimate and candid interviews. At WAC & MAC

Theatre Camp: An American comedy where eccentric staff members of an upstate New York theatre camp must band together when their beloved founder falls into a coma. Mainly at WAC & MAC

Scrapper: A British comedy about a dreamy 12-year-old girl who lives happily in her London flat, filling it with magic. When her estranged father turns up, he forces her to confront reality. Starring Harris Dickinson, Lola Campbell and Laura Alkman. At most cinemas and WAC & MAC.

Andre Rieu 2023 Maastricht Concert: Love is All Around: I know that many people like this? André Rieu will again stage his glorious annual summer event in the iconic Vrijthof Square this year. The concert will be a musical feast with heart-warming pieces lovingly chosen by André, covering classics, popular sing-alongs, and delightful waltzes that make you want to dance. Everywhere!!

Exhibition on Screen: Leonardo: The Works: Emphasis is placed on Leonardo da Vinci’s unparalleled drawings and paintings and his universe, especially his life and his time. Several masterpieces will be explored in detail by the experts. At many cinemas including WAC & MAC

Exhibition on Screen: Vermeer: The Greatest Exhibition: In the spring of 2023, the Rijksmuseum in Amsterdam opened its doors to the largest Vermeer exhibition in history. This was on recently and has returned at some cinemas and WAC & MAC

Still on the Circuit:

Indiana Jones and the Dial of Destiny – Daredevil archaeologist Indiana Jones races against time to retrieve a legendary dial that can change the course of history. Accompanied by his goddaughter, he soon finds himself squaring off against a former Nazi who works for NASA. Starring (80-year-old) Harrison Ford and Phoebe Waller-Bridge of ‘Fleabag’ fame.

Asteroid City – Yes, it is a Wes Anderson film, so don’t expect a strong plot line. Just look at the photographic images and enjoy its splendour and colourful images. A comedy-drama of world-changing events spectacularly disrupt the itinerary of a Junior Stargazer/Space Cadet convention in an American desert town circa 1955. A stellar cast including Tom Hanks, Scarlet Johansson, Steve Carell Brian Cranston etc. This excellent film will be shown at MAC during September – Don’t miss it!

Mission Impossible – Dead Reckoning Part One – the IMF team must track down a terrifying new weapon that threatens all of humanity if it falls into the wrong hands. The 7th Mission Impossible starring Tom Cruise

La Syndicaliste – In 2012, the head union representative of a French multinational nuclear powerhouse becomes a whistle-blower, denouncing top-secret deals that shake the French nuclear sector. Alone against the world, she fights government ministers and industry leaders to bring the scandal to light. Starring the excellent Isabelle Huppert

TV Preview:

Monday 31st July:

20.30 – BBC1: Extraordinary Portraits – Extraordinary Portraits is an uplifting series that celebrates modern Britain. Bill Bailey matches NHS workers with some of the UK’s best artists.

21.00 – BBC1: Wolf – A new serial. Obsessed with the neighbour he believes murdered his brother in the 90s, DI Jack Caffery finds himself trying to right the wrongs of others. Meanwhile, a wealthy family in Monmouthshire are the victims of a psychopath’s cruel games.

21.00 – BBC3: Life and Death in the Warehouse – Drama inspired by real events telling the story of young Welsh worker Alys, who begins to fall behind at her warehouse job after becoming pregnant. 

Tuesday 1st August:

22.55 – BBC4: The Trials of Oppenheimer – Quite timely with the Christopher Nolan film being shown in cinemas. A documentary on the rise and fall of scientist J Robert Oppenheimer, the director of the project that developed the first atomic bomb. He later tried to prevent a nuclear arms race in his role with the Atomic Energy Commission. His stance made him many political enemies and he was later put on trial for supposed communist sympathies.

23.15 – BBC2: Molly’s Game – Excellent drama based on a true story. Following a career-ending injury, a skier discovers the world of high-stakes poker, and builds her own gambling empire, which makes her rich – and attracts a major federal investigation.

Wednesday 2nd August:

22.40 – BBC1: Dreaming Whilst Black – An excellent new comedy series. Kwabena has been stuck in his dead-end recruitment job for way longer than he initially planned. He spends the majority of his time in reveries of accomplishing his dream: to be a filmmaker. Next episode at 23.05

22.45 – ITV1: The Silence of the Lambs – Oscar-winning psychological thriller starring Jodie Foster and Anthony Hopkins

Thursday 3rd August:

21.00 – BBC4: Gentlemen Prefer Blondes – Musical comedy starring Marilyn Monroe and Jane Russell.

22.30 – BBC4: Brief Encounter – Classic romantic drama starring Celia Johnson and Trevor Howard. A chance meeting in a suburban railway station brings together by 2 married strangers. 

22.40 – BBC1: Schindler’s List – Steven Spielberg’s multi-Oscar-winning drama starring Liam Neeson, Ben Kingsley and Ralph Fiennes.

Friday 4th August:

21.00 – BBC2: Reframed: Marilyn Monroe – The final two episodes of this 4-part documentary about Marilyn Monroe. Next episode is at 21.45

21.15 – BBC4: Neil Diamond: Radio 2 In Concert – The singer-songwriter performs songs from his album Home Before Dark produced in collaboration with Rick Rubin

21.45 – BBC4: Elkie Brookes in Concert – The singer performs in this two-part TV special. Songs include Pearl’s a Singer and Fool if You Think it’s Over. From 1987. Part 2 is at 22.25

21.50 – BBC3: Pride – London-based gay and lesbian activists lend their support to striking miners in 1984 Wales. Excellent film

Saturday 5th August: It is a good night for fans of the late great Tony Bennett

21.00 – BBC2: Tony Bennett at the London Palladium – A 2011 concert in which the singer marked his 85th birthday by drawing on a repertoire spanning 60 years.

22.00 – BBC2: Arena: Tony Bennett’s New York – Documentary taking a look at the man behind the silky voice as Tony Bennett – civil rights activist, jazz enthusiast, painter and New Yorker – takes a tour around his native city and the world of American music

23.20 – BBC2: Tony Bennett Sings – The singer performs a selection of his favourite songs. More sessions at 23.50 and 00.20

21.15 – Channel 4: Becoming Elizabeth – Another episode of the serial of a young Elizabeth 1

22.00 – ITV1: Irvine Welsh’s Crime – The final episode of the gritty thriller written by Irvine Welsh and starring Dougray Scott.

22.20 – BBC1: When Harry Met Sally – An excellent romantic comedy of a chance encounter between two graduates culminates in a short-term friendship. But when fate brings them back together five years later, they are forced to deal with how they feel about each other. Yes, and there is ‘that’ restaurant scene!

Sunday 6th August:

21.00 – BBC1: World on Fire – Another episode of this intriguing World War 2 drama

21.00 – ITV1: A Spy Among Friends – The penultimate episode of this serial about the defection of Kim Philby to the USSR

22.30 – BBC1: The Kings Speech – King George VI tries to overcome his stammering problem with the help of a speech therapist to make himself worthy enough to lead his country through World War II.

23.00 – BBC2: Ali – Based on real events,a young Mohamed Ali reaches new heights of fame as a boxer and through his conversion to Islam, and his refusal to fight in Vietnam and other controversial actions. Although short of Ali’s physique, Will Smith provides a good performance.

A Few Funnies for a Smile:

I rang the Council the other day to ask if I can have a skip outside my house.

The man from the Council said, ‘You can cartwheel all around the block for all I care!’

Apparently, owls can’t mate when it is raining?

It’s too wet to woo

I hate it when people act and talk all intellectual about Mozart -when they have never seen one of his paintings

A genie granted me a wish, So, I said, ‘I just want to be happy

Now I am living in a cottage with 6 dwarves and working in a mine

The police are hunting for the Knitting Needle Nutter who recently stabbed 6 people in the backside.

They believe that the attacker could be following some kind of pattern 

A man from Wolverhampton goes to Antiques Roadshow with a very rare vase

Fiona Bruce asks, ‘How did you acquire this vase?’

The man says, ‘It was handed down to me’

Fiona Bruce says, ‘Where from?’

He replies, ‘An upstairs window!’ 

Cyclops says to his wife. ‘How do you spell Hawaii?

His wife says (biting her lips), ‘Well you need two I’s’

Cyclops puts his pen down and says, ‘My life is just a joke to you isn’t it?  

Coventry and Warwickshire Humanists May 2021 Newsletter

Happy May time!

I hope that you are staying safe and dry.
I have suffered 3 soakings whilst out on my bike, Gill (my wife) is unsympathetic.
“You won’t take shelter when it rains, you just won’t stop”.
She has a point.
 
Brian Nicol and putting the humanist viewpoint.
 
It was great to see and hear from Brian Nicol at our zoom gathering yesterday, he came to make the following points:
 
As members are aware, one of the ways that people in Mid-Warwickshire become aware of Humanism both locally in terms of activities such as rites-of-passage and as a wider philosophy, is through regular columns in the Courier series submitted by George Broadhead and myself.
George is no longer with us and I am writing now to say that I am no longer able to continue as I am finding it increasingly difficult both to physically type and compose coherent passages!
It would be a pity not to continue to take advantage, alongside churches, local MPs etc of this free publicity so I am writing to ask for members who would be willing to contribute.  Articles need to be about 300 to 400 words about anything relevant to Humanism. George and I used to write a lot about national campaigns such as Dignity in Dying and relating to various aspects of faith schools and promoting  a Secular society including  Bishops in the House of Lords and religious exemptions from legislation that everyone else has to comply with.  There is no lack of material on the various Humanist and other web-sites.
 
Every potential contributor needs to know what the others are doing.  One possibility is to have a small panel of contributors with a coordinator.  Perhaps ideas could be discussed at a future meeting?
Brian
 
Following Brian’s contribution, 3 of us (JS, BGB and myself) have undertaken to take the baton from him and try to maintain the tradition.  It’s a good cause and we’ll do our best.  If you have an idea for an article ………
 
 
 
KEEP UP-TO-DATE WITH INDEPENDENT SCIENTISTS’ WEEKLY BRIEFING ON COVID-19
 
Glyn and Heather Evans have consistently recommended Independent SAGE.  They agreed to say what it is.
 
The Independent SAGE streams LIVE EVERY FRIDAY on YouTube.
 
Chair is Prof Alice Roberts, President of Humanists UK and also Prof of Public Engagement in Science at Birmingham University. Notable speakers are Prof Gabriel Scally, Prof Susan Michie, Prof Christine Pagel, Prof Anthony Costello, etc. The main advantages of Independent Sage, as its name implies, is its total independence from political interference and, of course, its members have particular expertise.
 
In last Friday’s (14/05/21) meeting they were particularly scathing about the Government’s approach to the Indian variant (B.1.617.2). Also very damning on the Government’s delaying of a public enquiry on COVID till Spring 2022. No indication whether collection of data and evidence would precede that date – if not the publication of the enquiry would not occur before the end of 2022. This delay can but sound a bit suspicious.
 
Summary of their six point plan for dealing with the Indian Variant (B.1.617.2)
1. Global Vaccination – as a matter of urgency!
2. Border Control – The current ‘traffic light’ system of international travel is weak and inconsistent.
3. Improved Local Systems of Outbreak Control. The provision to fine people £10,000 for failing to   isolate should be withdrawn as this is a powerful disincentive to come forward for testing.
4. Domestic Vaccination – follow up of people  not yet vaccinated, eg with vaccination teams.
5. Limit Indoor Mixing – Outdoors to be encouraged.
6. Continuing Vigilance It is incumbent that we act now rather than wait and see if things get worse. The lessons from 2020 have shown that delaying action could increase hospitalisations, overwhelm the NHS and may also cost lives. There should be a national communication campaign urging people to limit contact as far as possible and to take measures to protect themselves and others with whom they are in contact.
 
A Lawn Being Sprinkled – David Hockney, chosen by Alistair, from one of his presentations to our zoom gatherings.

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The Armchair Audience’ by Jacquie Campbell
 
As I type, the full opening of theatres in June is looking less certain and we’ll have to see what unfolds.  However, there is still plenty to enjoy online. 
 
The National Theatre has just released two more of its productions to view at home – Comedy of Errors and Terence Rattigan’s The Deep Blue Sea.  I haven’t seen the first production, which stars Lenny Henry and Lucian Msamati, who played a powerful Othello at the RSC in 2015.  But I did see The Deep Blue Sea and, oh my, I can’t recommend it enough.  It’s a fabulous production, with the late Helen McCrory giving a stunning performance – one of her finest, I think – as Hester and Tom Burke as her younger lover, Freddie.  Time Out described this as “Exquisitely sad” and “Beautifully judged” and I couldn’t agree more.  It stays with you for a very long time. 
 
The Original Theatre Company have been a happy discovery form me in the last few months, and they’ve done fantastic work producing live shows and then streaming them.  Being Mr Wickham is their latest offering.  The live shows have finished, but it’s available to watch online until August.  It’s a retelling of Pride and Prejudice from the perspective of that incorrigible cad and bounder, George Wickham, 30 years later.  It’s charming and great fun, and Adrian Lukis reprises the role of Wickham that he played in the BBC production.
 
For a live show, Original are producing A Cold Supper Behind Harrods.  Three giants of acting, David Jason, Stephanie Cole and Anton Lesser are doing a live reading from the stage of the Oxford Playhouse on 11 June at 7.30.  It’s about a reunion between three former Special Operations agents and is playing live for just that one night, but will be available to watch afterwards. 
 
Meanwhile, theatre brochures are starting to drop through the letterbox once more, tempting us to book.  We’re currently studying the programme at Malvern Theatres – if you haven’t been there, it’s a terrific arts centre with a programme that often features plays before they move to the West End.  And Great Malvern is a lovely place to stay if you fancy a short break.  Fingers crossed………..
 
Some Films and TV Programmes to look out for this week – May 28th
 
Thursday 20th May:
22.05 – BBC4: Tea with Mussolini – An excellent comedy drama. A group of eccentric English and American women living in Florence during the 1930s collectively adopt a local boy (believed to be Zeffirelli himself) disowned by his father. Their happy existence is under threat as war breaks out. Starring Maggie Smith, Judi Dench, Joan Plowright, Cher, Lily Tomlin and Baird Wallace.
23.15 – Film 4: Paris Texas – An exceptional and outstanding drama directed by Wim Wenders. A man wanders out of the desert with no memory and returns to his home town. He tries to piece together his past and find his estranged wife and child. Starring Harry Dean Stanton, Nastassja Kinski, Dean Stockwell and Aurore Clement. A wonderful haunting guitar score from Ry Cooder
Friday 21st May:
19.05 – Sony Movies: Raising Arizona – A great Coen Brothers comedy. A habitual thief and his policewoman wife discover they cannot have children, so set out to kidnap one of five babies born to a local tycoon. Starring Nicolas Cage, Holly Hunter, John Goodman and Frances McDormand.
22.40 – BBC1: The Witches of Eastwick – A great comedy drama to go to bed with. The sleepy town of Eastwick changes when 3 bored independent women have their wishes granted when a mysterious man arrives. Starring Jack Nicholson, Cher, Michelle Pfeiffer, Susan Sarandon
23.20 – BBC2: Testament of Youth – An excellent period drama based on the memoirs of writer Vera Brittain. Her fiancé and brother are sent to the front line during World War 1. A young woman gives up her studies at Oxford to follow them. She becomes a nurse, and witnesses the horrors of the conflict. Her outlook changes forever. Starring Alicia Vikander, Kit Harington and Taron Egerton.
Saturday 22nd May:
15.15 – Channel 5: The Glenn Miller Story – Musical biopic of the bandleader. Depicting the king of swing’s triumphs from his college days to the pinnacle of his career, before it ended when his plane disappeared in 1944. Starring James Stewart, June Allyson and Charles Drake, and featuring an appearance by Louis Armstrong as himself. Pure nostalgia and enjoyment
19.30 – BBC2: The Guernsey Literary and Potato Peel Pie Society – A truly delightful feel-good romantic drama, ideal for a Saturday evening. A literary club in Nazi occupied Guernsey invite a famous author to attend a meeting. Starring Lily James, Tom Courtenay and Katherine Parkinson.
21.00 – Film 4: Red Sparrow – An excellent spy thriller. A retired ballerina is recruited to the KGB to use her body as a weapon. Her first mission, targeting a CIA agent, threatens to unravel the security of both nations. Starring Jennifer Lawrence, Joel Edgerton, Matthias Schoenaerts and Charlotte Rampling as the ‘hostess from hell!!’
23.00 – BBC2: Loving – An excellent and critically acclaimed fact-based drama. In late-1950s Virginia, interracial couple Richard and Mildred Loving are targeted by the authorities and arrested, leading to a momentous legal battle that would end with the Supreme Court’s historic 1967 decision. Starring an Oscar-nominated Ruth Negga, with Joel Edgerton, Will Dalton and Michael Shannon.
Sunday 23rd May:
18.15 – Talking Pictures: The Day of the Jackal – An exceptionally great thriller and adaptation of Frederick’s Forsyth’s novel. A group of conspirators contracts the Jackal to assassinate President de Gaulle. Out-foxing the French police at every turn. Starring Edward Fox, Michael Lonsdale, Alan Badel, Tony Britton and Cyril Cusack. If you missed it recently
19.30 – ITV1: Fantastic Beasts: The Crimes of Grindelwald – Second part of JK Rowling’s Harry Potter prequel saga. A complex plot and the introduction of more characters adds narrative richness and a deepening mythology. Starring Eddie Redmayne, Johnny Depp, Katherine Waterston and Jude Law.
21.00 – BBC1: The Pursuit of Love – Last episode of this enjoyable series. Longing for love and obsessed with sex, Linda is on the hunt for the perfect lover. But finding Mr Right is much harder than she thought.
 
Wednesday 26th May:
21.00 – BBC2: The Black American Fight for Freedom – Fifty years on from the promise of equality and the Civil Rights Act, this documentary examines moments where America had the chance to become more equal and why that didn’t happen.
01.00 – Channel 4: Little Men – A rich, thoughtful and an absolute top quality drama. A 13-year-old boy recovering from the death of his grandfather befriends the son of a Chilean woman, who rents a dress shop from his parents. Starring Michael Barbieri, Greg Kinnear and Pauline Garcia
Thursday 27th May:
21.00 – Sony Action: Blade Runner 2049 – A great Oscar winning sci-fi thriller sequel to Ridley Scott’s 1982 classic. An android-hunter working for the LA Police Department discovers a long-buried secret, which leads him to track down former detective who’s been missing for 30 years and is linked to the case. Starring Ryan Gosling, Harrison Ford, Ana de Armas and Sylvia Hoeks.
Friday 28th May: It is a great night on BBC4 for fans of Bob Dylan to celebrate his 80th birthday
21.00 – BBC4: Don’t Look Back – A superb, intimate film diary of Bob Dylan’s 1965 tour of Britain, Featuring interviews with various Sixties cult figures, including his then-girlfriend Joan Baez and poet Allen Ginsberg. Followed at 22.00 with Omnibus interview with Bob Dylan and 23.00 Arena with a recording of a live concert fro 1980
23.20 – BBC2: Effi Grey – A delightful fact-based period drama to go to bed with. A Victorian woman is trapped in a loveless marriage to a celebrated art critic. She becomes a model for a painter who her husband is promoting. She falls in love with the artist and creates a scandal by becoming the first woman to seek a divorce. Starring Dakota Fanning and Emma Thompson.
 
Brian GB
 
Rare Blue Bee, thought to be extinct, rediscovered in Florida.
 

Membership dues
 
Eager members have been asking urgently “How do we pay into C & W Humanist funds?”
 
You can pay directly by BACS to
 
Coventry and Warwickshire Humanists
 
Sort code 20 – 23 – 55
Account number 00982911
 
 
The Summer is coming and ….
 
We are fortunate to have several groups, allied to the humanist cause and responding imaginatively to lockdown and post lockdown.  Here, some of them describe what they are planning.
 
National Secular Society
 
On Tuesday 25th May at 19:30 in a zoom meeting
 
Rob Palmer from Recovering from Religion (RfR) will lead the discussion. 
 
RfR is a non-profit humanist organization which has the goal of providing hope, healing, and support for people struggling with issues of doubt and non-belief. Its passion is connecting others with support, resources, community, and most of all, hope. They have two forms of support available: peer support and professional support.
 
Rob Palmer is a volunteer for RfR involved with many aspects of peer support. He will join us to discuss why RfR’s services are so important, and share details of what RfR does to meet the needs of the community.
Rob is a retired aerospace engineer who now works for Recovering from Religion, filling a variety of roles. He is a Helpline Volunteer, Online Community Channel Moderator, a Social Host (for the weekly community Zoom sessions featuring professional presentations to the RfR community), and a member of the RfR Ambassador Program, charged with publicizing the organization. Rob is also a skeptical activist, as he is a member of the Guerrilla Skepticism on Wikipedia project, and he is a columnist for the Skeptical Inquirer (‘The Magazine of Science and Reason’), writing as ‘The Well-Known Skeptic.’
 
Skeptical Inquirer column: https://skepticalinquirer.org/authors/rob-palmer
 
Follow Rob on Facebook at: https://www.facebook.com/TWKSkeptic
 
Birmingham Humanists – a real picnic!
 
So pleased to see this initiative from B’ham Humanists.
 
When the weather improves, perhaps we should follow their example.
 
Dear friend of Birmingham Humanists
 
Covid regulations have changed, allowing up to 30 people to meet outside, so we can go ahead with our next event, the picnic in Sutton Park on Sunday, 23 May at 12.30. It’ll be great to see each other in person again!
 
As numbers are limited, we need people to register in advance. So if you intend to come to the picnic, please sign up via the website at https://birminghamhumanists.org.uk/events/picnic-in-the-park. NB You will need to do this separately for each person attending. Please sign up at least 24 hours before the event.
 
We will then send out details of where to meet, along with information about parking and public transport, to everyone who has booked a place.
 
Looking forward to seeing you there, and hoping the weather will have improved by then!
 
With best wishes
 
Carolyn Sugden
 
Secretary, Birmingham Humanists
 
http://www.birminghamhumanists.org.uk
 
And from north of the border
 

Join us in Glasgow from 3 to 5 June 2022 for an international humanist weekend!
 
 The 2022 Humanists International General Assembly will take place in Glasgow (Scotland) from Friday 3rd June until Sunday 5th of June. The event will be organised in collaboration with our Member Humanist Society Scotland.

The event will take place at the Sir Charles Wilson Building which forms part of the University of Glasgow.

The weekend will feature a range of cultural and intellectual experiences, including the International Humanist Conference 2022.
 
 
THAT HAVE HAPPENED DURING MAY by Brian GB
 
The Union between England and Scotland was proclaimed on 1st May 1707 during the reign of Queen Anne (I wonder if and when the Union will be disbanded?)
The Final of the Snooker World Championship is usually played on the first Sunday and Monday in May at the Crucible Theatre in Sheffield
New Zealand officially became British colony on 3rd May 1841 during the reign of Queen Victoria
On 3rd May in 1611 saw the first publication of the King James Bible
Roger Bannister became the first man to run a sub-4 minute mile on 6th May 1954 at Oxford
On 8th May 1429 Joan of Arc’s army defeated the English army at Orleans
The General strike started on 3rd May 1926 and lasted 9 days. The main Trade Unions involved were the miners, railway/transport workers, dockers and printers
In May 1921 Coco Chanel launched the scent ‘Chanel No 5’ which was destined to be “the world’s most famous”
Buffalo Bill’s Wild West Show opened in London on 9th May 1887. The show included the world famous markswoman Annie Oakley
Henry Vlll’s second wife Anne Boleyn was executed for treason at the Tower of London on 19th May 1536
Eleven days later on 30th May, Henry Vlll married Jane Seymour (He didn’t hang about did he?)
On 21st May 1932 Amelia Earhart was the first female aviator to make the first solo flight across the Atlantic
Iconic rock and folk musician and Nobel Prize winner Bob Dylan will celebrate his 80th birthday on 24th May (Bob Dylan 80??? Wow I do feel old!!)
The Gilbert & Sullivan opera ‘HMS Pinafore’ opened to rave reviews at the Opera Comique, London on 25th May 1878. The opera was produced by Richard D’Oyly Carte
Ordered by Philip ll, the Spanish Armada set sail for England 28th May 1588
 
Thank you Brian GB and finally, a poem, settle down now, are you sitting comfortably? 
 
 
The Children’s Hour by Henry Wadsworth Longfellow
 
Between the dark and the daylight,
When the night is beginning to lower,
Comes a pause in the day’s occupations,
      That is known as the Children’s Hour.
 
I hear in the chamber above me
      The patter of little feet,
The sound of a door that is opened,
      And voices soft and sweet.
 
From my study I see in the lamplight,
      Descending the broad hall stair,
Grave Alice, and laughing Allegra,
      And Edith with golden hair.
 
A whisper, and then a silence:
      Yet I know by their merry eyes
They are plotting and planning together
      To take me by surprise.
 
A sudden rush from the stairway,
      A sudden raid from the hall!
By three doors left unguarded
      They enter my castle wall!
 
They climb up into my turret
      O’er the arms and back of my chair;
If I try to escape, they surround me;
      They seem to be everywhere.
 
They almost devour me with kisses,
      Their arms about me entwine,
Till I think of the Bishop of Bingen
      In his Mouse-Tower on the Rhine!
 
Do you think, O blue-eyed banditti,
      Because you have scaled the wall,
Such an old moustache as I am
      Is not a match for you all!
 
I have you fast in my fortress,
      And will not let you depart,
But put you down into the dungeon
      In the round-tower of my heart.
 
And there will I keep you forever,
      Yes, forever and a day,
Till the walls shall crumble to ruin,
      And moulder in dust away!
 
A very pleasant note to end on, thank you Audrey for the suggestion.
 
If you would like to join our 59th zoom session, at 7.30 p.m. next Wednesday 28th May, you will need a new zoom invitation, the old one will no longer work.
I will send it to you but should I forget, please demand one at:
 
rmjelley@gmail.com
 
Stay safe and if you’re out on your bike, stay dry too.
 
 
 

58th Zoom gathering this evening

Wednesday 19th May 2021

Coventry and Warwickshire Humanists


Our 58th zoom gathering

Music: TBA

Reporting on Humanism in The Courier papers: Brian Nicol

May Newsletter: copy needed, posting due tomorrow.

Free: Mubarak Bala

Free: Nazanin Ratcliffe

A Poem: chosen and read by Audrey

Finances: how to make contributions to our funds and contact the treasurer.

Conversion Attempt: John Gainer.

Cartoon of the week: Egghead.

Hail (on) the Woodlands: Andrew and Mo

Art: Alistair

The Quiz: BGB

Recommendations: What have you read, listened to or heard this week?

Classy Music: TBA

If you would like to pop in to our meeting please send an email to rmjelley@gmail.com

Farewell to George

C & W Humanists Special Newsletter May 2021

Remembering George Broadhead

Dear friends,

It was bitterly sad to hear that George Broadhead had passed away.  He chaired the first local humanists meeting that I attended in 2011 and he did so with great flair and panache, with George nothing was monochrome.

I think that George would haved loved to hear how he’s remembered.  Let me start a list for you to continue:  unique, flamboyant, extrovert, charismatic, knowledgeable, formidable, colourful, whimsical …………….

He was a campaigner; George fought long and hard, on behalf of humanism and for Gay Rights etc.  His weapons included a dogged sense of purpose, a quick mind and a sharp wit.

Today, all those who knew George will remember an independent thinker, a one-off.  Our thoughts are with George’s partner Roy.

Thanks George.

Bob Jelley

Memories shared by Dr Brian Nicol.

I have known George since the day the local group was formed in 1974- so for 47 years.   Believe it or not at the inaugural meeting of the group  at their house in Spring Lane  which was advertised and run by Roy, George was very much the diffident one in the background seeming to confine himself to offering tea and biscuits.  Over the years of course he has blossomed and shown himself to have a very distinct personality.  His two main interests which  seemed to take up most of his spare time were Humanism and organising Gay activities on the national stage.

In the late ’70s he discovered a local demand for non-religious rites of passage, particularly funeral services. Neither he nor Roy were keen so he asked me if I would be willing to try my hand.  Such ceremonies were then in their infancy  but the BHA  had published  a guide for would- be officiants that was very useful. I was a bit nervous about the whole thing but George  was very encouraging and went with me to the various crematoria to make sure that I got there in good order and of course to say how well it went !

When we first knew them George and Roy owned a cabin cruiser and travelled extensively along the canals. When they had to give that up George organised what they referred to as ‘our little jaunts’ for himself and Roy. This involved going by train to an attractive town conveniently within reach and putting up for a couple of nights at a hotel of sufficiently  high standard.   Winchester, Ludlow and places in the Cotswolds were often chosen.  George was quite keen on having a social life. He was a supporter of any get-togethers that the group organised as well as the coffee and biscuits after meetings. When we started having speakers from a distance he arranged for them to be met and he and I took them out for a meal before the meeting .He rather thought of himself as being a man of taste and my wife and  I were sometimes invited on a warm summer evening to join Roy and himself for a glass of bubbly on their small patio to admire the latest statuary or water feature that he had installed.  He similarly decorated the house. One of the latest acquisitions was an antique chiming clock that he had seen advertised on e-bay.

Latterly, both retired from the group we met up sometimes for coffee. He was a keen customer of Arden’s  and usually pushed his trolley round the town centre in a very ‘camp’ attire. Since Covid we spoke often on the phone comparing ailments of ourselves and spouses.  Apart from gossiping we also suggested topics for our monthly columns on Humanism in the Courier and read each others draft efforts for accuracy and intelligibility.

I shall miss him a lot.

A younger George, picture taken at Brian Nicol’s 60th Birthday Party, about 30 years ago.

Memories of George shared by Glyn and Heather Evans ‘Egghens’

It was long ago, in 1986, that we joined C&W Humanists after visiting their annual stall, that year placed beside our own vegetarian stall, at Leamington Peace Festival.  Passers-by were invited to debate with members the subject of God so it was often lively.

In those days monthly group meetings were held at the Quaker Meeting House, Coventry.  When later we transferred to Kenilworth’s Waverley Day Centre Roy was regularly in sole charge of refreshments for the group, while George finished chairing the meetings.  When Egghens took over as official tea makers it freed Roy to get on with his proper secretarial duties.

Occasionally we gave George and Roy a lift, perhaps to a pub lunch before a country ramble organised by the group, and we did get to know George better. He enjoyed the group’s Bring and Share Suppers in various members’ homes. Always fussy about food, understandably he welcomed the chance to see in front of him exactly what was on offer before committing himself to eating it.

During Lockdown we’ve missed coming across him when shopping, usually at Waitrose. There we would exchange news and ask after the health of Roy, by then unable to attend group meetings.

George’s frequent well-reasoned articles in the Kenilworth Weekly News and lately the Courier will now be a loss to both the readership and the cause for Humanism.

Best wishes

Egghens

Roy and George on the day of their Civil Partnership Ceremony.

Memories shared by John Gainer

I was sorry to learn about George’s death. It was George who recruited me in 2006 through a letter in the Coventry Telegraph.I send my deepest condolences to Roy and to George’s wider family.  George was one of those people who, once you have met them, you will never forget. He was quite a character.

RIP George!

Best wishes to all,

John Gainer

Memories shared by Andrew Ireland

Sad news.

My sympathy goes to Roy, George’s civil partner.

George was “the Humanists” for most of us, some years ago and was a one-off.

He joined us at many of our dinners, lunches, socials and up to a few years ago our walks.

AGMs and the monthly meetings were always amusing – perhaps for the wrong reasons sometimes – but George will be missed for his unique style, humour and warmth.

Andrew Ireland

Finally these words, from Jane Sault, who could be speaking for several recruits to humanism.

I owe my humanism to George. I was in my thirties when I read one of his letters in the Courier and decided that his life views echoed mine. I made contact and was immediately welcomed to the monthly Thursday meetings at the Waverley centre. George and Roy worked very hard to keep the group going, with George still flying the flag for Humanism in the local paper until quite recently (alongside Brian Nicol).

I’m very grateful to George for his determination to put Humanism on the local map and to Roy for facilitating George’s time as Chair by being such an efficient secretary to him.

Jane Sault

Gatherings of Coventry and Warwickshire Humanists including George.

The Christian Church – privileged and in power.

Schools Minister Nick Gibb has announced that, when the Government is made aware of schools that are not carrying out daily acts of Christian ‘collective worship’, it will enforce it.

The UK is the only sovereign state in the world to impose Christian worship as standard in state schools.

DONATE TODAY

We’ve campaigned for decades against the requirement that all schools, including schools with no religious character, lead pupils in Christian ‘collective worship’. In recent years, we’ve taken some small comfort from the fact that many schools simply ignore the law. It’s unpopular, outdated, and wrong.That’s why we’re so concerned the Government is now planning to actively enforce the law on collective worship – despite the United Nations repeatedly calling for the UK to repeal it on human rights grounds.

The law allows families to ‘opt out’ of compulsory collective worship, in most cases this will lead to the child being singled out and made to sit in a room with nothing educationally worthwhile to do. We’re campaigning to replace collective worship with inclusive assemblies.

Do you agree that children should be given the freedom to make up their own minds about what they believe? If you’re passionate about making sure schools are safe, open, and inclusive places for young people to be, then please help us scale up our work against compulsory worship in UK schools.

Please help us to stand against the pushing of religion onto children.

Please don’t forget to donate to Humanists UK today. All children have a right to participate in fully inclusive assemblies which bring the community together and treat everyone equally.

Welcoming a new family member?

It feels as though we have been in a state of enforced hibernation, snowed in by COVID.

Over the past year we have missed so much – including family contacts.

A lovely way of celebrating family relationships, comes when we welcome a new arrival, the birth of a baby.

A Humanist Naming Ceremony can be a splendid non-religious way of doing all that.

To find a local celebrant who can help you to organise a ceremony, you can: log on to Humanist UK website and search for celebrants operating near to your post code. Or you could send a request to this website. You could also ring 07763005654 and we’ll tell you about nearby celebrants

56th Zoom Gathering this evening

Wednesday 5th May 2021, 7.30 start

Dear all,

Please find below, an exciting change of Agenda for this evening.

Emma Doriani is popping in to talk to us about:

Pentonville Prison the case for prison reform.

She is an expert on the subject and a regular musician in prisons. 

You’ll be impressed and depressed.

So …….

Several items are removed from the agenda and written updates on: Mubarak Bala, Nazanin Ratcliffe and Barclays Mandate Change are given below.

Since Mo and Andrew are treading the boards, can we roll over your ‘Into the Woods’ contribution to next week please?

Thanks

Bob

56th zoom gathering

Music:   Opera Sorpresa en Alto Rosario Shopping

Pentonville Prison and prison reform: Emma Dogliani

Cartoon of the week: Egghead.

Art: Brian (Bamber) GB, changes role to present art.

Play:  to be performed by the wedded, woodland thespians A and M Ireland.

Casting: Broad Lane’s Billy Cotton, Aud.

The Quiz: Alistair!!! 

Into the shivering Woods: Andrew and Mo

Recommendations: What have you read, listened to or heard this week?  

Ed: The Killing

Classy Music: Kiri Te Kanawa & Norma Burrows | Rossini’s Cat Duet

Updates

Free Nazanin Ratcliffe, latest.

It seems that the pace may be quickening. 

The Govt. is considering paying Iran the money owed for the cancelled arms deal.  If it is paid, Iran may release Nazanin.

It’s a kind of blackmail, will it encourage more blackmail in the future?

C & W Hums: Barclays non-news.

I spoke to Caroline in Barclays Mandate Change section this morning (5th May 10:25) she says “We’re on the last leg, the paperwork is being done today, it will all be finished in 5 working days”.

Hope springs eternal …………….

Mubarak Bala: 372 days illegally detained.

From The Guardian, 7 days ago

UN condemns one year detention of Nigerian humanist Mubarak Bala

Prominent figure has been detained since April 2020 without charge and is accused of blasphemy

Mubarak Bala

In the weeks before his detention Bala had posted comments critical of Islam on Facebook. UN experts condemned Nigeria for a ‘flagrant violation of fundamental human rights’. Photograph: Handout

Emmanuel Akinwotu in Lagos

Wed 28 Apr 2021 17.51 BST

The United Nations has condemned Nigerian authorities for failing to release a prominent humanist accused of blasphemy, who has been detained for a year without charge.

Mubarak Bala, the president of the Humanist Association of Nigeria, was arrested at his home in Kaduna state on 28 April 2020 and taken to neighbouring Kano, where calls for action against him had been made by religious figures.

In the weeks before, he had posted comments critical of Islam on Facebook that caused outrage among conservative groups in the mostly Muslim north of Nigeria.

For months the 37-year-old was denied contact with his lawyer or family and his whereabouts unknown before he was granted access, and a high court order for his release on bail has been ignored by Nigerian authorities. His case has been seen as an example of a clampdown on voices judged to be critical of religious orthodoxy, in a deeply conservative region.

A group of seven UN human rights experts on Wednesday condemned Nigerian authorities for a “flagrant violation of fundamental human rights.”

“Today marks one year since Mr Bala was arrested and detained in Kano state, without any formal charges, on allegations of blasphemy. His arbitrary detention has continued despite our appeals to the government in May and July last year,” they said, with the case causing “a chilling effect on the exercise of fundamental freedoms in Nigeria.”

“Through his continued detention, the government is sending the wrong signal to extremist groups that the silencing and intimidation of human rights defenders and minority non-believers is acceptable,” they added.

Last December, Nigeria’s high court ruled that Bala’s detention went against his rights to personal freedom, fair hearing, freedom of thought, expression, ordering his release on bail and damages of 250,000 Naira ($657). Yet authorities have continued to detain Bala.

“The government must take action to ensure that the responsible authorities respect the due process and enforce the judicial ruling,” the UN experts further said.

Bala, the son of a widely regarded Islamic scholar, has been an outspoken religious critic in a staunchly conservative region, where open religious dissent is uncommon. After renouncing Islam in 2014, he was forcibly committed to a psychiatric facility by his family in Kano before being discharged.

After Bala posted comments critical of Islam and religion on his Facebook profile last April, he received a surge of online accusations of blasphemy and threats.

A lawyer for Bala, speaking on condition of anonymity, told the Guardian that police were able to detain Bala on “a holding charge” often used in arbitrary detentions, where formal charges are not presented.

“We are have filed another bail application in Abuja, in the high court,” he said but a judicial strike in the country had delayed proceedings.

Last year his wife, Amina Mubarak, described the toll of her ordeal while caring for their one-year-old child. “It is unbearable, going through this psychological and emotional trauma right now. I’ve tried all I can,” she said.

Free Nazanin Ratcliffe

From The Guardian this week:

Boris Johnson accused of ‘dismal failure’ to free Nazanin Zaghari-Ratcliffe

Tulip Siddiq MP says PM did not even send UK officials to recent trial where Iran jailed dual national for further year.

Boris Johnson has been accused of a “dismal failure” in his diplomatic efforts after Iran sentenced Nazanin Zaghari-Ratcliffe to a further year in jail on top of the five-year sentence she has already served.

Labour’s Tulip Siddiq, the British-Iranian dual national’s MP, questioned the effort the prime minister had put into releasing Zaghari-Ratcliffe, telling the Commons: “From where I’m standing, I’ve seen no evidence on the part of the prime minister so far.

“At the heart of this tragic case is the prime minister’s dismal failure to release my constituent and to stand up for her, and his devastating blunder in 2017 when he was foreign secretary – when he exposed his complete ignorance of this tragic case and put more harm in Nazanin’s way.

“The prime minister did not even arrange for UK officials to attend Nazanin’s recent court hearing, which might have ensured she got a free and fair trial. He still hasn’t got his government to pay the £400m debt that we as a country owe Iran.”

It is one of the most unbridled attacks on the Foreign Office’s handling of the case by the MP, who is deeply frustrated at the government’s inability over five years to have any impact on the Iranian revolutionary courts.

Timeline

3 April 2016

Arrest in Tehran

Nazanin Zaghari-Ratcliffe is arrested at Imam Khomeini airport as she is trying to return to Britain after a holiday visiting family with her daughter, Gabriella.

2016

Release campaign begins

Her husband, Richard Ratcliffe, delivers a letter to David Cameron in 10 Downing Street demanding that the government do more for her release.

9 September 2016

Zaghari-Ratcliffe is sentenced to five years in jail. Her husband says the exact charges are still being kept a secret.

November 2016

Hunger strike

Zaghari-Ratcliffe’s health deteriorates after she spends several days on hunger strike in protest at her imprisonment.

1 November 2017

Boris Johnson gives statement used against her in court

The foreign secretary, Boris Johnson, tells a parliamentary select committee: “When we look at what [she] was doing, she was simply teaching people journalism.” Four days after his comments, Zaghari-Ratcliffe is returned to court where Johnson’s statement is cited in evidence against her. Her employer, the Thomson Reuters Foundation, denies she has ever trained journalists, and her family maintain she was in Iran on holiday. Johnson is eventually forced to apologise for the “distress and anguish” his comments caused the family.

12 November 2017

Health concerns

Richard Ratcliffe reveals that his wife has fears for her health after lumps were found in her breasts that required an ultrasound scan. He says she is “on the verge of a nervous breakdown”.

14 January 2019

Hunger strike

Zaghari-Ratcliffe again goes on hunger strike, this time in protest at the withdrawal of her medical care.

8 March 2019

Diplomatic protection

Jeremy Hunt, now the foreign secretary, takes the unusual step of granting her diplomatic protection – a move that raises her case from a consular matter to the level of a dispute between the two states.

15 June 2019

Hunger strike in London

Richard Ratcliffe joins his wife in a new hunger strike campaign. He fasts outside the Iranian embassy in London as she begins a third hunger strike in prison.

11 October 2019

Daughter returns to London

Zaghari-Ratcliffe’s daughter, Gabriella, who has lived with her grandparents in Tehran and regularly visited her mother in jail over the last three years, returns to London to start school.

17 March 2020

Temporary release during Covid pandemic

Amid the threat of the coronavirus pandemic, Zaghari-Ratcliffe is temporarily released from prison, but she is required to wear an ankle brace and not move more than 300 metres from her parents’ home.

8 September 2020

New charges

Iranian state media report that she will appear in court to face new and unspecified charges. In the end, a weekend court appearance on a new charge of waging propaganda against the state, which could leave her incarcerated for another 10 years, is postponed without warning. Zaghari-Ratcliffe says: “People should not underestimate the level of stress. People tell me to calm down. You don’t understand what it is like. Nothing is calm.”

17 March 2021

Freed – but back in court

Zaghari-Ratcliffe faces a second set of charges in Iran’s revolutionary court. She is freed from house arrest at the end of her five-year prison sentence, but because she has been summoned to court again on the other charge, she has not been allowed to leave the country to return to her family.

26 April 2021

New sentence

Zaghari-Ratcliffe is sentenced to another year in prison after being found guilty of spreading “propaganda against the system” for participating in a protest in front of the Iranian embassy in London in 2009.

Tulip Siddiq MP says PM did not even send UK officials to recent trial where Iran jailed Nazanin, a dual national for further year.

Newsletter April 2021

When will we ….. meet again?

This week saw our 53rd weekly zoom gathering, since Coronavirus and social distancing forced lockdown and a suspension of physical gatherings.

Speaking personally … the gatherings have been enjoyable, a highlight in empty weeks BUT it will be good to meet up, in the same room, to see faces break into smiles.

We discussed holding a virtual AGM, as many organisations are doing but we decided that we’d wait; September is the ordained month for our AGM and 16th is the 3rd Thursday in the month, so that’s our hope a real, physical AGM on Thursday 16th September 2021.  More details will follow.

When will we meet again? 

In thunder, lightning, or in rain? When the hurlyburly ‘s done, when the battle ‘s lost and won.

Humanist Schools in Uganda

Coventry and Warwickshire humanists, individually and as a group, have supported African schools and pupils for some years, this support continues. Steve Hurd, from Ugandan Schools Trust has sent the following message:

Please thank Coventry & Warwick Humanists for their generous donation of £200 towards the two new primary schools in Uganda. We have the funds to buy them now, but we need every help we can get to pay for refurbishment, staffing and equipping with books, learning and play materials.

Things were going so well for the schools before Covid hit and, since, it has been a struggle to pay the staff when they have had no local income – but we have managed to keep the staff team together and are hoping for a brighter future.

As you may be aware, during the Covid closure, we have done quite a bit of building work:

– a boys’ dormitory at Mustard Seed School

– new hall at Isaac Newton

– brand new primary school for the Kanungu Community, which suffered the cult massacre of 780 men, women and children in 2000.

– a nearly finished new school for the Katumba Parents, mainly single mothers whose husbands were killed in an abortive uprising in 2016.

At the moment, things are frenetic. We are buying two primary schools, forced to close due to the loss of income from the covid lockdown. These will provide primary sections to both Isaac Newton and Mustard Seed Schools and, we hope, greatly improve children’s life chances in their areas.

Once we have bought the schools, which may happen next week, we need to refurbish them, secure good teachers and pay them, and buy furniture, books, learning and play resources.

If you were interested I would be happy to talk about developments in Uganda on Zoom.

A huge thank you to everyone in the group.

Best wishes

Steve Hurd

We will take up Steve on his offer and hope to welcome him to a zoom gathering soon.

Egghead supply cartoons to our zoom gatherings and newsletters.

EVENTS THAT HAVE HAPPENED IN PREVIOUS APRILS by BGB

1) Sir Robert Walpole became Britain’s first Prime Minister on 3rd April 1721

2) Richard 1st died from an infected wound while besieging Chalus Castle in       France on 6th April 1199. He was succeeded by his brother John

3) The notorious highwayman Dick Turpin, hanged at York on 7th April 1739

4) Renowned Engineer Isambard Kingdom Brunel was born on 9th April 1806. Among his famous constructions were Clifton Bridge, Bristol, the SS Great Britain and the Great Western Railway

5) On 10th April 1633 bananas were first sold in London. These bananas came from Bermuda

6) The coronation of William lll and Mary ll took place on 11th April 1689 after they succeeded Queen Anne

7) On 13th April 1919, British troops led by Acting Brigadier-General Reginald Dyer opened fire into a crowd of 10,000 Sikh unarmed civilians at Amritsar, India. 379 unarmed Sikhs died

8) Dr Samuel Johnson published his first dictionary on 15th April 1755. It took him 9 years to complete

9) The last military battle in Britain was fought on 16th April 1746 at Culloden Moor, Scotland. The battle was between Scottish Highlanders and Jacobites led by Bonnie Prince Charlie and British troops led by the Duke of Cumberland

10) On 17th April 1969 the UK voting age was reduced from 21 to 18.  Harold Wilson was the Prime Minister who introduced this policy. But new young voters did not do him any favours as he lost the next General Election to Edward Heath

11) Henry Vlll became King on 21st April 1509. Henry’s older brother Arthur died at the age of 15 in 1502

12) Local lad William Shakespeare was born on 23rd April, 1564 and died on 23rd April in 1616

13) On 25th April 1915 Anzac troops (Australia & New Zealand) suffered massive casualties as they attacked the Turkish stronghold at Gallipoli. Winston Churchill, the First Lord of the Admiralty was held responsible for this military disaster

14) Captain James Cook is believed to be the first European to land in Australia on 28th April 1770. The first landing took place at Botany Bay

15) On 29th April 1884, Oxford University admitted female students for the first time to sit an examination. But it was not until October1920 that women were allowed to sit for a degree qualification

Oh, to be in England  written by Robert Browning, chosen by Secretary Audrey

Oh, to be in England

Now that April’s there,

And whoever wakes in England

Sees, some morning, unaware,

That the lowest boughs and the brushwood sheaf

Round the elm-tree bole are in tiny leaf,

While the chaffinch sings on the orchard bough

In England – now!!

And after April, when May follows,

And the whitethroat builds, and all the swallows!

Hark, where my blossomed pear-tree in the hedge

Leans to the field and scatters on the clover

Blossoms and dewdrops – at the bent spray’s edge –

That’s the wise thrush; he sings each song twice over,

Lest you should think he never could recapture

The first fine careless rapture!

And though the fields look rough with hoary dew,

All will be gay when noontide wakes anew

The buttercups, the little children’s dower

– Far brighter than this gaudy melon-flower

I am scouring the skies for swallows, haven’t seen one yet, nor martins, nor swifts.  Robert Browning doesn’t mention bluebells, which are just beginning to flower (14th April), soaking up the sunshine before the tree canopies shade the ground.

Contributions to C & W Humanist Funds

Running costs for our group are modest.  For example, this monthly newsletter needs to be posted to just a few addresses, it’s emailed free, to most people.

Some of our annual costs are: 

Affiliation fees: Humanists UK £75; Humanists International £30; National Secular Society £34; website (WordPress) £100.

We bought 12 Remembrance Wreaths last year, £240 in total.

When we do re-start physical meetings, we usually make enough from room collections to cover the cost of the meeting. 

However, if we decide to support a good cause, for example, this month’s donation to schools in Uganda, balances wither!

We ask that each supporter makes an annual contribution.  £10 is the suggested figure.  We realise that this sum will be too great for some and we fantasise that there will be others who will give more.  Any contributions will be appreciated, we give, what we can afford.  Our treasurer is Adrian Davis, and you can email him at: adridav@gmail.com or bullion deliveries can be made to my house, in darkness.

Some Films and TV Programmes to look out for this week

Saturday 17th April:

13.05 Sony Movie Classics – The Wild One: The first, the best, and the quintessential motorbike movie. Long banned in the UK. Marlon Brando as the sullen, leather-clad leader of a motorcycle gang with his fellow hell-raising rebels pitch up in a small town, where he woos the sheriff’s daughter.

21.00 Channel 4 – First Man: The story of how Neil Armstrong got to the Moon is told in rich and intimate detail in this thrilling film. From his early days in 1961 as a NASA test pilot. Oscar-winning drama based on the book by James R Hansen, starring Ryan Gosling and Claire Foy.

22.50 Talking Pictures – The Man Who Fell to Earth – An excellent cult classic sci-fi drama starring David Bowie. An alien is sent to Earth to find a way to save his dying home planet. He adopts a human identity and uses his advanced knowledge to become a successful tycoon. Directed by Nicolas Roeg’s and starring David Bowie, Rip Torn, Candy Clark and Buck Henry.

23.15 Film 4 – Charlie Says – An excellent biographical drama. Three years after the infamous Manson murders, a graduate student is tasked with teaching 3 young women who were involved in the homicides. She struggles to break through the brainwashing they received during their time in Charles Manson’s commune. Starring Hannah Murray, Matt Smith and Sosie Bacon.

Sunday 18th April:

21.00 BBC1 – Line of Duty – Another episode of the best police-crime drama series

22.00 BBC2 – I Tonya – A true story and comedy bio-pic of ice skater Tonya Harding who rises through the ranks at the US figure skating championships. Her future in the sport is thrown into question by a shocking incident after her ex-husband steps in. Starring Margot Robbie, Sebastian Stan, and Allison Janney, who won a Bafta and an Oscar for her performance as Tonya’s mother.

Monday 19th April:

21.00 BBC4 – Mark Kermode’s Oscar Winners: A Secrets of Cinema Special – As the red carpet season reaches its climax, the doyen of film critics Mark Kermode looks back at past winners of the prestigious award, and celebrates some of the most memorable performances. As with his previous series, this is wonderfully sharp, witty and thought-provoking. A ‘must’ for any film fan

22.00 BBC4 – Stephen: The Murder that Changed a Nation – Documentary examining the 1993 death of Stephen Lawrence, beginning with a look at events leading up to his murder and the police investigation that follows. As the suspects remain free, tip-offs from the community make Stephen’s parents wonder why arrests are not being made. Episodes 2 & 3 on Tuesday and Wednesday

Wednesday 21st April:

21.00 BBC2 – Bent Coppers: Crossing the Line of Duty – Another episode of the documentary examining corruption in the police in the 1970s, revealing how a secret network of officers was operating illegally throughout London and led to the formation of the first internal anti-corruption unit A10, which inspired the BBC drama Line of Duty.

Thursday 22nd April:

18.55 Film 4 – A Walk in the Woods – A fact-based drama. Robert Redford as travel writer Bill Bryson decides to hike the Appalachian Trail, through some of America’s most rugged terrain. The only companion he can find is a roguish old friend, who sees it as an opportunity to get out of paying his debts. A warm, witty, woodsy and mature movie. Also starring Nick Nolte and Emma Thompson.

Friday 23rd April:

23.05 BBC1 Philomena – A teenager in 1950s Ireland becomes pregnant, and is sent to a home for `fallen women’, while her baby is forcibly taken from her and sent to America to be adopted. Fifty years later, she meets a disillusioned political journalist who attempts to reunite her with her son. Fact-based drama, starring Judi Dench and Steve Coogan. Both actors on sparkling form.

BGB

P.S. Two Quick Jokes:

A weasel walks into a bar

The barman looks surprised and says

‘What can I get you?’

‘Pop goes the weasel’

To whoever stole my glasses?

I will find you

I have contacts!

The Armchair Audience

Things for the autumn and winter are starting to look a lot better for us theatre addicts, and we have everything tightly crossed that some of the promised productions will go ahead.  There are plenty of outdoor shows planned for the summer, and even some indoor ones – I was a bit cautious about the latter until I heard that Michael Sheen is appearing in Under Milk Wood at the National Theatre in late June, and caution was immediately thrown to the wind…….

In the meantime, there’s still plenty to enjoy at home.  Last month, I plugged the Old Vic’s production of Dr Seuss’s The Lorax which has been adapted to be performed live on-line.  I bought a ticket for my six year old nephew, and he was utterly entranced. So, if you’ve got youngsters you’d like to be entertained for a couple of hours, it’s highly recommended, and there are a couple more performances to go.

There’s a huge amount of theatre available on YouTube if you seek it out – lots of companies have released old productions, and there are some real gems to be found.  An example is Girls Like That, a hit play from 2014 at the Unicorn Theatre.  It follows a group of schoolgirls reacting as one of their peers has naked photos of themselves leaked online – a pertinent issue for the present day, and a good way to get into a knotty play during the quiet hours.  And Manchester International’s Festival have put all their productions from last year and 2019 online on YouTube, which is a fantastic opportunity to find something unusual and new.

Finally, if it’s opera you’re craving, rather than drama, then Opera North have made their production of Leonard Bernstein’s Trouble in Tahiti available on YouTube.  It’s a witty satire on the American dream, and is absolutely fantastic, well worth a watch.           Jacqueline Campbell

The Campaign for a change in the law to make Assisted Dying legal.

Brian Nicol has penned this article for the local press

Public support for legally sanctioned assisted dying is gaining ground

‘Support for legally sanctioned Assisted Dying is gaining ground. Each year sees more and more countries or legal jurisdictions pass legislation to help people suffering from incurable pain to end their lives. In March, Spain joined the Netherlands, Belgium, Switzerland and Luxembourg increasing the number of counties in Europe willing to give their citizens a way to escape from incurable suffering that they cannot undertake themselves without help. Worldwide the number is also growing including: Canada, New Zealand and several US States.

Public opinion in favour worldwide is also growing. In the UK a recent poll found that 84% of the public support giving assistance (with safeguards) to terminally ill patients suffering pain and no less than 47% of those polled said that they would break the law, risking a 14-year prison sentence, to help a loved one. Although most religions are officially against change, 79% of people who described themselves as religious were also in favour.

So why hasn’t the UK Parliament listened to the people? The last time the issue was debated parliament was in 2015 when a private members Bill was defeated by 330 to 118. The proposed legislation would have allowed Assisted Dying in very restricted circumstances and with a great many safeguards. For many of those against it was perhaps the ‘slippery slope’ argument. Once the principle is accepted of the state, via the NHS, helping people to kill themselves albeit in very restricted circumstances, where might it lead in the future? How do we know what pressures might be put on people to request an early death.

The response is that year by year, as the experience of countries who have legislated becomes available, it is becoming clear that the fears are unfounded even for countries like Belgium which has much wider criteria for a request to be made. Since 2015 other things have changed. Notably the position of the doctors who would be in the front line of providing the assistance. Previously the BMA was opposed to assisted dying, although its membership had not been consulted. Responding to pressure the doctors have now been asked with the result the half would be in favour of change.

A new initiative has now brought the issue again to the fore. Barry Marsh a leading brain surgeon and notable author on medical matters has written a letter to Robert Buckland the Justice Secretary asking for a state sponsored enquiry into the state of the law and its implementation. The letter has the backing of the campaign group My Death, My Decision and of Humanists UK. Some 50 plus MPs have also given their support for change including some who were previously against it but would now like an independent enquiry to look at the facts. It would be good if Jeremy Wright would also have an open mind on the issue and take into consideration the views of many of his constituents.

Dr Brian Nicol

Coventry  and Warwickshire Humanists’

Finally

Thanks to those who have contributed articles etc for this newsletter.  Our May Newsletter will be posted on Thursday 20th May 2021 and so, if you have items for it, please email them to the blue email address below by Tuesday 18th May.

Our C & W Humanists 54th zoom gathering will take place on Wednesday 21st April 2021 at 7.30 p.m.  If you would like to pop in, you will be very welcome, please email me at rmjelley@gmail.com and you will receive an invitation.

2nd jab for me today and no aches!

Where there’s no sense …… .. …….

Stay safe.

Finally, Finally

News that George Broadhead, a founding father of C & W Humanists, is in hospital after suffering falls.

Best wishes to George and Roy, get better soon George.

Time to up-date school assemblies.

I have enjoyed many of the school assemblies that I have witnessed, as a pupil, teacher and headteacher. Assembling together with all the form, house or school, has been quite a dramatic social gathering, with a frisson of mystery, anything might happen.

I can recall Mrs Negus, a teacher at Junior School, who would burble spittle as she sang Holy, Holy, Holy especially on the line ‘glassy sea’. There was the appearance of Jimmy Hill clothed in CCFC credibility and the moment we marked the death of Nehru the leader of India.

As for the religious bits, they tended towards the tedious. I spent more time cruising with St Paul around the Mediterranean than I do with Rob Bryden and I continue to have no idea why Paul’s Letters are so revered.

As a headteacher, there were quiet moments, as we considered some dramatic event ‘ As we hold the people of Dunblane in our thoughts or prayers’. For that assembly in March 1996, the whole community was invited in, one quiet, sombre Sunday. I also remember the awful grief that was present when children, pupils and parents gathered to mark the death of a pupil or the two teachers who died, in service, over the years.

There were joyful times, when individuals or teams marked successes and there were many performances: vocal, dramatic and instrumental that delighted, ranging from a growing Junior School Brass Band to the loud and raucous accompaniment that went with our Bhangra Dance Group.

Were we in awe?

Yes we were, in awe of the talents, diversity and skills of each other.

That’s what a school assembly can be, the gathering of a community, in which there are different world views and religions, emphasising what we have in common, what we share.

Bob Jelley

Government to ‘remind schools of their duty’ to carry out Christian collective worship

April 1st, 2021

In a departure from its previous approach, the UK Government has said that if it is made aware of English schools breaching a requirement to carry out a daily act of worship, they will be ‘investigated’ and ‘reminded of their duty on this matter’. Humanists UK – which has long campaigned for compulsory school worship to be replaced with inclusive assemblies – has expressed alarm at the statement, which marks a ramping up of enforcement of the archaic policy.

The statement was made by Education Minister Nick Gibb MP in response to a parliamentary question from fellow MP Sir John Hayes, who asked ‘what steps [the Department for Education] is taking to ensure that a daily act of worship is taking place in every maintained school.’

The UK is the only sovereign state in the world to impose worship in all state schools, including those without a religious character. In most of the latter, this worship is expected to be ‘broadly Christian’. Although schools with a high number of pupils from non-Christian backgrounds can apply – via a process called ‘determination’ – to have worship in line with another faith, they cannot opt-out of worship altogether. Parents may withdraw their children from this worship and sixth form pupils in England and Wales may withdraw themselves, but younger pupils may not withdraw without parental permission. And the process is often difficult with no meaningful alternative to worship offered in the strong majority of schools. This leaves parents to choose between exposing their children to religious indoctrination or isolating them from their peers with little or nothing of educational worth to do. It also leaves children who are too young to withdraw themselves forced to participate in religious acts of worship they may well not believe in.

In February, the UN Committee on the Rights of the Child pressed governments across the UK to ‘to repeal legal provisions for compulsory attendance at collective worship in publicly funded schools and ensure that children can independently exercise the right to withdraw from religious observance at school.’ A prior report by the same Committee in 2016 also said the requirement should be abolished. This makes the Government’s enforcing of the law even harder to justify.

Humanists UK Education Campaigns Manager Dr Ruth Wareham commented:

‘Compulsory collective worship threatens the freedom of religion or belief of children and their families and is totally out of step with the kind of inclusive education we should be offering in a diverse 21st century democracy like the UK. The fact that the Government now appears to be saying it will enforce this archaic law to an extent that hasn’t been the case in over fifteen years is particularly alarming.

‘The Government should instead be taking steps to instead require inclusive assemblies that are suitable for all pupils regardless of background or belief.’