This weekend, alongside the ubiquitous Jubilee "celebrations", Epsom racecourse will host the Derby. One of the pinnacles of the horse racing calendar made all the more significant by what happened 99 years ago.
On Derby Day in 1913, Emily Wilding Davison stepped out from behind the railings at Tattenham Corner into the path of Anmer, one of the king's horses as part of the campaign for "Votes for Women". She died four days later from her injuries. Davison was the only suffragette to die in pursuit of the campaign.
Shockingly the Epsom racecourse has no memorial to Emily Davison - no plaque or statue, nothing to identify the place where she stepped out in front of the galloping horses. Her selfless act of protest, and one of the most significant acts of protest in recent British history, is forgotten by the race horsing community, the racecourse owners or even Epsom council. and yet there are statues of horses that won the Derby (including one who won the race as recently as 1991 and whose statue was erected in 1995).
I used to live near Tattenham Corner and find it shocking that so much money was pumped into the tiny, under-used rail station (because the Queen uses it once a year) and not a single penny was put towards anything to mark the 1913 protest.
Surely it's time for a monument at Tattenham Corner? A blue plaque perhaps? Something to mark one of the most heroic acts of campaigning for civil rights this country has ever seen.
Next year is the centenary of Davison's death, the lack of appropriate recognition is something that needs to be addressed in time for that anniversary.
Showing posts with label protest. Show all posts
Showing posts with label protest. Show all posts
Tuesday, 29 May 2012
Thursday, 26 April 2012
Children of the Rainbow - singing to oppose terrorism
Earlier today around 40,000 people gathered in an Oslo square to sing Children of the Rainbow , a popular peace song which mass killer Anders Breivik has condemned during his trial.
Breivik had accused Lillebjoern Nilsen, the singer of Children of the Rainbow, of being a Marxist intent on brainwashing children with his music.
Breivik had accused Lillebjoern Nilsen, the singer of Children of the Rainbow, of being a Marxist intent on brainwashing children with his music.
Labels:
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Saturday, 7 April 2012
Why protest the Boat Race?
So a protestor decided to risk his life by swimming in the Thames just as the two Boat Race crews, and the huge flotilla of following craft, passed the half way point.
Why? What on earth could someone be protesting about that was worth risking their life?
Next weekend it's the Grand National at Aintree - an orgy of animal abuse which will, almost certainly, involve horses being injured and killed.
There's the ridiculous finances in football - overpaid players, debts, corruption - but what has that got to do with two rowing eights on the Thames?
And there's always the cost of the London Olympics - but that has nothing to do with the two old universities.
Maybe it's nothing about sport. Maybe it's to do with cuts in society, the NHS, Ken Livingstone's tax return...
Who knows?! It certainly ignites Twitter, which lit up with suggestions it was David Walliams training for next year's Sport Relief!
Maybe it was a suicide bomber in the style of "Four Lions" who hadn't thought that the water might stop their bomb going off?
All we do know is the guy is an idiot and has caused chaos for what is, in reality, the last great amateur sporting encounter in the world.
Why? What on earth could someone be protesting about that was worth risking their life?
Next weekend it's the Grand National at Aintree - an orgy of animal abuse which will, almost certainly, involve horses being injured and killed.
There's the ridiculous finances in football - overpaid players, debts, corruption - but what has that got to do with two rowing eights on the Thames?
And there's always the cost of the London Olympics - but that has nothing to do with the two old universities.
Maybe it's nothing about sport. Maybe it's to do with cuts in society, the NHS, Ken Livingstone's tax return...
Who knows?! It certainly ignites Twitter, which lit up with suggestions it was David Walliams training for next year's Sport Relief!
Maybe it was a suicide bomber in the style of "Four Lions" who hadn't thought that the water might stop their bomb going off?
All we do know is the guy is an idiot and has caused chaos for what is, in reality, the last great amateur sporting encounter in the world.
Thursday, 12 January 2012
366/12 - Occupy Nottingham
Click here for day 12 of my Project 366 - Occupy Nottingham, Korngold and bonny!
Monday, 24 October 2011
OPINION: Are we heading for a UK revolution?
As Bob Dylan sang: The times they are a'changing!
Most democracies evolve, often very slowly, over hundreds of years. In the UK there are signs that the need and desire for change is accelerating.
1. Earlier this year, we had a referendum about a new voting system (it failed but it was only the second referendum in the history of the UK).
2. Today, MPs will debate calls for another referendum, this time about membership of the EU, brought about because 100,000 people signed an e-petition.
3. For 10 days protestors have been camped outside St. Paul's Cathedral in the City of London making their voice heard on issues including corporate greed, banking dishonesty and societal inequalities.
These are just three examples of the political balance being edged slightly away from its historical roots.
There's always been protests and marches but the past decade has seen a million or more on the streets of London to oppose the war in Iraq - it could be argued that, ultimately, this lead to Tony Blair's downfall. Other huge marches have happened about issues such as fox hunting.
And then there were the riots of summer 2011; a 5-day orgy of anarchy in some areas, the police ineffectual against seemingly organised gangs whose behaviour "inspired" a swathe of lawlessness.
Is this all just a blip - the proles rattling the cage of those who truly rule - or is this something more significant?
In the UK we were the first major nation to have a revolution. More than a century before the French or Americans ditched their monarchy we had the English Civil War and over a decade as a republic. Sadly, it was a false dawn and we had the Restoration which returned everything to its previous status and with bells on!
This isn't just an anti-monarchy rant. They are just the figurehead that highlights the inequalities in society. There is a wider "elite" that keeps power and privilege in their grubby hands whilst keeping the rest of us very much in our place.
It's nearly 100 years since the Russians got rid of the Czars but it would be wrong to suggest their troubled century has given everyone their fair share.
The UK government (and opposition) makes great efforts to highlight our great "democracy" - but it's a token democracy with whip-controlled MPs doing exactly what their pay-masters tell them (most of the time!).
Next year will see both the Olympic Games come to London and the Diamond Jubilee of Queen Elizabeth II. The government will be keen to make the Olympics the "people's games" but
they will have a bigger problem celebrating Liz Windsor's jubilee while there are families struggling to put food on their kids' plates and keep their houses warm.
Maybe #OccupyLSX should have an annexe set up outside Buck House, or any of the other castles and homes we, as a nation, loan to our monarch for free?
Maybe we need marches in every city around the country demanding a new Britain with a new constitution, a new bill of rights and an end to the corruption and privilege that has been the roadblock preventing the UK from being a truly civilised and democratic nation.
The problem is the majority of the population are too apathetic - or is that just plain pathetic.
The time has come for a new start. 2012 could be that be start - the tipping point when the UK actually becomes a democracy.
Most democracies evolve, often very slowly, over hundreds of years. In the UK there are signs that the need and desire for change is accelerating.
1. Earlier this year, we had a referendum about a new voting system (it failed but it was only the second referendum in the history of the UK).
2. Today, MPs will debate calls for another referendum, this time about membership of the EU, brought about because 100,000 people signed an e-petition.
3. For 10 days protestors have been camped outside St. Paul's Cathedral in the City of London making their voice heard on issues including corporate greed, banking dishonesty and societal inequalities.
These are just three examples of the political balance being edged slightly away from its historical roots.
There's always been protests and marches but the past decade has seen a million or more on the streets of London to oppose the war in Iraq - it could be argued that, ultimately, this lead to Tony Blair's downfall. Other huge marches have happened about issues such as fox hunting.
And then there were the riots of summer 2011; a 5-day orgy of anarchy in some areas, the police ineffectual against seemingly organised gangs whose behaviour "inspired" a swathe of lawlessness.
Is this all just a blip - the proles rattling the cage of those who truly rule - or is this something more significant?
In the UK we were the first major nation to have a revolution. More than a century before the French or Americans ditched their monarchy we had the English Civil War and over a decade as a republic. Sadly, it was a false dawn and we had the Restoration which returned everything to its previous status and with bells on!
This isn't just an anti-monarchy rant. They are just the figurehead that highlights the inequalities in society. There is a wider "elite" that keeps power and privilege in their grubby hands whilst keeping the rest of us very much in our place.
It's nearly 100 years since the Russians got rid of the Czars but it would be wrong to suggest their troubled century has given everyone their fair share.
The UK government (and opposition) makes great efforts to highlight our great "democracy" - but it's a token democracy with whip-controlled MPs doing exactly what their pay-masters tell them (most of the time!).
Next year will see both the Olympic Games come to London and the Diamond Jubilee of Queen Elizabeth II. The government will be keen to make the Olympics the "people's games" but
they will have a bigger problem celebrating Liz Windsor's jubilee while there are families struggling to put food on their kids' plates and keep their houses warm.
Maybe #OccupyLSX should have an annexe set up outside Buck House, or any of the other castles and homes we, as a nation, loan to our monarch for free?
Maybe we need marches in every city around the country demanding a new Britain with a new constitution, a new bill of rights and an end to the corruption and privilege that has been the roadblock preventing the UK from being a truly civilised and democratic nation.
The problem is the majority of the population are too apathetic - or is that just plain pathetic.
The time has come for a new start. 2012 could be that be start - the tipping point when the UK actually becomes a democracy.
Let's stop cow-towing to the Windsors and their cronies.
Let's stop putting up with a parliamentary democracy that isn't very democratic.
Let's stop accepting the inequalities in society and give everyone the equality of opportunbity they deserve and should be their right at birth.
We need a new beginning - a nation of rights AND responsibilities, where anyone COULD be Head of State, where everyone can earn a good living for themselves and their family and where nobody goes cold or hungry.
Let's stop letting those in power manipulate the rest of us for their benefit and let's take control.
Vive la Revolution!
Labels:
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