Poetry Sunday (Tuesday 31 December 2019) “A Brave and Startling Truth”

This poem by Maya Angelou comes to us from Maria Popova’s Brainpickings  

A BRAVE AND STARTLING TRUTH

We, this people, on a small and lonely planet
Traveling through casual space
Past aloof stars, across the way of indifferent suns
To a destination where all signs tell us
It is possible and imperative that we learn
A brave and startling truth

And when we come to it
To the day of peacemaking
When we release our fingers
From fists of hostility
And allow the pure air to cool our palms

When we come to it
When the curtain falls on the minstrel show of hate
And faces sooted with scorn are scrubbed clean
When battlefields and coliseum
No longer rake our unique and particular sons and daughters
Up with the bruised and bloody grass
To lie in identical plots in foreign soil

When the rapacious storming of the churches
The screaming racket in the temples have ceased
When the pennants are waving gaily
When the banners of the world tremble
Stoutly in the good, clean breeze

When we come to it
When we let the rifles fall from our shoulders
And children dress their dolls in flags of truce
When land mines of death have been removed
And the aged can walk into evenings of peace
When religious ritual is not perfumed
By the incense of burning flesh
And childhood dreams are not kicked awake
By nightmares of abuse

When we come to it
Then we will confess that not the Pyramids
With their stones set in mysterious perfection
Nor the Gardens of Babylon
Hanging as eternal beauty
In our collective memory
Not the Grand Canyon
Kindled into delicious color
By Western sunsets

Nor the Danube, flowing its blue soul into Europe
Not the sacred peak of Mount Fuji
Stretching to the Rising Sun
Neither Father Amazon nor Mother Mississippi who, without favor,
Nurture all creatures in the depths and on the shores
These are not the only wonders of the world

When we come to it
We, this people, on this minuscule and kithless globe
Who reach daily for the bomb, the blade and the dagger
Yet who petition in the dark for tokens of peace
We, this people on this mote of matter
In whose mouths abide cankerous words
Which challenge our very existence
Yet out of those same mouths
Come songs of such exquisite sweetness
That the heart falters in its labor
And the body is quieted into awe

We, this people, on this small and drifting planet
Whose hands can strike with such abandon
That in a twinkling, life is sapped from the living
Yet those same hands can touch with such healing, irresistible tenderness
That the haughty neck is happy to bow
And the proud back is glad to bend
Out of such chaos, of such contradiction
We learn that we are neither devils nor divines

When we come to it
We, this people, on this wayward, floating body
Created on this earth, of this earth
Have the power to fashion for this earth
A climate where every man and every woman
Can live freely without sanctimonious piety
Without crippling fear

When we come to it
We must confess that we are the possible
We are the miraculous, the true wonder of this world
That is when, and only when
We come to it.

When we come to it – then Happy New Year!

MDFF 21 December 2019 Stone the Crows!

G’day from sunny Yuendumu,

Just an update on the latest developments flowing from the dark event that took place almost six weeks ago in Yuendumu.   Yesterday I went to a well attended barbeque at the Yuendumu basketball court. People had gathered to discuss their proposed vigil outside the Alice Springs court house where tomorrow a judge will decide if legal proceedings of the murder trial will take place in Alice Springs (as requested by the Yuendumu community) or in Darwin.
Dark clouds indeed have silver linings. Just as bushfires are drawing communities together all over Australia, so too the Yuendumu community is united in grief and anger. Young and old, men and women, we all stand together. We have many friends all around the world who stand with us and this is greatly appreciated. Adversity as social glue is an expression of our common humanity. On the other hand the subtle and not so subtle misunderstanding and misreporting by the media and members of the public alike continues unabated. Despite these provocations the Yuendumu community is displaying a calm dignity which is awe inspiring.

Attached is an Arena Magazine article which is the best article about the Yuendumu events so far seen. It goes beyond scratching the surface and I highly recommend it.  The authors have been here and are friends of Yuendumu and have kindly given permission for me to attach the article. (Linked HERE)  If you have a few bob and a bit of time to spare you won’t regret taking out a subscription to Arena Magazine https://arena.org.au/subscribe/

I also have permission to reproduce an email I received recently from a friend. To protect the guilty I shall assign anonymity to this friend. Some of you will know who he is.

Subject: Fuck me Dead

I just heard on the news that Shane Stone was appointed to head up the federal government’s response to the drought. He and his gang of loony CLP pollies couldn’t run the NT. What bullshit, another example of the cunts in Canberra doing something stupid, that will cost a shitload of money, all just to appear to being doing something. We are governed by idiots that have no principles at all. Nothing new here folks, all things normal. BOHICAA (Bend Over, Here It Comes Again Australia), Fubar and Snafu time!

Nothing, nothing at all from this cluster fuck will hit the ground to assist those affected by the drought, which is pretty much everybody.

I despair.

Fuck me dead or stone the crows indeed! I had hoped to hear the last of ‘our’ Shane Stone who was the Northern Territory’s Chief Minister before he quit in 1999. He ‘went south’ and became the President of the Liberal Party of Australia. It is almost certain that he was Prime Minister John Howard’s tutor in dog whistling, fear and loathing electoral campaigns and playing the race card.

So what flummoxed my anonymous friend? An early December news report:

Former Northern Territory chief minister Shane Stone will lead the federal government’s response to the drought…. The agency, which was renamed National Drought and North Queensland Flood Response and Recovery Agency, will remain in the Department of Prime Minister and Cabinet.

A glutton for punishment I am- Twice now I’ve listened to a 10 minute segment on the ABC’s RN radio programme…

https://www.abc.net.au/radionational/programs/breakfast/helping-farmers-in-the-big-dry/11782934

When Hamish Macdonald asked Shane Stone what his thoughts were on climate change Shane replied that the climate was always changing and whether he believed in climate change or not had nothing to do with his position viz drought relief and he then accused Hamish of having set up a “gotcha” moment…. Fuck me dead!

Bob Dylan- Rainy Day Women #12 & 35…
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fm-po_FUmvM
Everybody must get stoned….

Happy Christmas y’all

MDFF 7 December 2019 La Frontera

Hola Amigos,

To see ourselves as others see us is a most salutary gift- Aldous Huxley in The Doors of Perception.
Sometimes it behooves us denizens of remote Aboriginal Australia to exit our Plato’s cave and see ourselves as others see us. The same could be said for the Australian nation as a whole.

Thus it came to pass that Luis Miguel Rojas-Berscia a Peruvian academic linguist travelled through Yuendumu days after a 19 year old Warlpiri man had been shot.

With Luis’ permission I here repeat his unredacted Facebook entry:

Don’t know what to say. Don’t know whether my opinions matter. I am a foreigner in foreign stolen land, after all.
What just happened in Australia made me think quite a lot (and experience quite a lot as well)

A few days ago I was driving through the Tanami road. My best Kukatja friend and his family wanted to come to Alice Springs. He was worried about me. It’s a long and dangerous drive, so I accepted and they jumped on. The drive was great. We chatted a lot of what had happened the last two months, our adventures in Kurrurrungku, Malam, Halls Creek, and Fitzroy Crossing, and the importance of language. We got to Yuendumu and visited some of their family members. They were sorry. Just getting to Yuendumu changed the whole atmosphere. They were all sad. They knew what had happened. What they hadn’t known by then was that the boy was a close cousin. We left Yuendumu with tears and silence.

A couple of hours later, we got to the turn that would take us to Alice Springs. The police made us pull over for a quick breath check and this is when things went weird. A trip to Alice turned into a “border crossing” trip. They immediately asked my friend, ignoring what I had to say of course,: “where are you from, where are you going? Who are you staying with?”
Did that matter? They are free citizens, mate. They could come from anywhere, go anywhere and stay with whomever they want. My friend couldn’t reply properly. He was scared. I told the policeman he was my assistant and that we were working on a book together. The police officer replies: is he? With a smile on his face. I was shocked. He let us go after a few minutes of redundant questions.
I saw a few tears running through my friend’s face. He said to me: “We are foreigners in our own country. We lost. We failed. “ I was heart broken. What could I say? Would my words make a change? I tried to switch topics and return to language, our adventures, etc. Things were now different. “My friend said: you know why we drink, mate? We just lost our dreams.”
Later that same day we went to the supermarket. I was waiting outside while my friend wanted to buy some soft drinks. He came back after a few minutes. The police officer at the door did not let him in because he said he was drunk. We had not had a sip of alcohol in months. Over the top. Frustration again.
And now what matters is white people safety. Ha!
Mates, have you ever realised you are the descendants of people who stole a land and raped a culture? Can you think beyond your western lenses and realise that these traditional inhabitants still exist and deserve respect? Deserve empowering? Deserve all the things you deserve? They are just like you. They get angry just like you. They mourn just like you when you lose a family member. They want to drink just like your crazy friend on a Saturday night. They want to laugh just like you. They want to have a life just like you. And they want to have a place in their country just like any human being in the world.
It’s a shame. Don’t know whether my words matter. I’m also a foreigner after all. (But i deserve a smile and no questions, right?)

Good night, Australia. Nyamu

My parents experienced five years of occupation by a foreign power with a different language, Luis I believe lived through the dictatorship of Fujimori in Peru, myself I lived through the relatively benign popular kleptocratic dictatorship of Juan Domingo Perón.
I don’t think I’m drawing too long a bow when I perceive remote Aboriginal Australia to be under
kleptocratic occupation by a foreign power speaking a different language. Luis crossed the border.

This one dedicated to Donald Trump and his border wall:

Calexico- across the wire:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tkryXbJ14dE

those with so much, no show of heart…..

Take my word for it- this 10 min video is well worth persevering with:

Los Luzeros de Rio Verde whose parents made it across the border and now live in Houston

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fvh-7dmZmcY

Hasta pronto,

Franklin

MDFF 5 December 2019

Bonjour,
plus ça change, plus c’est la même chose-
the more things change, the more they stay the same.
Some years ago I read Bruce Pascoe’s ‘Dark Emu’. I couldn’t put it down. What a wonderful beautifully crafted piece of writing. What an interesting subject. After two centuries a readable denial of the denial. Thus it came to pass that Malthus’ consumers of loathsome worms were no longer universally seen as the primitive uncivilised barbarians who by having been consigned to the lowest ranks of human society had by default justified their mistreatment and the appropriation of their lands.

To me the most significant sentence in Dark Emu is “…then all of us must be alert to that greatest of all limitations to wisdom:- The Assumption…”

In the winter of 2012 Bruce Pascoe wrote an essay in the Griffith Review entitled ‘Andrew Bolt’s Disappointment’, it included “…we are looking at each other across a gulf of incomprehension…”

Very restrained was Bruce. Myself I perceive a “Grand Canyon of malicious ignorance”

Thus as the chorus of recognition for the book got louder so too the deniers of the denial of the denial counter attacked. Leading the charge is The Bolt Report, a TV programme on Sky News.
Bruce’s Aboriginality is being questioned. Pedantic questioning of bits of the book are being promulgated. Instead of enjoying the book as a fresh look at the history of the First Australians, we are now witnessing an obnoxious messy hate motivated argument. The trolls have been incited into action so that a staffer in Ken Wyatt (The current Federal Minister for Indigenous Australians)’s office resigned because she couldn’t cope with the anonymous vitriolic abuse on the phone and on line resulting from Ken Wyatt having sprung to Bruce’s defence.

Is it possible that Andrew Bolt’s obsessive attack on Bruce Pascoe is the result of him having had his nose put out of joint by Bruce’s 2012 essay? As they used to say in Dutch ‘Was hij op z’n pikje getrapt?’ (had he had his little dick stepped on?) Methinks Andrew’s response is disproportionate.

When Joseph Conrad wrote ‘Heart of Darkness’ was his English or Polish identity questioned? Was his entitlement to write about the Belgian Congo and about London questioned? Did his colleagues and friends cop abuse? Was a vicious campaign to discredit him and his book launched?I don’t think so.

So what has all this to do with Yuendumu?

Just as books like Dark Emu can bring out the darkest instincts in Australian Society, so too the very existence of remote Aboriginal communities seems to seriously bother a significant proportion of mainstream society. The First Australians and their descendants are either pitied or hated, both inappropriate and unfair responses to such as the proud Warlpiri Nation.

My Warlpiri friends and neighbours are a great bunch of people, and this is a great place.

I don’t know what it will take for the outside world to stop making assumptions and portraying and treating Yuendumu as this dangerous dysfunctional place inhabited by wild out of control violent black fellows, and brave white fellows facing dangers and privations so as to bring order, safety and civilisation to these colonial outposts.

I just hope that the tide is turned before this stereotype becomes a self fulfilling prophesy.

A bientot

François


Dark Emu, heart of darkness…….Don’t be afraid of the Dark- Robert Cray….

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ra2Qndv_xeE

Clive James

Ira Maine remembers Clive James
Dear Editor (You’ve not paid me for my last work)
First class New Yorker piece on Clive James. I might never have read it had it not been for your kindness in brining it to my attention. Very well done and thank you.
London in the seventies was awash with newspapers and the Sunday papers were vastly popular. I read the Observer, leftish, less gung-ho and a bit more cerebral than the rest. The Times and the Spectator amongst others were propagandist arms of the right and the working man’s newspaper, the Daily Mirror, having been slowly converted from a 60’s slob journal into a more ‘thinking’ newspaper, was gobbled up by Murdoch and returned to its slob condition.
Clive James was the once a week TV critic at the Observer. It is almost impossible to imagine now with what delight I looked forward to his weekly column. In the middle of an hilarious review of an episode of ‘Coronation Street’ he’d waft off on a literary dalliance on perhaps the Wife of Bath’s tale in Chaucer’s ‘The Canterbury Tales’ without batting an eyelid and assume you knew precisely the reference in question. He was so unlike the average English TV critic who tended to be almost censorious, husbanding their knowledge, their power, their ‘we know best’ pedantry, whereas James allowed his literary learning to explode out of him with a level of exuberance and joy that left the Poms gasping and struggling to catch up. James would have no truck with London’s literary propriety which quickly gave the jackass members of his profession ammunition aplenty to bombard the man and accuse him of the most disgraceful literary hooliganism. Of course, by their standards James was precisely that,  but a splendid firecracker hooligan, an exploding Catherine Wheel hooligan and already in the process of teaching Old Mother Fleet Street to suck eggs.
Wonderful, wonderful stuff and I can’t praise him enough.
Pushkin in Russia was as famous and well regarded a poet as Shakespeare or Heaney. Pushkin’s work did not translate well so Clive James learned to read and write Russian simply for the pleasure of reading Pushkin in the original. Extraordinary.
This has been a bit breathless but I don’t care. Being born in an age of Pavorotti,  Du Pre, Seamus Heaney, Chomsky, Kurosawa and so many others is a rare privilege. Easily I add Clive James to this list.

MDFF 1 December 2019 Completa tranquilidad

Buenos dias,

In 1955 as I listened to Radio Belgrano in Buenos Aires, the classical music program kept being interrupted by an announcement: Reina completa tranquilidad en todo el pais (There is absolute calm in all of the land). The real situation was in sharp contrast. On the short wave radio we heard an inland doctor get instructions from a city surgeon on how to perform a leg amputation on a wounded soldier, and we also heard the announcements accompanied by martial music on the advancing revolutionary troops in the province of Córdoba.  We also followed the movements of General Perón as he fled in a Paraguayan navy ship up the Paraná River. Yet the national radio station insisted that Reina completa tranquilidad en todo el pais

Two thirds of a century later I find myself in the Yuendumu community and there is no letup in the barrage of negative depictions of Yuendumu in the media as a tinderbox. The real situation is in sharp contrast.

Andrew Bolt has never been to Yuendumu yet with arrogant confidence he writes about the recent highly publicised events. The first sentence of his Courier Mail article of 20thNovember includes:

On Saturday…..went to the volatile Aboriginal community of Yuendumu…..

This is when a 19 year old Warlpiri man was shot. It was the same day the well attended funeral of another young Warlpiri man took place in Yuendumu.

I read a lot, yet in all the time I’ve lived here, this is the first time ever I’ve read Yuendumu being described as “volatile”.

The following Tuesday a public meeting took place at the Yuendumu basketball court attended by high ranking police and government officials and a large contingent of armed constabulary. The mood was one of sorrow and anger.

Andrew Bolt who wasn’t there wrote as follows:

On Tuesday with crowds at Yuendumu seeming primed for another riot

The “another riot” never took place, instead a sombre very dignified and peaceful march to the police station ensued.

If this is how our community is depicted it makes you wonder about the veracity of those reports emanating from one of the world’s most civilised cities. I’m talking about the crowds at Paris seeming primed for another riot.

Andrew Bolt and I share the same Dutch heritage.  In Dutch people like Andrew are known as klootzakken.  In the country I spent my childhood in they are called boludos.  In Warlpiri they are kujurlpa.  Ah, the joys of multilingualism.

In the Australian (27th November) under the heading Evacuation plan for ‘terrified’ outback nurses Northern Correspondent Amos Aikman wrote:

Healthcare staff sent back to Yuendumu following the death of Kumanjayi Walker are “terrified” and may have to be evacuated again if police and elders fail to resolve law and order issues in the outback community, the nursing and midwifery union says.

On the day before the tragic events Wendy went to Yuendumu clinic to be seen by the visiting podiatrist. A few days ago I went to the clinic to get a Mylanta refill.  On both occasions we failed to see any “terrified” healthcare staff. Why did we fail to see any? Because there weren’t any.

A friend told me she saw something she hadn’t seen in decades- a policeman having a conversation on a mobile phone walking along the main street of Yuendumu not wearing one of those Swiss army knife belts. An exception, he was the only one not wearing a gun.

Yesterday an ABC news report included: …some Yuendumu residents said they were concerned about the continued increased police presence in the community….

Despite the concern, Chief Minister Michael Gunner said the police presence had scaled down in Yuendumu since the shooting, when there were about 30 officers on the ground in the days following the incident…
Yes indeed, it’s down to about a dozen, all of them armed except for the lone policeman walking on the main road with his mobile phone.

The ABC News report concluded with:

In a statement, a spokeswoman said NT Police would not answer questions about operational matters such as numbers of deployed members.

There has been no report of unrest in the community, she said.

Adios,

Frank

Elton John- Burn down the Mission- 1970

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PUC8j8Qg0OA