Archive for June 24th, 2009
Francisco de Zurbaran: Still life with Lemons
by Chris on Jun.24, 2009, under art
Leave a Comment :zurbaran more...Helen Bamber: someone to admire – and emulate, if you can
by Chris on Jun.24, 2009, under politics, society
Helen Bamber
Photograph: Helen Bamber in Belsen, 1945
She calls herself “a witness to the vulnerability of humanity”. From her home in north London, a pint-sized divorcee has emerged as one of the world’s most prominent campaigners against the very worst type of personal suffering, that of deliberate and coldly calculated torture.
For more than half a century, Helen Bamber has devoted her life to the care of survivors of horror and violence. In 1985 she created the Medical Foundation for the Care of Victims of Torture. Its very name, says Bamber’s biographer Neil Belton, tells us “more than most of us wish to hear”. She and her colleagues have provided therapy to more than 30,000 people, from more than 90 countries.
The “Good Listener”
Bamber has never had any formal training, but believes the most important part of her work is to “listen to clients for as long as they wish or can bear to talk”. The title of Belton’s book about her is The Good Listener, a neat summary of her life and work.
Bamber believes the world is divided into two types, bystanders who see only what they want, and proper witnesses who observe and record the truth. She joined the latter group in 1945, when she volunteered to go into the concentration camp of Belsen to help with the physical and psychological recovery of Holocaust survivors.
As a 19-year-old girl, Bamber found herself on the receiving end of some of the worst human horror stories imaginable. She has described the survivors there who “would dig their fingers into your arms and hold on to you to get to you the horror of what had happened.”
Moving on from Amnesty
This tenacious teenager returned to London to work with children who had survived the camps, and later joined Amnesty International, where she worked to expose torture regimes in such countries as Chile and Argentina.
It became increasingly apparent that the AI brief to expose these regimes and look after its victims was too wide, and Bamber saw a greater need for individual care. She was moved to create her own foundation, where the role of therapist is “to receive, not to recoil” and often “simply sit rocking somebody while they tell their story”.
Never moved to tears by these tales, Bamber remains strangely affected by the sound of survivors singing together. It reminds her of “what capacity people have for creativity and what’s denied them”.
Bamber sits on human rights committees from Belfast to Gaza. Former hostage John McCarthy is impressed by her energy and power, her combination of compassion and determination.
Unusual childhood reading
He believes her work must require a certain anger. Bamber admits to this fuel for her gruelling schedule, and the source of it may be found in her childhood. Born to Jewish parents of Polish descent, young Helen grew up in a house where the Nazi threat was overpowering.
Her father read her sections of Mein Kampf to remind her of the evil in the world, and she has described a sense of constant foreboding. Her trip to Belsen was about overcoming her own fears.
Bamber has since dedicated her life to helping others do the same, and describes a sense of satisfaction in helping people learn to live again. And as to what really drives her on, she explains that even in the midst of such evil and suffering, or perhaps especially in such places, “there’s something very good to be retrieved from people”.
Caroline Frost
http://www.bbc.co.uk/bbcfour/documentaries/profile/helen_bamber.shtml
BBC – BBC Four Profile – Helen Bamber.
Portrait of Edouard Manet by Henri Fantin-Latour
by Chris on Jun.24, 2009, under art
Portrait of Edouard Manet by Henri Fantin-Latour
Manet – The painter of modern life and a great flaneur.
Shock as ‘Guardian’ journalist invokes Hegel!
by Chris on Jun.24, 2009, under philosophy, politics, society
This is quite interesting! I just wish Mr Jeffries had taken the Hegel a little further: there’s a lot more to his philosophy of freedom than is intimated here. Still, it’s a pleasure to see anyone noticing that liberal ideas of ‘negative freedom’ are a bit inadequate, to say the least.
Brush up your Hegel, Sarko
Monsieur Président’s burka outburst suggests he can’t tell his abstract and concrete freedoms apart
Nicolas Sarkozy’s problem is that he hasn’t read enough Hegel. Let me rephrase that: one of his problems is that he hasn’t read enough Hegel. When the French president told a special session of parliament in Versailles earlier this week, “We cannot accept to have in our country women who are prisoners behind netting, cut off from all social life, deprived of identity”, he would have done better to hold his tongue, and instead reflect on that passage in the Philosophy of Right in which Hegel distinguishes between abstract and concrete freedom.
The former means the freedom to do whatever you want, which, as you know, is the basis of western civilisation and why you can choose between 23 different kinds of coffee in your local cafe, or 32 different kinds of four-inch wedges the glossies tell you look sexy this summer but in none of which you can walk comfortably. Such is the freedom of late capitalism, which seems to systematically strive to deprive us of an identity that we might construct ourselves.
For Hegel this isn’t real freedom, because our wants and desires are determined by society. By those lights, a western fashion victim is as much a sartorial prisoner as a woman in a burka.
Neither is really free. Those that must buy what someone else tells them are this season’s must-haves are as much in mental chains as those who put on head-to-toe garment with netting for the eyes because of the strictures of the society to which they belong.
By real freedom, Hegel meant not doing whatever one wants but having the freedom from societal conditioning and the fatuous whirl of desires by using reason. If you come across someone who manages to be really free in this sense in either capitalistic or strict Islamic society then send me their names so we can celebrate their escape.
None of us is really free in that sense. I used to think otherwise. I once wrote an article under the headline “If only we were more like the French: Call me a chippy atheist, but I’d rather see a headscarf ban than Muslim ghettoes.” I thought forcibly liberating people from their mental and sartorial shackles would make us free. I was wrong. Now I believe the creation of Muslim ghettoes is made more likely by official displays of intolerance towards what some Muslim women wear, that the social integration France overtly seeks through its policy of laïcité, or secularism, is less likely. One of the reasons for this shift is because of thinking about what Hegel means about freedom in thesociety to which I belong.
Yes, but, you might well want to say, surely women who wear burkas are more oppressed than those who treat the sartorial laws of Grazia as though they were truly the words of God (which, as you know, they are)? None of what I’ve said means that I feel anything but depressed when I see a woman in a burka, but that’s my problem, something that I can’t resolve in the way Sarkozy suggests. What’s striking in Sarkozy’s speech is that it is yet again a man who denounces women and presumes that they are cut off from social life. They may be cut off from Sarkozy’s secular French society, and that may be difficult for allegedly tolerant western liberals, but they are not cut off from all society. In fact they’re very much part of the society that many westerners despise as oppressing women.
Sarkozy’s remarks, though they’re bound to upset some of France’s five million Muslims, are consistent with French revolutionary culture and the tradition of laïcité that led, in 2004, to the banning of headscarfs in French schools. Doesn’t he realise then that his speech exemplifies an abstract freedom of expression which, in Hegelian terms, proceeds from social conditioning, not reason? It seems unlikely. For French political culture, religion is tolerable only if it keeps itself to itself. As soon as a person of faith tries to present what religion means for them in public in France, they risk being accused of fundamentalism.
Sarkozy now goes further, following revolutionary logic in not just chasing those who dress in ways he and French political culture finds intolerable out of public spaces, but pursuing those who dress in a way that is a rejection of western values even into their private worlds. He said: “The burka is not a sign of religion, it is a sign of subservience. It will not be welcome on the territory of the French republic.” Even religious justification is bad enough, run the suppressed premises of this argument, but the absence of such despicable justifications is worse.
The woman in a burka is revealed as subservient to patriarchal culture. She must be made free to choose to be more western. Sarkozy proposes, in giving his backing to the establishment ofa parliamentary commission to look at whether to ban the wearing of burkas in public, that such imposed freedom would improve her lot.
French venerate such abstract freedoms. We needn’t. They were, for Hegel, the basis of the revolution’s collapse into the Terror in which, he argued, individuals were sacrificed to the ill-conceived pursuit of abstract freedoms. Sarkozy is thus a modern-day Robespierre, proposing some women – whom he presumes to have been silenced by patriarchal society and whose voices he doesn’t want to hear –be terrorised in the name of the kind abstract freedoms France has venerated for 210 years. Let’s see if he succeeds.
Brush up your Hegel, Sarko | Stuart Jeffries | Comment is free | The Guardian.





