Thursday 5 November 2009

the true and the sacred

This is an odd week. Last Saturday I went to the Radical Book Fair in Edinburgh, and then to a poetry workshop about the Persian poetic form the Ghazal. And then it was Halloween and on Sunday it was the Feast of All Saints. So I had planned to post about ghazals on Burnedthumb, and how the cumulative meditative technique shapes the kind of subject you choose and the way you present it, and on Lúcháir I was going to post about a speaker called Joseph Murphy and his book, At the Edge, dealing with the survival of Gaelic culture in Ireland and Scotland.
I was also, since the end of October brings together death-and-renewal celebrations in both Celtic and Christian communities, going to pay tribute to all the saints in my life, living and dead, Catholic, Protestant, Quaker, Wiccan, Buddhist, Muslims and Jews, and atheists and agnostics aligned to all kinds of compassionate philosophies. I've chosen which tradition I want to follow myself, but I am grateful to many others, and I consider myself very fortunate to have lived among and learned from so many interesting and gifted people.
This has now taken on an added importance. I will be dealing with the outstanding posts on Burnedthumb and Lúcháir - next week, probably, life is pure mental just now - but there is an issue which has bugged me so many times in the last week, I just have to post about it. As it impacts both on questions of how we write and how we live together, it's going up on both blogs.
Recently I've been aware of
Jan Moir's poisonous and irresponsible outburst on the death of Steve Gately. As well as the unkindness of writing such stuff at a time of grief, I have issues with her irrational dismissal of the evidence from witnesses and from medical experts, in order to draw a conclusion that could not be other than hurtful
an email being circulated asserting that the holocaust is to be removed from the British curriculum in order to pacify Muslims. It further alleged that Muslims are holocaust-deniers. I know of no basis of truth for either of these statements, and, though it was passed on to me by someone who is only concerned to make sure that the holocaust is accurately remembered, the intemperate and irresponsible language used can only stir up hatred
the dismissal of David Nutt. Nutt seems to have been unnecessarily provocative, since the only reason ecstasy is safer than tobacco is that tobacco is 100% lethal, but on the other hand you can't ask people to give you the facts and then, when you don't like them, ask for some different ones.
The stramash over Jesus Queen of Hearts. No, I haven't seen it, but I've read what the author said, and when she says she is a Christian, and intended to write something that was thoughtful and to ask us to reflect deeply on the issue of trans-gender, I believe her. I don't believe her play is blasphemous and I'm not offended by it. But. That title looks like a parody, it's designed to grab the wrong sort of attention, and the poster is cheap and tacky and demeaning. It isn't surprising that many Christians get the impression that the whole thing is designed to mock and degrade them. Then you add to this the pompous self-righteous stance of some of the protesters, the posturing as if we had some sort of right to authority in the matter. We don't. We have one opinion among many. We are entitled to hold it, to express it and to live peacefully without being mocked for it, but we don't have the right to make everyone else accept it. And finally, the whooping and cheering of the media, trying to stir up a good fight, and forgetting that at either end of this story are decent thoughtful people, acting in good faith, and hurt by the exploitation of an issue which is so dear to them.

All these things seem very different, but in my head they have one thing in common, and that is abuse of the written word. In a free country we can think what you like, and say what you like, but once you put it into writing, you have the responsibility to make sure that what you have said conveys the message you meant, and to consider what impact it will have on those who hear it. If writers don't write with respect for what is true and what is sacred to their readers (and everyone has something they feel is sacred), we shouldn't be writing at all.

2 comments:

Jasmine said...

The denial of the hollocaust is something that angers me. I did not connect it to moslems.

I have worked in the homelessness sector for a decade and have trained in dual diagnosis. It is terrible that the government dismiss experts in the field simply because what everyone in the drugs field knows to be true, does not fit in with government objectives.

Politics is a perfect example of abuse and manipulation of the written and spoken word.

That said, I wish you the best for the new celtic year.

Forthvalley scribe said...

Denial of the holocaust makes me angry too. And using the issue to hate other cultures (which is where I think this particular email was coming from) abuses the compassion we rightly feel for all those victims.
I don't know much about drugs - just enough to know I need to keep my ignorant mouth shut! But I do know that it matters to deal scrupulously with the truth if you want to persuade people.
I agree with you about politics. And advertising. And gossip journalism. Best wishes to you, too, Jasmine