Friday, November 27, 2020

WHAT HAS AUNTIE JOANNA BEEN UP TO RECENTLY?

 


....This report from London will some flavour of it all.


Auntie is also working on a new book...which she is enjoying...much of the research involves lengthy interviews, which of course at present mostly has to be done by telephone. Other research can be done via the inter net...some will have to wait until museums and the Public Record Office etc are open...


Meanwhile, the Advent wreath has been set up and the first candle will be lit this weekend...



Saturday, November 21, 2020

AFTER A BUSY DAY...

 

...it was satisfying to settle to this excellent  documentary/dramatic presentation of St John Henry Newman.  Hugely recommended.





Wednesday, November 18, 2020

A TASTY LUNCH ...

 


....and delicious desserts, all prepared by a top London restaurant, were served today to homeless people at Farm Street.   It's all done very correctly - all volunteers have their temperatures checked, we wear masks and surgical gloves and so on.  But the atmosphere is, despite all that, relaxed and chatty. The aim is neighbourly companionship as much as anything else. And there's a  Creative Writing course starting - some of the guests have said they have a book/poem/autobiography in them - and over lunch there is music and lots of long conversations...

It's all punctuated by prayer - we begin the day with prayer, there is Grace before and after lunch, and our discussion time ends with prayers.  Our chaplain is Fr Dominic, and he is patient and friendly  with everyone, a popular figure who has put in hours of work to make this project happen.

I'm usually stationed at the trolley where the food is served, dishing out on to plates, while others as waiters go to and fro, and a kitchen team keeps up the steady flow of teas and coffees while tackling the washing-up.  After our guests leave at 2pm we have a general discussion and meeting...and can eat up any leftover food from the serving-trolley... 

There are a good many other  churches doing similar work - and good liaison between them all -  and no shortage of volunteers.  Next time some one tells you that Christianity in Britain is dead, just mention that.

Sunday, November 15, 2020

Persecution of Christians...

 


...really matters. This needs action and prayer.


Support RED WEDNESDAY, the initiative launched by Aid to the Church in Need to draw attention to religious persecution and to support Christians worldwide.


Read here


And there's a special Novena beginning on November 17th. Read here



Saturday, November 14, 2020

FIREWORKS...

 


...are popping and crackling around  as I write this, with rockets shooting up into the sky and leaving glorious trails of glittering stars. It has been  a very dark and rainy day, and the traditional November sounds and sparks are cheering and oddly reassuring.

The  fireworks at Bogle Towers were set off  in due style last week, with neighbours watching from a safe distance, sparklers in hand. We oohed and aahed and enjoyed ourselves, and, as always, there were echoes from childhood memories...

By tradition, we also always have a walk to our local railway bridge from where we get a fine view of  any firework displays that are happening around the neighbouring roads. Although the trend over recent years has been away from family events and towards large crowds at huge spectacular,  this year for obvious reasons things reverted to the older style. So it was all family displays, with rockets shooting up and bright flashes and bangs.

Today, I met a friend for a planned walk along the Thames. It rained and rained, and we ate our picnic (no possibility of a pub or cafe being open) with a small bottle of Prosecco and a  flask of hot coffee.  The Thames was grey and also oddly reassuring...it goes on being the same while events surge around it. While we were on the Isle of Wight some weeks back, J. quoted |Tennyson's Brook: "for men may come and men may go, but I go on for ever..."

Thursday, November 12, 2020

...and on the American election...

 


...there's a good analysis here



I recommend it.




Monday, November 09, 2020

...and news from America...

 ...reveals a not-unexpected result in the elections: Biden/Harris by a narrow win.

If we assume that Mr Biden will be a short-term president, it seems relevant to look at Mrs Harris. She  emerges as an ambitious, highly materialistic woman largely without principles or ideology. The ardent feminists don't like her much, as she has pushed her own career rather than promoting the lesbian/transgender/rights-for-"sex-workers" etc agenda. 

It's always unimpressive when a woman who takes office starts not by affirming her commitment to public service or to the common good but by making  a speech  on the lines of "Ooh, how proud Grandma would  be of me!".  Maybe Grandma would, but that is hardly the point. Government is about service. Take a leaf from Mrs Thatcher's book - her words on becoming Britain's first woman Prime Minister were carefully chosen, to include a traditional often-quoted prayer and to show respect for the great public office she was to hold.  

That said, Mrs Harris' track record seems to suggest that encouraging American women to abort their babies is not high on her agenda.  She might even be persuaded that supporting or encouraging abortion is an unwise and imprudent thing to do, even if she is uninterested in the fact that it is also wicked and cruel. Pro-life campaigners should  work on that basis.   The cause is a sacred one. It would be a great pity if the pro-life movement in America diverted its efforts from saving babies' lives to support for Mr Trump's campaigning efforts for a re-run of the election.

All things considered, Trump  was quite a good president, with the Israel-Arab peace and - until the wretched Coronavirus intervened - an impressive achievement in the economy. He is vain, ungentlemanly and vulgar, with a sordid private life and an inability to control his temper....but his policies were not always wrong. Salvaging what was useful from his term of office could be included in the agenda for the future. 






Sunday, November 08, 2020

Perhaps the most haunting Remembrance Sunday...

 

...in its history.  No one was allowed into Whitehall to stand by the Cenotaph, except the central figures (Royals, Government/Opposition figures, military bands).  The ceremonies went ahead, in the full traditional way, but...

We had decided to go, to be as near as we could, and stood in Parliament Square. Absolute silence and stillness at eleven o'clock struck. We could see nothing: there were not only barriers placed across the entrance to Whitehall, but screens to prevent even a glimpse of the Cenotaph.  We could hear the music - the pipes with the traditional lament and the band with "O Valiant hearts"...

No signal, however, was needed to mark the Two Minutes Silence. As soon as Big Ben struck, all in the Square and in the surrounding area fell completely silent. No one moved. I have taken part in the  ceremony over the years - accompanying my father to the Regimental service at Guildford Cathedral, walking in solemn procession to a local church  as a London Borough councillor, and in Westminster Abbey with J's regiment...but this utter silence on this strangest of Remembrance Sundays was somehow the most moving and powerful of all.

Afterwards we walked towards St James Park and had some coffee ("takeaway only") from a pastry shop, and so on to Westminster Cathedral, and silent prayer.   Later, a  back through the Park to view  the wreaths...and then home through the late afternoon...

Saturday, November 07, 2020

SPENT TODAY...

 

...at Farm Street, where a well-organised team is feeding homeless people during this lockdown, with excellent meals provided by London's top restaurants.  

The meals arrived in boxes, stacked in white paper bags...I hate to see all that paper wasted, so was allowed to save, fold and take home the bags which will be used for packing prizes for the various education projects with which I am involved.

The volunteer team is very competently led and includes Fr Dominic Robinson  who is not only an excellent chaplain but has clearly  worked hard in preparation to ensure that the Farm St facilities are being used in a most effective way. The very attractive panelled Parish Hall is familiar to me as the meeting-place for the Catholic Writers' Guild over the past few years...and as the venue for the  lunch following  the Catholic Women Praying Together Mass  last year  which we had hoped to be an annual event...oh dear...may it happen some day...

And then home to a ZOOM meeting of the Friends of Maryvale, with plans for the months ahead...

This Autumn is being particularly beautiful...

 

...and it makes the weirdness of things more poignant.  On the first day of lockdown we  walked in St James  Park. Russet and golden leaves, and a Guards band was playing...perhaps a rehearsal for Remembrance Day on Sunday...but the crowds can't be there, on this 100th anniversary of the unveiling of the Cenotaph. 

Down to Charing Cross and the river, via a rather bleak Trafalgar Square with policemen hovering about in their horrid new menacing padded gear and weaponry.   

On the bridge, as the dusk drew in, it was strange to see no lights glowing in any of the office windows...in the Norman Shaw buildings, where  I worked in the late 1970s as a Parliamentary researcher, all seemed blank.  The ugliness of the tower blocks beyond, and the odd look of poor old Big Ben all wrapped in sheeting and scaffolding...and yet the loveliness of the evening sky, and the haunting knowledge that this is London, our London, in this strange time in its long history...

Monday, November 02, 2020

Current policies ...

 


.... attempting to postpone the spread of the coronavirus are unjust and penalise the poor.



"Public health policy must consider everyone. The current lockdown strategy has protected young low-risk students and professionals who can work from home, such as bankers, lawyers, journalists, and scientists. By contrast, older high-risk working-class people were forced to work, risking their lives while building up the population immunity that will eventually protect us all. With collateral damage from lockdowns disproportionally hurting low-income people – especially inner-city residents – there has been a double whammy against the working class."


Read more here...

On All Hallows Eve...

 


....a splendid Mass and Rosary Procession at St Dominic's, Haverstock Hill, and the launch of the book on the new Luminous Mysteries garden. Bishop Nicholas Henderson celebrated Mass and preached, and there was a good-sized congregation (all suitably spaced - but the church is large). I was touched to be invited to speak, and told the story of the Garden and how the book came to be written.


Pics here...

It was the perfect way to mark this year's All Hallows Eve, and it gave us a joyful and uplifting time...which we all needed as we knew we were facing bleak news from the government, announcing the (unjustified) banning of public worship.


Our Bishops have rightly asked for some evidence that the public celebration of Mass spreads the coronavirus.