23/05/2016

Bristol For Refugees


Bristol Refugee Week



If you are from a refugee background and want to run a stall at Celebrating Sanctuary in Queen Square on Sunday 12th June please get in touch with Richie at richie@tribeofdoris.co.uk
(NO food stalls please!)



Support Bristol Refugee Festival 2016 programme of arts, cultural & educational events and help us plan and expand our activities for 2017.

In its 11th year Bristol Refugee Week is part of a nationwide programme of arts, cultural and educational events that:
  •  celebrates the contribution of refugees in the UK
  • promotes a better understanding of why people seek sanctuary

Due to many factors, this year events will stretch across a month - 24th May - 26th June, giving us the opportunity to turn it into "Bristol Refugee Festival"!
The main event 'Celebrating Sanctuary' in Queen Square is a free public event that has becoming an annual day out, with great music, food and activities for all the family. There are also many other events such as the Refugee Women of Bristol Dance and The City Community Cup Football Tournament; all becoming popular calendar events.  
We will use the month to:
  • encourage  greater understanding between communities
  • raise awareness of the issues and difficulties facing refugees and asylum seekers
  • highlight the work of the many organisations working on their behalf in Bristol. 
The festival relies on generous donations of money, time and gifts in kind. 
 Can you help? Every pledge you give will make a difference and together we can help refugees and asylum seekers  feel more welcome, secure  and understood in our City Of Sanctuary .
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See also the programme for the month-long festival:


20/05/2016

Bristol in the Public Art Review... Issue #54



... with my first article for this American art review:



 






The spring/summer 2016 issue of Public Art Review features a profile of a socially-engaged artist, climate change art, and much more! Please allow 1-2 weeks for delivery.


http://shop.forecastpublicart.org/index.php?p=product&id=108



Issue 54 - Spring/Summer 2016







Bristol Carnival founder Carmen Beckford has passed away




It's is with sadness that I announce the passing of Miss Carmen Beckford M.B.E aged 87



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Carnival founder Carmen Beckford dies



Louis Emanuel , May 20, 2016

One of the founding organisers of St Paul’s Carnival who went on to become a figurehead for race relations in Bristol has died, aged 87.
Carmen Beckford MBE, a retired nurse who arrived in the UK from Jamaica at the age of 17, passed away in her adopted home of Bristol on Wednesday after a long illness.
Her legacy is set to be immortalised in a giant mural as one of “seven saints of St Paul’s” due to be painted onto streets this summer.
Paying tribute on Wednesday, Peter Courtier, former director of Bristol Racial Equality Council, said Beckford "courageously fought against racial discrimination and inequality" in a city which "owes her so much".

Born in St Thomas, Jamaica, in 1928, Beckford left for the UK to train as a nurse at Ashford Hospital in Kent. She moved to Bristol in 1965 to work as a midwife in Downend and soon become active in the local community.

Carmen Beckford pictured right alongside artist Michelle Curtis with the illustration which will form the base of a mural in St Paul's. Pictured left on her 87th birthday
She was instrumental in setting up St Paul’s Carnival - known as St Paul’s Festival at the start -  in 1967 with the help of St Paul’s and Environs Consultative Committee and the West Indian Development Association, aided by the vicar of St Agnes Church.
Beckford, a lover of music and dance, was put in charge of entertainment at the carnival which grew to host more than 100,000 people.
Her work with the community didn't go unnoticed and she was encouraged by the Jamaican High Commissioner to apply for the role of Bristol first community development officer at Bristol City Council, a role held between 1978-86 which included working to improve race relations in the city.
Throughout her life she also sat on the Commonwealth Coordinated Committee alongside bus boycott campaigner Paul Stephenson and established the West Indian Dance Team in Bristol.
The club went on to perform at Colston Hall and traveled as far as Germany. Beckford said of the team later: “When you have self-respect and pride no one can mess with you. I was involved in all of their lives, I would tell my girls when you are walking on the street keep your head high and no loud talking as you are members of The West Indian Dance Team.”
Her work in the community was officially recognized by the queen in 1982 when Beckford was awarded an MBE, becoming the first black recipient in the South West.
Carmen Beckford was instrumental in setting up St Paul's Carnival in 1967
Later, when asked about her contribution to Bristol as one of the city’s most important black leaders, she said: “I never paid much attention to what other people felt was right or wrong, or whether people felt that I should be doing this or that.
“I just followed what was in here (her heart), as that is the only voice that matters and trust that he (God) is guiding me to do the right thing.”
Asher Craig, councillor for St George West and close friend of Beckford’s told Bristol24/7: “She was a beautiful woman and had a heart of gold. She was extremely stylish and was an amazing networker who had all the skills and expertise of a socialite, which she capitalised on in her role as the entertainments officer on the board of St Paul’s Carnival. 
“The legacy of Carmen Beckford's contribution towards helping to create a more equal and integrated city must never be forgotten and I will ensure that it lives on."
Peter Courtier, former director of Bristol Racial Equality Council added: “Black women pioneers had it hard in the Black rights struggles of the 60s, 70s and 80s. She courageuosly fought against racial discrimination and inequality. I and Bristol owe her so much. RIP Carmen.''
Carmen Etheline Marjorie Beckford, who lived in Filton, was born on December 21, 1928, and died on May 18, 2016 at Westbury Care Home. She was the eldest of seven children and leaves behind her brother Derek Beckford, sister Loris Mair and many nieces and nephews.


Bristol for Massive


A certainly unusual morning in Bristol!!


Fans queue from 4.30am for Massive Attack tickets

Read more: http://www.bristolpost.co.uk/LIVE-Fans-queue-4-30am-Massive-Attack-tickets/story-29297322-detail/story.html#ixzz49BeTADNi 



Unlike Glasto or Radiohead, and in stupidly long actual physical queue for gig tickets.  
The ticket queue at Bristol Ticket Shop is still going strong too!



Ben is first in the queue at Idle Hands in Stokes Croft! He says "Massive Attack just represent Bristol don't they?"


https://twitter.com/bbcrb/status/733550481142775809

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  1. ITV REPORT
  2.  

Massive Attack tickets generating massive queues after going on sale

Massive Attack queues
Hundreds of people have been queuing for tickets to Massive Attack's homecoming concert in Bristol. Credit: Dani Andres

Tickets for Massive Attack's home-coming concert in Bristol have gone on sale with hundreds of people queuing in the city to get their hands on them.
The concert in September will take place on the Downs - the first time an outdoor music event has been held there for 15 years.
Tickets have also gone on sale online but many fans decided to queue up outside the Stokes Croft shop Idle Hands from as early as 4am to be in line for tickets as they went on sale at 8am.
Around 20,000 people are expected to attend the show on September 3.

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19/05/2016

"Jamaican Pulse" in Bristol this summer


Bristol's Royal West of England Academy (RWA) will host an exhibition of Jamaican art this summer. One more reason to pass by.


Jamaican Pulse: Art and Politics from Jamaica and the Diaspora

B.I.B. Kimani Beckford, oil on canvas, 2014
At a time when Jamaican art is receiving growing international acclaim, Jamaican Pulse showcases the extraordinary diversity of Jamaican art, presenting contemporary artwork alongside key works from Jamaican art history.
While exploring the roots of modern Jamaican art and suggesting new links between past and present, the exhibition also explores the artwork through a political lens and considers how global attitudes to body, gender, religion, class and sexuality have impacted this small island nation. By creating a conversation between the Jamaican Diaspora population across the UK and internationally, Jamaican Pulse looks back at early artistic and political awakening, whilst also creating a platform for contemporary artists.
Many of the contemporary artists in the exhibition also featured in the recent, critically- acclaimed Jamaica Biennale. Their work spans multiple disciplines including painting, sculpture, photography, textiles and moving image, and will be supported by twentieth century artwork from a number of public and private collections, including the Jamaican High Commission, London, and The National Gallery of Jamaica, Kingston.
Jamaican Pulse will be accompanied by an exciting learning and participation programme, with activities taking place on and off-site, including a satellite programme at The Bluecoat, Liverpool.
Jamaican Pulse is delivered in partnership with the Jamaican High Commission and is supported by Arts Council England and the Art Fund. It is co-curated by Kat Anderson and Graeme Mortimer Evelyn on behalf of the RWA



Ras Dizzy, The Bird is a Shefield Prospect it Cald the Gospel Bird, 1998, Tempera and oil on matboard,27.9 x 38.1 cm, Courtesy of Cavin-Morris Gallery, Photograph © Cavin-Morris Gallery



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Details:

25 June – 11 September


Admission Prices
Adults: £6.95
(includes a 70p donation)
Concessions: £4.95
(includes a 50p donation)
Under 16s/SGS, UoB & UWE students: FREE
Art Fund card holders: £4.50 (includes a 50p donation)
PLEASE GIFT AID YOUR TICKET and help us to claim up to 25% more
(Please ask for details)
Become a Friend (yearly membership): from £15, enjoy unlimited repeat visits, private view invitations, and other benefits.
For more details on admissions go to: www.rwa.org.uk/visit-us/admission/

Opening times

Galleries and café
Tuesday – Saturday: 10am – 6pm
Sunday: 11am – 5pm
Closed Mondays
Last admission 30 minutes before closing.

My article from Iraq: Dr Juman's work for displaced women in Nineweh, Kurdistan



19.May

IRAQ: WAHA’S ACTION IN KURDISTAN AND


 NINEVEH


In Iraq, WAHA International is committed to helping displaced people, chased away from their home by the 2014 violence linked to the rise of the Islamic State in Iraq and Syria. In different locations, WAHA has helped to reopen hospitals, to secure maternal and reproductive care, and to send high-quality medical personnel in IDP camps.



Dr Juman is a busy woman. Only a few years ago, this elegant gynaecologist was living with her husband in Arizona, in the U.S., but she decided to come back to her home country. The urge to feel helpful and to contribute to the needs of her fellow citizens, plagued again by the attacks from the Islamic State, was stronger than her crave for freedom and peace. For a while at least.
Born in Zakho, in the extreme north of the country, in Kurdistan, Juman is the oldest of a Chaldaean family of seven children. From 1915, Christian families like hers were pushed away from an area to another by the different political rulers that followed the end of the Ottoman Empire. Hers temporarily found peace in Zakho.
Though her parents were teachers and most of her siblings followed their path, Juman studied medicine at the University of Mosul, started working as a gynaecologist in 1997 and got married in Iraq. Since 2000, she has been practicing her specialty in remote villages, trying to help women with no access to hospitals. For two years, she was the only doctor responsible for Obstetrics & Gynaecology (OBGY) in Amedia.
But with the war starting in 2003 and the consequences on the society, at some point in 2007 she had to leave the country. “I lived five years in Jordan, I was working with NGOs there to help refugees, receiving up to 50 patients a day, but my husband could not find work. Then we managed to get a visa for the United States where we arrived in 2012”, says Dr Juman. “But I came back to Iraq to do my job, to help my people here. In the U.S., I could work as a general practitioner but they have so many there. I wanted to serve my country”.
After Fear, A New Beginning
Dr Juman met the WAHA International’s team in February this year. WAHA was starting a new programme in northern Iraq to help displaced families and children still in need of better healthcare facilities. WAHA opened its mission in the country after a first exploratory mission. The current situation is still pushing people to flee their home, mainly because of on going fighting between the government forces and the Islamic State (ISIS or Daesh).
WAHA’s activities in Iraq are based in Kurdistan. A team of two doctors is based in Erbil and has recently been completed by a logistical administrator and by a local field coordinator based in Duhok. The staff is working in the main clinic in the IDP camp of Qadiya to help displaced people, mainly from minorities and oppressed communities, including Yazidis.
The camp in Qadiya, which hosts more than 15.000 IDPs in 3.000 residential units, is run by the RWANGA organisation. A Primary Healthcare Unit has been open by the German NGO Malteser, with the help of the German Aid Agency (GiZ). WAHA has a reproductive healthcare unit, including a maternity in their compound. The team of doctors led by Dr Juman is bringing support to local health authorities in the form of healthcare material and personnel.
WAHA also contributed to the reopening of the Snuny Hospital, one of the main health centres in the region, with the help of the U.N. Development Programme (UNDP) and with the help of ta local charity. They later opened a fixed clinic in the Sinjar Mountains region, in Sardehsti. Most of the displaced people in this region are also Yazidis.
Dr Juman visits the patients and the younger doctors in Qadiya, Snuny and Sardehsti almost daily. In Qadiya, she is helped by another gynaecologist, Dr Drakhshan, and by a radiologist, Dr Mosaab. The medical team gives between 40 to 50 consultations per day, mainly to pregnant Yazidi women. In Snuny, Dr Reem is in charge of obstetrical care, gynaecology and deliveries four days a week. Another team is in charge from Friday to Sunday, with Dr Suzan from Dohuk and Dr Najah from Syria.
In Sardehsti, they are working with Dr Heshkal, from Zakho. The situation in the Sinjar Mountains is the most difficult one. Here, displaced people are forgotten by the state. There are very few infrastructures, and the locations are abandoned by the authorities. Sinjar City has been completely destroyed by ISIS fighters. Even teachers in the camps don’t receive any salary. “There are almost no international organisation here”, says a member of the a local charity, “it’s a precious help that WAHA brought by opening the small clinic”.
People in the region know that more fighting is to come as the international coalition promised to liberate Mosul from ISIS fighters before the end of the year. But in the meantime, displaced people and impoverished families only ask for daily survival.
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En français :


25.Mai

IRAK : L'ACTION DE WAHA AU KURDISTAN ET AU NINIVE

En Irak, WAHA International est déterminée à aider les personnes déplacées, chassées de leur domicile par la violence liée à l'augmentation de l'Etat islamique en Irak et en Syrie depuis 2014. Sur différents sites, WAHA a contribué à rouvrir les hôpitaux, pour garantir des soins maternels et de la reproduction, et d'envoyer du personnel médical de haute qualité dans les camps de déplacés.
Dr Juman est une femme occupée. Il y a quelques années, cette élégante gynécologue vivait avec son mari dans l'Arizona, aux États-Unis, mais elle a décidé de revenir dans son pays d'origine. L'envie de se sentir utile et de contribuer aux besoins de ses concitoyens, en proie aux attaques de l'Etat islamique, a été plus forte que sa soif de liberté et de paix. Pendant un certain temps au moins.
Né à Zakho, dans l'extrême nord du pays, au Kurdistan, Juman est issue d'une famille chaldéenne de sept enfants. Depuis 1915, les familles chrétiennes comme la sienne ont été poussées d'une région à l'autre par les différents dirigeants politiques qui ont suivi la fin de l'Empire ottoman. La sienne trouvé temporairement la paix à Zakho.
Bien que ses parents fussent des enseignants et la plupart de ses frères et sÅ“urs aient suivi leur chemin, Juman a étudié la médecine à l'Université de Mossoul. Elle a commencé à travailler comme un gynécologue en 1997 et s’est mariée en Irak. Depuis 2000, elle pratique sa spécialité dans des villages reculés, en essayant d'aider les femmes sans accès aux hôpitaux. Pendant deux ans, elle a été le seul médecin responsable de l'obstétrique et de gynécologie (OBGY) dans la région de Amenia.
Mais avec la guerre entamée en 2003 et les conséquences des violences sur la société, en 2007, elle a dû quitter le pays. « J'ai vécu cinq ans en Jordanie, je travaillais avec des ONG là-bas pour aider les réfugiés. Nous recevions jusqu'à 50 patients par jour. Mais mon mari ne pouvait pas trouver de travail. Ensuite, nous avons réussi à obtenir un visa pour les États-Unis, où nous sommes arrivés en 2012 », explique le Dr Juman. « Mais je suis revenue en Irak pour faire mon travail, pour aider mon peuple ici. Aux États-Unis, je pourrais travailler comme médecin généraliste, mais ils ont tant de là. Je voulais servir mon pays ».
Après la peur, l’espoir du renouveau
Dr Juman a rencontré l'équipe du WAHA International en février 2016. WAHA commençait un nouveau programme dans le nord de l'Irak pour aider les familles et les enfants déplacés ayant besoin de meilleures installations de soins de santé. WAHA a ouvert sa mission dans le pays après une première mission exploratoire. La situation actuelle pousse encore les gens à fuir leur maison, principalement en raison des combats en cours entre les forces gouvernementales, kurdes et internationales contre l'État islamique (ISIS ou Daech).
Les activités de WAHA en Irak sont basées au Kurdistan. Une équipe de deux médecins est basé à Erbil et a été récemment complétée par un administrateur logistique et par un coordinateur local de terrain basé à Duhok. Le personnel travaille dans la clinique principale du camp de Qadiya pour aider les personnes déplacées, principalement des minorités et des communautés opprimées, dont de nombreux Yézidis.
Le camp de Qadiya, qui accueille plus de 15 000 personnes déplacées dans 3 000 unités résidentielles, est géré par l'organisation RWANGA. Une unité de soins de santé primaires a été ouverte par l'ONG allemande Malteser, avec l'aide de l'Agence de coopération allemande (GIZ). WAHA dispose à côté de ce bâtiment d'une unité de soins de santé en matière de reproduction, comprenant une maternité. L'équipe de médecins dirigée par le Dr Juman apporte un soutien aux autorités sanitaires locales sous la forme de matériel et de personnel de santé.
WAHA a également contribué à la réouverture de l'hôpital Snuny, l'un des principaux centres de santé de la région, avec l'aide du Programme de développement des Nations Unies (le PNUD) et avec l'aide d'une fondation locale. WAHA a ensuite ouvert une clinique fixe dans la région des Monts Sinjar, à Sardehsti. La plupart des personnes déplacées dans cette région sont également yézidis.
Dr Juman rend visite aux patients et aux médecins de Qadiya, Snuny et Sardehsti presque tous les jours. A Qadiya, elle est aidée par une autre gynécologue, le Dr Drakhshan, et par un radiologue, Dr Mosaab. L'équipe médicale donne entre 40 à 50 consultations par jour, principalement à des femmes enceintes yézidis. A Snuny, le Dr Reem est en charge des soins obstétricaux, de la gynécologie et des accouchements, quatre jours par semaine. Une autre équipe est en charge du vendredi au dimanche.
La situation dans les montagnes de Sinjar est la plus difficile. Ici, les personnes déplacées sont oubliées par l'État. Il y a très peu d'infrastructures, et les emplacements sont abandonnés par les autorités. La ville de Sinjar a été complètement détruite par les combattants d’ISIS. Même les enseignants dans les camps ne reçoivent plus leurs salaires. « Il n'y a presque pas d'organisation internationale ici », commente un membre de la Fondation Barzani, « c’est une aide précieuse que WAHA apporte depuis l'ouverture de la petite clinique ».
Les gens de la région savent que de nouveaux combats se préparent car la coalition internationale a promis de libérer Mossoul des combattants d’ISIS avant la fin de l'année. Mais en attendant, les personnes déplacées et les familles pauvres ne demandent que la survie au quotidien.

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By Melissa Chemam

18/05/2016

"The New Odyssey": stories of the refugee crisis


Just out:

The New Odyssey



The New Odyssey

Patrick Kingsley
Paperback 

Book of the Moment


The New Odyssey is a work of original, bold reporting written with a perfect mix of compassion and authority by the journalist who knows the subject better than any other.

Europe is facing a wave of migration unmatched since the end of World War II - and no one has reported on this crisis in more depth or breadth than the Guardian's migration correspondent, Patrick Kingsley.

‘Tremendously impressive… Vivid, sometimes shocking, always telling… The story of what lies behind the news from the Mediterranean has rarely been told so strongly.’   Philip Pullman


DESCRIPTION

'A brilliant, humane, sweeping account of the European refugee crisis. Kingsley has produced the great piece of reporting this issue so badly needs.'   Alan Rusbridger.

Europe is facing a wave of migration unmatched since the end of World War II - and no one has reported on this crisis in more depth or breadth than the Guardian's migration correspondent, Patrick Kingsley.

Throughout 2015, Kingsley travelled to 17 countries along the migrant trail, meeting hundreds of refugees making epic odysseys across deserts, seas and mountains to reach the holy grail of Europe.

This is Kingsley's unparalleled account of who these voyagers are. It's about why they keep coming, and how they do it. It's about the smugglers who help them on their way, and the coastguards who rescue them at the other end. The volunteers that feed them, the hoteliers that house them, and the border guards trying to keep them out. And the politicians looking the other way.

The New Odyssey is a work of original, bold reporting written with a perfect mix of compassion and authority by the journalist who knows the subject better than any other.


'A must read for our times'   Yanis Varoufakis

This is a unique achievement speeding urgent insight, understanding, and wake up calls for the rest of us who sleep easy in our beds at night.'  Jon Snow

'Kingsley is doing the world an invaluable service by showing that migrants are particular and human, not collective and a group, and that each of them – just like us - has a story of their own.'  David Hare

'A really moving and important publication. It provides a basis of fact and analysis that is truly important at a time of great challenge for humanity. I have no hesitation in recommending it.' Peter Sutherland United Nations Special Representative of the Secretary General for International Migration

'Deeply moving and hugely timely...The New Odyssey reminds us that behind the statistics and headlines lie real lives, driven by desperation and simply wanting a safer future. It should be compulsory reading.'  Caroline Lucas MP


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Bristol and the EU



Anyone could go for me and record?? Wish I could stay longer...


link: http://www.obv.org.uk/news-blogs/bristol-debates-eu-referendum



Bristol debates EU Referendum


The newly elected Mayor Marvin Rees has agreed to give a few opening remarks at the EU, in-out debate, in Bristol next week. Three racial equality organisations are teaming up to put on a European Referendum debate in Bristol on the 26th of May.
Voice4Change England, Operation Black Vote and the Black South West Network are holding this crucial debate from 6:00 -8:30 in the evening at M Shed in Bristol, to encourage and promote voter registration ahead of next month’s referendum.
The issues that are to be discussed around ‘Brexit’ will affect every person in Bristol that’s why we are encouraging a lively debate for the remain or leave arguments around the EU.
Our organisations are also very keen for young people and all Black and minority ethnic groups to register to vote. Young people and those BME communities are often less likely to be registered to vote than other groups.
In this critical debate all our differing opinions are valid in a healthy democracy, and events like these encourage more engagement from the diverse back grounds in Bristol.
The debate is also supported by Up Our Street, BabassaInc, Hope Not Hate and the Somali Forum.

You can book your ticket here: http://blacksouthwestnetwork.eventwax.com
And to register to vote: https://goo.gl/2UN5Su
Time: 6pm -8.30pm
Date: Thursday 26th May 2016
Venue: M Shed, Prince Wharf, Wapping Road, Bristol BS1 4RN