Autobiography - To Revolution Singing
By Ray Schaufeld
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To Revolution Singing
I knew it when I was fourteen, I know it now and I can back it up with quotes*, we go to revolution singing. Onwards, like Christian soldiers. Forward to revolution!
I went to a Youth Movement when I was young. Unlike the Girl Guides, which I also went to, girls and boys met together. We all wore one optional uniform, a deep blue ' Movement shirt' over our t-shirts and trousers.
Our organisation was called Habonim. It is Hebrew for 'the builders.' Our motto, translated into English was 'call us not children, call us the builders.' On Sunday afternoons I took the Tube to Finchley Road and walked for twenty minutes to the headquarters where our group met. We also had a winter camp for five days and a summer camp for a fortnight each year. We learned songs in Hebrew, English and other languages, Israeli dancing, and a team game played with a basketball where we caught people out by throwing the ball at their legs.
We had socialist discussions each week where we worked through issues in our group. If we all arrived in Utopia, for example, by suddenly getting marooned on a perfect desert island how would we sort out likely trouble in Paradise? What would we decide if, for example, if some of us were hardworking and others bone idle? Would we all get the same rations? What if a person wished to write poems, paint pictures, create driftwood sculptures or play guitar, did this count as work in the same way as the essential labour we would need to carry out to give ourselves food, shelter warmth and safety?
I learned what freedom politics is from the gospel song O Freedom:
O Freedom, O-oh freedom, O-oh freedom over me
And before I'll be a slave, I'll be buried in my grave and go home to my Lord and be free.
The second verse started Black Liberation, the next Women's Liberation, the next Gay Liberation. Then back to O Freedom to round the song up.
It never entered my head to doubt or disagree with any of this. I still agree with the lot!
The songs, yes it is the songs that stay with me the most. From all corners of the world. From all eras of revolution. In Spanish we sung of the Fifteenth Brigade in the Spanish Civil War (Viva la Quince Brigade). In Italian we learned about the, um Italian revolution. Probably an old one as the lyric after the Red Flag (Bandiera Rosa) had a cannon in.
Avanti popolo, per il canone, revolutione, revolutione
And at the end of both verses; the shout-out chorus.
Viva Marx, viva Lenin, viva Mao Tse Tung!
We did not learn detailed history to go with the songs (I joined at 10 and left at 14 which was a pretty usual path). We did learn about South Africa at first hand from Stephen Kitson. Stephen was my age and was brought up by his North London grandmother. His father, David Kitson was a white South African engineer who was thrown into prison for 20 years for joining in a protest against apartheid. His mother Norma was a journalist who campaigned for the release of David and the rest, including Mandela, and for an end to apartheid.
Stephen's explanation of South Africa in our discussion session was straightforward.
'In England a rich person will say; I've got a big house, a big car and central heating. In South Africa a rich person will say; I've got a big house, a big car and Blacks.' Meaning Black servants.
That simple? Because it is. To me politics is simple, it is about joining a group of people who are trying to make the world a better place and getting on with it. Although it is not a paying game my head holds many good memories of my radical activism. My involvement with the student left at The University of Stirling at the end of the seventies and start of the eighties. The South London Anarchist Centre a couple of years later. Then Faslane Peace Camp,(started at the same time as the Greenham Common Women's peace protest), near the American nuclear submarine base in Scotland.
A few years on, as the single mother of a small girl, the Edinburgh Women's Liberation Newsletter, provided a much needed home for my writing life of poetry, short tales, opinion pieces and book reviews. It gave me identity. As well as being a wee wifie** on the dole I was a published writer. Read by friends and by new people who came up to me at women's gatherings and told me they liked my work.
To me the thing that is complicated is apathy. Why are English people somestimes so quiescent? I can understand it when someone is ill as I have in the past experienced times of debilitating depression. But to be like that all the time? I don't get it.
When I was 14 I quit Habonim for the commercial Babylon of Minys, the synagogue youth group. I put on make-up, took the Tube the other way to Harrow on the Hill and met my friend Reva Gilbert for an evening of discoing in hotpants. Us girls lined up and did the dance moves to Spirit in the Sky. It was better odds here for a spotty four-eyes to 'get off with' and then 'go out with' a boyfriend. I did.
If I had stayed with Habonim till 16 I would have become a youth leader. Too daunting a prospect for me as I was shy. If I had followed my path in Habonim right to the end I would have emigrated to Israel and been placed on a kibbutz. Full circle in a way since my parents, initially from Eastern Europe met and soon after wed on a kibbutz in the Negev desert. But by 1971 the times they were a-changing.
What revolutionary songs do we have in the mainstream today? The best seem to be 'internal' where the songwriter describes their emotions in a way we can all relate to and this often reflects an unease with our circumstances. It all connects. Lou Reed's lyrical and beautifully understated 'Pale Blue Eyes' where he is still bedding his ex although she is married is subversive. I love the way he takes his time and slowly builds the mood. Ian Dury's Spasticus Autisticus was written from the heart. Ian when five contracted Polio, after swimming outdoors and drinking infected water. Four years in children's hospitals followed,. isolated from all he knew, plaster casted from the hips down and strapped up to the painful appliances that doctors then believed would make people with disabilities normal. I like Eminem too, he's a baddie and good!
What music do you like? And, as we say in Devon 'where to?'.
* On the power of song or thereabouts:
Revolutions are the festivals of the oppressed - Lenin
I want a revolution I can dance to - Emma Goldman (anarchist and feminist)
Why should the Devil have all the good tunes - General Booth, Salvationist
** wee wifie. In Scotland not always a married woman, simply means a female older than a wee lassie
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A very interesting piece -
A very interesting piece - thank you for posting it!
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Wonderful experience for you,
Wonderful experience for you, Elsie. Wish I had similar things in my wasted youth. Makes me feel like writing a social song. Think I will.
Rich x
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You touch on information
You touch on information about many different issues here. Songs can be very rousing, eg when soldiers are having to go into physical conflict which may lead to bad injury or death.
I love singing, as you probably realise! And particularly about the cleanness of God's 'good news' which is truly liberating, though indicates all problems will only be wholly sorted in the eternal age to come.
You do show here that you always - and increasingly? - did think about some of the complexities of the issues, and the mixed motives around. How often do the oppressed become oppressors after getting some victories? 'You must believe everything I say.' 'No discussion.'
Rhiannon
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I really enjoyed reading this
I really enjoyed reading this. The only false note I detected was you saying you were 'socially withdrawn' I prefer the more striaghtforward, I was shy. Reminds me a bit of Jackie Kay going to the same kind of meetings, but for socialists, and learning how to kick capitalists. I don't listen to music but I guess it moves the heart. 'You canst not stir a flower/ without the troubling of a star'. Everything is connected and the world really is going to shit.
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yeh, red dust road was great,
yeh, red dust road was great, but her 'real' father was a real creep.
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Last night I was watching an
Last night I was watching an interview with the singer song writer Buffy St Marie, I think that's how you spell her name. Anyway she's from American Indian heritage and what she had to say was similar to your words of a better world and how the Indian nation fought for their rights. I admire anyone that has the courage and conviction to put their feelings into action and words. This is a fine piece of writing written in such a way that's so inspiring. Very much enjoyed reading Elsie.
Jenny.
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This is our Facebook and
This is our Facebook and Twitter Pick of the Day!
Pease share/retweet if you like it
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Great stuff, Elsie. Love all
Great stuff, Elsie. Love all the musical refs.
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