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The poems |
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| Tom
Leonard |
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Being a Human Beingfor Mordechai Vanunu not to be complicit not to keep one's mouth shut to hold onto one's job not to put friends and family before the rest of the world not to be just a bought behaviour pattern I am a human being a human being responsible to that world From Being A Human Being (Object Permanence, 2006). Reprinted with permission of the author. The poem was written to be read at a specific occasion—the installation in April 2005 of Mordechai Vanunu as rector of the University of Glasgow. The rector is a person elected as representative of the students on the university senate and is elected by the students to serve for two years. Vanunu, though nominated and elected by the students of Glasgow University, was unable to attend his own installation, and the ceremony was held symbolically in his absence at an event in Bute Hall, Glasgow University, attended by the principal of the university Sir Muir Russell, with professors, lecturers and students. Vanunu was unable to attend because he was detained by the Israeli authorities in Jerusalem and refused permission to leave the country. He had in fact recently spent 18 years in jail, much of it in solitary confinement, for the crime of letting it be known to the world at large that the nuclear installation he was employed in in Israel was secretly making nuclear weapons. At the time of my writing this note to the poem, October 2007, Mordechai Vanunu is back in jail in Israel for the crime of speaking with foreign journalists and visiting what he himself referred to as 'the Palestinian ghettos'. As a professor at Glasgow University, being one of three writers appointed to the Chair of Creative Writing at Glasgow University in 2001, I was able to read my new poem from the platform standing beside the Principal, and to congratulate the students on their political maturity and evident sense of social responsibility in voting for this courageous man. It was sad to see the robe that should have been on Vanunu's shoulders draped across the empty chair on which he should have been sitting during the installation ceremony. But the desire for liberty and freedom from mutual destruction that Vanunu stood for, and stands for, cannot be suppressed: that is a truth that many young people, students or otherwise, have repeatedly throughout history maintained in despite of those sundry forces for destruction and the suppression of liberty too often backed by too many of their elders. The students of Glasgow University were saying by their official endorsement of Vanunu: 'This is how you—and all of us—should behave.' My poem was written at the end of a run of poems I had written over about nine months, having had a burst of writing following heart disease resulting in stents being put in several of my arteries. The procedure was a complete success, but I felt a sense of necessity for certain forms of saying to be expressed, and the urgency seemed to be part of the forms of concision that were given me. I've said it before: Tom Leonard should be designated a National Treasure. His influence on contemporary Scottish writing, in terms of what we write about and how, is immeasurable - he opened up doors for the rest of us to walk through. This poem, dedicated to Mordechai Vanunu who spent the best part of twenty years in prison for telling what he knew about Israel's nuclear programme, could be Tom's own credo. It's the very opposite of rhetoric; it's a simple, profound, direct, challenging statement of how we should be - existentially and politically - in the world: to accept the moment and fact of choice. Tom Leonard was born in Glasgow in 1944. His two main collections of poetry Intimate Voices and access to the silence constitute his Collected Poems 1965-2004, and are both published by Etruscan Books, Devon. He is also the author of a biography of James Thomson of Port Glasgow, Places of the Mind: The Life and Work of James Thomson (B.V.) and compiled the anthology Radical Renfrew: Poetry from the French Revolution to the First World War. In 2001 he was appointed to the Chair of Creative Writing at Glasgow University along with Alasdair Gray and James Kelman. |
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