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GREAT MEETINGS - GEORGE GALLOWAY IN MANCHESTER |
22/02/2008
Clive Searle from Manchester Respect Renewal reports on a great
few days, with meetings and walkabouts with candidates and Respect
MP George Galloway
If nothing else we worked him hard. George Galloway’s
thirty six hours in Greater Manchester were a whirlwind of meetings
(three), TV and radio interviews (five) and walkabouts (two).
After
a tremendous start in Atherton, Lancashire
on Tuesday night the focus for George’s whistle-stop visit
turned to Manchester. George, along with prospective Respect candidate
Kay Phillips, took to the streets
of Cheetham Hill to meet and talk to the voters we hope will be
campaigning for Kay in April.
George
and Kay both received a fantastic response which will be built on
in the coming weeks as our campaign gets fully under way.
Next it was down to south Manchester and Rusholme’s
famous curry mile where lunch has taken in the wonderful Falafel
Palestinian cafe. With the Respect banner stretched outside many
popped in the meet George and Ali Shelmani, our prospective candidate
in neighbouring Moss Side ward.
Walking the 800m to our next meeting venue took
well over an hour as George stopped for photographs, popped into
shops or chatted with passers-by – in one case an Iraqi exile
now working in the car wash along the main road.
We
had planned a five o’clock meting as a low key affair –
a question and answer session with new Respect supporters. In the
event 69 people – some met on the way to the venue - arrived
at the beautiful Luther King house chapel in Rusholme.
Here George and Ali spoke of the connections between
poverty and urban decline in Manchester and the wars and occupations
of the Middle East. With questions ranging from Libya to the odious
John Gaunt of Talksport, George set out the case for Respect and
a new left alternative.
But
the best was truly kept for last - at the Saffron restaurant in
Cheetham Hill that evening. Over 150 gathered in the banqueting
hall to discuss ‘5 years of destruction in Iraq – 60
years of oppression in Palestine.’
Organised
by North Manchester against
Wars the meeting was an inspiring example of the Stop the War
Coalition at its best. Chaired by Kay Phillips the audience listened
too Andy Burgin from Stop the War outline the successes of our movement
7 years on from its formation.
The
irrepressible Rae Street from CND
spoke of the challenge of nuclear disarmament 50 years after the
fist Aldermaston Marches. Then Jackie [my apologies for not writing
down her second name] a comrade from United
for Peace and Justice in the States, took us through the developments
in the ‘heart of the beast’.
But
the most powerful contribution of the evening came from Anas Al-tikriti
of the British Muslim Initiative.
Anas gave us the most devastating critique of the sudden step-change
in Islamophobia, which we have witnessed in recent weeks.
If
the Archbishop of Canterbury is to face such hostility and gutter
insult when he muses about Islamic law, how likely was it for young
Muslims to feel a full part of ‘British society’? The
message that young Muslims would take from the press and the politicians
was that ‘they would never be full citizens, never fully trusted’.
Islamophobia alongside war, he argued, was the recruiting
sergeant for alienation and terrorism – at home and abroad.
Finally,
George Galloway delivered a powerful and moving speech attacking
the devastating legacy of the Iraq disaster. A county where agriculture,
writing and the alphabet, libraries, and a system of law were first
invented had been destroyed, cut to shreds, on a pack of lies.
He
spoke of the million Iraqi dead – raising an image of an Old
Trafford where the bodies were piled high and then higher still
until the top could not be seen – of the two million refugees
outside of Iraq and the two million displaced inside.
That figure, in Britain, would equate to 13 million
dead or driven from their homes. Yet when you add to that bald number
to the mothers, fathers, brothers and sisters maimed and injured
or mourning for their lost relations, then you see a see the reality
of a country destroyed by greed and hubris. Damaged almost without
hope of repair by imbeciles who claim it is not their fault that
God put America’s oil under somebody else’s country!
Not surprisingly, by the time George finished many
were in tears.
The
contributions from the floor were of equally high quality. Everyone
who wished to had theirsay. A young woman pleaded that we reassess
the concept of ‘security’ – to look at it not
through the eyes of the military but as a way of meeting human need
– the human security of homes, clean water, a healthy life.
Another spoke of how in the Cheetham of the 1930s
it was the Jews in who suffered racism, then it became the Irish
and now the Muslims. “Who’s next?” he asked, “unless
we stick together.”
A short report like this cannot do the many contributions
from the floor the justice they deserve. But they were powerful
contributions no less important than those from the top table.
Our
comrade from America suggested that it was unlike any meeting she
had attended before - and she may well have been right. I think
many people in the room will remember that night for years to come.
It certainly gave a renewed hope as well as impetus
for those of us who believe that if they want war without end’
then we will need to be a peace movement without end – until
we defeat the warmongers once and for all.
So
a big thanks to all the speakers and to CND who helped build the
meeting alongside North Manchester against Wars. Thanks again for
Saffron for the use of their banqueting hall. And thanks to everyone
who came and a reminder that you can book coach seats at www.mancsagainsttanks.org
.
Hopefully
meetings like this across the country will help build the March
15 World Against War demo in London. We’ll see you in London.
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