Category Archives: Misc

The centre cannot hold

REVIEW IN THIS WEEK’S THE TABLET BOOKS Books > The centre cannot hold THE CENTRE CANNOT HOLD 05 October 2017 | by Jimmy Burns The centre cannot hold The Struggle for Catalonia: Rebel Politics in Spain Raphael Minder (Hurst, 344 PP, £15.99) Tablet Bookshop price £14.40 • Tel 01420 592974 Few local festival rituals in Catalonia are as popular as the castell, the human tower. A large group of male and female volunteers – from a minimum of 60 to maximum of 600 – link arms to create the pinya …

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Puede Catalunya aprender algo de Escocia?

  Vengo de visitar  la capital escocesa de Edimburgo, una ciudad elegante, relajada y acogedora del patrimonio mundial, que me ha dejado impresionado  por la tranquilidad y el civismo del proceso politico  de Escocia en comparación con el desastre que ha llegado a caracterizar la cuestión catalana en España. En el impresionante e histórico castillo de Edimburgo, una de las atracciones turísticas más populares de Escocia, perdura una sensación de identidad cultural que es británica y escocesa. Visitándolo recordé el lema “Mejor juntos”, que los unionistas usaron con éxito para …

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Can Catalonia learn something from Scotland?

I was in the Scottish capital Edinburgh, an elegant, relaxed ,  welcoming world heritage city, earlier this  week  and was struck by the peacefulness and civility of Scotland’s devolutionary process compared to the shambles that has come to characterize the Catalan  issue  in Spain. In the impressively  located and historic Edinburgh Castle, one of Scotland’s most popular tourist attractions,  there endures a sense of cultural identity that is both British and Scot. Visiting it I was reminded of the  “Better together”, slogan which unionists  used successfully to win the ‘no’ …

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The Spanish Government’s Own Goal

Few images circulating globally from earlier yesterday (October 1)  seemed to risk being  more damaging to the Spanish government’s attempts to woo over a majority  of Catalans to its concept of a lawful constitutional democracy than that  of helmeted Civil Guard officers using a hammer to break a window and a lock cutter to break open a door at  a sports centre near Gerona. Tougher tactics  have been used before by British and other European  police including Catalonia’s own force the  Mossos D’Escuadra to deal with violent protestors, criminals, and …

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Catalan History & Choreography

  Few sights in Catalonia claim to be as emblemic as La Seu Vella on a hill above the city of Lleida,the region’s second largest city . The group of semi-ruined and restored buildings include the sight of a former conquered Moorish castle, a Cathedral and a military barracks whose last extended use as such was during the early years of the dictatorship of General Franco during the 1940’s. In this “place of suffering” as some locals call it , there are remnants of plunders as a result of religious …

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Brexit-the Banquet’s Uninvited guest

In an evening marked by customary tradition, hospitality, and good cheer, the comment by the London’s Lord Mayor Andrew Parmley that ” Britain, Spain,  Europe are the essence of what we are” resonated across the banquet room of the Guildhall last night It drew spontaneous applause from the more than  700 guests- City of London councillors and officials, businessmen ,  ambassadors , and a representative sample of the Spanish diaspora from journalists, actors and academics, to scientists, retailers,  and bankers. Noting that the magnificent  hall where the guests were gathered …

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Diary of a Royal Love In-Day One

  It’s coming up to midday and a stationary Guards band along the Mall is playing the James Bond  007 tune, presumably to remind the world that however diminished the UK may seem, no one does it better than the MI6 legend, the world’s most popular spy. The film music is  a  sufficiently familiar theme  for nearby  tourists to break into applause. Such recognition does not  initially appear to extend to the State visit to the UK of the King  Felipe and Queen Letizia  Spain. The most public part of …

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A Vital European Bridge

  A true story I owe to my late Spanish mother, a post-war immigrant to the UK , involves  a state visit of the the Emperor of Ethiopia, Haile Selassie, to the UK in October 1954. I was a young child then and with one my first life-time  passions that of watching the Changing of the Guard at Buckingham Palace. The precision of the proud British soldiers in red coats  and the uplifting music of their band stirred my imagination, making me feel one of them, as if I’ve stepped into …

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Anglo-Spanish Royals

The Spanish Royal visit to the UK An Enduring  Relationship Revived   Ask your average English schoolboy what he knows about the relations  between the Spanish and British Royal families, and the likelihood is that he will mention Spain’s Philip 11nd, and the heroic defeat  of his Armada by Queen Elizabeth Ist. A less selective and superficial history will show that relations between British and Spanish royals  have been mutually respectful, if not immune to occasional crisis, for over five  centuries. As the recent biography of Spain’s great Queen Isabella …

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Time for Uk to win back hearts and minds

The United  Kingdom has hardly found the world at its feet this last year. The Brexit vote last summer, which was supported by over half of the population, but not by me and the rest of the population,  left not only the UK’s  European partners, but most of its democratic and accountable allies wondering just what kind of madness had gripped the English  and Welsh (for the Scots voted against) who by a slim majority had voted to leave the European Union without really thinking how this could be done …

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