Stories to make you think
October 31st, 2018 by Roger Darlington
There are about 200 sections to my website, but one of the most popular is one which I call “Stories to make you think”.
Here you will find no less than 79 thoughtful stories, motivational tales, and pieces of wisdom from around the world.
I’ve justed added a new story to the collection and you can view them all here.
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Why Peterloo was so important and why you’re going to hear so much more about it
October 29th, 2018 by Roger Darlington
On 16 August 1819 in St Peter’s Field in central Manchester, around 60,000 pro-democracy reformers gathered in a peaceful protest that turned savage when it was attacked by armed cavalry, resulting in 18 deaths and over 600 injured. Until recently, the only public commemoration of this historic event was a plaque on the wall of what used to be the Free Trade Hall and is now the city’s Radisson Hotel.
Most people have never heard of this event which was quickly called Peterloo. However, I have always been aware of it because I grew up in Manchester until I was 23; I spoke as School Captain at my school’s Speech Day in the Free Trade Hall; and I studied in the Central Library in what is now St Peter’s Square.
This week, a new film, called simply “Peterloo” and directed by Mike Leigh, will be released which – together with bicentenary events next summer – will highlight this neglected piece of working class history.
In the “Guardian” newspaper today, John Harris has an interesting piece on Peterloo, the event and the film, and comments:
“The kind of history that now seems to dominate our culture is too often centred on kings, queens and powerful men, something lately seen in the revival of the cult of Winston Churchill.
Peterloo and everything that followed it were the products of things that were much more profound: disjunctions between systems of power and the new industrial economy, and the fact that among the first people to live out those contradictions and demand their resolution were the thousands who gathered in St Peter’s Field.
Put another way, this country’s journey into democracy was a product of the wisdom of crowds. There, not in ministries and mansions, is where social progress always originates, and in times as uncertain as ours, we would do well to remember it.”
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Remembering the creation of Czechoslovakia 100 years ago
October 28th, 2018 by Roger Darlington
Exactly 100 years ago today, the new state of Czechoslovakia was created. This new country had a chequered history.
It was dismembered by the infamous Munich Agreement of 1938, it was occupied by Nazi Germany from 1939-1945, it was controlled by the communists from 1948-1989, and it was deviderd into the Czech and Slovak Republics in 1993.
You can read my review of a history of the Czech lands here.
British readers especially should be reminded that Czechoslovak pilots flew with distinction in the Royal Air Force during the Second World War. Indeed the top-scoring RAF pilot in the Battle of Britain and the top-scoring RAF night intruder pilot in the war were both Czech. You can read my essay on this Czechoslovak contribution here.
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The vital role of UK Biobank
October 27th, 2018 by Roger Darlington
UK Biobank is a major national and international health resource, and a registered charity in its own right, with the aim of improving the prevention, diagnosis and treatment of a wide range of serious and life-threatening illnesses – including cancer, heart diseases, stroke, diabetes, arthritis, osteoporosis, eye disorders, depression and forms of dementia.
UK Biobank recruited 500,000 people aged between 40-69 years in 2006-2010 from across the country to take part in this project. I was one of them and I am pleased to be contributing to this vital project.
Participants have undergone measures, provided blood, urine and saliva samples for future analysis, detailed information about themselves and agreed to have their health followed. Over many years, this will build into a powerful resource to help scientists discover why some people develop particular diseases and others do not.
One of the world’s leading health research geneticists took time out of his schedule to address this year’s UK Biobank Scientific Conference. He reminded attendees how, with the help of half a million participants and support from funders like the MRC and Wellcome, UK Biobank is transforming health research in the UK and overseas.
The provision of information about illness, lifestyle, diet, activity and genetics and much more “shared freely with other approved researchers, is world changing,” Dr Eric Lander, from Harvard, USA told delegates. “It’s what we always dreamed of.”
You can learn more about UK Biobank here.
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A review of the novel “Prague Fatale” by Philip Kerr
October 26th, 2018 by Roger Darlington
Kerr – who died in March 2018 – was a writer of both adult fiction and non-fiction who is known for the Bernie Gunther series of historical thrillers set in Germany and elsewhere during the 1930s, the Second World War and the Cold War. “Prague Fatale” is the eighth novel in the Gunther series and the 14th will be published posthumously next year (2019).
I don’t normally read thrillers but someone bought me this one as a birthday present, presumably because of my interest in all things Czech for family reasons. The action takes place in the Autumn of 1941 and is located, partly in Berlin and mainly in Prague. The narrator is Bernhard Gunther, a 43 year old widower who is an officer in the SD, the intelligence wing of the SS, in Nazi Germany. In classic Agatha Christie style, he is summoned to a stately home on the outskirts of the Czech capital to investigate a strange murder for which there are many plausible suspects.
What makes this very readable, dialogue-heavy, carefully-plotted story so compelling is that so many of the characters were actually historical figures and there are allusions to many historical events. The leading real-life character is Reinhard Heydrich who, some months later, was assassinated by Czech and Slovak parachutists. At times, I felt that Gunther’s conversations with men like Heydrich almost humanised them but, if one can overlook this conceit, this is a splendid read.
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A review of the new space movie “First Man”
October 25th, 2018 by Roger Darlington
The ‘Space Race’ between the USA and the USSR took place in the 1960s when I was an impressionable teenager and I followed avidly every exciting development.
NASA’s Apollo 11 mission – the concluding segment of this movie – was in July 1969. At the time, I was president of my students’ union at university and I kept the union building open all night so that we could watch live Neil Armstrong’s “one small step for man, one giant leap for mankind”. Chronologically “First Man” comes between “The Right Stuff” and “Apollo 13” and it is a superb addition to the space canon of the cinema.
Director Damien Lazelle (“Whiplash”) and writer Josh Singer (“Spotlight”) have chosen to tell Armstong’s story from 1961-1969 so the movie opens with a breathtaking flight in a North American X-15 experimental aircraft and concludes with his safe return from the moon.
The account is not a triumphalist one, but a human one, showing the danger and the death involved in the Apollo programme and the struggle by Armstrong – a man of restained emotions and few words – to cope with the loss of a daughter and the worry of his wife and sons.
Interestingly this American couple is portrayed by the Canadian Ryan Gosling as the laconic Neil and the British Claire Foy as his more expressive wife Janet. Of course, Lazelle and Gosling worked together on the delightful “La La Land” and, while the topic is utterly different, the chemistry is just as sparkling and the representation of obsession just as compelling.
We really see and indeed feel how tiny and fragile the space capsule was and how powerful and explosive the rockets were. The attention to period detail is impressive, even down to one of the Armstrong sons wearing a Davy Crockett coonskin cap (we all had those), while the sound (Phil Barrie) and cinematography (Linus Sandgren) are simply stunning.
See “First Man” on a big screen and you’ll leave the cinema feeling that you’ve made a lunar flight but glad that it wasn’t your life on the line. The last time that a man was on the moon was in December 1972 and one wonders whether and, if so, when and why it will happen again …
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Word of the day: the fear of long words
October 24th, 2018 by Roger Darlington
Hippopotomonstrosesquippedaliophobia is one of the longest words in the dictionary — and, in an ironic twist, is the name for a fear of long words. Sesquipedalophobia is another term for the phobia.
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Word of the day: the longest in the English language
October 24th, 2018 by Roger Darlington
The longest word in any of the major English language dictionaries is pneumonoultramicroscopicsilicovolcanoconiosis, a word that refers to a lung disease contracted from the inhalation of very fine silica particles, specifically from a volcano; medically, it is the same as silicosis.
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Visit to Rome (4)
October 22nd, 2018 by Roger Darlington
On our third and last full day in Rome, again we had a theme: this time, the papacy. Again we were out all day but this time the weather was cooler and generally overcast.
We decided not to visit the Vatican Museum and Sistine Chapel (I’ve been three times before) since 11 year old Joshua was not that interested, but we did want to see St Peter’s Basilica which is of course part of Vatican City and the home of the pope. We managed to get there by the metro, only to find a morning queue that was said to be taking two hours.
So, we postponed St Peter’s and walked down to Castel Sant’Angelo. This structure by the side of the River Tiber was originally built in 123-139 AD as a massive circular tomb for the Emperor Hadrian, but it was a papal castle for 1,000 years and it is now a museum. There are some fascinating artefacts and glorious vistas with plenty of photo opportunities.
Afterwards it was time for lunch, but the area around the Vatican is a tourist trap and prices – always steep in Rome – were astronomical in the restaurant between the castle and the basilica. As an illustration, Joshua’s burger and chips was 33 Euros (£29) and the whole of the bill was subject to an automatic service charge of 17%.
At least, when we returned to St Peter’s Basilica, we found that the queue was down to half an hour. Constructed between 1506-1626, the church is simply enormous and centred on the huge altar canopy created by Bernini. Other works of art include the famous Pieta marble statue crafted by Michelangelo. The basilica has a somewhat gloomy interior but the Swiss Guards outside add some colour.
Home tomorrow after a most enjoyable but expensive long weekend in the Italian capital
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Visit to Rome (3)
October 21st, 2018 by Roger Darlington
On our second day in Rome, we had a clear theme: the Roman era. Again we were out for a full eight hours.
We started by spending the morning at the Colosseum where we had a male guide who told us horrific stories of the slaughter of Christians, prisoners and gladiators for the pleasure of the masses in the earliest case of dictators dispensing ‘bread and circuses’. It was all started by the Emperor Nero in 80 AD and the blood continued to flow for more than 300 years. It was impossible to visit this place and hear these stories and not think of the wonderful film “Gladiator”.
We had lunch at a restaurant opposite the Colosseum called “La Biga”. This name does not mean what you might think; it is the Italian word for the type of one-person chariot used in the race sequence in the film “Ben Hur”.
We then started the afternoon with a guided tour of the Forum. Our female guide told us the mythical story of the foundation of Rome when Rhea Silvia was raped by a god and gave birth to the twins Romulus and Remus. Clearly the need for the #MeToo movement goes back a long way. The Forum ruins include many temples and three triumphal arches.
After our time at the Forum, we walked round to Piazza Venetia, the location of the Victor Emmanuel II monument which is so huge and multi-layered that it is popularly known as ‘the wedding cake’. In the square, we found a gelataria where we had enormously expensive but hugely delicious ice cream dishes.
Finally we wandered over to the Capitoline Hill. This lovely quiet square was designed by Michelangelo and features an equestrian statue of the emperor/philosopher Marcus Aurelius.
Throughout the afternoon, the weather became cooler and overcast. Then, just as we went out for our evening meal, there was a ferocious thunderstorm with heavy hail [see here], but fortunately we managed to find a restaurant very close by.
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