Coming back to the song, and giving it a bit more time to
settle in the ear, I hear something completely different. It isn’t a masterwork
by any means, yet, nevertheless, its insistent, repetitive rhythms fit the
purpose rather well. But what raises it to the level of something remarkable is
the phrase, occurring several times and emphasised by periods in the music,
‘Shaker Aamer – your friend’. This is a very strange, and bold, description to
slip into a protest song. It attempts to generate not a sense of outrage, or
pity, but actually to claim a personal relationship between the wretchedly
incarcerated man and the listener. He is our friend. He isn’t a threat (as the
US government claimed), a fundamentalist, a terrorist: he is a friend, someone
who means us no harm. Nobody else, surely, would dare to be so humanistic, so
personal.
But my thoughts went further. This line – ‘your friend,
Shaker Aamer’ – is what you would put at the end of a letter. This song is
intended as a letter written on behalf of someone who can’t write one. It’s not
only that, of course, because if it was, the sign-off line would be precisely
that, rather than appearing three times through the lyric; but it makes it
clear that the song’s function is not just to comment on the prisoner but to
give him a voice.
But we aren’t finished yet: there is another, final layer.
As a result of re-listening to ‘Shaker Aamer’, I looked up the details of his
case (as far as Dr Wikipedia reports them), and noticed that his lawyer, during
the time of his incarceration, was one Clive Stafford-Smith of campaign group Reprieve. I know that name,
I thought. And Mr Stafford-Smith was the man who, the year before Shaker Aamer
was eventually released, Ms Harvey got to do a report on Dorchester County
Hospital as part of her act of assault and battery on the Today Programme in
early 2014. So, therefore, she had an ongoing relationship with one of the few
people in a position to know what Shaker Aamer himself thought of his own situation.
Knowing that, it becomes impossible to see anything other than the detainee’s
own words in what Ms Harvey sings. This isn’t only her imagination at work:
it’s someone else’s actual speech, presaging what she’d do on Hope Six. If
Shaker Aamer is our friend, it’s because he wants to be, because he’s used
those words.
How wrong I’d been. This isn’t just a socially-conscious
musician sitting in her studio taking it upon herself to call our attention to
a dreadful injustice and commenting on it from a position of safety. This isn’t
even a socially-conscious musician sitting in her studio and imagining what it
might be like to be the victim of that injustice. It’s a musician giving that
victim a voice in the most direct way imaginable. And then not even telling
anyone that that’s what she’s done.
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