Our Lay Reader Lillian has been co-ordinating a small group
reorganising the entrance area to the church, where we display a variety of
notices, on a more rational basis. We were clearing up some of the notices and
discarded bits and pieces this week when we discovered a small magazine. Making It Real Part 6, it’s called, and
consisted mainly of a cartoon version of part of the Gospel of St Luke and an
article by Ben Griffin, a former SAS soldier who started the UK version of
Veterans For Peace as a result of his experiences in the Afghanistan War. On
investigation this publication turns out to have been produced by a very small collective of Christian anarchists based not at all far away in Guildford: thus
Surrey continues its strange tradition of harbouring this way-out form of
radicalism (shades of the Diggers at Weybridge nearly 400 years ago).
This group, it turns out, are freegans, guerrilla gardeners,
supporters of whistleblowers and pacifist veterans, and altruistic organ
donors, among other things. I don’t agree with a lot of their analysis. ‘We see
the richest and most powerful people in the world killing for, consuming and
then wasting most of the world’s resources, and destroying the planet in the
process, why do we work for them in the vain hope to be more like them?’ Making It Real asks. I don’t see many
people I know who are motivated in that way. They don’t want to be like the
super-rich, they just want security and peace, more even for their children
than for themselves. There is certainly a ratchet effect that escalates our
expectations of what a good standard of living means; but basically most people
are content with modest quantities of basic things – food, clothing, shelter,
recreation, and self-realisation. But complaining about this group getting that
wrong is a bit picky. Frankly they’ve got a lot of the big picture right.
Most of us are moderates, cavillers and compromisers; and
without the occasional extremist I suspect nothing much would ever move
forward. I’m not going to start foraging for food out of Swanvale Halt’s bins,
but I’m not going to have a go at them for trying to live like that. I will
even remember them in my prayers because that kind of extremism is what the
world needs.
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