HISTORY OF THE TROUBLES |
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THE MYTH OF THE FESTIVAL |
In May 2002 there was an attempt on the stonehengepeace@yahoogroups group to
discuss aspects of the former Stonehenge People's Free Festival.
If there were any conclusions that might be drawn I suggest they are:
1. EVIDENCE IS DIFFICULT TO OBTAIN & TO VERIFY This reluctance to examine the facts is not confined to those who attended the Festival. For years I've had no success getting the National Trust to examine their claims and their records, most surprisingly for a well resourced organisation they claim they have no evidential records. It appears their vision of the Festival is also mythological. I have no doubt that this would be found to be the case if we were able to communicate with other participants including The Bishop of Salisbury, former Chief Constables and the residents of Wiltshire. I expect their "memories" of the Festival also to have become internalised and mythologised.
2. THE CURRENT SITUATION
The position of those opposed to the Festival, who remain numerous and
entrenched in positions of power, is that at all costs public policy and
public bodies must prevent the establishment of anything that might
resemble or conceivably turn into, a "Free Festival". Any park up, camp
site or even local musical bands playing in the open air, arouse extreme
suspicion.
3. THE STONEHENGE PEACE PROCESS
The challenge for the Peace Process is to project a new image of a
communal gathering which is as different as possible from the Festival
so that it can be licensed or permitted by the authorities, and yet
fulfill the requirements for outdoor celebration that the community are
constantly expressing.
We supported an attempt for a Managed Open Access to farmland in 2001, which
was to have been just a Park Up not an event at all, but hopefully a step
towards establishing credibility of a voluntary management group, and as a
seed towards a legal and permitted future gathering. Unfortunately this was
opposed by the police, leaving a sense of bitterness and betrayal in the
community that still has not gone away.
In 2002 we tried to facilitate a group to meet and organise a properly legal
event at some neutral venue, but perhaps partly because of the suspicions
mentioned above, the group never incorporated or carried through the plan
to reality. Resistance to change is very deep.
This is the crucial moment at which the mythologies of all are being
tested and perhaps revisioned. The I Ching speaks of a revolution, a
great transformation, that is believed in only after it has happened. It
is this, revolution of the mind, that we are seeking. So people look
towards the future, and stop staring at the past.
--
"Though the road may be long
.
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