Friday, 13 June 2014

DIG FOR VICTORY: What to do about at-risk people seeking peace and safety


[From 2011 - I will update with suggestions to set up well-resourced processing centres at strategic places in Asia]
 
Subject: A message from the PM to Refugee Advocacy groups

A ‘satirical’ message from Julia Gillard to all refugee advocacy groups
Today I am announcing a draft policy on asylum seekers and refugees that represents a new, more humane and enlightened paradigm in my government’s approach to this issue that will see the rapid phasing out of off-shore processing and long-term detention, and I am calling for all asylum seeker/refugee advocacy groups to respond with their suggestions, advice and constructive criticisms.
In the future, any man, woman or child arriving on our shores by boat or by airplane, seeking safety from a serious threat, whether that be from state oppression, war or climate catastrophe, will be expediently processed in vastly upgraded onshore facilities.
All those found to meet the very strict requirements for refugee status, who are genuinely escaping identified serious threats of harm, will be integrated into society through a range of re-settlement options. Where there is family support, people can move directly into a community.  Where there is no such social support already in place, people will be offered a choice of a suburban, regional or rural CERES-based permaculture village farms situated near a volunteer town who agrees to host the new settlement that will eventually integrate into and enhance their local community.
Refugees who accept this option will be expected to sign a 5-year contract with the government, committing to an 8-hour day, 5-day week of work and study. (Correspondence courses can be tailored to individual needs). Penalties for breaking the contract will apply.
All those found not to meet refugee status, and who wish to appeal the decision, will be held for a short duration in an on-shore facility while their appeal is being expedited – if it fails, they will be returned to their country of origin.
My government also acknowledges and regrets the damage our Detention Centre on Christmas Island has caused to the unique and sometimes critically endangered wildlife (in particular the giant crab) and for the sewage pollution of pristine coastline. The centre will be closed down for long-term detention and will be used simply as a transfer station.
Maureen Brannan 905 Wilsons Road CLOYNA Q 4605  ph: 0427710523 blog: worldatpolarity@blogspot.com

15th September, 2011 
Excerpt from:  http://worldatpolarity.blogspot.com  - SUBMISSION to HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES INQUIRY INTO BIODIVERSITY ...

….SUPPORT PERMACULTURE -  The self-supporting P/C Villages that I have long been promoting with a blueprint to establish, in particular to give unemployed people and refugees an option for their future, dovetails nicely into biodiversity restoration, as do all permaculture endeavours. These settlements can be set up in degraded ex-farm land that no-one wants to take responsibility for to rehabilitate back to biodiverse edible landscapes. (Includes earth building, free-range livestock, tri-generation power, aquaponics and hydroponic components to provide on-site fresh daily harvesting of supplements). After just a few years of learning (and teaching us…) and establishing self-sufficiency, people will be in a position to incorporate a nursery and revegetation program for endangered plant species for their district – there will be multiple benefits; obviously for refugees who might otherwise be held in detention, socially to invigorate the local communities, to given the unemployed honest, rewarding work, to help increase populations of endangered plants and animals and as ‘bush tucker’ supplements to everyone’s diet – obviously the Aboriginal Land Custodians of that country will be intimately involved in on-going advice and management.  If their traditional land management regimes were re-established, biodiversity would stabilise and flourish, as it had been for millennia before colonisation.
-------------------------------------------------------------
Open Letter to Julia Gillard re the current refugee crisis 

There's a lot of degraded ex-farmland in Australia, thousands of kilometres of country that no-one wants to take responsibility for to rehabilitate back to productive use, either for growing food or for wildlife habitat in areas where ecosystems are endangered.
One of the many options your government has in dealing with unauthorised arrivals, either by air or by sea, is to process them as quickly as possible on the mainland, and settle genuine refugees in permaculture villages of around 1000, perhaps fenced and gated communities on a few hundred acres of unused land relatively close to towns.
Many refugees, especially from Asia, already have skills in food growing, and any permaculturalist worth their salt (Josh Byrnes of Gardening Australia being just one leading expert in the field) could draw you up a plan whereby the newest Australians can build their own earth-insulated homes (I myself have had plans drawn up to ABA standards for a 5 bedroom coursed adobe dwelling that can be owner-built and furnished for under $100,000) and become mostly self-sufficient in their own food requirements, within five years, at which time they will be integrating well and contributing to the local community.
P/c models adapted to local conditions could be rolled out across rural, regional and remote communities all over Australia, especially Aboriginal ones in dire need of basic shelter and food, so that they can become self-reliant to a large degree;  endangered plants and wildlife will also benefit  as p/c integrates with bush tucker and the restoration of habitat.
Permaculture settlement models have been tried and tested for decades, evolving with the latest technologies and enhanced with Indigenous wisdom, and have been proven to work exceptionally well; this is evidenced by the expanding number of successful ones in Australia and around the world. It would cost FAR less than off-shore detention and sending desperate souls to a living hell in a remote Malaysian prison for the rest of their lives.
If the government continues with its current asylum-seeker regime, when alternatives such as this are eminently viable, the UN criminal courts will have no option but to prosecute you for your cruelty and inhumanity towards some of the most traumatised and disadvantaged people on Earth. I personally believe it exposes a depraved mind that would choose such cruel fates for people seeking asylum, and those who continue with it should be treated by psychologists. .

Maureen Brannan 905 Wilsons Road CLOYNA Q 4605  ph: 0427710523 blog: worldatpolarity@blogspot.com
August, 2011
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
*CERES - Centre for Education and Research in Environmental Strategies, is an award winning, not-for-profit, environment and education centre and urban farm located by the Merri Creek in East Brunswick, Melbourne.

Built on a decommissioned municipal tip that was once a landfill and wasteland, today CERES is a thriving, vibrant community. Over 300,000 people visit CERES each year. Many more connect with us through our innovative program taking sustainable education directly to schools across the State.

CERES is recognised as an international leader in community and environmental practice. CERES Organic Farm, Market, Shop, Co-ops and Café and Permaculture and Bushfood Nursery are unique social enterprises that offer new solutions and ways to combat climate change.

Community groups such as the Bike Shed, Community Gardens and Chook Group that call CERES home are also vital to CERES culture.

All waste and water on the site is recycled and much of the site is powered by renewable energy such as wind and solar.

CERES is now working towards making the site completely carbon neutral by 2012.

CERES is a model for a possible future where innovation, sustainability, equity and connectedness are valued. Both as a place and a community, CERES is striving to create a new way of being.

------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
In Havana, the whole city grows vegetables, fruits & herbs in every conceivable space, raised-gardens spring up wherever and whenever  an opportunity arises – nature abhors a vacuum – everyone benefits.   We need similar social-sharing structures and mindsets.  And we need to go on a ‘war’ footing, as below, to prepare ourselves for extreme weather events and the vicissitudes of a speedily changing climate.

Dig for Victory  - THE GARDEN PLOT THAT BEAT HITLER

Thursday August 11, 2011

By Jane Warren

IN 1939, Britain’s back gardens became the front line. With ­German U-Boats posing an increasing threat to food imports, the Ministry of ­Agriculture launched a bold campaign with an inspired slogan: Dig for Victory.

All able citizens were encouraged to take up their gardening tools and turn every square foot of fertile soil into a food-growing factory. Demand led to grass verges, railway embankments and even public parks becoming vegetable plots.

At the peak of the campaign, a million tons of home-grown produce were harvested, and the modern allotment movement was born.

Today the slogan “dig for victory” is inextricably associated with such similar wartime rallying cries as our “finest hour”, that echo from the days when Britain stood alone against Hitler. Yet, surprisingly, the credit for coining this enduring saying of self-sufficiency belongs to an unlikely source: the then young left-wing firebrand Michael Foot.

It was he who, in the days after war was declared, made a horticultural call to arms with a 1939 newspaper article that insisted: “Britain must learn to dig… not only must we dig in the cities, every spare half acre from the Shetlands to the Scillies must feel the shear of the spade…Turn up each square foot of turf. Root out bulbs and plant potatoes. Spend your Sunday afternoon with a hoe instead of in the hammock…”

Six days later he wrote: “The order… must be rammed home: Dig for Victory”.

Foot’s words, like the striking posters that were soon produced to motivate the masses, proved galvanising. The classic image remains the black and white photo of a boot on a shovel as it slices into the ground. It could hardly be accused of subtlety, but Daniel Smith, the author of a fascinating book on the Dig for Victory campaign, believes “there is perhaps no more famous advertising image produced by any British government”.

The effect of all this self-sufficiency propaganda was remarkable. On 19 March 1941, a woman by the name of Joan Strange updated her personal diary (which was later published). “Help! I’ve not written this old diary for nearly a week,” she wrote. “It’s the allotment’s fault! The weather has been so good that I’ve gone up most evenings and get too tired digging to write the diary.”

The authorities hoped the campaign would help the country avoid food shortages while boosting levels of nutrition and morale. Through their efforts, the Diggers would harvest a million tons of produce per year at the campaign’s peak.

The government reported that in 1942 over half of all households were growing at least some of their own veg. Men, women and children of all ages pooled their efforts. The pleasure in success was only heightened by the physical dangers under which growers laboured. Herbert Brush of Forest Hill reported in his diary on October 26, 1940 on the impact of a German bombing raid: “I went round to look at the allotment, but it was a case of looking for the allotment. All my potatoes and cabbages have vanished.”

On street corners in every major town there were “pig bins” into which citizens were encouraged to deposit their food scraps for pig feed; all this from a nation that, before the war, looked abroad for its food.

The nation had quickly come to terms with the deprivations the war brought. They donated their pots, pans and garden railings to be turned into aircraft; they recycled paper for rifle cartridges and maps, and even saved animal bones to be made into explosives. It was said that at Buckingham Palace, the Queen herself had lines painted around the baths to ensure that the household didn’t use too much hot water. But a cold bath is one thing, a permanently rumbling belly quite another. “You’d go home after a Sunday on the allotment and you’d feel really good,” says Gwen Wild, who lived through the period. “There is no better feeling in the world. Dig for Victory was the nub of our existence then. It was our fight. It was the only way we could fight.”

Where one acre of grazing pasture could support enough animals to provide meat for one or maybe two people, the same area could produce enough wheat to satisfy 20 people or enough potatoes for double that. And where 230,000 had taken up shovels in anger by mid-April 1940, the figure was 541,000 a year later.

In March 1942, allotment holders and private gardeners were estimated to be producing between £10million [£275million today] and £15million [£412million today] worth of vegetables. Figures showed that out of all those families who formerly grew only flowers, only 20 per cent were now not growing vegetables. And nearly 40 per cent were devoting three-quarters or more of their garden space to vegetable cultivation.

By the time of a relaunch of Dig for Victory in February 1943, it was estimated that some four million families now grew their own vegetables. According to government statistics, plots covered more than 140,000 acres.

“But the story is not one best understood through statistics,” points out author Daniel Smith. “It comes instead through the ordinary men, women and children who laboured in their gardens and allotment plots, creating its narrative with their sweat and toil.”

As the Daily Express put it on August 7, 1942: “What really counts is the enthusiasm and effort of the gardener, the constant digging, hoeing, weeding, raking – the things which require labour and command interest. They induce in the gardener a feeling that he is working to a worthwhile end, making a valuable contribution in voluntary work towards winning the war.”

The Dig for Victory campaign was but a small part of the story of the Second World War. It lacked the obvious heroism of the Battle of Britain, the drama of D-Day, or the joy of VE Day. But it proved just as vital in the effort that helped us ultimately win that war.

(Synchronistically, the day after I sent this off, Bush Telegraph had a report on the WWII Victory Gardens - I didn’t realise Australia had got into the ‘dig for victory’ campaign as well - that will make it so much easier for people to relate to and to adopt.)

-------------------------------------
There was a report on TV recently about Cuba being the greenest & most sustainable developing country in the world - they've developed that way because they had to, but now they're leading the world in self-sufficiency, sustainability and organic permaculture.  They have a high life expectancy and a high literacy rate - Castro introduced eco-friendly measures such as stainless steel pressure cookers, fluorescent lightbulbs, etc YEARS before the rest of the world. The American woman reporter said how this man and his family recycled everything, saved their plastic bags and used them another 30 times, and put low energy lightbulbs in along with other sustainable lifestyle measures - a voice over said how the country may become wealthier economically - then at the end said: "...still, he does look forward to the day he can throw the trash bag out with the trash."  Typical Americans ... they just don't get it.  Even if that family were wealthy its obvious they would stay environmentally friendly - as if people only do it to save money (although happily sustainable living achieves that as well as keeping the environment healthy.)

 (One of 80 Fact Sheets on Permaculture on Gardening Australia's website alone - the wealth of knowledge on p/c available on the internet is just phenomenal)

Dear CERES – I found out about your paradigm-shifting, political game-changing enterprise in 2004 and have been intending to contact you ever since – one of my sons is actually living on your doorstep but still hasn’t managed to visit. At last I’m now in a position to go ahead with a business plan for a Community p/c garden for Murgon, based almost entirely on your blueprint. I’m submitting it to various philanthropic organisations & individuals and government departments for funding.

Alternatively, Julia Gillard could be issuing with a ‘Show Cause’ to Julia Gillard’s government (as to why they should not process asylum seekers and refugees on the mainland in permaculture village model settlements, which will also act as a ‘work for dole’ opportunity for unemployed people. It can be found online at present, within the Biodiversity Submission at   www.worldatpolarity.blogspot.com 

CERES - Centre for Education and Research in Environmental Strategies, is an award winning, not-for-profit, environment and education centre and urban farm located by the Merri Creek in East Brunswick, Melbourne.

Built on a decommissioned municipal tip that was once a landfill and wasteland, (same history as currently in Havana... on the Tropic of Cancer, SBS? google)   today CERES is a thriving, vibrant community. Over 300,000 people visit CERES each year. Many more connect with us through our innovative program taking sustainable education directly to schools across the State.

CERES is recognised as an international leader in community and environmental practice. CERES Organic Farm, Market, Shop, Co-ops and Café and Permaculture and Bushfood Nursery are unique social enterprises that offer new solutions and ways to combat climate change.
Community groups such as the Bike Shed, Community Gardens and Chook Group that call CERES home are also vital to CERES culture.
All waste and water on the site is recycled and much of the site is powered by renewable energy such as wind and solar.
CERES is now working towards making the site completely carbon neutral by 2012.
CERES is a model for a possible future where innovation, sustainability, equity and connectedness are valued. Both as a place and a community, CERES is striving to create a new way of being.
CERES has over 140 employees who are mostly part time. To obtain more information on CERES philosophy and management structure please go the the About CERES section    Across the organisation we also have approximately 400 people providing their time and expertise as volunteers. Volunteers contribute to the key CERES enterprises such as Honey Lane and Harding Street Market Gardens, CERES site maintenance crews and behind the scenes through admin work. The CERES seed propogation program is also a popular hub for volunteers and the fruits of volunteers labour can be seen all over the site as well as in the Market Gardens and at our Permaculture and Bushfood nursery.
Many people decide to commit a regular amount of time to CERES such as a day or half day a week. For others they will be inspired by a particular project such as our Kingfisher and Harvest festival and volunteer only for the life of the project.
Whatever way you find your way to the CERES community be it through employment or volunteering your contribution is greatly appreciated.
 
 [A friend ‘in the know’ told me that we’re passed tipping point on global warming and that mass extinctions are inevitable - up to 90% of life on Earth could collapse, and it will be catastrophic, not a gradual event – its already happening fast in the oceans.]

No comments:

Post a Comment