Originally from: Farmtalking
Thanks Mary – You've reminded me!
It was a guy from Littorel Arts, I think his name was Tony Nuttall, who contacted me early in 2001.
At the time I requested he linked to Farmtalking and Warmwell on his web site and I think he did, but I've not heard from him since. I should do a search on Google!
Best wishes and thanks again! – Jane
Author wrote:
Dear Jane and Coleen
This was reported in the Farmers Weekly on Jan 17
All the best
Mary
http://www.warmwell.com/inboxnew.html
Jan 17 ~ "....with the aim of communicating something of the experiences and
the trauma endured by farming and rural communities in Cumbra, the Scottish
borders, Northumbria, Yorkshire, Lancashire, Gloucestershire, Devon and
other rural areas hit by the epidemic. Littoral Arts, the Watchtree Liaison
Committee and Great Orton Parish Council, hope that the exhibition tour can
start in Manchester in October next year and reach London by the time of the
fifth anniversary of FMD – in February 2006." FWi
----- Original Message -----
From: <...>
To: <...>
Sent: Tuesday, January 20, 2004 4:21 PM
Subject: [farmtalking] RE: fmd road showHi Coleen
It would be interesting to know exactly which travelling Art Company was
wanting to put on the Show?
As you may remember, Julia Currie put on a photographic exhibition, 'Inthe Shadow of Foot and Mouth' –
http://farmtalking.com/news_jc_artexh_141002.html – which included Ian
geering's photographs and letters, poems and drawings from children, mostly
in the West Country. I visited the exhibition in Stroud last year and it was
very well received by those who attended, including some who had been
affected by FMD.
There was also the Art Gallery Exhibition 'Love, Labour & Loss – 300 Yearsof British Livestock Farming in Art' 20 July to 15 September 2002 at the
Tullie House Museum, Carlisle. –
http://farmtalking.com/whatson-archive.html.
The Oaklands Trust also put on a play, 'Never Ending Sunset' –http://farmtalking.com/news_never_ending_sunset.html – which sadly I was
unable to attend, but understand it was also very well received. It was
hoped it would travel around the country too, but as far as I know it hasn't
done so inspite of efforts to arouse interest by the Everyman Theatre, a
National Theatre Group.
Early in 2001 I was contacted by a young man who had obtained funding toenable him to collect and collate a record of the FMD crisis for posterity
and I did what little I could to help him.
Of course there will also be those who try to make money from otherpeople's suffering in one way or another, at the same time there are those
who have good intentions and have no desire to make a profit from such
ventures but do need finanial help to stage them!
If some of those affected choose not to attend it is understandable but itmight well do some good if any of those who are totally unaware of the scale
of what happened were to attend and became informed by it.
We certainly should 'not forget' and anything that informs the ignorantand can help to remind us it must never happen again is to be welcomed IMO!
Author wrote:
A meeting was held at the old Great Orton (now the Watchtree NatureReserve) yesterday between locals and someone from a travelling Art Company.
They want to put on a show around the Country, concerning the horrors of
fmd through graphic images etc. The reporter said the whole idea was – so
people would NOT FORGET and that the whole episode of fmd could be taken to
people who perhaps did not witness it. It was decided to ask the local
people as they has lived through most of the horror (with the burial pit
being on their doorstep) what their views were.By all accounts the meeting was not harmonious,and it was decided that
it is far to raw and still uppermost in many people's mind to allow this to
go ahead. In other words – the time is not right.It did not say if this would be a paying and therefore money making
exhibition.
I think that people did not wish to know what was happening when fmd was
taking hold – so I am not sure to take these horrid horrid images would be
of any help (unless of course it is to make money).It was also said that the exhibition was to help and to stop it
happening again.
Well we know how to do that, and it is not via any exhibition.
I know what they mean by it all being still raw. They showed somefootage of the animal transporters pulling into Great Orton full of sheep
going to be slaughtered, along with the burial pits. I simply burst into
tears. I was taken right back, as if it was yesterday.I know that pictures of wars etc do go on show and that people do go and
view them. I do not feel this was a war, and that it only happened because
of lies – but then when I think about it – is that not how wars start,
because someone in power allows it! – or wants it.There was also a small debate on Radio 4 on Sunday regarding Public
Enquiries. I quote this as best I can..
"The people have to obey by the law of the land. If they do not – they
must face the consequences. A public enquiry is the only way we have open to
us, of holding people in high office to account. Without that, they are free
to do as they please"Coleen
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