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DIARY Distant socialising

Writer JAN WOOLF muses on propaganda as a virus that infects us all

WRITING on the 75th anniversary of VE Day, I am not feeling part of the nostalgia fest. But I’m moved by it nevertheless, as if in lockdown we can hear our dead relatives calling for to us to be resolute.

What a lovely old Churchillian word that is, meaning to re-solve. But now we have a Churchill wannabe in charge who can’t find the right word for anything, despite — or because of — a posh classics education. What cruel comparisons: WWII to Covid and a literate unifying figure to a figure of fun.

As a 49er, I wasn’t around for VE Day but had a ration book and suffering relatives. There was much talk of “the war” and fear cast a long shadow that the welfare state helped mollify for kids. We felt special and safe, while knowing that people we loved had been through the terror of bombs or combat. Now we fear the Covidian assault within.

I felt the rendition of We’ll Meet Again after the Queen’s VE speech was a tad mawkish, an attempt to domesticate workers. But what was truly moving was the later historical footage showing an energised and enlightened working class that removed Churchill two months after VE Day in favour of socialism. Will there be a post-Covid welfare state?

I grew up being taught that “we” won the war, with a bit of help from the Americans and Russians — or Soviets, people stopped saying, as if the Russian word for council was a dirty one.

The Russians became, as they pretty well are now, tucked behind an iron curtain. Fascism defeated, communism was seen as the next threat to Western democracy, and there was a frantic attempt by the Establishment to equate the two.

I didn’t buy it. After the Cuba missile crisis, which nearly did for us, I became active in the peace movement, where I met fellow teacher-activists Helen Mercer and Greta Sykes. We wrote, produced and illustrated Deadly Persuasion — a pamphlet, that centuries-old provocateur, and Ralph Steadman did the cover.

It’s an examination of the way the history of the Cold War was taught in school textbooks, and it’s just been rereleased to remind us of the insidiousness of propaganda dressed up as truth.

Tony Benn liked it and arranged its launch in the House of Commons in 1985, writing: “Bombs are only inert lumps of machinery but propaganda is a virus that infects us all and prepares us for conflict. We cannot keep the peace if we do not understand history and learn its lessons.

“Yet from our childhood at school, and afterwards through the media, we are all regularly subjected to this virulent distortion of events to condition us for war.”

The war we’re fighting now is against Covid but, when we emerge, capitalism will be just as virulent, making up for lost time — and profits.

When our grandchildren ask what did you do in the Covid, grandma/pa, what will we say? That we learned stuff and refused to go back to the old ways? That we rediscovered nature in all glory and averted climate disaster, that community was more satisfying than individualism? That we insisted that people were put before profits?  

Or will we accept the same old systems, which costs as many lives as Covid each year?

Education comes from the Latin ‘educare,’ to lead out. Propaganda doesn’t do this, it leads you into darkness, lack of agency, intellectual lockdown. Deadly Persuasion covers the role of the Soviet Union in WWII, Hiroshima and Nagasaki, the iron curtain, the Truman Doctrine and the Marshall Plan and the division of Germany.

These huge historical events framed our lives and were all distorted in British school history textbooks, thus justifying the Cold War and indecent levels of nuclear and military spending.

It’s going on during Covid too, as the mainstream media doesn’t report what’s happening in the socialist countries. Who knows that there have been no deaths in Vietnam or what assistance Cuba has given to developing countries? OK, so Russia isn’t socialist any more, but neither is it locked into the virulent neoliberal game.

As we remember Britain’s role in the global fight against the virus of fascism, including many brave Germans, we remember also that, like Covid 19, fascism can root itself anywhere, and it’s odd that the F-word isn’t featuring in most of our mainstream media.

We hear of Nazis, but not the ideology behind them. I think this is deliberate.

For more on Deadly Persuasion, visit adeadlypersuasion.blogspot.com. This article first appeared in International Times, internationaltimes.it. Jan Woolf's latest short-story collection, Stormlight, is published by Riversmeet Press.

 

 

 

 

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