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The Journey of Reconciliation

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Healing the past, and the present – a sculptor and three cities find ‘a symbol of reconciliation’.

Healing the past, and the present – a sculptor and three cities find ‘a symbol of reconciliation’.

‘Reconciliation’ is a journey. Depending on the people or the circumstance, the journey can be short or long. Some years ago Liverpool sculptor, Stephen Broadbent, had a serious breakdown in his relationship with a colleague. While he was wrestling with this in his studio, he had an inner sense in his heart that he needed to do something about it to help put it right. He started working with clay to create a small sculpture of a figure walking away from someone, but then having made a choice, the figure is seen beginning to turn around to walk back the other way. He then worked on a second sculpture of two figures embracing. He knew he had to take the first step to rebuild the relationship. He did go back, apologized for his part and they got reconciled.

That second sculpture became for him a ‘symbol of reconciliation’. A few years later midst the conflict in Northern Ireland, he took the initiative to create a larger version of that very sculpture which was then erected in Belfast, Glasgow and Liverpool as symbols of reconciliation between England, Ireland and Scotland. He had young people from the three cities working and learning together in its creation at each of the three sites.

In the last two years this same symbol of reconciliation, already in Liverpool, was erected, in the Republic of Benin, West Africa, at the request of the then President, and in Richmond, Virginia, in the United States, in relation to the Atlantic Slave Trade and its abolition, as part of an initiative called The Reconciliation Triangle. Liverpool City Council had apologized as its last act of the Millennium for the city's part in that horrific trade in which the city had played a leading role. In Benin the President apologized to the African Diaspora for its role in selling slaves to the slave traders, which has remained a cause of division in his country to this day, and in Richmond earlier this year I was present, when 5,000 people gathered in the heart of that city for the unveiling of this same sculpture marking the 200th anniversary of the Abolition of the Slave Trade.

Just prior to that, totally unexpectedly, a white city councillor had apologized publicly for the part his family had played buying and owning slaves on the plantations, and at the unveiling itself the Vice-President of the City Council, an African-American, spoke and said that she, as a descendant of slaves, would forgive what had happened for the sake of future generations. For Stephen Broadbent and the two councillors, the acts of apology and the decision to forgive were personal choices. Especially for the latter two, the apologies were made to help to heal the legacy for the sake of the future. No one can demand it of another.

In the context of world events, we are aware how much injustice, conflict and revenge have been and are being inflicted as a result of the unhealed wounds of history. There is no quick fix. In my work with Initiatives of Change, we are engaged, among other things, in a work of reconciliation with a headline theme ‘building trust across the world’s divides'. In one of its outreach programmes, Hope in the Cities, we use this as a basis for facilitating ‘honest conversation’ dialogues, bringing people together, in a safe environment, where there has been a breakdown of trust, to listen and learn from one another and seek to find a way forward together. We help people move from ‘you are the problem’ and ‘the blame game’ to ‘we have a problem, what do we do about it’.

We are facilitating such a dialogue at the moment, at the request of Liverpool City Council, bringing together senior executives in business and representatives of the Black and racial minority communities on the issue of racial diversity in employment, to grapple with the minimal representation of the Liverpool black community at any level in the city despite the fact that there are 5000 jobs coming on stream in the retail developments. The dialogue is seeking to deal with the ‘why?’ and what to do about it. The reasons are many, not least covert racism and exclusion. That too is a legacy of our history as a city. It is inadequate to play up the Bicentenary Celebration of the Abolition of the Atlantic Slave Trade, however significant, unless at the same time we deal with the legacy that is still with us. It has been very encouraging that out of the first of these dialogues very positive action points are developing how to overcome the obstacles.

This initiative, undertaken by the Chamber of Commerce and the Merseyside Coalition of Employers on the one side and the Black and Racial Minority network on the other, is an example of a journey, because it is quite clear that if we do not move forward towards trust- based outcomes, a spirit of common purpose and reconciliation, the frustration that is within the community will take us back to the anger and conflict of the past.

In the light of events in the world now spilling over into our country, and other concerns within our city or communities that are on our hearts, are there other areas where we need to enter into such honest conversations to proceed along that road towards reconciliation?

This is taken from a ‘reflection’ given at a Christian, Muslim, Jewish - Three Faiths Forum in Liverpool in 2007.



NOTE: Individuals of many cultures, nationalities, religions, and beliefs are actively involved with Initiatives of Change. These commentaries represent the views of the writer and not necessarily those of Initiatives of Change as a whole.

Язык статьи

English

Год выхода статьи
2007
Publishing permission
Granted
Publishing permission refers to the rights of FANW to publish the full text of this article on this website.
Язык статьи

English

Год выхода статьи
2007
Publishing permission
Granted
Publishing permission refers to the rights of FANW to publish the full text of this article on this website.