Sunday, July 6, 2014

Basque Country once ripped asunder, is now rebuilt and helping show the way.


Spain’s Basque Country was a personally unknown entity until discussed by Nathalia artist and social justice/peace activist, Bill Kelly.

Nathalia artist and social
justice/peace activist, Bill Kelly
 with a piece he drew
following a recent operation.
 
“Kelly”, as he is known by everyone, including his wife, Veronica, has a unique interest in the Basque County evolving from his passion for both art and peace.

A decades-long interest in the Pablo Picasso painting “Geurnica” created in response to the bombing of the Basque Country village in northern Spain, by German and Italian warplanes the Spanish Civil War on the eve of World War Two, has left Kelly with a unique perspective of Geurnica.

An American by birth who has lived in Australia for decades, Kelly has a third allegiance which is almost as powerful as both his birth and now home-place.

Much of Kelly’s art has a sense of yearning for peace – the essence to Picasso’s “Geurnica” and he visits there at least annually to contribute to ceremonies recognizing when peace died at the Basque village in 1937 and is now reborn.

With personal interest in everything of the Basque Country ignited by Kelly, it was fascinating to learn that a professor of political and social philosophy at the University of the Basque Country, Daniel Innerarity, is a prolific author of books discussing the human condition.

“Humanity at Risk: The Need for Global Governance”, a series of essays edited by Innerarity with Javier Solana, includes a quote from the a founder and editor of the daily Il Manifesto, the late Luigi Pintor, who said, “A society that assumes growth as its goal is like a person who considers obesity an ideal.”

Following the Pintor quote was an essay by Dimitri D’Andrea from the University of Florence in which he discusses the globalized risk and global threat for future generations from climate change.

The famous "Guernica" by Pablo Picasso.
D’Andrea wrote: “The fact that global warming is rooted in the ‘economic innocence of day-to-day consumption’ makes the catastrophe threatening us doubly unthinkable; unthinkable for it is too big for us to imagine and unthinkable because it is difficult to trace back to normal everyday life”.

The involvement of Basque Country thinkers in this social dilemma is not surprising for although they are relatively simple people who have lead equally simple lives for centuries, they are recognised deep thinkers who have contributed much to the world community.

The unannounced and unprompted attack on Geurnica in 1937 ruptured modern life in the Basque Country and in a seemingly disconnected way prepared the Basque people for the certain rigours that a changing climate will bring.

Kelly has been privileged to watch the Geurnican people recover from that sudden and violent rupture of their peaceful lives and within that play an important part in the rebuilding of the community; a community, for their work towards reconciliation and environment, named as a “UNESCO European City of Peace”. They are now far better able to, and are preparing for a different future.