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Roger Casement in the Amazon

17/02/2025 By ACOMSDave Leave a Comment

During the 28th October to 1 November 2024, an immersive week of creativity and inquiry into Roger Casement in the Amazon,  artist Mark Maughan opened his door to his latest performance piece, collaborating with thought leaders, innovators, and activists from across the Atlantic. This was a chance to dive into the making process, to dissect a series of questions, and to envision how these ideas might shape a powerful future performance.

About the Project:

The project peels back the layers of a dark chapter in history, focusing on the UK-funded Peruvian Amazon Company that thrived during the rubber boom between 1907 and 1913, on lands now recognized as part of Colombia. In 1911, Roger Casement, a British diplomat born in Ireland, penned a scathing report that revealed the horrific genocide of an estimated 60,000 Indigenous Peoples, drawing parliamentary scrutiny and ultimately leading to the company’s dissolution.

Portrait of Roger Casement, Artist: Sarah Henrietta Purser, 1848-1943, Oil on canvas.

Casement’s name became synonymous with human rights yet fell prey to scandal and personal turmoil, culminating in his execution at Pentonville Prison. The echoes of the UK rubber trade’s brutality still resonate today, leaving the trauma experienced by the Indigenous communities of the Colombian Amazon unresolved.

With a rich background as a translator for NGOs in Colombia, Mark Maughan has spent the past two years engaging with the four nations of La Chorrera—the Uitoto, Okaina, Muinane, and Bora. His theatre project seeks to amplify the unheard narratives of this troubled history, grappling with the tightrope walk between the pursuit of objective truth and the subjective nature of storytelling in theatre.

Check out the ‘Schedule for the Week’ below for details about the sessions and how people participated:

Open-Research-Week-Revisiting-Roger-Casement-int-he-Amazon

Open Research represents a fresh avenue for artists to collaboratively explore creative projects alongside public audiences as part of their making process. It draws inspiration from Reena Kalsi’s Process programme at Roundhouse London in 2022.

On the first day, Mon 28 Oct 24, Jeffrey Dudgeon MBE, Northern Irish politician, historian and gay political activist, author of the ‘Roger Casement: The Black Diaries – with a study of his background, sexuality, and Irish political life’ with Kinti Oreliana, Erna Von-Wall and Almiro Andrade provided content and perspectives to the start of the research.

The three-day event provided many answers and also left a lot to be explored after the event.

Why not start your research by contacting your local library and exploring Roger Casement, or contact NIGRA (Northern Ireland Gay Rights Association) the organisation which helped Jeff Dudgeon in the case Dudgeon v United Kingdom to the European Court of Human Rights; this successfully challenged Northern Ireland’s laws criminalising consensual sexual acts between men in private.

Links:

  • Wikipedia: Jeff Dudgeon
  • OPEN RESEARCH WEEK: Revisiting Roger Casement in the Amazon
  • Amazon: Roger Casement: The Black Diaries – with a study of his background, sexuality, and Irish political life
  • LGBT History club – Roger Casement

Filed Under: Community Journalist Tagged With: amazon, art, Colombia, Genocide, history, Indigenous Peoples, Mark Maughan, Open Research, performance, roger casement, rubber trade, theatre, workshops

Tel Aviv's Gay Holocaust Victims Memorial Unveiled

12/01/2014 By David McFarlane Leave a Comment

By ARON HELLER 01/10/14 11:49 AM ET EST AP
tel aviv gay holocaust memorial

TEL AVIV, Israel (AP) — Israel’s cultural and financial capital unveiled a memorial Friday honoring gays and lesbians persecuted by the Nazis, the first specific recognition in Israel for non-Jewish victims of the Holocaust.
Tucked away in a Tel Aviv park, a concrete, triangle-shaped plaque details the plight of lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender people under Adolf Hitler’s Third Reich. It resembles the pink triangles Nazis forced gays to wear in concentration camps during World War II and states in English, Hebrew and German: “In memory of those persecuted by the Nazi regime for their sexual orientation and gender identity.”
The landmark joins similar memorials in Amsterdam, Berlin, San Francisco and Sydney dedicated to gay victims of the Holocaust. While Israel has scores of monuments for the genocide, the Tel Aviv memorial is the first that deals universally with Jewish and non-Jewish victims alike and highlights the Jewish state’s rise as one of the world’s most progressive countries for gay rights.
“I think in Israel today it is very important to show that a human being is a human being is a human being,” Mayor Ron Huldai said at the dedication ceremony, where a rainbow flag waved alongside Israel’s blue-and-white flag. “It shows that we are not only caring for ourselves but for everybody who suffered. These are our values — to see everyone as a human being.”
Israel was born out of the Holocaust and its 6 million Jewish victims remains seared in the country’s psyche. Israel holds an annual memorial day where sirens stop traffic across the nation, it sends soldiers and youth on trips to concentration camp sites and often cites the Holocaust as justification for an independent Jewish state so Jews will “never again” be defenseless.
But after 70 years, Tel Aviv councilman Eran Lev thought it was time to add a universal element to the commemoration. Lev is one of many gays elected to public office in Tel Aviv, a city with a vibrant gay scene that has emerged as a top international destination for gay tourism.
“The significance here is that we are recognizing that there were other victims of the Holocaust, not just Jews,” said Lev, who initiated the project during his brief term in office.
As part of their persecution of gays, the Nazis kept files on 100,000 people, mostly men. About 15,000 were sent to camps and at least half were killed. Other Nazi targets included communists, Slavs, gypsies and Jehovah’s Witnesses.
Unlike their persecution of Jews, however, there was no grand Nazi plan to exterminate gays. Nazis viewed being gay as a “public health problem” since those German men did not produce children, said Deborah Dwork, director of the Strassler Family Center for Holocaust and Genocide Studies at Clark University in Worcester, Mass.

“The idea was to change their behavior, not to eradicate them, not to murder them,” Dwork said.
The policy was far from sweeping — as evidenced by the rampant homosexuality among the ranks of the Nazi Party’s SA paramilitary wing, which helped pave Hitler’s path to power. The most famous gay Nazi was Ernst Röhm, one of the most powerful men in the party before Hitler had him executed in 1934.
Later, the Nazis outlawed homosexuality and the Gestapo set up a special unit targeting homosexuality. In the Buchenwald concentration camp, the Nazis carried out experiments to try and “cure” homosexuality. Those sent to the camps were forced to wear pink triangles, compared to the yellow stars that Jews bore on their clothing. Gay Jews wore an emblem that combined the two colors.
Today, Israel is one of the world’s most progressive countries in terms of gay rights. Gays serve openly in Israel’s military and parliament. The Supreme Court grants a variety of family rights such as inheritance and survivors’ benefits. Gays, lesbians and a transsexual are among the country’s most popular musicians and actors.
Moshe Zimmermann, a professor from the Hebrew University of Jerusalem and the memorial project’s historical adviser, said the Tel Aviv monument marked a big step in Israel by ridding itself from what he called a monopoly of victim hood.
“We are finally shedding the load of being the lone and ultimate victim,” he said. “We can learn from this that by recognizing the victimhood of others, it does not diminish the uniqueness of your own victim hood.”
 
Further reading:
 

  1. Original Article – Huffington Post
  2. BBC News Article
  3. BN&S Commentary
  4. The Gay Holocaust Lagers

Filed Under: Anti-Bullying & Homophobia, History Tagged With: Adolf Hitler, Anti-Gay Discrimination, civil rights, Gay Discrimination, Gay Holocaust Victims, gay rights, Gay Voices News, Genocide, Israel Gay Holocaust Monument, Nazi Germany, Tel Aviv, Tel Aviv Gay Holocaust Monument, The Holocaust

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