Here in New Zealand we
call it Courage Day. Dr Nelson Wattie, the New Zealand Society of Authors
(NZSA) PEN representative, introduced the Courage Day meeting in Wellington. He
pointed out that the name refers to the courage that such writers display, but
also recalls NZ writers James Courage and his mother Sarah Courage, who both
faced opposition because of their writing - in James' case, because he dared to
write about homosexuality at a time when such writing was discouraged and could
be banned.
This year the NZSA
Wellington branch decided to focus on courage shown by writers in a situation
close to home, and we invited Dr Jeffrey Paparoa Holman to address us about the
courage of people, including writers, in Christchurch, and more generally on
writers' courage to speak in stressful and dangerous situations.
Jeffrey Paparoa Holman
is a prolific poet, whose books include As
Big as a Father (2002), The Late
Great Blackball Bridge Sonnets (2004) and Land Very Fertile (2008). This year he published Shaken Down 6.3, a collection of poems,
photographs and an essay focusing on the Christchurch earthquake. He delivered
a riveting and moving talk, despite still getting over the effects of jet lag,
having only returned last week from the Iowa Residency (which you can read
about here: http://paparoa.wordpress.com)
Jeffrey first talked
about the courage shown by his family during the war: his father who was in the
Navy, and his mother and grandmother who used to talk to him about being bombed
in Liverpool during the Blitz. He told us about some of the writers he met at
Iowa, in particular a man from Myanmar who in his imprisonment refused to let
his art or his work be confined, and treated every item in his cell as a
possible art object
This was the first time that we included
the "empty chair" at our Courage Day event. The chair is placed to
symbolise a writer or writers who cannot be present because they are imprisoned,
detained, disappeared, threatened or killed. It added an extra poignancy to the
occasion and to Jeffrey’s wise and moving words about the situation in
Christchurch.
Philippa Werry
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