ST GEORGE’S DAY

April 23rd, 2008 admin

Happy St. George’s Day!

Which seems to be a more popular thing to be celebrating this year according to Philip Johnston in today’s Daily Telegraph.

It certainly appears that some of our politicians have decided to embrace St.George’s Day. You do have to ask yourself whether this has more to do with diverting attention (during a very bad week for Labour leader Gordon Brown, he announces that the St.George’s flag will fly over 10 Downing Street for the first time in recent memory) or raising attention (trailing in the polls London Mayor Ken Livingstone – who has rarely organised events in London to celebrate the 23rd April, preferring instead St. Patrick’s Day – this year is pulling out all the stops with events across the capital).

While political singer Billy Bragg writes passionately in today’s Guardian about why we should embrace St. George’s Day under the headline “Let’s celebrate what it means to be English”. And here it is-

“The notion of a patriotic celebration of St George’s Day is something that many English people feel ambiguous about, owing to the historical connotations that it carries. For a long time we’ve flown the union flag rather than the flag of Saint George – but a mixture of a greater confidence in Scotland and the recent influx of immigrants has put the English identity back on the agenda. It is possible for St George’s Day to become a celebration, but whether or not it can become a national day in the way the Americans have, I very much doubt; we just wouldn’t feel comfortable with a day when we have all got to salute the flag. The belligerence within the English tradition is still a fresh memory and for some people the national flag is associated with football violence.

We need to find a way to overcome that reticence and repossess the symbols of what it means to be English. St George’s Day can help us do that if we can make it less inward looking and more like St Patrick’s Day where everyone can be Irish for the day, wherever they come from.

What we lack is a confidence, not so much about who we are, more about whether it’s okay to celebrate being English. We need to stop being embarrassed about our home and find a way to celebrate the things about it that we love – both to respect the locals and to build bridges with newcomers.

Multiculturalism isn’t about celebrating everybody’s culture but our own. We have to be present, not least because as hosts we provide the framework for our diversity to flourish. If you accept the idea that national identity is personal, then it is down to each of us to find something to celebrate on April 23. Let those people who feel strongly about the traditional ideas, celebrate them in their traditional way. Let others find aspects of Englishness they feel comfortable with.

My hunch is that Englishness has more to do with space rather than race – and by having a day when we can celebrate the things that make us feel we belong, we can begin to reclaim our identity from those who would use our flag to intimidate and divide.”

© Billy Bragg, The Guardian, Wednesday April 23 2008

ONE RESPONSE TO “ST GEORGE’S DAY”

  1. Happy St George’s Day. Cahal Milmo in The Independent suggests St Aidan as an alternative to St George as a saint for all the UK.

    St Aidan, “…a seventh-century Irish monk who helped convert the north of England to Christianity, is being touted as just one reason why he should supersede the bellicose (and Turkish) dragon-slayer as a new patron saint for entire United Kingdom…”

    “He makes a good patron saint of Britain because of his character. He was particularly humble and believed in talking directly to people. When he was given a horse by King Oswald of Northumbria, he immediately gave it away because he was worried that he would not be able to communicate properly.

    “He was also not shy of reprimanding the mighty and powerful about their failings. He saw it as part of his job to remind secular rulers not to get above themselves. At a time when we are thinking about what makes Britishness, he had a sense of openness and diversity for his time that I think makes him a good candidate as the patron saint of Britain.”

    http://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/this-britain/homegrown-holy-man-cry-god-for-harry-britain-and-st-aidan-814057.html

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