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The Raging Grannies
Betty Brightwell
Together we have performed more than a hundred years of work in
the peace movement. As we are approaching sixty years of age--or
have passed it--and realize that the threat of nuclear war is still
hanging over our grandchildren and our great grandchildren, we get
angry, raging mad! We know we haven't much time left in our lifetime
to change things or bring some sanity into the conduct of international
affairs.
So we sing satire. We aren't very good at singing, but the medium
being the message, as grannies in bright colourful clothes fashionable
a couple of generations ago, and wearing smiles, outrageous hats
and pink running shoes, we seem to have an appeal.
We sing about U.S. nuclear warships coming into Canada and John
Diefenbaker spinning in his grave as a result. When we sing about
the U.S. nuclear umbrella which “protects” us, we put
up a ragged golf umbrella full of holes. We sing about terrified
caribou hazed by low flights of NATO planes or uranium mining, relating
it to the disaster at Bhopal in India.e are convinced that the techno-chase
will eliminate the human race. We march to “It's a long way
to Vladivostok” and tell you that an ICBM could get there
in seven minutes from New York and vice versa but, we warn, “if
the missiles meet up midway, you know who's below"--and a grannie
rips open her jacket to reveal the red and white maple leaf. Even
raging grannies 'gainst nuclear subs can end up on the CSIS subversive
list.
We've sung outside B.C. Government House to the Prime Minister
and his cabinet. We've sung to the crew of the USS nuclear submarine
Indianapolis. We've sung to Peter Gzowski in person and over Morningside
on the CBC radio. We've sung to you on the CBC National, to Pierre
Berton, to Farley Mowat, to Victoria Mayor Gretchen Brewin, and
our own M.P. Pat Crofton.
We began by singing to theatre lineups. We sang at the spring Peace
Walk, and at an anti-uranium rally. We even disrupted the B.C. Peace
Conference and yet received a standing ovation from the assembly.
We've been ignored in shopping malls, loved by senior citizens'
clubs, and called “pinkos” by others.
Lordy, lordy, lordy. Where does our energy come from? All of us
have other things to do and other lives to lead. But these days
we find it more rewarding just being raging grannies together and
singing songs about survival issues and being concerned about the
future of our grandchildren and the grandchildren of the entire
planet.
Reprinted from PEACE Magazine's April/May 1988 issue. PEACE
Magazine is published bi-monthly. A six issue subscription costs
$15.00. Write: PEACE Magazine, 736 Bathurst Street, Toronto, ON
M5S 2R4.
(CX4713)
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