Today I wrote this, which is the beginning of a piece to be published in Writing in Education, entitled, In conversation with Anna Perera about Guantánamo Boy and other ideas on writing:One cold, autumnal evening in 1990, I was walking down towards Bond Street in London. The stroll was relaxed and as carefree as a stroll in central London’s busiest streets can be. During the day I had been working on the voiceover of what was to become The Story Keepers, in a recording studio at the BBC and so was in a fairly buoyant mood. Although, as many may know, emerging from a recording studio into the street is an odd affair; you are immediately aware you had been in a soundproofed room, cocooned and isolated, even from basic things like the news – which, I am sure you will agree, is an odd thing to happen when you are at the hub of international news at the BBC. So while I walked I couldn’t help but wonder why there was such a huge police presence on the streets. It certainly hadn’t been there on my way in. But more than that, the police seemed to be picking people up at random and herding them into vans.
Taking the time to stop and look, I soon realized this wasn’t a case of random selection. None of the people being rounded up looked anything like me. In fact, to say they looked more middle-eastern would have been a fair assessment. When I asked a policeman what was going on, he replied that we were now at war with Iraq and they were clearing Oxford streets of “potential troublemakers”! My Scottish accent and fair skin didn’t categorise me thus, though my indignation didn’t go unrecorded.
Why this comes back to me twenty years later in 2010 may not be immediately obvious but just recently, on a cold autumnal morning this time, I was walking along the same stretch of London to meet Anna Perera, a former student of mine on the MA Writing for Children at the University of Winchester and author of Guantanamo Boy where "picking up people" is a common thread in our thoughts.
But now I think it might be time to rave on, John Donne, rave on, rave on, don't you agree?