Category Archives: Blog

Encounters with the Common Good

I know  I am not alone in struggling not to be overwhelmed at times by all the negativity in so many words and acts,  a sense of despair about the  state of the world from Brexit to Trump, via massacres and other man-made disasters. So let me share three  shared encounters in recent days that reminded me that our spirits can be lifted if we allow  other less binary, less visceral and conflictive human narratives to give us direction and a  sense of  common purpose. The first was a silent …

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Falklands War-History & Legacy

The Falklands War, following the Argentine military occupation of disputed British territory in the South Atlantic,  involved the biggest British naval deployment since WW2, lasted 74 days and  cost the lives  649 Argentine military personnel, 255 British military personnel, and three Falkland Islanders . It ended in British victory, the collapse of Argentina’s military regime, and contributed to Mrs Thatcher’s reelection  as prime-minister. To a new generation of young  European adults, the Falklands War not only barely features in their collective memory, but is largely ignored as a subject worth …

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The shame of Argentine Football

In the Paraguayan Capital of Asuncion , hardly an icon of historic accountability, a group of South American football executives will meet tomorrow (Tuesday)  to decide when and how, if at all,  the second leg of the continent’s club championship Copa Libertadores final  between River Plate and Boca Juniors of Argentina  will be played. This is no routine meeting. It comes after the match initially scheduled for last Saturday was cancelled twice over the weekend as a result of a violent attack in Buenos Aires on the Boca team bus …

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England vs Spain Football

Nothing like being a bicultural (British-Spanish) European citizen in a rowdy pub in south London to experience the high and lows of an  England-Spain  football match at Wembley. Let me say from the outset  that my well-known enthusiasm  as an author for Spanish football had me in a minority of two  in a pub that last Saturday was packed to the rafters with mainly young well tanked English males determined to drink as much beer as possible and back the home team. The pub and most of Wembley  were of …

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Messi’s Rites of Passage

We have grown used to Messi speaking through his football, but on Tuesday night against Nigeria he showed a less typical, for him,  capacity to play the leader. While his opening goal showed the  vision, touch, composure and accuracy that has marked his  genius for more than  a decade, as illustrative of  personality was his talk to his team-mates at half time, and the celebration of Argentina’s second goal. The talk just before Argentina walked out for the second half,  by all accounts, involved not a huge speech but a …

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Memory, Martyrs and Mission

Rome may be full of enduring Christian relics, many of them well known and repeatedly visited by pilgrims,  but the temporary exhibition currently on show in the  crypt of the Venerable English College is a little publicized gem,  well worth visiting if only for a reminder of the enduring and rich legacy of  English Catholicism and the part played by Jesuits in its defense. But hurry, it send on May 11th, after a short run of less than a month..   Entitled ‘Memory, Martyrs, and Mission’, exhibits included a first …

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Homage to Iniesta

  Few people will lament  Andres Iniesta’s  departure from FC Barcelona as much as Messi. In a book of personal tributes to Iniesta published last year, that of his Argentine colleague speaks volumes about how integral to Barca’s success the two have been, largely because of the unique personal understanding between them as individuals. Messi tells how he never feels more comfortable than when knowing Iniesta is playing alongside him, for the players both feel and live for their football, without letting politics intrude, instinctively playing to each other’s strength, …

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Mary Magdalene

This past Sunday the  Catholic church I visited had its images covered in deep purple as is traditional at this time leading up to Easter, its altar monopolised by men. Coming in from the bustle of London on  St Patrick’s weekend and finding shelter from the aggressive final snow storm of  the Beast from the East, I was drawn into a controlled clerical space, then soothed by plain chant  and incense  and a  measured silence with which I was encouraged to meditate on the mystery of Christ. Later in the …

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A meeting with a Czech ‘friend’

    I am glad I caught the BBC’s John Simpson’s fascinating recollection  this morning of his avoidance of an  attempted honey pot  trap  by the communist Czech intelligence service during  the Cold War. It brought back memories of a somewhat more mundane encounter I had many years later , thankfully devoid of any attempted sexual subversion, and involving  a very different, and genuinely friendly  kind of  spy of the same nationality. It took place during a weekend conference at Oxford’s  St Antony’s College, attended by an assortment of academics, …

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The Post, the FT, and turning 65

As birthday presents go, I couldn’t have asked for a more timely and worthwhile one than a visit to my favourite London cinema the Clapham Picture House, ‘en famille’ to watch The Post. At one level it was a trip down memory lane , to my rights of passage in journalism, reporting to  newsroom bosses (always male) in  rolled up sleeves, and feeling part of an enterprise that began immersed in  typewriter clatter and reels of telex tape, messenger boys running to deliver urgent copy before proceeding to  Linotype machines, …

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