It certainly was an impressive sight: hundreds of thousands of people on the streets of London last weekend demonstrating, essentially, in favour of remaining in the European Union – or at the very least, putting the question to a second referendum.
All those fluttering EU flags – 12 stars on a field of blue – celebrating the “unity, solidarity and harmony” of the European peoples could scarcely fail to be striking. But I wonder how many of the demonstrators were aware that they were carrying an emblem based on veneration of the Blessed Virgin Mary.
Arsène Heitz, who designed the first European flag – adopted by the Council of Europe on the feast of the Immaculate Conception, December 8, 1955 – was a devout Catholic who was inspired by the traditional 12-star halo of the Blessed Virgin Mary, Queen of Heaven. This image is often repeated in Marian imagery, drawn on the Book of Revelation’s reference to “a woman clothed with the sun – and a crown of 12 stars on her head.”
Heitz, from Strasbourg in Alsace, belonged to the Order of the Miraculous Medal, whereon the 12 stars around Our Lady are still seen. He was supported in his first design by the Belgian journalist Paul Michel Gabriel Lévy, a Jewish Holocaust survivor. The flag was regarded as drawing on European cultural roots, not as a sectarian emblem.
The French author Olivier Roy points out in a recent book, L’Europe est-elle chrétienne?, that three of the four founders of the EU were committed Catholics: Schuman, De Gasperi and Adenauer – and “the first two died in the odour of sanctity” – so the continuity of those cultural roots is warranted.
The flag is certainly a beautiful design, though perhaps some Leavers may take a different interpretation from the fact that it features only 12 stars, not 28 for each nation now in the EU – because the number 12 symbolises “completeness and unity”. Some might say – as the Labour politician Gisela Stuart has suggested – that the EU was successfully complete with just a dozen nations. The problems arose when it grew too big for its boots.
But that’s another debate …
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The Father was a brilliant play about the impact of Alzheimer’s, written by Florian Zeller, a 39-year-old French playwright. In performance, the audience is deliberately confused by the sequence of events, then realises that this is what it feels like to experience the onset of any form of dementia.
Zeller’s new work, The Son, currently playing at the Kiln Theatre in Kilburn, north London, is an equally stunning work about the impact of adolescent depression on a family.
The teenage Nicolas seems, at first, to be just a confused teenager troubled by his parents’ divorce and his father’s remarriage. He feels his father, Pierre, has abandoned him, and Pierre, feeling guilty about this, tries to support the lad. His mother, Anne, also feels sidelined, and can’t cope. His stepmother resents the way this is affecting Pierre.
Gradually, we see that Nicolas is really a seriously distressed young man: again the audience perceives the mental anguish from each point of view.
It is an affecting picture of a troubled young person in the midst of the complexities of modern family life, and one of the best plays I have ever seen.
Laurie Kynaston as Nicolas is compelling, and it’s brilliantly directed by Michael Longhurst. Anyone concerned with mental health issues will find it insightful – and lacerating.
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It never fails to amuse me how often the latest health researches re-affirm older traditions of folk wisdom. The latest finding from China Medical University tells us that an onion a day helps to keep bowel cancer at bay.
There is a long folk tradition that onions (and garlic) help the blood and support the immune system. The Transylvanian legend that garlic fended off vampires arose because garlic was known to boost blood.
I well remember my Edwardian aunts recommending onions for health.
Onions do make you cry. But in the days when “Irish jokes” were in currency, there was a reverse Irish joke which asked: “What happens when you slice an Irish onion?” Answer: “It makes you laugh!” The politically correct considered this patronising, but it brought a smile to my face.
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