0 Comments

One of the "spin- offs" from the "Children of Craig-y-nos" project – and there are many, the most obvious one being linking people together who had shared the sanatorium experience as children and now they are senior citizens and meet up once again – is that it has encouraged other ex-patients from another hospital to do the same investigation into their past.

A whole community is emerging around the Marguerite Hepton hospital with blogs in England ( Southampton) and Australia. All are intent on piecing together their missing history.


0 Comments

For those still in doubt over what constitutes art click on the following link.

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/entertainment/7370842.s…

a group of artists are living in a museum with lice in their head.

Seven German artists are living with lice in their hair in an Israeli museum for three weeks in the name of art.

The Berliners aim to stretch boundaries of what is art, saying they are toying with ideas about hosts and guests in line with a theme set by the museum.

"The idea is that we live in the museum as their guests, and at the same time we are hosting lice on our heads," said artist Vincent Grunwald, 23.

The artists are wearing shower caps to prevent the lice from spreading.

Milana Gitzin-Adiram, chief curator of the Museum of Bat Yam, near Tel Aviv, said: "Art is no longer just a painting on the wall.

"Art is life, life is art."


0 Comments

When I began this project into the collective memories of a community dealing with a taboo disease I little dreamt that it would include having men breaking down and crying on the phone as they re-lived memories of 50 years ago.

Listening to a tape recording of one such interview yesterday -I couldn't help wondering how much more suppressed grief there is around this subject not only in the country but other countries too where they imposed this strict militaristic regime on children often in prison like conditions.

One interesting development is that another group has sprung up in the Southampton area which is beginning to explore its own medical history and they have started a blog too.

This photo of Winnie Gardiner ( if I manage to upload it on my Apple without having to resort to my partner's PC again!) is of a child who spent five years in this remote TB sanatorium and was treated for a disease she never had.

She came home aged nearly six years on calipers, a cripple from so many years in bed. Many years later it was discovered she had celiac disease, an allergy to gluten.


0 Comments

I don't believe it!…..I have just had an email from a girl I met in Iceland some 40 years ago.

She was a student , part of an expedition, and I was working in the British Embassy ( better not to ask what I was doing).

She is interested in medical history and she is thinking of doing an MA, She had picked up some leaflets and brochures from The Wellcome Trust Centre for the History of Medicine and read an article on my project.

It is uncanny the way things are slotting together. Yesterday I edited an interview with an ex-patient now living in California who still has her original diaries from Craig-y-nos and another, still living in Wales, who has the same doll that was with her throughout her three years in hospital.


0 Comments

Who writes history?

I ask this question after reading Jan Morris book:”The Matter of Wales”.

I do not recognise this country she portrays which is described as a “magnificent celebration of Wales and all things Welsh”, a country drenched in druids, mystic folk tales, grand houses and endless battles with the world I am writing about in “The Children of Craig-y-nos”.

On closer reading it is a book sourced on secondary or tertiary material – she has read extensively on Welsh literature cultures, history,likewise she has travelled widely throughout in Wales.

But has she spoken to the people?

There are a few paragraph eulogising the Welsh sheepdog. Fair enough.

She has watched some farmers are work.

But there is no mention of the poverty stricken disease riddled world of the Welsh valleys in South Wales during the industrial revolution and even up to the 20th century, a world where women who had TB were forced to have abortions part of a unspoken programme of unspoken eugenics (“ we were told not to have children…if we did we were forced to have an abortion.,..they said it was for our own good”) and how this shaped the lives of men and women who were little more than serfs owned by rich English mine owners.

Not even one sentence.

No, this is the comfortable history of Wales.

This is the official side of Wales: cultured in a quaint, charming, folksy kind of way produced from secondary and tertiary source material.

It has nothing to do with raw world of primary source material- ( oral history) the voices' of people from 50 60 even 90 years ago that’s the basis of ”The Children of Craig-y-nos”.

I am disappointed for Jan Morris is a travel writer I much admire.


0 Comments