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Archive for June, 2009

Panalba

June 30th, 2009
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PANALBA                      

 

What is Panalba?

Panalba is a community for anyone who has a love for Scotland. It includes recommendations for travel and accommodation, special events, blogs and articles from acclaimed Scottish writers as well as being the exclusive voice for The Gathering 2009.

This is the site for people who have a common ancestry or connection with each other through their affinity for Scotland. Panalba is not just another site about clans, whisky and golf. We aim to cover Scotland and host events in a way that perhaps has not been done before.

Panalba is created and produced in Scotland.

Join up today and connect with the Scottish Diaspora Forum to receive updates and information regarding the event.

www.panalba.com

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SDF performing musicians win award

June 24th, 2009
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Lillias Kinsman Blake and Rachel Newton  who will be playing as delegates arrive and register at the Scottish Diaspora Forum have recently won the Critics Awards for Theatre in Scotland for best use of Music and Sound (along with cellist Seylan Baxter).  Click here for full details

 http://www.criticsawards.theatrescotland.com/Winners/08-09.html

 

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Lillias Kinsman Blake grew up playing Flute and Fiddle in the Scottish Borders. In 2005 she graduated with aBMus Honours in Folk and Traditional Music, with a first in performance, from the University of Newcastle-upon-Tyne. Now based in Newcastle, she performs with The Shee as well as in a duo with Scottish harp player and singer Rachel Newton. Lillias is also an experienced teacher working as a core tutor for Folkworks and The Sage Gateshead as well as associate director for the youth ensemble Folkestra. In 2004, Lillias was commissioned to write and perform music for the Rowan Tree Theatre Company for The Love Adventures of Mr. George Cochrane (2004) and in 2005 she co-wrote the music for the storytelling CD On the tip of my tongue.

 

Rachel Newton is from Edinburgh with strong family ties to the North-West Highlands. Attending a Gaelic medium school and through the work of the Feis movement, she soon discovered her passion for traditional music. Her upbringing in both Highland and City cultures has meant that she has been strongly influenced by a diversity of styles and this is highly evident in both her playing and singing. Rachel attended the prestigious City of Edinburgh Music School, and gained a BMus(Hos) in Folk and Traditional Music from the University of Newcastle-upon-Tyne, where she became  involved in various ensembles. In2008, Rachel released the albums Dear Someone with flautist Lillias Kinsman Blake and A Different Season with six-piece band The Shee. Rachel toured with Rowan Tree Theatre Company in The Journey of Jeannie Deans (2007). One of her songs is used on the soundtrack for the BIFA award winning film, The Inheritance. Rachel was a finalist in the BBC Scotland Young Traditional Musician of the Year 2005.

 

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The Gathering 2009 Special Offer

June 23rd, 2009
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6 “Gathering Passports” for the price of 5

£475 buys a full weekend of Entertainment for 6 people

 

This special package of 6 Gathering 2009 Passports allows each holder access to both days of entertainment at Holyrood Park and a seat on the Castle Esplanade to watch Aisling’s Children: Tales of the Homecoming, a pageant specially written and performed to mark this historic occasion. As an additional benefit, these Passports also include vouchers with their own special offers.  

 

The Gathering 2009 is a celebration of Scotland’s culture, both contemporary and traditional.  

A two-day World class Highland Games in Edinburgh’s Holyrood Park on Saturday, 25 and Sunday, 26 July and so much more……………… 

 

Witness the greatest clan gathering ever held 

Watch the world’s leading Highland athletes, dancers and pipers  

Hear Capercaillie, Dougie MacLean, Red Hot Chilli Pipers and many more 

Learn about your ancestry and discover the complex world of heraldry 

Enjoy great Scottish food and drink  

Buy  quality arts and crafts 

Explore Scotland’s natural heritage and walk across the country in just a few strides! 

Take your seat at the Edinburgh Castle Esplanade to see a magnificent historical pageant. 

For more…..log on to  www.thegathering2009.com 

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June’s featured Scot

June 3rd, 2009
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The Rt Hon George Reid

Co-Patron of the Scottish Disability Forum

 


 

 

George Reid is as near a Clackie — someone born in the Wee County of Clackmannanshire — as anyone can be.

 

The earliest relative he has traced is John Reid, a shepherd in Muckhart in the 1680s.  Until George started travelling, his family never lived anywhere other than the Hillfoots — at the bottom of the Ochil Hills.

 

“If they were there in the 17th century,” he says, “chances are they were there a long time before.  Sometimes I fantasise about an earlier version of me standing on a crag and shouting at Roman legions and the army of Edward I ‘Thus far and no further!’”

 

Reid did travel, though, on a 45-year journey through politics at home and abroad.  To London, Strasbourg and Edinburgh as an MP, Member of the Council of Europe, MSP and Presiding Officer of the Scottish Parliament.  And to wars and disasters in 87 countries, where he handled tricky political situations as a director of the International Red Cross.

 

Now he says he is back where he belongs.  “The first thing I see each morning out one bedroom window in my Bridge of Allan home is the Wallace Monument and the Ochil Hills, and out the other Stirling Castle and the River Forth.”

 

Roots, he says, are important in a rootless world.  “Continuity is part of my heritage, of being a link in a long line of folk who come from here”.

 

He is profoundly grumpy, however, about the outside genealogists who wrongly corrected Hillfoots to Hillfeet.  “Absurd,” he said.  “They certainly weren’t Clackies.”

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Scottish Diaspora in the Year of Homecoming by The Rt Hon George Reid

June 3rd, 2009
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What does it mean to be Scottish in today’s world?

By the Rt Hon George Reid

Are only the 5.1 million people living in Scotland eligible? Or can the word also be used to describe more than 40 million people with Scottish ancestors who are to be found in every continent?

What are the qualities that make a person Scottish? A good education and an enquiring mind? An aptitude for hard work? A belief in equality of opportunity?

What has the Scottish contribution been to the development of Australia, Canada, New Zealand, the United States – and a host of other countries?

And how, in today’s global village, are we to bind this international community more closely together, so that we all benefit?

These are the issues which will be debated in the Chamber of the Scottish Parliament at Holyrood, Edinburgh, on Saturday 25 July. The event is organised by the Scottish Diaspora Forum in the year of the 2009 Homecoming.

For those who want to study the Scottish diaspora in greater detail, there are two other events in the North of Scotland. Leverburgh in South Harris will host a conference on Emigration from the Outer Hebrides from 10-12 September. And Highland Homecoming in Inverness from 22-24 October will deal with Scotland’s Global Impact – “how a small nation changed the world!”

And, being Scotland, there will always be ample opportunity to sample a dram or two, to take to the floor in a ceilidh, to meet clan chiefs and parliamentarians, and to discuss ancestry with the country’s genealogists. There are almost 50 million family records at the General Register Office in Edinburgh, most of them accessible via the internet.

“Roots are important,” says Lord Steel of Aikwood, who will chair one of the Forum panels at the Parliament. “From often humble beginnings, Scots made the most remarkable contribution to education, exploration, industry and science.”

“And they did so almost everywhere,” adds Professor Tom Devine of Edinburgh University, who will give the Forum’s keynote lecture. “The most remarkable characteristic of the Scottish diaspora is just how genuinely global it is.”

In the United States, half the signatories of the Declaration of Independence – itself “modelled on the inspirational Scottish declaration of Independence of 1320”, said the Senate Resolution naming 6 April as Tartan Day – were of Scottish descent. So were 11 Presidents, half the Secretaries of Treasury, and a third of the Secretaries of State.

Surveying the contribution made by Scots to American commerce, education, law and religion, Woodrow Wilson concluded: “Every line of strength in this country is coloured with Scottish blood”.

In Canada, the first Prime Minister was John Macdonald from Glasgow. Eight men and one woman with Scottish roots have followed him to that high office. And it was largely Scots who laid down the infrastructure linking Newfoundland to British Columbia: driving the railways coast to coast, founding banks and newspapers, establishing newspapers, and planting churches.

In Australia, Major General Lachlan Macquarie from Ulva is known as the father of the nation, turning the country from a penal colony into a nation. Prime Ministers like Andrew Fisher and Sir George Reid continued the Scots democratic tradition.

And in New Zealand, the Scots who founded Dunedin – either the Gaelic name of Scotland’s capital, or the first syllables of Dundee and Edinburgh – produced a rich crop of businessmen, farmers, lawyers, ministers of religion and politicians.

The diaspora is not just limited to the Commonwealth, though. In Russia General Patrick Gordon expanded the empire of Peter the Great, and Field Marshall Barclay de Toly saw off the military threat of Napoleon. In Japan, Thomas Blake Glover from Fraserburgh helped turn the country into an industrial giant by bringing young samurai to Scottish colleges, by starting the imperial navy, and by founding the company which later was to become Mitsubishi. In China, France, Hungary, India, Italy, Poland and other countries there are monuments and statues in honour of Scots who contributed to their new homeland.

Not all the emigrants became the stuff of legend, of course. The men and women who struggled through the wastelands from Hudson’s Bay to found Winnipeg are not known today individually. The 30,000 Scots who settled in Poland in the late Middle Ages have largely merged with the local population, though their placenames remain. The descendants of missionaries planted in “Little Scotland” in the Caucasus by the Free Church may have ended up as keepers of the Botanic Gardens in St Petersburg, but the family Bible from home is still there.

Education, hard work, a belief in equality of opportunity – yes, these are common Scottish characteristics across the globe. But Scots at the Diaspora Forum will have to get used to the idea that culture transmogrifies with time.

“Tartan Day” in the United States – a heritage event now celebrated in over 30 countries – does not celebrate Scotland. It celebrates the unique history and lifestyle of Scots Americans. If purists at home do not like the idea of sporrans featuring buffaloes or the kilt being topped with a Davy Crockett hat, they will have to think again. If heritage hunters from abroad are disappointed to see the Tartan Army of football fans decked out in all its finery or pop bands playing skat on the bagpipes, they will have to understand that Scotland has moved on.

Yes, it is still a land of misty islands, Highland glens and romantic castles. But it’s also a country which these days makes its living through an amalgam of education and enterprise – through biosciences, cultural enterprise, energy (in the form of oil, gas and renewables), financial services, knowledge industries, quality food, and some of the best universities in the world.

Over the seas and across the centuries, the bonds linking the 5.1 million Scots at home and the 40 million people of Scottish descent in the diaspora remain strong. But if we are to have a future for our common past, it will need to embrace the new realities as well.

How can we cooperate more closely in the arts, business and education? How can we honour what has been achieved overseas as much as has been done at home? How, in this internet age, can we talk to each other on a more regular and ongoing basis? What do we want from the diaspora? What do they want from us?

If the Diaspora Forum begins to provide some answers to these questions, then Homecoming will not be a one-off event. It may just start to have an ongoing legacy.

Article kindly provided by The Rt Hon George Reid a former Presiding Officer of the Scottish Parliament

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