Intercultural Mass

intercultureI attended inter-cultural Mass today as a sign of how much Oxford as a City values its cultural diversity.  It was good to be welcomed by the Catholic Caribbean Association and I was impressed to see that these inter-cultural masses have been held in Blackbird Leys for over 20 years.

Faith plays a very important part in any society so I was very happy to see everyone together  to share their faith journeys, faith experiences and to celebrate mass. Our City is one of many faiths and one of the things I have really enjoyed so far in my year of being Deputy Lord Mayor is the diversity of events and the fine traditions of all the faiths in our City.

I am grateful to to Olive Smith and members of the Catholic Caribbean Community for all their hard work over the years in making these important events happen.

It’s a real joy that through shared faith we can bring our many different cultures together in events like this – it was a wonderful celebration to the glory of God and to our continued faith journeys together across our different cultures and in peace and harmony and with respect for each other.

Needless to say, as with many faith-based events, there was wonderful food afterwards and a chance for lots more good fellowship and good conversations about all the good works done by the Catholic Community of Blackbird Leys and beyond.

100 years of buses in Oxford

oldbusThis morning I had the privilege of riding on a very old bus on a journey to commemorate 100 years of bus services in Oxford.  We started at the BMW museum in Cowley and travelled all the way to Oxford Station then back along Queen Street.  The old buses are looked after by the amazing volunteers of the Oxford Bus Museum Trust.  I was made to feel very welcome and learned some amazing facts about Oxford’s long bus history including how they were preceded by horse-drawn trams but that Oxford never had electric trams because colleges wouldn’t allow the hooks in their walls for the necessary cable suspension.

The bus we were in had no power steering and a “crash” gearbox, meaning no synchromesh.  Despite this it was dirven very expertly and smoothly by one of the museum trust volunteers and a long-time bus driver.

 

The Spirit of Christmas

spiritI went as Deputy Lord Mayor this evening to an amazing concert at Christ Church Cathedral. It was entitled “Spirit of Christmas” and arranged by the Muscular Dystrophy Campaign. I was honoured to be sitting at the front and had a really good conversation with Bill Ronald, the Chairman of the Trustees.  The event was a mixture of audience carols, lovely music from the choir of the Dragon School and some wonderful light-hearted Christmas-themed readings from well-known celebrities including Michael Elwyn, Robert Glenister, Jemma Redgrave, Honeysuckle Weeks and Alison Steadman OBE.  The whole evening was an utter delight, set off beautifully by everyone lighting candles to hold, starting from Lily, a seven year old child who has benefited from a lot of support from the MDC.  I gather concerts like this regularly raise around £15k – pretty impressive but so important for the lives of so many young people diagnosed with Muscular Dystrophy.

If you can possibly afford to make a donation to this excellent cause, please do so now via this web link to the MDC donation page.

100 years of Oxford Cinema Memories – book launch at the Phoenix

welcomeThis was a fabulous afternoon spent at the Phoenix Picture House on Walton Street in Jericho.  I wasn’t quite sure what to expect with this Mayoral engagement but was keen to find out.  I was welcomed by Kenny Gold, the general manager of the Phoenix Picture House and then we were taken into screen 1 where we were treated to a fascination presentation on the History of what is now called the Phoenix Picture House by Dborah Allison, one of the authors of the book that was being launched.

I was fascinated to hear how many different owners and proprietors the Phoenix has had in its 100 year life and how much it has served the local community in its time.  I’m amused that students used to be charged the top rates for tickets because they were considered to be the most well-off people in Oxford.  I hadn’t realised either that the cinema had a rather seedy period in the 1970s where it was owned by a company called Star, and became a bit of a notorious sex cinema.  We saw an amusing press cutting from the era that said “students were accused of kinds of atrocities ranging from shouting, urinating and slamming car doors, to consuming Chinese take-away meals while sitting on walls and discussing films in an obscene manner.”

10The talk was finished off with some wonderful memories from Martin Selwood who had been a projectionist in the 1930s and is now 97 years old.  He has some amazing memories to share and was a major source of historical information for the book.

After the presentation we were taken to the Phoenix’s bar for tea and cakes and I very much enjoyed more conversation with the other authors, Hiu M. Chan and Daniela Treveri Gennari.  What an absolutely fascinating afternoon learning about the secrets of one of Oxford’s most lovely cinemas.  I hope it will go on serving the people of Jericho and beyond for many years to come!

Celebration Dinner Dance for Diwali

diwali2What an evening this was!  I had spoken at an event with the Oxford Hindu Temple and and Community Centre Project before so I was delighted to invited to the Diwali celebration dinner and Dance at the Rover Sports and Social Club.

I was welcomed again by Dr Gopal and his wife as well as by the wonderful Chinta Kallie and was pleased to be able to take Gordon, my partner, along too.

diwali1

There was a great band and some amazing music and dancing.  We had a delicious three course meal and I know that many of the OHTCCP committee and members had been at the venue since 10am that day.  It all looked amazing and the food was delicious.  I got to help open the event by lighting a Diwali lamp and gave a short speech after the vote of thanks.

Divali, the festival of lights, I understand, is one of the most important festivals of the Hindu religious year so I was glad to see everyone having a fantastic evening and hope all enjoy a really great festival, in the coming days and weeks, culminating on 3rd November. The five day festival of Diwali honours Lakshmi, the goddess of wealth. And the row of lamps – the Diwali – is lit to help Lakshmi, the goddess of wealth, find her way into people’s homes. I hope that the homes and lives of all those present are prosperous so that OHTCCP can realise its dream of having a Hindu Temple in Oxford soon!

It’s lovely to see that In Britain, Hindus celebrate Diwali with great enthusiasm.  Diwali is becoming well known in Britain with many non-Indians joining in – I was indeed very pleased to be at the event with Gordon doing just that!

Interfaith evening for better understanding

This evening I attended an interfaith event at the St Clement’s family centre on Cross Street.  Canon Bruce Gillingham of St. Clements’ Church opened the event and the topic of discussion was “The founders of our religions”. We heard some excellent talks both from Dr Richard McCallum of the Centre for Muslim Christian Studies in Oxford and from Mr Abdul Ghani Jahangir Khan.  I was delighted to accept a cheque for the Lord Mayor of Oxford’s charitable trust, which came frrom the good works of the Ahmadiyya Muslim Community nationally.  The event was chaired by Ch Waseem Ahamad, National President of the Elders of the Ahmadiyya Muslim Association.

understanding

I am impressed that the Ahmadiyya Muslim community UK has been doing great work for 100 years and that the Oxford chapter has been active for about 30 of those. I think it’s great that the community puts such emphasis on education, values, peace, harmony and service to humanity and it is an example to all people in our City, be they of other faiths or none. I was particularly pleased to hear that the centenary activities include making regular contributions to feeding Oxford’s many homeless people and that so many members are donating generously to charitable activities in Oxford and beyond. It is a sign of a healthy, compassionate and committed community that it is engaged in humanitarian efforts in other parts of the world too, under the auspices of its own national community, and I want to thanked all involved for their current fundraising efforts for the victims of the Syrian humanitarian crisis.

Drug and substance abuse, antisocial behaviour, gang culture, violence and promiscuity are all plagues of our time on the younger people of our society and I am grateful for the work the Ahmadiyya Muslim Community does in encouraging our youth to take alternative, more healthy and wholesome pathways.

I think we really benefit from a multi-faith approach to such issues in jointly showing our youth that there are better ways to live a fulfilled life. In any faith, evangelism is important so I was interested to see that the Oxford chapter of the Admadiyya Muslim Community has visited nearly 30,000 homes in Oxford to spread the peaceful message of Islam with leaflets – I joked that maybe I should invite some of them out for election campaigns! Spreading peaceful messages is so important in these times of terrorist threat and it does a huge amount to help the public resist the temptation to be suspicious of all Muslims just because a tiny minority have some radical views that they express as hateful terrorist actions. There have been plenty of radical Christians in history too and I hope we can all agree that all religions of peace have no place for radicalism, hatred and terrorism. These peace symposia, held in Oxford since 2011, are very useful in spreading the “love for all, hatred for none” motto.

We ended the evening with some wonderful Asian food, prepared on the premises for us.

Lovely to be thanked!

I had a really lovely email today following my last-minute attendance at the Oxford-Léon link meeting and AGM from the organiser, sent to me and to the Lord Mayor’s PA Anjana who organises our engagements:

“I would like to thank you both for Thursday evening: Anjana for organising Tony to deputise at our meeting at short notice, as Cllr Sinclair, the mayor was ill and Tony for stepping in. It was clear that Anjana had efficiently forwarded the notes – and that Tony had read them. Your system for dealing with these situations clearly works.

Tony, I appreciate that it must have been difficult with little notice, but your speech was excellent and thank you for staying for the meeting and taking an interest in our work. Thanks especially for your technical help with the Skype link. It was (again) a tad embarrassing that the problems were at this end and that Oxford City Council’s technology was out-done by that of a small NGO in a developing country. Our contacts in Leon were very amused by this.

I’m glad that, with your help, we were able to establish the connection and speak to Jane and Andrew. It is a pity that there were no speakers, as we requested so even had we got Skype working on time, the audience would not have been able to hear them as intended.

All in all it was a good meeting and making £70 on the raffle was an added bonus.”

Receiving such messages is wonderful and really makes it feel worth making the effort to attend everything I am invited to as Deputy Lord Mayor.  I feel honoured and very blessed.

Oxford León Association and Trust AGM

This was another last-minute engagement due to the Lord Mayor being unwell.  I was invited to speak and indeed did so the minute I was through the door!

I am a great advocate of town-twinning activity and in my time so far on the council have made some great friends in Bonn, another City with which Oxford is privileged to be twinned.

The link with León in Nicaragua is different to all Oxford’s others because Nicaragua is a developing country and this Association and Trust raises funds for important projects in that country. It’s a real credit to everyone involved that the link has been alive and doing great work since 1986 – nearly 30 years. I am pleased that two of my councillor colleagues, John Tanner and Mike Rowley were able to visit León as part of the delegation back in February.

leonOf course fundraising should also be fun and indeed many in Oxford had great fun earlier this year swimming at Hinksey Pool, our wonderful heated outdoor pool just down the road, in the sponsored swim. It raised much needed funds for a pipeline to carry clean drinking water into a Nicaraguan community where the previous supply was contaminated with Arsenic.
I know there are plans to bring two young people from León to Oxford next year and I think that’s a really great thing to do to strengthen then link. I’ll certainly do what I can to get the City Council to support this.

I also thanked the Association for the gigantona (giant puppet woman) that was a gift from León to Oxford. I know it was used in the Cowley Road Carnival this year and provided great entertainment and delight for many people – I hope Oxford can use it much more as time goes on!

We were treated to a Skype link conversation with some volunteers actually in Nicaragua and indeed some rather delicious Nicaraguan Rum.  I also bought some fair trade coffee that had been got as part of a project running also in Léon.  There was also a raffle but I didn’t win anything!

Opening of Andrew Wiles Mathematics Building for the University of Oxford

penroseThis event was a last-minute stand-in as the Lord Mayor was ill.  It was a great privilege to see this building and its opening as it really is stunning. Speeches were made by the Vice Chancellor of Oxford University and by David Willetts, the UK Minister of State for Universities and Science, as well as the Head of the Department, Sam Howison.  I was treated to a wonderful tour by the department’s head of administration and hugely enjoyed the visit.  The building is quite amazing in that it has all sorts of mathematical quirks built in, including the Penrose paving, based on a non-repeating pattern discovered by famous Mathematician Sir Roger Penrose, and two “crystals” which are based also on mathematical structures.

maths

The building provides more than 300 offices in a range of sizes, identifiable space for graduate taught course students and 4th year undergraduate students working on projects, an extensive suite of teaching and seminar spaces as well as a range of meeting rooms, breakout spaces and a large departmental common room. It provides workspace for a diverse community of more than 500 mathematical researchers and support staff, including faculty, research fellows and postgraduate students. It is a centre for the academic life of approximately 900 undergraduates.

The project incorporates Ground Source Heat Pumps which will supply heat in winter and cool the building in the summer. This is achieved by submerging pipes deep into the ground that can transfer the temperature to the building by use of pumps. The Institute building was designed by Rafael Viñoly Architects.

Opening RADECS 2013

This evening was a fairly brief event for me in that I was invited to the Town Hall to the opening drinks reception of RADECS 2013, a large conference that took place in Oxford this year.  It is the The 22nd European Conference on Radiation and its Effects on Components and Systems.    My brief was to give a bit of history on the Town Hall and the Civic office of Lord Mayor. Did you know that The present Town Hall is the third on the site and its foundation stone was laid in 1893 by the Mayor Thomas Lucas and without mention of the first builder – a Mr A Chappell of Lambeth – who was declared bankrupt in October 1893. The present design by Henry T Hare was built by Messrs Parnell and son of Rugby for £94,116 (note, Oxford’s average house price is now £356,299) . The official opening of the Town Hall was on Wednesday 12 May 1897, by HRH the Prince of Wales Edward VII.

The Lord Mayor of Oxford is a very old tradition, with the first recorded names going right back to the 12th century. There is a long unbroken line of Mayors of Oxford right up until 1962 when the dignity of Lord Mayor was granted to Oxford by Queen Elizabeth ll.  In Oxford, The Lord Mayor represents the City at civic and ceremonial events and spends a great deal of time promoting the City, the key initiatives of the City Council and supporting a wide range of Oxford based voluntary and other organisations.

The Lord Mayor generally carries out in excess of 300 engagements each year. These engagements cover a wide spectrum of events from high profile Royal visits and leading the City’s annual Remembrance Sunday service, to small community group meetings and charity events.  The Lord Mayor also chairs meetings of full council.