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John Thomson was a man of substance

August 13, 2008 – 12:09 pm

John Thomson (14 June 1837 – 7 October 1921) was a pioneering Scottish photographer, geographer and traveller. One of the greats. He was one of the first photographers to travel to the Far East, documenting the people of eastern cultures. Upon returning home, his work among the street people of London cemented his reputation, and is regarded as a classic instance of social documentary which laid the foundations for photojournalism.

Thomson returned to Britain in 1872, settling in Brixton, London, which is where I am residing at the moment. Thomson never left again. Over the coming years he published his work, presenting the results of his travels in the Far East. His publications started initially in monthly magazines and were followed by a series of large illustrated photographic books. He wrote extensively on photography, contributing many articles to photographic journals such as the British Journal of Photography.

Thomson renewed his friendship with Adolphe Smith, a radical journalist whom he had met at the Royal Geographic Society in 1866. Together they produced the monthly magazine, Street Life in London, from 1876 to 1877. The project documented in photographs and capturers the lives of the street people of London. It is amazing as it highlights social documentary photography as an early type of photojournalism.


We have run for Tibet!

August 9, 2008 – 7:11 pm

To mark the opening of the Olympic games in Beijing this week today we ran from Canary Wharf to Chelsea.  We have raised over £200 for the Tibetan Children’s Village and tried our best to raise awareness of Tibet and it beautiful people.  We enjoyed every minute even though it was peeing it down with rain!

 [youtube]http://uk.youtube.com/watch?v=OQrHedfSVsQ[/youtube]


The brave and the bold

August 8, 2008 – 3:47 pm

Hello chaps and chapesses,

One of my friendly fellow Tibetan supporters sent me this.

A letter to the Chinese president about human rights concerns in China, signed by some Olympic athletes (admittedly some retired ones and a few winter sports athletes, but Olympic nonetheless). Quite a few are German, but that’s where this particular campaign started. I thought it was very interesting – but you may think otherwise. I reckon those guys deserve a bit of extra applause for taking a stance.

http://www.sportsforpeace.de/seiten/index.htm


Free Tibet activists are deported

– 3:43 pm

‘Free Tibet’ activists touched down in the UK to the sound of cheering after being forced to leave Beijing

http://www.guardian.co.uk/sport/2008/aug/07/olympics2008.china1


The Olympic opening

– 3:43 pm

Dear people of the world, 

Today is the day. The grand Olympic opening.

The latest news is a British man has protested in Hong Kong and thousands of Tibetans are protesting in Beijing and being silenced.

The Dalai Lama have given his praise and blessing to China and stressed the point that they deserve to hold the Olympic games.

There have also been two Britons have been detained in Beijing after a protest about Tibet.The group Students for a Free Tibet said four activists from the UK and the US were arrested after displaying banners close to the Olympic stadium. The protesters scaled a 120ft (36.5m) lighting pole early in the morning and unfurled banners reading “One World One Dream Free Tibet” and “Tibet will be free”. The action was timed before the arrival of the Olympic torch in Tiananmen Square. A spokesman for the Beijing Olympics described the protest as “unacceptable and “illegal”.

In London, fellow campaigners from the group also held a protest to coincide with the one in Beijing. Two supporters climbed suspension cables to reach a height of 100ft (30m) above the River Thames and unfurled a banner saying: “Beijing 2008: Make Olympic History: Free Tibet.” The supporter said: “I’m here today because I’ve been a long-term Tibet activist and I feel like now is a really critical time for Tibet. The Beijing Games have been used by the Chinese government as a propaganda tool to whitewash their human rights record in Tibet.”

[youtube]http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/asia-pacific/7544415.stm[/youtube]

The Olympic torch has travelled 87,000 miles through six continents since leaving Greece in March. Its journey has been marked by a large amount of protests about China’s human rights record and its policies in Tibet. During the month in which the torch was lit, protests flared in Tibet against Chinese rule before snowballing into the worst unrest in Tibet for 20 years.