grenfell

The Accident is not good, at all

Like a lot of Brits I was kinda intrigued by the trailers for The Accident. It looked sort of unimpressive aesthetically, I thought, but it had some good actors attached and an interesting premise. So I watched it. Hooooo boy.

Here is a summary of the first episode of The Accident:

Down-to-earth Welsh hairdresser Sarah Lancashire walks into her 15-year-old daughter’s room and finds her having sex with an older guy. Instead of ripping his balls off or calling the police (as having sex with a 15-year-old girl is you know ILLEGAL) she seems pretty chill about it all and tells the guy (uh, the pedophile) to escape out of the window before the girl’s dad comes back. Okay.

Downstairs the husband comes in and he’s dressed in a banana costume for a fun run. The adults go off to the fun run and while they’re there they listen to some clunky foreshadowing about how much everyone loves the village and will fight for it etc etc. Meanwhile some teenagers including the daughter are meeting up at an old abandoned building.

These are BAD KIDS! You can tell because some of them have DYED HAIR and PIERCINGS. They sneak under the extremely ineffective barbed wire and start vandalising the place. One of them spray-paints a willy which is the only realistic thing anyone in this story does. While the daughter and her friend are painting a butterfly mural on the upper floor of the building for some reason, there’s a massive gas explosion. Oh no! The explosion can be heard at the fun run zone and all the adults decide to go and see what happened. Okay, that I can buy, as I also live in a village and villagers are nosy AF.

The parents hear that kids are inside the building, which is odd cos no-one saw them go in, and start worrying. A phone call comes in from one of the girls (the daughter’s friend?) which confirms that a whole bunch of teens are trapped. Cut to some heroic firemen working to free them, using a angle grinder, WHICH SHOOTS SPARKS EVERYWHERE, in a GAS EXPLOSION. I considered for one second that that maybe was a plot point and the rest of the show would be about prosecuting incompetent rescuers, but… um, it seems not.

Anyway at this point the head of the company which owns the building shows up, despite this apparently being a pretty remote Welsh village, how the hell did she get there so fast?! Sarah Lancashire, whose daughter is trapped within rubble and possibly dead, hits this lady with the mild insult “you built this place cheap as chips!” Um, it’s past the watershed, you can swear, you know. A TV camera is filming this because the TV cameras are there, in this remote village where an explosion happened apparently less than an hour ago.

Then the building collapses completely and kills almost everyone inside! Who saw that coming? Dust fills the air. Everyone looks… peturbed. Maybe shocked at a pinch. And… that’s it for the big scene of horror and grief!

But, seeing as Sarah Lancashire is the main character her daughter survives, albeit so severly injured she might be disabled for life. Emergency services whip body bags out right in front of the crowd, way to go guys. Also one of the firefighters is dead, this is Alan who is married to Debbie, a deaf woman. Casting a deaf actor (Genevieve Barr) to play a deaf character and making her disability not the most important aspect of her is the only good move this show appears to have done, I think.

Okay so Sarah Lancashire heads to hospital with the other parents and watches them one by one learn their kids have died. This is the episode’s only actually well-done scene. One of the mothers (the mother of the daughter’s friend?) walks past SL and snaps sharply and horribly “She’s dead” and that got me right in the gut, credit where credit’s due.

While in the hospital SL talks to a guy who apparently saved her daughter in the building but we didn’t see him there who what why?? Also the nurse lets her go in the room, what the hell kind of hospital is this?

Back at home it turns out SL’s husband has been beating her and is about to do so again. She lets him do it and then comforts him for a while. That scene got a lot of criticism on Twitter (yes, I was eagerly Twittering along with others as it aired, and there was barely a positive tweet in the bunch) but actually I was okay with that, it’s definitely not outside the realm of possibility for a victim of domestic abuse to act that way. Refuge thought so too and posted about it which I thought was a good move.

Nearly at the end now. SL’s daughter starts communicating with her mother via blinking and the grieving parents hold a vigil. Company lady goes on TV, the clip of SL shouting “cheap as chips” gets dramatically played over and over and I found that hilarious, oh god I’m sorry. Not only am I not convinced the writers of this have ever met a Welsh person I’m not entirely sure if they’ve ever met a British person, no one has said that phrase in years.

The ‘next time’ trailer sees the deaf lady being beaten up, so much for a sense of community spirit.

This show is getting rave reviews across all the major British outlets and I have honest to god no idea why. See, it almost reached “so bad it’s good” levels, but the thing is: this was loosely based on two real-life tragedies: Grenfell and Aberfan. The Accident – a show about specifically children dying in a Welsh disaster – aired almost 53 years to the day after Aberfan. If you’re British or keep up with world news I won’t have to tell you about Grenfell, which was only a couple of years ago. Even sidestepping the issue of why there are so few Welsh actors in a drama inspired by Aberfan and so few black and Muslim characters in a tale inspired by Grenfell, the tweaking of the story (the death of innocents caused by bad corporate policy) to make the victims partly responsible for their own deaths leaves a very bad taste in my mouth. No-one in Aberfan or Grenfell Tower were breaking into a building when they were killed. This show, it feels exploitative and just so… cheap.

Cheap as chips.

A Bit of Banter

It goes without saying there are a lot of anger-making stories in the news right now, but this one particularly stood out to me.

This man’s defence was that the cardboard figures he had inside the cardboard “Grenfell Tower” effigy he burned were supposed to be him and his friends. I absolutely cannot get my head around this. His defence is that he thought it would be funny to imagine all his friends burning to death, apparently. Sorry for all the italics but that is the most pathetic, piss-poor excuse I’ve ever heard for anything.

Anyway, he got off.

Other excuses Paul Bussetti dished out: One of the figures he burned was supposed to be a person in a ninja costume, rather than a caricature of a Muslim person. Everyone at the party thought it was funny (to see figures apparently supposed to be themselves burn up). Despite the fact people uncovered a history of him making racist remarks, it absolutely was not racist. It was, in his words “just banter” except of course that normal damn people don’t banter about multitudes of people dying in a horrible, preventable tragedy.

Well. There’s only a couple of months to go until Bonfire Night. I hear people like burning effigys then, too, Paul.

It’s the second anniversary of the Grenfell Tower disaster today.

RIP:

Fatemeh Afrasiabi
Sakina Afrasiabi
Mohammed Alhajali
Alexandra Atala
The Begum family
The Belkadi family
Raymond “Moses” Bernard
Maria de Pilar Burton
Vincent Chiejina
The Choucair family
Joseph Daniels
The Deen family
Tony Disson
Eslah Elgwahry
Mariem Elgwahry
The Elsanosi-Ahmed family
The El-Wahabi family
Logan Gomes
Marco Gottardi
The Haftom family
The Hashim family
The Ibrahim-Hassan family
Ali Yawar Jafari
Hamid Kani
Khadija Khalloufi
Victoria King
Deborah Lamprell
Gary Maunders
Mary Mendy
Ligaya Moore
Denis Murphy
Mohamed Amied Neda
Isaac Paulos
Steven Power
Hesham Rahman
Jessica Urbano Ramirez
Khadija Saya
Abdeslam Sebbar
Sheila Smith
Gloria Trevisan
The Tuccu-Ahmedin family
Ernie Vital
Majorie Vital

Some more stories from Grenfell, this time ones about the helpers:

*

Zahra Choudhry, the student midwife who rushed to the tower

Asked how a 20-year-old could cope with so much, she laughs and says: “I felt I was a 35-year-old woman with six kids. I’d dealt with grief, the loss of babies, as part of my training, but I’d never experienced loss like this. It was overwhelming, because there were so many people involved, but I didn’t cry at all when I was there.”

Here’s How People Are Helping Those Who Have Been Evacuated From Grenfell Tower


Members of the public queued to donate supplies, following a hugely supportive response from members of the community.

By Wednesday afternoon, several the named drop-off points had received so
many donations that people offering more had to be turned away.

Adele and Stormzy Attend Grenfell Tower Memorial Service

Adele was famously among those who went to Grenfell Tower to help those in need, and later paid a visit to the emergency services who spent a week working in the aftermath of the tragedy “for a cup of tea and a cuddle”.

[…]

Stormzy was similarly vocal, sharing his disillusionment with the way the government reacted to the tragedy, most notably at this year’s Brit Awards, where he performed a freestyle rap name-checking Grenfell.

Muslims awake for Ramadan may have saved lives in the tower

Muslims were among the first people on the scene as people were evacuated from Grenville Tower.

Andre Barroso, 33, told The Independent: “Muslims played a big part in getting a lot of people out.

“Most of the people I could see were Muslim. They have also been providing food and clothes.”

The volunteers who flocked from near and far to help

“What motivated me? Humanity.

When they said no more donations, I thought I’m going to come down myself and help. I couldn’t just sit and watch the news.”

 

sarah531:

[Image 1: A wide shot of a high-rise building in London with almost all of it blackened by fire. Image 2: The same building with the damage hidden by scaffolding and a large banner reading “Grenfell, forever in our hearts” opposite a green heart symbol.]

Today (June 14) is the first anniversary of the Grenfell Tower disaster. 72 people died, the vast majority of them working class, black, migrants, disabled, or Muslims. (Or a combination of more than one of those descriptors.) Many were young children, as well. The whole terrible, avoidable incident remains a massive stain on modern-day Britain. The survivors and the families of the victims still haven’t got justice for what happened.

I think about Grenfell a lot and I really want to do something, but there’s so little useful stuff I can do, especially since I can’t get to London easily from where I am in the UK. So today I’m gonna do the one thing I actually can do, which is post detailed tributes to all the 72 people who died, quoting the family members they left behind and explaining who they were and what they did.

Obviously, this comes with huge trigger warnings. Any details about victims’ deaths, rather than their lives, will be described as clinically and distantly as possible. However many family members have made it clear that they want the world to know the exact way their loved ones died, and I’ll be posting quotes from those people as well. It’s incredibly difficult stuff to read so all posts will be tagged “grenfell” “grenfell tower” and “trigger warning.” I hope that’s sufficient.

For more about Grenfell, the Guardian has covered it very extensively. You may also want to look at the hashtags #justiceforgrenfell and #justice4grenfell on twitter, where many survivors’ groups have made their voices heard.

Once I’ve finished posting about the victims I’m going to make another post talking about all the people who came out to help that night when they didn’t have to, and all the people who are still fighting for justice.

Prime Minister Theresa May has said she regrets her reaction to the tragedy, and she should. Many of the people she promised to rehouse still don’t have houses.

Again please be sure to blacklist the trigger warnings if you need to! This post is tagged with them too.

#Justice4Grenfell

Edit: Here are all the tribute posts, in alphabetical order by last name:

Fatemeh Afrasiabi
Sakina Afrasehabi
Amal Ahmedin
Mohammed Alhajali
Fathia Ali Ahmed Elsanosi
Mohamed Amied Neda
Alexandra Atala
Hamid Begum
Hanif Begum
Husna Begum
Kamru Begum
Rabia Begum
Leena Belkadi
Malak Belkadi
Omar Belkadi

Raymond “Moses” Bernard
Vincent Chiejina
Bassem Choucair
Fatima Choucair
Mierna Choucair
Nadia Choucair
Sirria Choucair
Zaynab Choucair

Joseph Daniels
Jeremiah Deen
Zainab Deen
Tony Disson
Eslah Elgwahry
Mariem Elgwahry
Abdulaziz el-Wahabi
Faouzia el-wahabi
Mehdi el-Wahabi
Nur Huda el-Wahabi
Yasin el-Wahabi

Logan Gomes
Marco Gottardi
Berkti Haftom
Biruk Haftom

Farrah Hamdan
Firdaws Hashim
Yahya Hashim
Yaqub Hashim
Abufars Ibrahim
Isra Ibrahim

Rania Ibrahim
Fethia Ibrahim-Hassan
Hania Ibrahim-Hassan

Nura Jemal
Hamid Kani
Hashim Kedir
Khadija Khalloufi
Victoria King
Deborah Lamprell
Amna Mahmud Idris
Gary Maunders
Mary Mendy
Ligaya Moore
Denis Murphy
Isaac Paulos
Maria del Pilar Burton
Steven Power
Hesham Rahman
Khadija Saye
Abdeslam Sebbar
Shelia Smith
Gloria Trevisan
Mohamednur Tuccu
Amaya Tuccu-Ahmedin
Jessica Urbano Ramirez
Ernie Vital
Marjorie Vital
Ali Yawar Jafari

Part 39 of a series of posts honoring the Grenfell Tower victims.

Logan Gomes, a stillborn baby whose family was from the 21st floor of Grenfell Tower

Logan Gomes was stillborn hours after his family escaped the
fire. Thankfully all other members of the family survived, although they were treated for cyanide poisoning in hospital.

Logan’s mother Andreia told BBC Newnight that she was furious about the cheap, less fireproof cladding which had been placed around Grenfell Tower and helped the fire spread.

“When you go ahead ignoring something like that I feel that
you don’t care. You just killed so many people and you just killed my son.”

Logan’s father Marcio Gomes gave a tribute to the baby,
through tears, on the first day of the Grenfell inquiry.

“On the night we managed to escape the horrific fire at around four in the morning. That same evening, we found out that we had lost our son, Logan, in the hospital…

Everyone was so happy that Logan was going to be
born. No-one more so than my wife Andreia. As you can see from the photos she was just glowing with happiness. The pregnancy suited her and all her friends, family were all very happy that Logan was being born. We cried, during the reveal party that we had, when I found out it was a boy.”

The other two Gomes children had been excited to welcome
their baby brother, Marcio said.

Sources

https://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/home-news/grenfell-tower-fire-latest-news-unborn-child-lost-kensington-chelsea-council-kill-so-cyanide-a7838526.html

https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/2018/05/21/grenfell-inquest-survivor-breaks-tearful-tribute-stillborn-baby/

[Image: A woman in a straw hat and electric blue jewellery, looking at the camera]

Part 38 of a series of posts honoring the Grenfell Tower victims.

Maria del Pilar Burton, from the 19th floor of Grenfell Tower

Spainish health worker Maria del Pilar Burton, known to all
as Pily, did not die in the tower but passed away many months later from
complications caused by the fire. She shared her flat with her husband Nick, whom she met in a Spanish disco and remained married to for over three decades. They also had a pet dog, Lewis, which did not survive the fire. Pily suffered from dementia, and according to her husband it got worse when Grenfell Tower was refurbished.

“Of course the stress and problems related to the refurbishment of the tower made everything worse… the stress was upsetting and a terrible thing for Pily to take, and all I could do was to make her feel secure.”

After she passed away in January 2018, having been in hospital ever since the fire, her husband released a statement:

“My beautiful wife Maria Del Pilar, known to everyone as
Pily, passed away on January 29.

“Pily was well known in our community, she was what people call a real character. A character in the best sense of the word – she was flamboyant, colourful, passionate and friendly.

“Everyone on Portobello knew her and when we went to the market on the weekend she would stop and chat all the way along.

“She had such a big heart. We were together for 34 years. She was the love of my life.”

Among her friends was Sirria Choucair, who also died in the
fire.

Sources

https://www.theguardian.com/uk-news/2018/may/22/broken-and-bereft-grenfell-inquiry-hears-tributes-from-survivors

https://www.standard.co.uk/news/london/grenfell-tower-death-toll-rises-as-women-dies-months-after-being-rescued-from-blazing-tower-a3778501.html

http://www.itv.com/news/london/2018-05-22/perfect-wife-died-after-months-of-indignity-following-fire-inquiry-told/

https://www.standard.co.uk/news/london/i-turned-and-screamed-where-is-my-wife-grenfell-tower-survivor-recalls-harrowing-night-as-he-fled-a3598116.html

Part 37 of a series of posts honoring the Grenfell Tower victims.

Abdeslam Sebbar, from the 11th floor of Grenfell Tower

Unfortunately Abdeslam Sebbar is a Grenfell Tower victim whom almost
nothing is known about, only that he was 77 years old, Moroccan, and died of fume inhalation. He was one of the few people not commemorated at the inquest, and the Guardian reported that attempts to contact his friends or relatives resulted in nothing.

However, in June 2018 the Scottish Daily Mail reported that Sebbar had
sons, and had a final phone call with them before he became a victim of the
fire. Later, a fraudster claimed to be another son of his and claimed money set aside for the Grenfell families; however he was caught and jailed for 18
months.

Sources

https://www.eveningexpress.co.uk/news/uk/grieving-relatives-reveal-human-toll-of-grenfell-tower-tragedy/

https://www.theguardian.com/uk-news/ng-interactive/2018/may/14/lives-of-grenfell-tower-victims-fire

https://www.pressreader.com/uk/scottish-daily-mail/20180602/282080572519720

[Image: A black man looking at the camera, with yellow pillows in the background]

Part 36 of a series of posts honoring the Grenfell Tower victims.

Ernie Vital, from the 16th floor of
Grenfell Tower

Ernie Vital, the son of Marjorie Vital, worked in the catering industry. He was 50 years old, and had lived in Grenfell for almost as long as it had been standing.

His family released a statement after he and his mother became victims of the fire:

“He was a proud, humble, mature and independent man. He was
a loyal son and law-abiding citizen who maintained good relationships with all those he met in society.

He will be remembered as a kind, sensitive and caring person
with a warm-hearted smile. His pursuit of happiness has been abruptly and dramatically stopped by the Grenfell Tower tragedy. His family and friends will miss him dearly.”

At the Grenfell inquiry his brother, who didn’t want to be
named by the media, remembered Ernie as “a very good dancer” who would sit and watch TV with him when they were younger. “We constantly watched TV because we didn’t really go out. It was a safe haven: in 1973, Caribbeans had a tough time, we weren’t particularly accepted by a proportion of the population.”

His body was found with his mother’s, and both sets of ashes
were scattered at sea. “I’ve never seen the water this blue …As I start to
release the ashes …I was breathing in the ashes, it was a magical moment. In a weird kind of way I became closer to them,” his brother said.

Sources

https://www.getwestlondon.co.uk/news/west-london-news/grenfell-tower-fire-loyal-son-13517076

https://www.theguardian.com/uk-news/ng-interactive/2018/may/14/lives-of-grenfell-tower-victims-fire

https://news.sky.com/story/grenfell-tower-inquiry-mother-and-sons-bodies-found-fused-together-after-fire-11383180

https://www.theguardian.com/uk-news/live/2018/may/23/grenfell-inquiry-continues-after-harrowing-second-day-live-updates