fi 7 hr Clitheroe Advertiser <t Times. February 14,1964
i
TALKING OF WOMEN
• • • by jean Miller
rp iIE only danger which petite, raven-haired Mrs. Krystyna Grifiith-Jones fears is find her dog may rush from the gale info (he road and be killed. The only disturbing noise
comes from Ihe busy trunk road outside her home. But once she lived in an atmosphere of fear. Once her sleep
was only fitful because of a glaring light, and even that rest would be broken when she was roughly roused for questioning. Mrs. Griflllh-J ones, who
lives at Manor House, Chat- burn. is one of the many Polish-born people now living in this country who were political prisoners in Russia during the war.
means she was not one of me very important prisoners whom the Russians interrogated for. hours during the night.
r “ I was unimportant, just a
young' girl." she explained. Her story begins on April 10,
J^LAliNK was talking to a group of voting people
and I listened. Ihe conversa tion began with an argu ment aDout pep records, switched to classical music, barely touched on politics,
and then centred, rather sur prisingly 1 thought, for a considerable time on reli gion. All the young people in
the group had their definite views, hut Elaine, a bright 20-year-old girl, a native of the CI i t h e r o e district, obviously intelligent and educated, dominated the scene. As the conversation grew,
so did my interest, for 1 was by accident a privileged spectator, and the young people did not resent my intrusion. Some of Elaine’s views
clashed with my own, but I found in the end that most of the youngsters in the group agreed with her. I could not
resist the temptation of join ing in, and soon realised I was not going to get matters all my own way. “ Put that in your paper!”
one of the company said with a challenging grin as first one and then another candid view was expressed. Rather taken aback, 1
ga v e a non - committal answer, but then began to ponder the problem. I talked to adults about Elaine's views and to my astonish ment 1 found many of them agreed with her, but con fessed they had never really taken the trouble or had the coinage to say so in public. Back I went to discuss the
challenge with Elaine, and to ask her if she would agree to publicity being given to the frank statements she had made. Agre eme nt was readily given with certain reservations. In view of Elaine's job and in fairness to her
family I agreed to publish only one of her names, and not to give her address. Hence the first article of a
brand new series entitled “ The girl in the shadows,” which will present Elaine’s views on several aspects of life. The articles have been
written exclusively for the “ Advertiser and Times ”
and will I feel sure cause considerable controversy and discussion. Whether you agree with
what Elaine says or not, you are bound to be interested, for there is no doubt that today Christian viewpoints are being challenged as never before. Elaine's views may sound
staggering to o r t h o d o x churchgoers, but they are possibly the views of the majority and they demand an answer.
W. Carey Chatburn, Editor.
IS H E A V E N A FAIRY TALE?
A R E you a coward? Think carefully b e fo r e you
answer that q u e s t i o n , because I will put it to you another way—you arc a coward, or if you are not one now, you will certainly be one before you die !
Tills is because pvervone is basically a. coward when it comes to the thought ot dying, even if one thinks that there is a life after death, which not many people do.
What does life after death mean ;n you? i f you are young, then tleath is too far ahead for you to w o t ’ about, but what if you are old? Sooner or later you will have to face up to the facts, either you believe in after life or you do not.
Men and women are odd crea tures. They like to think that they are important on earth, and that no-one can get on without them. They do not like to think that this ends when i hey die, so they invent a thing called after life.
>Iow, nobody knows where this after life, or Heaven as it is called, is. or even what it is. Ask any two people what their idea of Heaven is. and you will find their ideas are different. In fact everyone has his own little dream about Heaven, in the same way that he has his own little dream about, "the perfect little cottage in the country.''
How can Heaven exist when (here are thousands of differ ent ideas as to how it should be. It would bo impossible for us all to go to our own little private Heavens when we die.
However people will persist in ; believing they go to this ima ginary place. Next, they have to invent some way of going there. We all know and have scientific proof that our human bodies rot away when we die, so what now?
That's it! Invent a soul or spirit that lives inside you and will no: rot, so that this spirit can float up 'or in whatever direc tion Heaven is i when you die. No-one lias ever seen a soul, and we do not know where they live in our bodies—but nevertheless we are all assured that we have one.
So. now we have a very pretty picture of something we have never seen, living somewhere in us though we do not know where, and. when we die this something goes to a place which, again, we have never seen. And do you condemn your children for believing in fairies?
But. the older a person gets, apparently the more he be comes attracted to this idea of Heaven. The nearer he comes to death, the Jess he likes to think of it as the end of everything.
This fact is easy to prove. Look at tho average church congre gation, and you will find two thirds of them, or over, are at least middlo aged people.
This is not because the older ones have more to praise God for than tho younger ones. It Is because young people today feel they do not need a God; they are comfortable, enjoying life to the full, and they still, have a long way to go.
It is the older ones, who although they are comfortable, have not
of Heaven which promises them an everlasting youth.
This means, surely, that people are basically coming to God through fear of dying. A man
(
a long way to go—and who begin to drift towards this idea
or a woman will accept any fairytale story, us lung ns it offers a way out. And so people are going to believe firmly in Heaven, until someone comes up with a scientific proof that there is no such thing.
And who is going to do this? How can you prove that some, thing is not there, when it is
not there for you to prove that it is not there, and so on and so forth!
Unfortunately you cannot walk up to a corpse and ask it if it
is in Heaven, as you are curious what will happen when yon die. It would be a great help if you could!
j
Many people try to argue round i the point by saying that people I who have died, and been I brought back to life surgically, claim to have been in Heaven, and there are some fantastic accounts of angels and wonder ful music.
But on the other hand, there are just as many accounts of people who have been brought back to life and say they experienced nothing. This feel ing is therefore just hysteria of the brain as all the bodily senses are brought back to life.
Another silly idea connected with Heaven, is that if you believe in it. you mast also presumably believe in a sort of Hell. For hundreds of yfars people be lieved in a great expanse of fire under the ground with a
little man with horns and a toasting fork prancing round it.
Now they hill this as ridiculous. There could be no such place, they say. But though they scolT at this idea of a bad man and a great red fire, called hell, they still think of a good man
in a “ blue ethereal sky" called heaven. How can one idea be better than the other? Presum ably because people do not like the idea of going to the other place!
Another thought that strikes one is where the dividing line comes between heaven and hell? I f there is a heaven, are von only going to have human beings in it? Or are you going to have intelligent animals like dogs there, and what are you going to do about mentally- lacking human beings? A spe cial heaven for each sort of person?
Also non-ohristians who have load a good life, arc they to be excluded? The whole thing is too impossible to be true, and more and more Christians who believe in good principles In life, are not believing in the promised reward in heaven.
Are you one of those who believe that you will float up and play your harp? Arc you still believ ing in fairytales so that you will not have to face up to frightening realities? Yes. as I said before, are you a coward?
FURTHER REMAND ON MURDER CHARGE
SMALL crowd o f people waited outside Clithcroe Magis trates' Court for half an hour on Monday morning when
Joseph Wilson Masters (22) of no fixed address, who is a native o f Clitheroe, again appeared on remand. Masters, who is charged
with the murder o f James Littler, aged 75, of 8 Derby Street, Clitheroe. was again remanded in custody until next Monday by the magis
trate; Mr. J. D. Greenwood. The public gallery was packed
for the brief hearing, which lasted for only three minutes. First in the queue outside the
public gallery was a woman who began waiting at nine o'clock.
Masters appeared in the dock
handcuffed to a policeman and was wearing the same slate grey suit and green and white open-necked shirt in which he appeared last week.
Mr. Littler, a retired brick
layer. who Jived alone, was found dead at his home in Derby Street, Clitheroe, with severe head injuries on January 31.
Inspector P. B. Jackson, pro
secuting. in answer to a ques tion f r om the Magistrates'
Clerki Mr. T. U. Llddle, said that next Monday he would pro bably be able to say when the Director of Public Prosecutions would be in a position to proceed.
Mr. W. D. Greenwood, for die
defence, intimated that he had no.eommentfto make.
PLANS IN COLOUR
ABOUT 60 people attended a
- public meeting organised by Clitheroe Civic Society and held in the Boys’ Grammar School on Wednesday evening last week. Tlie speaker was Mr. Michael Drewett, a technical officer of the British Colour Council, whose talk and coloured slides covered briefly the theory of colour, application to new build ings in Caracas and Brasilia, and the effects of colour in some streets and squares in London. The coloured slides which he
showed during tlie last part ol tlie talk were particularly impres sive illustrating a number of aspects of colour in streets in cluding seasonal, festive, indige nous and incidental effects. This he hoped would enable
the audience to make a more enlightened appraisal of the street scheme for Morn- Lane which Is being prepared by the Civic Society and which will be ready shortly. Mr- Drewett's lively presenta
tion of an Interesting theme and the short discussion on a number
of controversial points which followed, combined to make a stimulating evening for all pre sent. Dr. W. D. Oliver presided.
1940—Palm Sunday—when she was arrested and imprisoned at Grodno, which is now part of Russia. " But then Hitler attacked Rus
sia and Poland and Russia found themselves on the same side. Following the signing of a treaty in London the Polish political prisoners were supposed to be released. Those w-ho could make themselves heard to those in authority were released, but many of them were not. Mrs. Griffith-Jones was intern
ed in a Russian prison in Poland for four months before being transferred to a prison inside Russia. At that time tile Russians sen
2 a.m. and interrogated for two hours. I was lucky there. The
important political prisoners would be investigated all night but as I was unimportant two hours were enough for me," she explained. She glanced round the light
airy room where we were sitting. " I should say that, in a room
roughly this size, or at any rate quite a large room, there were sixty of us. We had to make arrangements ab out sleeping because of the lack of space so we slept on oar - sides on the floor and could not change posi tions then.
SOUP AND WATER “ We were fed with soup and
wnter once a day, I was young and healthy blit of course the diet was terribly weakening, Many, many people died.
"The results of the interroga
tions were always in Russian and we had to sign these. At first I refused, but then 1 thought trie best thing to do would be to learn Russian so that at least l would know what I was being charged with. " Wo were put in with criminals
as this was dograding for us but I learned Russian front them. Later, people I spoke lo were horrified when they heard tho language—it was full of swear ing." Mrs. Griffith-Jones was .sen
tenced to five years in prison and fotmcl herself sent to the middle of Siberia.
" The journey took five weeks."
tical prisoners were most friendly and tried to help eaclt other as much as possible. There were three shelves in tlie cattle truck and as I was the smallest the others put me on a small shelf at the end of tlie truck to sleep. "The only thing was that bv
this time it was February and Siberia is so fantastically cold my coat was frozen to the side of the truck by morning and the others had to drag me free.” Eventually the prisoners arriv
ed at Marinsk on the Trans- Siberian railway and Mrs. Giif- fith-Jones was among those sent to the central camp, where con
ditions were milder than in some others. There site was made to work 12
hours a day making gloves, prob ably for soldiers
one letter per month and we soon developed a code with our fami lies. Through our letters WP learned that it seemed as if
Hitler was about, to invade Rus sia. “ We supply did not believe that the war would last ami it
was this conviction that Hitler would attack Russia and trim we would be freed to fight against tlie Germans, which kept ^ going.
“ The Secret Police were in charge of the camp and under
FAREWELL GIFTS
SUPERVISOR of the Cliih- croe centre of the North
with tlie handbag which lS
Western Electricity Board, Miss Ellen Wilkinson, of 27 Buccleuch Avenue, Clitheroe was presented with a hand bag from colleagues on Fri day to mark her retirement after 331 years. Miss Wilkinson was presented
Commercial Engineer, at, the Burnley district office. She an0
received other gifts from her Clitheroe colleagues.
Miss Wilkinson was the first
assistant, and the only one at that time, at the service centre, which was moved from York Street to the present Vine Street site in 1930.
In 1950 an ambulance team for
tlie.Blackburn area was formed and Miss Wilkinson was otic of its first members.
"At the cantp wc were all owed
she recalled. " We were put into cattle trucks, of course, and din ing tlie whole journey were only let out once. •' I must say that all the poli
L
tenced prisoners in their absence and without trial. Investigations were always made in the middle of the night. “ I was usually woken at about
terribly, lucky," she told me. By " lucky," Mrs. Griflith-Joncs
" But I was lucky, terribly,
them were. Russian prisoners so that wo could find ourselves be ing ordered about by a murderer. “At the camp we were given a
little more soup, bread and water. ■•When I arrived at the cantp
the soles of my shoes were com pletely worn out. although the uppers were perfectly alright. For five days I wore them like that and I was extremely lucky not lo get frostbite. After live days a shoemaker from Warsaw made me some soles from a piece of rubber, which he had prob ably stolen. " I was very warmly dressed
and one man who was leaving and had never seen mo before threw me a sheepskin coat which
came down to my ankles and kept me much warmer than most of the prisoners. “ It had been a very cold win
ter and as I was arrested in April I was very warmly dressed. Some of the women, however, were arrested in July and as they only had what they wore they were extremely cold in their summer dresses. We shared as we could although none of us had much. It was a great moment when
radios were allowed in the camp. “ I remember it clearly as it
tvas so suddon,’’ said Mrs. Grif- fith-Jonos describing the scene. "I walked into the barracks and heard Molotov sneaking about trie Russians being attacked by the Germans, who had been their allies.
“ For two months nothing hap
pened. and then wc heard wc were to be released. Tlie idea was that we should join tlie Polish Forces to fight against the Genitalis." But the prisoners did not find
this at all easy. " I was asked where I wanted
to go and was told that 110-onc knew where the Polish forces' were. Our freedom was illusory. I looked at the map and decided to go to a warmer place so I asked lo be allowed to go to somewhere near Samarkand.'’
ON THE BUFFERS
.Still determined to join her countrymen who were fighting,
.Mrs. Grifiiths-Jones climbed on to the buffers of a train out
side a station, but was spotted and arrested. Fortunately, tlie
'prison was so full that she was allowed to go free. Site hoarded another train in the same way and managed to
a reach a centre where many Polish people who had been in a similar position to herself were gathering. She joined the Polish Forces
and became the personal assis tant to the woman who was com manding officer of the Polish equivalent of the A.T.S. in Pale stine and Iraq. Later she was i:t charge ol a group of canteens for the forces in Italy.
Mrs. Griffith-Jones was a uni
versity student studying law and theatrical production wlton she was arrested and she intendod to become a producer.
This ambition was never realis
ed because in 1946 she was mar ried in Rome, her husband being the Gl, or second-in-command, with the British liaison unit with the Second Polish Corps. Mr. and Mrs. Griffiths-Jones and their son and daughter
lived in London belore going to live in Chatburn seven years ago. Although she has made Eng
land her home, Mrs. Griffith- Jones still maintains her affec tion for iter native country. One of her hobbies is the translation of Polish plays into English ami several of these have been broad
cast.
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British Legion Notes
BARROW SINGER HEAT
WINNER
A. DARWEN group and a Barrow singer we r e
winners in the sixth heat of the talent contest being o r g a n i s e d by Clitheroe British Legion and held in the Legion Club on Friday. About 200 people were present.
The judges had a difficult
group from Danven were tlie winners with Mike Keenan, of Barrow, second. The last heat takes place
tonight and later there will be two finals—one for groups and the other for solo acts. This year sees the anniver
saries of two world-shattering events—the 50th anniversary of the beginning of the First World War and the 25th anniversary of the beginning of the second.
The pilgrimage to mark the
50th anniversary of the outbreak of the First World War will take place from September 7 until the 12th. It is based on Ypres and Arras and is open to ex-servicemen who may be accompanied by their wives' and also relatives who wish to visit a cemetery within 15 miles of either town.
An interesting programme is
being arranged and tlie cost, which will cover rail and sea transport from London to Bel gium and France, accommoda tion and meals and all necessary transport while on the continent will be £22 per person. Arrangements have now been
made for pilgrimages to Holland on Friday, April 10 to April 14; Friday, May 22 to May 26; Friday July 3 to .July 7. and Friday, August 28 to September 1. Application forms may be ob
tained from the general secre tary of the British Legion. 49. Pall Mall. Londo n , S.W.l. Requests should be marked either
“ Battlefields Tour " or " Dutch Pilgrimage."
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DOUBT” DEFEAT CLITHEi
INLAYING bright imaginative football fi Park on Saturday, Clilheroc were ri
goal which looked to be scored from an c A header from a South Liverpool for
minutes of the game hit the bar and ret Hampson, who looked to be well offside
Playing to the whistle, he popped the ball into the net
and to Clitheroe's astonish ment the referee pointed to the centre-spot.
This goal made South Liver
pool 2—1 winners and it was a sorry end to a game in which Clitheroe had generally given as much as they hud received.
Clitheroe were the better
side in tho first half and if they had found more power in the forward line they could well have established a com fortable lead by the interval.
On tlie dry. uneven Hotlv Park
surface the ball was difficult to bring under control and it was
difficult to iiir the ball on the run
Cliiheroo shot often but from
too far om ;o make anv tolling effort.
For a time. Clitheroe were
down to ten men when Re" Dixon had to leave the field after a knock on ihe head. He re
turned dazed. f i e r c e sh o t
fierce shot. Shortly al ter tho interval
Clitheroe drew level with a neatly-worked goal. A centre from the right found Dixon completely unmarked and the
winger volleyed tho ball into tlie net. Earlier Clithcroe had j u s t
inches wide. Another fierce shot from John
failed to find the target when Tom Pinder placed a free-kick for Bernard Wallbank to drive
Kirk almost brought a goal when the keeper palmed tho ball out but managed to rescue it from the rushing fee; of Clitheroe forwards.
It was a shock to Clitheroe
when the home side's second goal was allowed to stand and in consequence play became ragged and a little needle crept into the game.
Clitheroe's defence were given
a hard test in this game’ but wing-halves Allan Bush and Eric Bush did not make things easier
for themselves by placing too deep. It was fonunate trim Brian Parkinson was on form at centre-
. half and kept a firm grip on the middle.
AMATEUR LEAGUE Results;
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AIISS H World
Waddingto: Ten nation the comp’ Misses wer Dressed
they paraci and were costume, cl and poise. Miss Spa
the run of play. South took the lead. Wallace failed to collect a right-wing comer and the bail was headed back for centre- forward Jones to hi; homo a
On the half-hour and against Full-bai Jack Gra
the game Team:
ton: Bus! IE.): Kit Pinder, D
COM
,Netherfiei( Ashton U. Bacup B Lancaster Burscough Skolmersd. S. Liverpo Fleetwood Marine Prescot Co Southport CLITHERi Rossendal Leyland X Barrow Rt Cromptons
FL Lancs.
Clitheroe ■ dither
Chatburn Waddingto Low Moor Gisburn v.
Chorley New Bl’igl Nelson Horwich Morecamb Droylsdcn
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by Mrs. H Mr. and
tier cake
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