The Power of Community
200AD and
the Roman Empire was a single pagan civilisation stretching from the borders of
modern Scotland to what is now Iran. But the
Empire was changing. The frontiers were now fixed and the army that defended
them paid by taxes and not plunder.
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Ostrogoths attack Rome 541CE (Angus MacBride) |
Then the
crisis came. Barbarians overran the frontiers and the system of free trade that
had made the empire rich collapsed. Order was restored, but at a cost of years
of austerity and high taxes.
Those taxes
were in turn levied increasingly on the poor whilst the rich not only got
richer, they retreated from public life and spent their wealth on themselves
and their country houses rather than in the cities and on public buildings. Ordinary
citizens felt increasingly abandoned by their superiors, left to fend for
themselves in an increasingly dangerous world.
During this
century of chaos one group of citizens stuck together. An unusual sect, they
were egalitarian enough to allow women to rise to senior positions, something
unheard of in the Roman world. When disaster struck and the rich ran for the
hills, their leaders stayed to help. If members of the community were enslaved
by barbarians they pooled their resources to buy them back.
Although
their ideology was considered somewhat weird by most citizens, their undoubted sense
of community drew them an increasing number of supporters. In due course the
Emperor himself was to join them.
Ninety years
later the western half of the empire, militarily strong but economically weak,
collapsed. Economic power moved east and the Germans took over the running of
Europe. However this sect, now much changed and not always for the better,
survived and is with us still.
They are of course,
the Christians.
A History of Oil
Oil is the
problem.
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Indian soldiers in Mesopotamia |
In 1912 we
entered the oil age when Winston Churchill made the decision to switch the
Royal Navy from using British coal to foreign oil. The first oil war began two
years later when British and Indian forces invaded Iraq to protect the Navy’s
Iranian oil fields. We invaded again in 1941, 1991 and 2003. In fact in
the 100 years of the oil age, the British Army has been in Iraq for 41 of them,
whilst next-door-neighbour Iran saw British backed regime changes in 1941 and
1953.
But foreign
wars weren’t the only problem with oil.
Between our
second and third invasions of Iraq scientists had been warning with increasing
frequency about the dangers of climate change. As oil replaced coal the rate of
increase in Greenhouse gases in the atmosphere accelerated, and this was a
problem that couldn’t be solved with tanks.
Give Me A P Please Bob
As fans of
Geoffrey of Monmouth know, Totnes was where Brutus the Trojan landed on these
isles to found Britannia. It was also where, in 2005, Robert Hopkins and
friends started the Transition Town movement.
Transition
Towns are the big idea of the moment in sustainability circles. They are a more
optimistic reaction to the end of the age of oil than the Dark Mountain lot.
Transition
movement revolves around three Ps.
Peak Oil is
the moment when we have used up half the world’s oil. We can search the deep
ocean floor for new fields, extract more from existing wells with new
technology and move to unconventional sources, but this all costs more.
The modern
world eats oil, runs on oil and is mostly made out of oil, but with China,
India and Brazil all wanting more of the black stuff, it will soon cost a lot
more. The Chancellor can knock a penny or two off fuel duty to keep motorists
happy, but he can’t reduce the cost of artificial pesticide, aircraft fuel or plastic.
Permaculture
though is part of the solution.
It is the
practise of feeding ourselves, wherever we live, in a way that doesn’t mortgage
the future. Small scale, low impact, diverse and imaginative projects allow
people to grow food almost anywhere. An increasingly popular sub-branch is
guerrilla gardening, the planting of any disused area of land with fruit and
vegetables for general consumption. If the kids nick all the strawberries,
that’s just great.
The final P
is People.
As is
becoming increasingly obvious as one scandal after another breaks, our society
is not about to reform itself anytime soon. Politicians have been caught
fiddling their expenses, the media is out of control, the bankers have been
quietly profiting out of the Credit Crunch but this unhallowed triumvirate is
still running the country.
Transition in Your Street
But you know
what? We don’t need them.
As the
people of Ancient Rome realised, when the going gets tough the last people
you’re going to find hanging around to help out are politicians, media moguls
and bankers. Just as it was left to the likes of Charmaine Neville, a singer in
a jazz band, to borrow a school bus and rescue the sick and elderly from flooded
New Orleans when hurricane Katrina struck, the people who will help you survive
Peak Oil probably don’t live in a tax haven.
Whether or
not there was a Charmaine Neville to borrow a chariot and rescue her neighbours
when the barbarians overran the Roman Empire is not known. What we do know
though is that whilst the Christian Bishops were becoming the new
administration on the continent, most of Britain returned to paganism, but not
the Roman sort. Something kept society going in the changed world of the fifth
century, but it wasn’t the Christian Church.
And that is
where I think Pagans can help the Transition movement.
The hardest
transition of all to make is the one inside, the transition from seeing the
natural world as a resource to be fought for and exploited to one which should
be shared and venerated, but I would hope this is a transition most of us are
at least part way towards making.
So why not
join the Transition movement and help future-proof your community, because at
the end of the day your community are the people who’ll be there in a crisis.
The society
that oil built is coming to an end. Help to become part of what comes next.
(This article first appeared in the Lammas 2012 issue of Pentacle magazine)