Bookself Mojatu.com Mojatu Nottingham Magazine M030 | Page 13

Nottingham connected atrocities who had fled to their shores on minor immigration charges from countries like Liberia and former Yugoslavia might often be doing so to wash their hands of these people. Most of them were simply deported and went home to impunity. Rapp agreed that pursuing perpetrators of atrocities on lesser charges and in national courts carried its own risks. He cited Iraq where the national courts are prosecuting Islamic State suspects for terrorism rather than genocide for the terrible atrocities committed against the Yazidi people. Rapp said they were being given very short trials with little evidence adduced and most hanged very soon after being convicted and sentenced. Community 13 Clearly an ICC prosecution was preferable but it was not going to happen, Rapp suggested. And he insisted that it was possible to bring some satisfaction to victims, even in cases like that of Jabbateh. The Liberian community in the US had been mobilised around such cases, he said. Perhaps this was so because evidence of their atrocities had been brought in aggravation of sentence and also because sentences were harsh. The ICC or other international criminal tribunals were always a better idea in theory. ‘But if you can’t get the best, go for the good,’ he said. ‘Don’t make the best the enemy of the good.’ Primary – Have you heard! - By Penny Cooper Mojatu team visited Primary, 33 Seely Road, Nottingham NG7 3FZ, for an event with Emma Smith and her 5Hz exhibition. A conversational evening to learn about her creation of a new language and how that work has provided insights into how language, in all its differing guises, may have evolved and a musicality about our speech which we may not have appreciated. “Primary was initiated by artists wishing to create an organisation that placed artistic research and production as a public process at the core of its work. Primary was set up by Nottingham Studios Ltd, an artist-focused not-for-profit organisation established as a registered charity in 2006.” A pleasant and welcoming space, which draws you in, with friendly engagement and fresh food and tea. We tried the bread there, made from fermented flour. What fun! The evening was great fun and very informative. Very much a lay person myself, it was interesting to hear about how language may have evolved, it’s design, the written word and how we peak and dip as we speak. We invented some lines and sang them, and enjoyed the benefit of a professional, Emma Smith, guiding us through various exercises to try out the new language. I would recommend a visit to Primary, take a look on their website - http://www.weareprimary.org/ for the up to date programme of events and see what else they are doing there!