Chris – Your blog is powerful and I feel so privileged to have my name 
associated with it in any way. Thank You. And for anybody else on the LIST who 
is wondering what to do with your life… Chris has a monumental answer. Just 
open some space is an cramped corner of the universe… for people in pain. 

 

Thanks Chris!

 

Harrison

 

 

From: OSList [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Chris 
Grady via OSList
Sent: Monday, July 25, 2016 7:14 AM
To: World wide Open Space Technology email list
Subject: [OSList] Calais refugee camp/jungle - and the power of Open Space + a 
new veg principal

 

May I share this blog as I realise that I have just been immersed in an open 
space technology world whilst chopping veg to help feed the refugees from all 
over Europe and beyond who are camped on the edge of the English Channel.

 

http://www.chrisgrady.org/blog/calais-warehouse-open-space-principals-the-right-veg/

 

I would welcome any sharing or reflections which you might be able to offer. 
There are two other blogs from the same visit if you want to learn more about 
the amazing work of the Refugee Community Kitchen and the Jungle Books 
library/learning centre.  Both should be completely unnecessary in this day and 
age, but as long as governments create limbo-land for human souls, charity is 
needed

 

In case it is more helpful, I offer the text only below.

 

"I have just spent 3 days in and around the Jungle in Calais, and there are two 
preceding blogs circulating which look at the work of the  
<http://www.chrisgrady.org/blog/calais-refugee-community-kitchen-many-many-carrots/>
 Refugee Community Kitchen and  
<http://www.chrisgrady.org/blog/calais-conversations-enhance-understanding-and-awareness-for-us-all/>
 Jungle Books. These are just two parts of an intricate, fully functional, 
completely unexpected operation or organised chaos to bring the maximum level 
of life and hope to the 7000 people living in political and governmental limbo 
in Calais.

When not knee deep in carrots, I work quite a lot with the system developed by 
Harrison Owen to help to run effective meetings and events called  
<http://www.chrisgrady.org/open-space-facilitation-and-event-design/> Open 
Space Technology. Over 20 years it has been used to help to ensure that each 
person is working most effectively when they are present in a space where they 
are collectively tackling an important issue about which they are passionate.

I realised that, with the addition of a quick principal about veg/ingredients, 
the operation of the kitchen, and the whole interlocking of services and 
support across the whole of the Jungle, observe the basic four principals and 
one law which Harrison put forward. He will not be surprised by this. I was 
delighted to muse over it whilst chopping aubergines.

The camp is totally supported by volunteers who arrive in waves or trickles and 
stay for days or months depending on their own external life commitments. On 
any one day or shift the organisers have to get used to the principal “whoever 
comes are the right people” – there is no time to wish for a few more, or worry 
whether they will stay long enough – we just get on with the job with whoever 
is there. The principal, once accepted, takes so much of the pressure away from 
wishing it were different. It ain’t. The challenge for us all, back here in 
Blighty, is to make sure the right people, whoever they are, know there will 
always be work and a welcome for them.

Principal 2 states “whatever happens is the only thing that could” – and as the 
Warehouse awakes to start work in the morning with preparations, deliveries, 
support services and care, they need to be aware that overnight the militaire 
may have closed a restaurant, or stopped 700 children being fed in a safe area, 
or decided that no building/repair materials can get through the gate. Whatever 
happens, outwith the immediate control of those ready to start work, has to be 
accepted. There are contingency plans between the organising volunteers for 
some eventualities, but in the main they roll with the punches. Behind the 
scenes there will be political and governmental negotiation, but on the ground 
the work continues relentlessly.

Open Space suggests that all topics or area of work should generate action 
points, so that “we” get stuff done. No point wishing someone else would sort 
the mess out, whoever is there at the moment needs to get on and deliver 
whatever is possible.   “When it starts it starts” – and whilst the stew should 
have been on the simmering gas jets by 11am, there is a problem if the 30 bags 
of tomatoes are not chopped and ready, or even available on site. Then it can’t 
start. [Editor’s note — times and quantities are fictional…please don’t make 
stew with my timings or quantities…these are for illustration purposes only !]

And now I would like to add a specific principal for the kitchen, a variation 
on the 1st principal, “whichever veg are in the fridge are the right veg” (or 
variations on that theme whether the department is distributing food, or 
helping to clothe the 7000 people in the jungle). The chefs have to be 
endlessly inventive. The donations have to keep flowing. The deals with “just 
past their best” suppliers, and larger business distributors have to be made, 
and without that it won’t start, and it won’t arrive in time. By a miracle, 
god’s will, power of the universe, skill or luck it just about keeps arriving. 
But that needs us to keep sharing the news in a positive and empassioned way, 
and reaching out to all contacts we can.

The next and final principal which we use in facilitating an Open Space event 
is the one which suggests “when its over its over”. This can be very powerful. 
If a job takes ten minutes and we’d allowed 30 minutes, then finish it, clean 
up, wash the knives and chopping boards, and get on with the next task…there is 
always a next task. But similarly, this crisis of human limbo-land is not over. 
It has been going on for too long, and will continue until governments 
re-consider the waste of money and human life that they are causing by their 
failure to act together. It is not over, and so every day of the week, every 
week of the year, a hot meal is needed by 1700+ people in the jungle, and many 
more if the militaire keep up their strategies instructed from on high. Tonight 
I have booked my Eurostar cheap deal to get over again in October for a week 
because, I suspect, it will not be over. And if it is then I will have time to 
sightsee in Calais, and the North area of France. But I suspect I will be back 
in the kitchen with new friends (whoever comes) and jumping in a van to get 
“the right veg” from somewhere.

Although I have written two blogs in quick succession about just three days in 
Calais, this third blog is hoping to reach a different group of “right people”. 
People who might google Open Space or things like that, or read business 
networks. By reaching out with Calais Jungle as the heart, I am hoping to reach 
some new people.

There is one Law offered by Harrison Owen to encourage the best use of Open 
Space, and it also applies to the Jungle. It is called the Law of Mobility or 
the Law of Two Feet.

Even as I type this I realise the awful impotence which the word mobility rises 
in my gut around this situation. We can use our two feet and we are mobile. 
Those that we serve and support have had their mobility removed by the 
limbo-madness that they are in. They cannot go back to their homes which we and 
our governments have helped to destroy, and they cannot reach their destination 
because of an unhealthy distrust of “foreigners” coming to swamp Great Britain.

But we the privileged free citizens of the UK and other nations can use the law 
of mobility and go where we are most needed. That’s the point – we all have a 
part to play, and something we can do. But we may need to make a move to be 
most effective.   I am afraid I don’t have “treasure”, but I do have “time” 
which as a freelancer I can offer. So my feet took me to Calais to help…and I 
didn’t need much talent to drive a van or chop carrots. Others may be time-poor 
but a bit more cash-rich, and there a short move to your bank account, or one 
of the online donation portals can have an immense good effect – such as  
<http://refugeecommunitykitchen.com/> http://refugeecommunitykitchen.com/

Within the Warehouse working area the law of two feet works seamlessly – if 
there are too many people around the carrots, and not enough people at the 
washing up, then the flow of volunteers move with just the tiniest prompt to 
down knives and pick up dish cloth.   There is endless washing and cleaning, to 
ensure the best possible hygiene in the kitchen. One of the smallest jobs of 
the day is washing up the 150 plates and forks from the volunteer lunch – 
everything is like home, but scaled up to enormous numbers.

So dear colleagues who use Open Space, friends who have been to D&D over the 
years, and those who know me from many other lives and ways. I hope you will 
have a think about how you can use your time talent and treasure, and your own 
mobility, to help those who are stuck in limbo so close to re-starting 
productive and UK tax paying lives here in this country A country that they all 
believe to be the most welcoming and supportive for a multi-cultural workforce 
and community.

My final blog (which will be the 4th of 3 – with homage to Douglas Adams) will 
follow when Anna is ready for me to shout about a plan/event she is thinking 
about.

Thank you for reading and sharing these blogs"

Thank you so much Harrison, Phelim, and all those who have led me to understand 
Open Space. 

 

Chris

 




Chris Grady FRSA
Chris Grady.Org

 

Gothic House, High Road, Great Finborough, Suffolk IP14 3AQ

07713 643971  [email protected]  skype: chris_grady

 

 <http://www.chrisgrady.org/> 
www.chrisgrady.org 

Chris Grady.Org Limited Company No 8827507  

Directors: Chris Grady and Kath Burlinson <http://www.kathburlinson.co.uk/> ,

Associates 2016: Kate Taylor (Edinburgh) Tania Azevedo (London) Kate Reed (New 
York)
CGO - Making Connections & Creative Life Support

 

Creativity and Business Life Coach

"Tell me, what is it you plan to do with your one wild and precious life?"  
Mary Oliver, poet

New e-book offering creative life support

 <http://bookboon.com/en/the-anatomy-of-your-creativity-ebook> 
http://bookboon.com/en/the-anatomy-of-your-creativity-ebook

 

Event Dates

CGO Surgeries:  Edinburgh Sat 13th Aug, London 23rd Sug & 20th Sept

Producers' Pool: London 26th July & 27th Sept

Creative Workshops: Edinburgh Sun 14th Aug 

Creative Business 1/2 Day with Nicky Raby & Chris Grady: London Tue 4th Oct - 
Book <http://bit.ly/1UtEtbV> 

Clothing Optional Theatre - 2nd conference: London Sun 13th Nov

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