Sponsorship site on http://JustGiving.com/HugoLondonMarathon

Sunday, 25 January 2009

Training building up for the marathon

An hour run plus an hour gym workout (including lots of cardio and some agility work) on Saturday plus 9.1 miles today running with Richard (I was talking all the way so not a very fast time); preparing for what I hope will be a sub 4-hour marathon at end April.
Best book still Stu Mittleman's "Slow Burn" - I've lent my copy to Richard

Thursday, 22 January 2009

Peace in our time

Like so many, I was delighted when President Obama took office, and immediately began putting right the wrongs.
I'm so disappointed at the US stance on Israel "The United States will never abandon Israel". Under the Clinton administration, for a few short months, US appeared not to back Israel and they immediately began discussing peace. The Israeli government and people are not fools - they will attack if they think they can get away with it (big bad George or Dubya to make sure nobody retaliates) but they will live in harmony if they don't think they can. Lets hope Sen Mitchell can broker a deal that works, though i don't see a return to pre 1967 borders imminent [this is a personal opinion and is not necessarily the opinion of Christian Aid, who usually shy away from expressing a political opinion]

Sunday, 18 January 2009

Winter Running


It's wet and cold outside. I often don't want to go out. And I remember when younger deciding "better to suffer for 6 days afterwards (from not training) than for 6 weeks beforehand (training)". Isn't it sad - I'm not that young any more and to attempt a marathon having skimped on training would be foolish and put others to inconvenience.
See me run in the rain. See me shiver. Shiver shiver shiver. See me slip on the mud. See my torch run out of batteries.
Then I remember why I'm doing it. At least I have a house, a warm shower to come back to. Food to restore my strength. Respect from friends, family and work colleagues. The people Christian Aid helps have often had everything they have worked for taken away - through natural disaster or through politics. The people of Zimbabwe didn't vote for Robert Mugabe, they simply want to live in their own village amongst their own neighbours and get on with life, and they have a right to expect to do so without interference - government is doing nothing, so charities have to. The people of the Gaza Strip had land and industry, but they've been forced back into a barren corner of their former territory. Then what little they have (each other - that's about it) is threatened as troops shoot indiscriminately at civilians claiming they are shielding militants.
Give generously - please!

Saturday, 10 January 2009

USA abstains from Gaza Resolution - Yippee!


It's a real blow to Zionism! We've seen 60 years of unchallenged aggression, of Palestinian people (and other Arab nations) attacked and their land plundered/ stolen, force back into the unloved corners of a fantastic rich land they once occupied.
God might have given the Promised Land. But exactly where did the borders lie? How much of that promise remains after so many transgressions by the 12 tribes? What about the exhortations to welcome the 'stranger within your gate'?
USA has abstained! It's a million times better than a veto. Aggressors watch out, Big George isn't backing you up any more - now might be a good time to patch things up with your neighbours.

Sunday, 4 January 2009

My neighbour likes my house


They like it so much, they've moved in. They haven't said anything, but suddenly we find ourselves confined to one bedroom - all of us - and we can only get to the kitchen and bathroom if they let us. I don't know quite how it happened, but their friend Big George comes round to make sure we're behaving ourselves (they took all of our stuff that they didn't want and shoved it into this one bedroom, then pushed us in here before we knew what was happening).
Things are getting nasty. One of the kids threw a piece of rubbish out of the bedroom door because we had nowhere else to put it. the response has been "disproportionate" - shouting, banging on the walls, all sorts.
Of course, the neighbours say the "League of Nations" says that everywhere around here belongs to them. The League of Nations doesn't exist any more, but the United Nations is so scared of Big George that it doesn't stop them from grabbing anything they take a fancy to.

What can we do? We're only asking for help!
NOTE the author, Hugo Minney, lives safely and comfortably in UK. His work in Africa has left an indelible impression of just how scary it is when you have no way to escape the horrors being perpetrated on you - Hugo realised just how lucky he is to have British Citizenship and to be able to leave, when those who lived there could be dead tomorrow.