Late in the afternoon before yesterday, I took the bull by the horns and cut the lawns at the back of the house even though the weather was pretty dull and overcast. The grass had grown quite long and luscious but fortunately succumbed to the mower pretty easily and I was glad to get this task done. By my reckoning, I have another cut to do in a fortnight’s time and then the last cut of the year on or about 5th November which is the way I remember the last cut. And on this last cut, the mower has to be drained of petrol and oil to keep it in reasonable condition during the winter months. The news in the evening before yesterday was dominated by a growing anticipation that a deal to end the Gaza conflict was now very nigh and the actual announcement was made but Trump just before midnight. Whilst there are still a lot of unanswered questions, it looks as though in the first phase we shall see the release of all of the Israeli hostages (or their bodies) and there will be an immediate cessation of strikes against Gaza. The feeling in the air is that once these two important events have taken place, it will be much easier to negotiate other things such as the exact shape and composition of the body that will govern Gaza post-conflict and what will happen to the existing members of Hamas who may still be armed? There is a technical and somewhat macabre problem with handing over the dead bodies of the hostages and that is that Hamas is not sure exactly where some of them are. Some may have been in tunnels which have been destroyed by Israeli tunnel-busting munitions, some may have been in hospital morgues ut these have been bombed practically flat in the conflict and finally, some of the Hamas officials who had the known the pf the location of the bodies have been killed and thus the knowledge of the location of the bodies has died with them. So although the Israelis have a number in their records of hostages still alive or of corpses held by Hamas, it is possible that we shall see some heart-rending scenes in Israel when some of the relatives expecting the release of the bodies of their loved ones in order to gain a sense of closure may have this denied to them as literally, Hamas do not know where the bodies are located and at least some of them will be in the rubble of what remains in Gaza. In the next few days, all of this will be played out before our eyes and the news media will be dominated by it. It increasingly looks as though the bombing of Qatar and the attempted assassination of the Hamas negotiators was the final straw that led Trump to lose patience with Netanyahu and force him into a deal. It looks as though the ceasefire will come into effect from mid-day and I wonder what else there is for the Israels to bomb. Nearly all homes have been destroyed or damaged. Entire neighbourhoods have been wiped out, leaving millions of Palestinians displaced and without shelter. Satellite analysis by the UN’s UNOSAT programme found that as of July 2025, nearly 78 percent of all structures across the enclave have been destroyed and the situation will have deteriorated since then as the Israeli army have swept through the whole of Gaza city in recent months. In the final reckoning, it looks as though the 1200 Israeli deaths two years ago is now matched by about 67,000 deaths of Gaza inhabitants which is a kill ratio of about 50:1.
This morning was rather out of the ordinary. Today was the feast day of John Henry Newman, a noted theologian who transferred his allegiance from the Anglican to the Catholic Church. The Pope has recently decreed that he was to be declared a ‘Doctor’ of the church and Newman is the first Englishman in 1,000 years to be so honoured. As he is practically a local saint and could well have visited my local church whilst he was active in the Birmingham area, I thought that he should be commemorated and suggest as such to the Church committee of which I was once a member. To cut a long story short, as I had made the original suggestion for some type commemoration, I was asked if I would undertake some of the readings or the special service to be held on his Feast Day. So, I turned up to the church and the congregation was quite small by Sunday standards. I approached undertaking the readings with some trepidation but all went and I was relieved not to make any fluffs. I also learned that the funeral of the dedicated parishioner who died last week is to be in a week’s time and his widow invited me along to the funeral tea afterwards (and he had come to Meg’s in any case) Afterwards, I came home for some quick elevenses and then shopping to Lidl, calling in at an ATM on the way. As with many other supermarkets these days, Lidl offers personalised offers direct to your smartphone and today the offers amounted to £6.00 which was more than 10% of the entire bill so this particular way of inspiring loyalty has worked in my case. I made myself a meal of curried vegetables with a few bits of ham thrown in an, as usual, I have made far too much so I have saved one half of it but labelled it with today’s date to ensure that it gets eaten up quite rapidly. Tonight, I shall probably watch ‘Question Time‘ but make sure that I am tucked up in bed so that I can fall asleep as soon as the the programme has finished. Beforehand, there is a friendly football of England v. Wales and I might watch that for a little, although these days I much prefer to watch rugby. I find the shirt-pulling and practical arm-wrestling to get or retain possession of the ball in football to be very off-putting and a long way for the traditional shoulder charge which we were taught when I started playing football in the 1950’s. But I acknowledge that the game and society have moved on a lot since then.