The Press

Conversati­on in the public square – the former heart of Chch

- CHRIS TROTTER .I

It was a bright mid-autumn day and I was waiting for an important call. Turning a corner, I found myself in the city’s broad public square.

Given the time of day, it was surprising­ly empty.

There were fewer trees than I remembered and the tall corporate towers that reared up on every side restricted the amount of sunlight.

There was one patch of it, however, a few metres distant, and a bench upon which I could sit and soak it up.

So intent was I upon the screen of my cell-phone that I did not notice the old man’s arrival.

‘‘Put it away, son,’’ he chided, ‘‘and take in the world of three dimensions.’’

I laughed rather selfconsci­ously and explained that I was waiting for an important call.

‘‘It won’t come any quicker, for all of your rapt attention.’’

‘‘That’s true,’’ I said, slipping the phone into my pocket.

‘‘Not that there’s much to see in the square today.’’

‘‘Not compared to some of the days I’ve seen’’, he sighed.

‘‘I bet you’ve seen some sights in your time,’’ I replied. ‘‘Could tell some stories?’’

‘‘That, I could, son, that I could. This was such a vital place once – the centre of the whole city. Everybody came through here, one way or the other. And around the four sides of the square, were all the important buildings.

‘‘The cathedral, the council chambers, the university – they were all here. Along with the playhouse, three or four cinemas, the public library and art gallery. I remember the newspaper offices – both of them – and the television studios.

‘‘At lunchtime, and at the end of the working day, all the people who worked in those buildings would pour out into this public square. They would mix and mingle, argue and fight, fall in – and out – of love.

‘‘This square was where the city came alive. It’s future shape and purpose were forged in a thousand – ten thousand – passionate conversati­ons.’’

I looked around. None of the buildings he’d described remained.

In their place rose the headquarte­rs of banks, insurance companies and accounting firms: glass and steel towers rising up, up, up above the public square. Some had preserved the facades of the older structures they’d replaced.

‘‘They looked forlorn and out-ofplace.

‘‘As foreign to their new function as the corporatio­ns who had, so public spiritedly, preserved them.

‘‘And those conversati­ons continued in the newspapers, on the local radio and television stations, on the stage of the playhouse, in the cinemas. It all merged into one grand public conversati­on: loud, uncoordina­ted and gloriously democratic!’’

It makes me wonder how the city could afford it all’’, I responded.

‘‘It’s a question I ask myself, son. We were so much smaller then, and yet we were able to sustain so much more than we do today. Look at those buildings, son. Thousands of people work in them – many more than in the past. And yet, at lunchtime and at the end of the day they scurry across the square, eyes glued to their cellphones, talking to no one. The passion’s gone, son. It breaks my heart.’’

‘‘No, no, it hasn’t gone’’, I replied hastily. ‘‘It’s just gone online. Checkout Facebook and Twitter – you find plenty of passion there!’’

‘‘Facebook! Twitter!’’ The old man practicall­y spat out the words.

‘‘They’re eating the younger generation’s soul! And making Mark Zuckerberg millions of dollars every second! Listen, son, I remember standing in this square when it was full-to-bursting with young men and women. They carried banners and waved placards and shouted slogans.

‘‘They came here to end a war; to sever all ties with apartheid sport; to abolish nuclear weapons. And they weren’t brought here by Facebook or Twitter. They were brought here by pamphlets and posters; articles and columns; documentar­ies and current affairs shows on radio and television. Dear God, son! It’s what the public square is for!

From my pocket, my cellphone trilled insistentl­y.

‘‘Excuse me for a moment,’’ I said apologetic­ally, ‘‘But I have to take this.’’

I turned away, clamping the phone tight to my ear to hear more clearly what the person at the other end of the call was saying. ‘‘Good news!’’, I cried.

But the old man had gone.

 ?? PHOTO: GEORGE HEARD/STUFF ?? Cathedral Square was once the vital heart of Christchur­ch. Today it is mostly empty, except for handfuls of puzzled tourists.
PHOTO: GEORGE HEARD/STUFF Cathedral Square was once the vital heart of Christchur­ch. Today it is mostly empty, except for handfuls of puzzled tourists.
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