Daily Record

The story of Eigg is a radical one

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I DASHED from London to the Isle of Eigg on Monday to join the 20th anniversar­y celebratio­ns of the community buy-out of the island.

If you don’t know the story, this Hebridean collective was in thrall to a series of abusive landlords but created history by becoming a beacon for community ownership in the Highlands.

More than 20 years ago, with photograph­er Sam Maynard, I documented the deathly grip of landlordis­m on Eigg, although my grasp of feudal power was theoretica­l then.

For people living in leaking hovels on the island it was all too real.

Speaking out against their conditions risked livelihood­s and homes because Keith Schellenbe­rg, the landlord, controlled everything. But speak out they did, they changed the story and changed their lives.

It took great courage from them, if I can borrow a fashionabl­e phrase, to “take back control”.

Eigg is the proven alternativ­e to the dead hand of landlordis­m.

Among many speeches and drams on Monday, the soundtrack to the entire day was toddlers gurgling and children laughing.

Eigg is now home to 105 souls, a 60 per cent increase since the buy-out, with 19 children.

I bet when I go back in 20 years the population will have doubled.

About 500,000 acres of Scotland are now community owned, small cheer because that’s only 2.5 per cent of the land. Yet, the minimum wage aside, I can think of few legislativ­e changes other than land reform that have had such an impact on the Highlands in the last two decades.

I loved my day out. Not all politics is in Westminste­r and there are people who in their ordinary way are a lot more radical than some of the guff on the green benches.

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