The Courier & Advertiser (Fife Edition)

San Francisco-born lecturer in Spanish, Dr Ted Bergman, shares his love for archaeolog­y and Don Quixote ahead of his talk on Quackery Through History as part of the Byre World series.

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Castlemilk Law Centre before going to the bar as an advocate in 2003. There she mainly worked in the appeal court before becoming a QC in 2019.

The decision to launch the WoS campaign on Internatio­nal Women’s Day last year came about when her interest in history, women’s issues and the law combined.

About the same time she read Sara Sheridan’s book, she was in the Faculty of Advocates library looking at some papers related to Dundee-born George “Bloody” Mackenzie who was Lord Advocate of Scotland in 1677 and who infamously locked up 1,200 Covenanter­s after the Battle of Bothwell Bridge in 1679. (He is now most famous for his poltergeis­t allegedly haunting the kirkyard at Greyfriars in Edinburgh).

She noted from the records that even amid the fervour of the time, Mackenzie had his doubts as to whether many of those being accused of witchcraft were indeed witches.

But the story that really affected Claire and made her think of the 4,000 accused and 2,500 executed souls – was when she read about a poor woman being tortured who asked her interrogat­ors: “Can you be a witch and not know it?”.

“A short time after that I was walking around Princes Street Gardens as I often do thinking ‘where are the women?’” she says.

“I really started to notice that there are statues of men, there are men on horses, there are names of men, but there are no named women. Then I got to the top of Princes Street Gardens and there’s even a full-size statue of a named bear! Wojtek the Soldier Bear who did lots of good things in World War Two.

“I looked up at the castle esplanade and not only is there nobody here who were celebrated for doing good things, they were also ignoring the history of the terrible injustice that happened to 4,000 people – 85% of them women – and we don’t have so much as a sorry or anything. It was at that point I went home and I thought ‘what do I want from this campaign?’

“I want a pardon for those who were convicted. I want an apology for those who never got to trial for whatever reason whose lives were ruined by the accusation – people that died when they were tortured and all sorts of things.

“That might sound like a very legal way of looking at things, but because an apology can only relate to people who were convicted, I wanted a catch-all apology for everyone else.”

Claire says she’d looked at witchcraft trials before in a jurisprude­ntial way.

It’s deliberate their campaign is focusing on the “achievable route” of securing an apology from state rather than church because, in a practical sense, the prosecutio­ns were secular – albeit initiated by a belief in God, and the kirk was very much involved. But she couldn’t look at the legal side without considerin­g her feminist standpoint.

“It’s men accusing women and the underlying reason for men accusing women – the reason they accused women of witchcraft was because they were seen as the ‘weaker sex’,” she says.

“As (Protestant preacher) John Knox said, they were the ‘port in the gate of the devil’. The belief was that because they were ‘weaker’, they must be ‘intellectu­ally weaker’, and ‘morally weaker’.

“John Knox said that is how the devil got amongst society. I couldn’t have missed that as a feminist and as a lawyer – but it wasn’t until all those things came together at the

one time that I thought this is why I want it!”

Claire had got to know Zoe Venditozzi – a writer who also works as a learning support teacher in Dundee – at the wedding of mutual friends and when she told Zoe about her plans, she was “totally on board with it”. One of the early ideas was to start a podcast that would “educate and shine a light”.

Zoe, who grew up in Newport and went to school in St Andrews, realised none of this history had ever been taught to them at school.

It was only when she started to do some reading and when Claire was special guest at the opening of a Fife-based community group’s Accused Witches Trail in Culross that she began to make the connection with Fife where something like 12% of Scotland’s witch trials took place.

“I was quite shocked by that,” says Zoe, 45. “I very much had a Fife education. But we didn’t get taught anything at all about these things. I had no clue.

“When I saw where Lilias Adie was buried in the revenant grave at Culross and so on, it made more of a personal connection for me. Then from doing the podcasts, I have obviously learned a lot more through the course of that.”

Claire and Zoe acknowledg­e there are several witch memorial campaign groups in Scotland including people in Paisley, Skye, Forfar and the recently renamed Rememberin­g the Accused Witches of Scotland group in Fife.

As they all have similar aims, Claire and Zoe have been encouragin­g the groups to join forces where possible.

First Minister Nicola Sturgeon recently retweeted an Internatio­nal Women’s Day live event they were hosting, which was “really helpful”. Cross-party MPs, MSPs and community groups have been in touch.

However, not everyone agrees. Dr Peter Maxwell-Stuart of St Andrews University recently described the pardon call as a “dishonest gesture” that was trying to rewrite history.

The witchcraft books author said cases would need to be examined individual­ly to establish any miscarriag­e of justice. The drive against witchcraft was led by James VI, who believed there was a coven trying to kill him and his new wife, Queen Anne of Denmark.

Zoe adds: “We’ve had a few people getting in touch with reasons why they don’t think personally it should happen. They’ve ranged from one man who said if this happened then were we going to be looking to the Italians to apologise for the Roman invasion? But once you talk about it, it becomes clear that there is actually a call for it to happen in the modern day. Even though it was several hundred years ago there is still a relevance to it.

“I’m sad to say with recent events there’s still an issue with women and safety. It’s symbolic we think of parity for women and safety for women and that sort of thing. But as a caveat it wasn’t only women – 15% were men. Often it was women who were the accusers. So it’s a complex story, definitely.”

THE BELIEF WAS THAT BECAUSE THEY WERE ‘WEAKER’, THEY MUST BE ‘INTELLECTU­ALLY WEAKER’ AND ‘MORALLY WEAKER’

To find out more about the Witches of Scotland campaign go to witchesofs­cotland.com/

Q Where in the world are you happiest?

A Windy Hill Preserve on the San Francisco Peninsula.

Q Favourite part of Scotland to explore? A Orkney, I really enjoy prehistori­c archaeolog­y.

Q What would you be if not a lecturer?

A I’d be an industrial designer, focusing on household gadgets.

Q Who inspires you? A Miguel de Cervantes, author of my favourite book, Don Quixote.

Q Theme song for your life?

A Restaurant, by The Blue Hearts

Q Last meal on Earth? A Starter: Nam Khao (Lao crispy rice), Main: Pho Bo (Vietnamese beef noodle Soup), Dessert: Chocolate Hazlenut Gelato.

Q Dream post-Covid dinner guests? A Sandi Toksvig, Bill Bailey, Barack Obama, Mary Beard.

Q First thing you’d do if you won £1million? A Look for local digs or geophysica­l surveys that need funding.

Q Tell us something about yourself that most people don’t know? A Swedish is my first language.

Q Favourite holiday destinatio­n? A Stockholm in the summer.

Q

What was the last book you read?

A Don Quixote, which I lecture on, but also my favourite book and always fun to read.

Q

What makes you happy?

A Discoverin­g new things.

Q Do you believe in love at first sight?

A Yes.

Q Have you ever had a paranormal encounter? A No.

Q If you could go back to any point in history, what would it be?

A The ceremonial demolition of Structure 10 at Ness of Brodgar.

Q What is the best advice you have ever received, and who did it come from?

A Try to see things from other people’s perspectiv­e. My mother.

Q

What do you do to unwind?

A Watch crime dramas.

Q Biggest regret?

A Not fully learning another language beyond Spanish at University.

Q What or who are you proudest of?

A My DIY projects that manage to hold together.

Q Who do you admire most?

A One of my Swedish aunts.

Q Who would you like to thank?

A My parents.

Q What advice would you give to your younger self?

A Don’t worry too much about what people might think of you.

Q Hardest thing you’ve had to give up during the pandemic?

A Sightseein­g in

Scotland.

Q Could you save someone’s life if they were dying in the street? A I hope so.

Q What’s your motto? A I really don’t have one.

Q Write your own epitaph?

A Not sure, maybe it easy’. ‘Take

Q What have you got in your pockets? A Nothing.

Q Tell us a joke.

A I’m sorry, I can’t hear you, I have a banana in my ear.

Dr Ted L L Bergman is a Lecturer in Spanish at the University of St Andrews. He will discuss dubious medicine and pseudo-science in his Byre World online event Quackery Through History on April 7. The event is free and tickets can be booked via byretheatr­e.com

 ??  ?? A disturbing visualisat­ion of Grissell Jaffray.
A disturbing visualisat­ion of Grissell Jaffray.
 ??  ?? STONE CIRCLE: The Ring of Brodgar in Dr Ted Bergman’s favourite place to explore, Orkney.
STONE CIRCLE: The Ring of Brodgar in Dr Ted Bergman’s favourite place to explore, Orkney.
 ??  ?? Ted Bergman, University of St Andrews.
Ted Bergman, University of St Andrews.

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