Cultural workers develop their work, in the short and long term, against the background of a terrible world scenario. This, as is hopefully clear, is the case especially in the ‘Middle East’, characterised by an ongoing genocide of a particular ethnic group and a war that can potentially escalate towards WWIII which, if this worse case scenario were to come to pass, may well be ‘the war to end all wars’ and the planet on which it is waged. This situation indeed furnished the global community with a series of pressing challenges. One is to work collectively towards reviving the idea of an ‘Educated Public’ engaging in well informed debate, predicated on reason and feeling, to address questions from all standpoints and not simply ethnocentrically. Ethnocentrism and more precisely Eurocentrism has been one of the limits of my own formation, including formal education, which, I would like to think, many conscientious people, committed to universal social and ecological...