I Got My First Tattoo In Support Of The Positive, Unifying And Brilliant Manchester Tattoo Appeal
I will never forget
the first time I saw Manchester. A neighbour had given me a lift down from the
North East to visit Manchester University. I would have been 17. I remember
looking at the CIS Tower as if it were the skyline of Manhattan. I enrolled at the
University and moved to the city a few weeks after my 18th birthday.
I don’t know if people
from other cities feel quite as attached to their city centre as Mancunians do,
but Manchester is a very special place. It may be because it is the de facto
second city of the UK (apologies Birmingham), or the undeniable capital of the
North (apologies Liverpool), or it may just be because it is such a marvellous
place to spend some time. But every day I enter the city centre, be it when I
worked there everyday as a legal trainee or now when I return home from
Parliament each Thursday night, I can honestly say I still feel a little bit of
the wonder I first felt when I was 17.
A tattoo-artist based
in Stalybridge, Sam Barber, came up with the idea of offering tattoos of the
symbol of Manchester - the worker bee - to people who make a donation of £50 to
the fund supporting the victims and families of the bombing. The worker bee has
been the symbol of Manchester since the Industrial Revolution when the textile
mills were compared to ‘hives’. You can find bees all over the architecture and
civic décor of the city centre.
The response from both
tattoo artists and the public has been incredible. When I read about Sam’s
idea, I thought it was perfect - a positive, unifying and brilliantly Mancunian
response. Not hundreds but thousands of people from all parts of Greater
Manchester have signed up - old, gay, straight, people of all faiths and none.
In future we will bump into each other down the pub and in the supermarket
sporting our worker bees as a memory of this togetherness.
The tattoos are going
to raise considerable funds for the appeal but even more importantly they show
that when our city is knocked down, we get back up, we stand together, we do
things our way and we will not be divided.
I’ll admit as a
first-timer I was fairly nervous about getting it done - but it didn’t hurt as
much as I’d feared, and Sam was brilliant at reassuring me. I’d like to thank
her for her time and her wonderful idea. Stalybridge is very proud of her and
Manchester is very proud of her.
The only thing was, I
didn’t get permission from my Mum first... She’s not a fan of tattoos but she
has since gone on my Facebook page to say she thinks this is a great idea. As
ever she’s right.
Jonathan Reynolds is
the Labour and Cooperative candidate for Stalybridge and Hyde. Details of the
Manchester tattoo appeal can be found here and you can donate here
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