Piers Morgan Uncensored - Piers Morgan Uncensored: Hamas Hostage, Sunak Snubs Greek PM, Gabor Mate
Episode Date: November 28, 2023On Piers Morgan Uncensored tonight, A daughter shares her anguish as her elderly father is kept captive by Hamas, Rishi Sunak snubs the Greek PM in ancient row over the Elgin Marbles and Gabor Mate's ...powerful take on Gaza and why he regrets that Prince Harry intervieW Watch Piers Morgan Uncensored at 8 pm on TalkTV on Sky 522, Virgin Media 606, Freeview 237 and Freesat 217. Listen on DAB+ and the app. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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Tonight on Piers Morgan Ossense,
and more anguish for families of the Hamas hostages
as the clock ticks down on Israel's temporary ceasefire.
I'll talk to the daughter of a man still being held captive
by the terrorists after her mother was released.
She soon acts down to Greek Prime Minister
as an ancient row over the Elgin Marbles
becomes a modern-day diplomatic spat.
Is it time we just let them back?
We'll debate.
And Dr. Gabon Marte is the infant Holocaust survivor
as powerful take on the Gaza war
as one plaudits across the world.
He also says he bitterly regrets
ever interviewing Prince Harry.
I'll find out why.
From the news building in London,
this is Piers Morgan Uncensored.
Good day of you from London, welcome to Piers Morgan Unsensored.
A debate about whether the Elgin Marble
should leave or remain is almost as old as the marbles themselves.
Those who want them to stay in the British Museum
are worried it will open the floodgates.
They say countries around the world will begin demanding
the return of all our colonial treasures,
even the British Museum looking like
Tottenham Hotspur's Trophy Cabinet.
I've sympathised with that opinion in the past.
But for me, what it came down to was this argument
from the Greek Prime Minister at the weekend.
This is not, in my mind, an ownership question.
This is an reunification argument.
Where can you best appreciate
what is essentially one monument?
I mean, it's as if I told you that you would cut the Mona Lisa in half,
and you would have half of it of the Louvre
and half of it of the British Museum.
Do you think your viewers would appreciate the beauty of the painting in such a way?
Well, this is exactly what happened with the Parthenon.
Sometimes somebody makes a point that it's so compelling
that it compels even people like me to change my mind.
Greece has built a spectacular museum to show off the Parthenon marbles, as they call them.
But with plastic casts of the marbles where the real ones really ought to be.
They were brought to Britain by Lord Elgin, who paid a fortune to extract them,
and later sold them to the government, not for a very expensive.
divorce. He always claimed he had a permission from the Ottoman Empire, which controlled Athens
at the time. But as the Greek PM says, it's not really an argument about whether a British
aristocrat filled out the right paperwork. The British Museum could still loan the marbles,
but also loan them back to Greece, as it does with many thousands of other artefacts every
single year. Britain's always said these treasures should stay here where they're safe.
But that's an argument's become a lot less sturdy since the museum admitted it's lost more than
2,000 treasures worth several million pounds.
How safe is that exactly?
When that's become a full-throttle diplomatic spat,
after our Prime Minister Rishi Sunak,
cancelled a meeting with his Greek counterpart at the last minute,
seemingly angry about what he said on the BBC at the weekend.
It seemed a pretty churlish, if not petty, attempt
to pander to his base,
and not a good look for either the Prime Minister or our country.
Greece is one of our allies.
They're friends.
They gave us fed of cheese.
olive oil, Stavros Flatley.
It's time we gave them our marbles in return.
We'll be debating that later on the show.
But first night, tonight, despite the release of more than 60 hostages,
the harrowing weight goes on for many families awaiting news of their loved ones.
Israel says that its youngest hostage, shamefully, a 10-month-old baby,
has been handed to another terror group, meaning Hamas is no longer in control of that poor child's fate.
Well, Jochaved Lifshitz was abducted by her mask for 16 days,
later released on October the 23rd,
memoryably shaking hands with one of her captors.
However, her husband, Odette Lifshitz, remains in captivity.
And their daughter, Sharon Lifshitz, joins me now.
Sharon, thank you so much for joining me tonight.
I really appreciate it.
First of all, let me just say your story has been one of the stories
out of this hellish situation that's touched me the most.
I think anyone who has parents are still alive
will have, I think, had their hearts just wrenched by what's happened to you.
The idea that on that awful day, October the 7th,
you lost both of them and had no idea what had happened to either of them.
And then you have the joy of your mother returning,
but you have the despair of still not knowing where your father is.
So first of all, let me just say,
my heart goes out to you and to your family
for what you've had to go through.
It is an unrelenting horror,
and it must have been incredibly stressful.
But second, let me just take you back to October the 7th.
Let me just ask you,
when was the first you knew about what was happening that day?
We got up early with my son and my husband
to go up north to York.
We live in London,
to pick up a puppy, actually,
that we've been planning for months.
And I opened some news outlet and saw that it fled up.
I called my mom, as I always do, and I couldn't get hold of her.
I then called my brother, and he told me that there's been a barrage of missiles,
and now they broke the fence.
And that was how it started.
And they didn't just break the fence.
They've caused attack a number of kibbutzies, including near Oz,
where your parents lived and had lived for a very long time.
time. When was the moment that you discovered that they had both disappeared, been taken?
So it's been a long day and we were on WhatsApp group with other members of the Kibbutz.
People were desperately trying to help each other to devise way to contact other people.
We were on the news. It was a horrific day about an hour and a half later.
So the Al Jazeera clip with a journalist saying about the fact they are occupying the
kibbutz, and this was actually just behind my parents' house.
And so by that point, I knew that things were, are never going to be the same.
But then we had many hours hearing so many rumors and hearing stories from people.
And about 8 o'clock in the evening, it took eight hours for the army to arrive in the kibbutz,
and not one shot was really shot at the terrorist.
They came in, they did what they wanted, they went as far as they could, and then they left.
So we heard about 8 o'clock in the evening that my parents were missing from the room.
In retrospect, we know that the whole house was burning, but we were spared that knowledge at the time.
Absolutely horrifying. It turned out your mother, who's 85 years old,
had been kidnapped by Hamas Guman on motorbikes and taken into what was described as a spider.
as web of tunnels underneath Gaza.
Did you have any knowledge about where she'd been taken
or what was happening to her?
Well, my mom and dad were in the bedroom.
It was quite early in the morning.
They arrived late.
My father didn't feel well.
So they basically had the terrorists.
The last my father spoke was to a friend
and he said, I can hear them speaking Hebrew.
I can hear many shootings.
And shortly after that, we'll have.
connection with them, then they, we know now, we knew afterwards that they, there were shots
in the door. At that time, we thought they were taken together. At that time, we were just
desperate thinking they probably didn't survive or their health is too frail. And when my mom came
out of the ground, it was like a miracle because we really didn't know that she was alive.
and just seeing her face, seeing her gesture.
And then she told us that our father was shot and that he was injured.
And so my mom was very pessimistic.
And so for the last month, we've just been really so pessimistic
about the chance of somebody as old and frail
and with complicated medical needs to survive this ordeal.
And then about three or four days ago with the first women and children that came one of the hostages actually told us that she was with my father in the same space for several days, that he was injured in his legs from being drugged, you know, when he was being pulled, that he was injured in his hand, but that he was alive.
and that's really the first time we heard he's alive.
At the same time, we're also hearing more and more and more stories
about the horrific conditions that they're subjected to.
And so many of them did not receive medicine,
even simple medicine, that over 50-something days
can really cause huge medical problems.
Everything is a problem.
There's levels of torture.
To think that they are on a holiday camp
is part of the psychological warfare being waged against us.
It's mind-blowing to me what you're having to endure here,
along with all the relatives, of course, of all these hostages,
because the people that were taken were in the main either elderly
or they were children, babies in some case.
It's beyond horrific.
But I guess that you've had some great news, obviously, that your mother came out,
and you've also had some great news that you've also had some great news
At least you know that as of several days ago, your father is still alive.
That must be a huge comfort to you, notwithstanding the fact he's still trapped inside Gaza.
Well, we know he was alive about over a month ago.
That's where we estimate that they cross path, that hostage that return and my father.
So we do not know.
And the situation is absolutely desperate, absolutely horrific.
I think that Alma, Abrams, that came, she came back in a really bad condition, just purely due to neglect for the fact she was not getting her medicine.
These are innocent people that were elderly people, that were drugged from them home, that saw their families being murdered.
These are people that are coming back to such a complicated, altered reality.
You know, we are uprooted, our homes are destroyed, people coming back, but they don't know.
the brother or the son was murdered.
You know, it's wonderful to have them back.
They are our light at this great darkness.
Your father was a very well-known peace activist
who would drive sick Palestinian children to hospitals in Israel.
He spent his life in the peace movement.
This is what he wanted was to have two nations living peacefully side by side.
And he believed you would make peace with your enemies.
This has been what his life's been about.
and yet there he is now in Gaza being held by terrorists
and you've no idea what may happen to him.
Yeah, I think my father's story complicate this situation for people
who would like to just cheer for one team.
And I think that in this part of the world
there are many people that realize that our capacity to live peacefully
is only if we find a way to live peacefully alongside our neighbour.
Sean, I'm so sorry for what you're going through.
I said it at the start or said again now.
It must be agony for you.
And I hope your father is released very soon, that your family can be reunited.
But as you say, it's so much more than just them.
They lived in a kibbutz with 400 people, 80 at least were killed in the most barbaric manner.
These are people they've known sometimes for decades, close friends.
And the horror of that, well, I'm sure we'll live with all of them.
the ones who survived for a very long time.
Yeah, you know, it's amazing how when your life is kind of torn apart so much,
you've realized the kind of fabric and what it is made of,
and how the love that we share, the way you overcome petty fights you used to have
over little things.
And in a way, in all this darkness, it's these people,
some of them, you know, I lived in London for 30 years,
I went really far and I see people I haven't seen for 20 years and there's a bond and you know
destiny has brought us back together and I think that that's something that really carries us
through it, the feeling that we are part of this extended community even if we're very far away.
And I think also, you know, people have shown great generosity and kind.
towards us. And in a way that also makes me feel that, you know, that we will have to find a way forward to this, the legacy of this events. And we are learning every day new things. We are learning about rape and we are learning about beheading and we are learning. There's thousands of stories and the ordinary stories are just things that would have, you know, been covered in the news for weeks for one of them. And there's thousands and thousands of these stories.
stories. The scale of it is overwhelming. There were 240 hostages. We're now down to 166.
Many of them are, you know, connected to other hostages, to people that were murdered.
My heart is with all of them, with the fathers who are there. So there's children who came back to
find that their parents were murdered. There's children who came back knowing that their father
is still there and they don't know when they will seem.
There's such a huge level of trauma.
There's such a complicated situation that unfolds here.
Sometimes it makes you feel really so desperate.
And yet, you know, I know because I'm apparent myself
that we have to come out of it
and let it be the catalyst for more than just more war.
Sharon, this is a difficult question.
But I'm curious what you feel about this.
Obviously, Israel's response has been militarily overwhelming in Gaza.
A lot of destruction.
Many homes wiped away.
Tens of thousands now of Palestinians have been killed, including thousands of children,
obviously had nothing to do with any of this.
What do you feel about the Israeli response?
As a human being, I find a loss of life,
and I spent quite a lot of my time reading about it
and trying to educate myself about it,
I find this loss of life horrific.
I also find that there was a very frail coexistence
that was shattered on the 7th of October,
and it's very hard to understand to me at this moment
what is a good response and what isn't.
I think that we are dealing with a horrific
terrorist organization that is worse than ISIS, it's worse than Boko Haram.
And so it's very easy to just say, don't do anything.
But I don't know then what do you suggest.
One thing I know for sure is that it cannot possibly be that the people who have, you know,
come to us and raped and slaughtered and murdered us and trained for it
and premeditated every element of it.
I cannot believe that these people come back home
and are kind to their own people.
So I think that Palestinian people deserve better than Hamas too.
And I think that that is something I'm sure about it.
I'm not a military strategist,
and I'm running on the pitch like hell,
trying to save my loved one.
So it's not the best moment for me to kind of think
about what is the best strategy for it.
I lament tremendously the loss of life.
I believe still that we will have to make peace with our enemy one way or another.
I believe that my people have endured such a horrific trauma that I, you know, we cannot contain it.
We cannot contain it.
We cannot contain the mass rapes.
We cannot contain the killing of babies, the tearing out of babies out of their mothers.
We cannot contain it.
So at this point, it's really hard for me to tell you what will be a good strategy.
You know, I don't know.
I know what I want.
I want nobody to suffer from this ever.
Yes, I completely agree with you.
And you say it so eloquently and so powerfully.
Just finally, Sean, how are you doing?
This must have been the worst time of your life, of course.
But how are you coping?
Are you sleeping?
Are you getting enough support?
I feel very surrounded by love.
I spend a lot, a lot of time with my mom.
My mom, you know, life has changed so much.
We're just trying to relocate her and find our feet in a, you know,
my parents' house was the center of our world.
All of us are all of a sudden on the world stage, playing, you know, to the audience.
I don't know how to say it.
And it's just been really, really exhausting.
and it feels that we need so much strength.
We also know that we have found our voice and strength
in the last 53 days in a way we could never foresee.
And I think that we are carried by sheer fact that we have to do it,
as well as by the fact that something should come out of it.
We owe it to the people that are there.
And I think the fight is work.
This deal is the most important thing.
We need to now continue it very, very, very, very carefully, make sure that it's not going to be stopped in the next two days,
but that it continues to the full maximum.
And then we have to press on all governments, on the Qatari, on the Egyptian, on NGOs that have failed us miserably on the seventh and since.
On all these people, we have to press on them to continue to bring these people back home.
back home and then we can start really thinking what has happened, what could be done
differently, you know, whether Israel, later.
Now it's just about returning, returning these people home.
They're in horrific condition.
Their life might end very quickly for all sorts of various reasons.
I would call on everybody who can do anything to bring them back on, to end that stage,
then we can look for how to move on.
Sharon, thank you so much for joining me.
I wish you and your family all the best.
I hope and pray your father is home with you soon.
But I thank you for joining me.
I wish you and all the families of all these hostages
who are living this unrelenting nightmare.
I hope it is over soon for all of you.
Thank you very much.
Thank you.
Well, unscensored next.
He's the Jewish Holocaust survivor
whose powerful take on the Gaza war
as one plaudits across the world.
Dr. Gabel Marte, who also famously interviewed
for Prince Harry, a decision he came to
regret. joins me next, live.
Welcome back to Unsensor, Dr. Gabon
Marte made global headlines earlier this year
when he appeared in an interview with Prince Harry.
The renowned trauma expert
spoke with the Duke of Sussex about the importance of
healing in an interview to promote
Harry's memoir. Well, more recently, Dr.
Marty's been winning, plaudits for his take on the
Israel Hamas War. He's an infant survivor
of the Holocaust and has been
outspoken about both the atrocities.
of October the 7th and Israel's response.
And Dr. Gabel-Marte joins me now.
Dr. Marty, thank you very much indeed for joining me.
And thank you of your patience.
I know you've been sitting there listening to the interview
I just conducted with this poor woman
whose parents were both kidnapped.
One has been returned.
One hasn't yet.
First of all, what was your response to that interview?
On the human level, I saw a very decent person
in evident pain, in grief.
obviously deep anxiety about the fate of her father.
I saw somebody trying to make the best
out of a really horrific situation
and my heart goes out to her.
You specialize throughout your career in trauma
and helping people get through trauma.
You talk to many people who've been in extreme trauma.
This is a very traumatic situation these last two months
for people on both sides,
for the people who are on that.
the receiving end of this massacre on October the 7th,
and we've just heard firsthand,
what that has been like for the people in Israel who suffered that.
But also, of course, what's going on now in Gaza
with many thousands of innocent people being killed
with Israel's military response, including thousands of children.
What is your overall assessment of where this war is now heading?
For that, you need some historical context.
Now, look, I used to be a Zionist.
As you mentioned, I'm a Holocaust survivor.
Zionism was very important for me as a salvation of the Jewish people.
Until I found out that the state was founded based on the extirpation, the explosion,
and multiple massacres of the local population, and that's not historically controversial.
So I'm taking a longer view of this, and I'm saying that the present situation cannot be understood
without looking at the historical context,
and nor come even forward if the present occupation
and the suppression of the Palestinians continue.
So Sharon, your previous guest, talked about the fragile coexistence.
There was no coexistence.
There was oppression, periodic massacres, land occupation in the West Bank,
the continuous expost.
of the population from their homes.
I visited the occupied territories three times now.
The first time, back during the first time
in the Fada, peers, I cried every day out for two weeks
at what I saw.
So this cannot go on.
And I saw the news about the algae and marbles being returned,
and how you changed your mind about that?
Well, how about returning the land
that's been stolen from the Palestinians?
I'm not talking about the state of Israel.
of Israel. I'm not talking about 1948. I'm talking about 67 and what's going on right now.
So there's got to be some stop to what's going on. And that's how I understand it.
This is for the sake of both Israelis and Palestinians.
Yes, I completely agree with you. This is a never-ending cycle. I guess from the Israelis' point of view,
what happened on October the 7th was on such a gigantically horrific scale.
I do get a sense that Israel is in a collective sense of trauma
and that they are determined that Hamas should not be allowed
to perpetrate such a massacre again.
And they are on record Hamas just two weeks ago.
Their spokesmen are saying they would do it again and again and again if they can.
So that represents a clear existential threat to the security of people in Israel.
So I guess my question for you is what should Israel's response be?
Everyone is increasingly concerned about what is going on in Gaza.
Clearly, the loss of civilian life is on a catastrophic scale.
Nobody thinks this is right, but at the same time,
I think many would share my view that Israel has a right to defend itself.
The question is, how do they do that appropriately,
and how do they get rid of Hamas,
if indeed you think they should get rid of Hamas?
You're raising many questions and many fair questions.
Look, I live in Canada.
where this country was founded on the suppression
and the erasure of the indigenous population
and the utter denial of their narrative.
And in Canada, for example,
there were horrendous residential schools
where a few decades ago, if a native child
spoke their tribal language,
that had a pin stuck in their tongue.
Now, most Canadians are not aware of that history.
Most Israelis are not aware of the history of what the Palestinians have suffered.
They don't know that in 1948 there were multiple massacres of large numbers of people by Israeli forces.
They don't know the history, the subjective experience of the Palestinians.
And in the absence of that knowledge, October 7th would just strike them as another horrific anti-Semitic event.
I understand the desire for defense and certainly even a december.
desire for revenge. But that's in the absence of knowing what the Palestinian experience
has been. And the Western press, and as in all countries where the local population
has been displaced, the majority of the population doesn't know the history or the subjective
experience. So if you ask him how to move forward, let's inform ourselves of the actual
experience of both sides, not just one side. And just as you had this wonderful Israeli woman,
who spoke to such humanity and such poignancy,
you might have some Palestinians on explaining their experience
of what it's like for them to live under occupation.
And in the absence of that conversation,
there's no moving forward, and that's all I'm asking for.
I've had a number of Palestinians, including a doctor.
Let me just say one more thing, sorry.
Yeah.
Israel's right to defense.
Yes.
Israel has the right to defend itself.
Every country does.
But Israel has no right to impose an occupation on people.
Now, look, I was born in Hungary.
In 1956, when I was 13, studying for my Mitzvah,
there was the great Hungarian revolution against Soviet occupation.
And it was after that revolution that we became refugees and came to Canada.
Now, did Russia have the right to defend itself against the Hungarian revolutionaries?
And mostly when we talk about Israel's right of defense,
We're taking isolated Palestinian actions, but we're not saying that this population also
has the right to defend against the occupation.
I'm not justifying the terrible events of October the 7th.
I'm talking in the absence of historical awareness.
It all just looks like Israel defending itself, but against whom?
Against the population that has been massacring in a number of thousands for 80 years, and taking
their lands and destroying their homes and jailing their children and torturing them.
That's the history.
Now, unless we know that, it all looks like this portal country trying to defend itself,
but against whom?
Against people that's been occupying and displacing for 80 years.
That's the history as Israeli historians have shown.
I don't make this stuff up.
I wish it wasn't true.
I wish I could believe in the dream of the Jewish.
state. I love that dream, except I found out at what price, at what nightmare that imposed on the
Palestinians. How do you see this ever getting resolved? It seems so intractable, but then as I
always say, so did the Northern Ireland conflict. That seemed intractable when the IRA were
committing terror atrocities, but they eventually did get to peace. Can you see a pathway here
to peace and what does it look like?
I can. That's a great question again.
Look, you're going to have Nick Creole with on,
later on, a tennis player.
I just spent a couple of weeks in Serbia
and the former Yugoslavia
with another tennis player, Novak Djokovic.
They have a foundation that promotes healing
and child development and so on.
So they asked me to speak throughout the former Yugoslavia.
You know what horrific
atrocities were committed there just a few decades ago.
So I was in Belgrade.
I was in Sarajevo.
I was in Banyaluka.
I was in Yubiana.
They're living together now.
There are still issues to be worked out.
But the minimum condition is the ending of the occupation
and the inhumane siege of Gaza.
And international law has
to be respected. International law is very clear that this occupation is illegal. That has to be
the basis of any future agreement. If that was agreed on, and if Israel could live within the
borders that are internationally recognized, I believe peace is possible. Now, we keep talking about
the Hamas Charter. Did you know that the Likud Charter, the ruling party in Israel,
excludes a Palestinian entity west of the Jordan River.
So let's get rid of both charters.
And let's start with the basis of recognition and peace
and the ending of this unspeakably brutal occupation.
Peers, you have to go there to see it for yourself, as I have.
And you would cry every day for two weeks as well.
I'm under no illusion about what the Palestinian people have had to endure.
and I think the oppression of the Palestinian people for decades
has been completely shameful.
And it shouldn't have been happening.
I mean, the mere fact that Israel was able after October the 7th
to simply turn off the supplies of food and water and fuel and so on into Gaza
says it all.
That is an occupation.
That is a controlling force, controlling whether people eat or have fuel
or can heat themselves or feed themselves.
So I'm under no way.
illusions about that. I'd be very critical of Israel before. What has complicated things for me morally
with this is that the scale of what happened on October the 7th was so disgusting. And the fact
that Hamas has said they will continue to try and do the same thing again is that I absolutely
believe Israel has to do what it can to remove that threat. And how you do that when they are
immersed in the civilian population and that population is half children without massive civilian
casualties on the scale we're now seeing.
I don't know. I genuinely don't know.
I don't know how they resolve this.
But I hope that better minds than mine can work a way through this.
Well, I hope along with you as well.
But again, I'm saying that there's no possibility of that
until the international community,
and particularly Israel's big brothers, the UK and the US,
stop supporting its illegal, brutal,
inhumane and rapacious occupation.
It can't happen without some pressure.
And again, most Israelis are simply not aware.
I've been to Israel, talk to people.
They have no idea what's happening a few miles away
from when they're sitting in Tel Aviv, having coffee.
And they have no idea, or in Jerusalem,
and they have no idea what's happening a few miles away
how those people under occupation are living.
And this has been, Doug, it's not that they're not capable of being aware, but like most people, they're just not.
And I'm saying that unless we fully get the Palestinian experience historically and throughout the decades and into the present moment,
we can't possibly understand what's going on here.
Now, in 2005, there was a study appeared in the Journal of World Psychiatry looking at traumatized,
populations under war conditions.
The most traumatized children in 2005,
this is before Hamas gained power in Palestine and in Gaza.
The most traumatized kids were in Gaza.
This population has been traumatized severely.
Of course they're full of rage.
I'm not justifying anything they did,
but I'm saying what do we expect from this population
that's been suppressed and tormented and crucified for decades?
decades. We're going to have a short break and I'll come back with after the break.
Welcome back to Unsenton, Dr. Gabor Mate. It's still with me.
Dr. Marte, I want to talk to you about something else now, which made you sort of globally
brought to the world's attention earlier this year when you sat down with Prince Harry to talk
about his book, Spare. And he got a lot of attention in this. I just wondered, you've expressed
since then regret, really, that you ever did it. Why do you feel that way?
I express regret not about the having done the interview, but the way I agreed that it would be conducted.
What I mean by that is I had a strong sense that this interview should be free for everybody.
It should be a service to the public.
It was a great discussion.
I really enjoyed meeting Harry.
I found him to be humble and sincere and genuinely interested in promoting mental health
and looking at the trauma that underlies people's mental health issues.
What was wrong with it is that it was put behind a paywall.
So a lot of people, people had to buy his book in order to watch the interview.
A lot of four million people already had.
They were excluded from watching the interview.
And so that's what I regretted.
I did not regret doing the interview.
I enjoyed it.
And I thought it was a really good discussion between two people,
two flawed people who were willing to look at their flaws.
So I'm glad I did it.
but in retrospect, I would not agree to it unless it was aired freely for the whole world to see.
Harry felt the same way, by the way afterwards.
We both wanted it released, but the lawyer said that since it was marketed as a pay-for viewing one-time event,
we'd be slapped with a clash action suit if we released it.
So unfortunately, a lot of people didn't see it.
Those who did, for the most part, expressed a lot of appreciation.
Let me play a clip from the interview you conducted.
I'll come back to you after this.
And then at some point you say towards the end of the book,
when is someone in his family going to break free and live?
Have you done that?
I have now.
Yeah.
It was a few like.
It was great.
I do.
Once the book came out, I felt incredibly free.
I felt a huge weight off my shoulders.
Now, we have very different views about Prince,
I've laid my cards on the table.
I think he's behaved disgracefully towards his family,
particularly when Prince Philip was dying,
then the Queen was dying, the family was in grief,
and all he and his wife, Megan, seemed to have done to me,
is chuck flames at the family from abroad
and tried to damage them in the institution of the monarchy.
But it's interesting that he believed there,
and I recognize you feel differently,
that he believed there that he's found freedom.
But in all your experience of talking to people
through similar kind of family trauma, if you like.
Can you really find happiness
if your freedom involves disconnecting yourself
from your entire family?
Well, it's a really good question.
My eldest son and I, Daniel, with whom I wrote our book,
The Myth of Normal, Trauma, Illness and Healing in a Toxic Culture,
are writing a new book now.
It's called Hello Again, a fresh start for parents and their adult children.
families are tough, families hurt each other, children are traumatized in families.
Harry was traumatized in his family, not because his parents didn't love him, but because they
were carrying their own trauma and passing it on to the next generation.
I passed on my trauma to my children.
I didn't mean to, but I did.
And so sometimes people can work these things out if there's the willingness on both sides,
and people do make mistakes.
And I do believe Harry made some mistakes.
That goes both ways.
People can work it out, and sometimes they can't.
And sometimes people find freedom in having to disconnect.
In the book, The Myth of Normal,
I talk about this tension that we all have
between authentic and belonging,
attachment and authenticity.
If we can belong and connect
and be our true selves, that's ideal.
But what do we do if in order to be our true selves,
our families or our communities won't accept us?
Well, for example, over this Israel issue,
I made a decision a long time ago
that for me, speaking the truth, which doesn't make me right,
but speaking my truth is more important than who likes me and who doesn't like me.
In 1967, I wrote an article after the war arguing by that time
that Israel had occupied these territories quite deliberately
and then never give them back.
My father kicked me out of the house.
I accepted that.
Now, my father later on came around
and actually agreed with me,
but I made the decision that to be myself
and to speak my truth,
I'm willing to break the contact if that's what it took.
A lot of people in that situation,
and Harry, in that family,
with a very troubled young mother
and a loveless marriage,
and a father was having an affair before he was born,
a family there was not a whole lot of touching and holding.
There's multiple reasons to say that it was a very traumatized child,
and in order to become himself, he had to distance himself.
Now, did he do it right?
Exactly the ideal way?
Maybe not, but you know what?
When I look at myself at age 38 or 35,
boy, did I make a lot of mistakes.
So this is all part of the human drama.
And families sometimes work it out, sometimes they don't.
It's true. It's very true.
Dr. Martin, I've got to leave it there.
It's been fascinating.
Please come back on the show again another time.
I've really enjoyed talking to you.
Likewise.
I really appreciate you giving me this listening.
Thank you.
A pleasure.
Thank you very much.
Unsense, the next, is it time to give the Elgin Marbles back to Greece?
We'll debate.
Welcome back to Ancense.
I'm joining now, I'm on our pack.
Talk to your contributor to Paul-A-O-Wone agent,
the former Marine-term presenter and conservationist,
James Clancy,
journalist Ava Santina. Right, it's talk marbles, Mr. Glancing, because you and I don't agree about this. I've had a conversion.
The Greek Prime Minister actually changed my mind. When he painted this picture literally of the Mona Lisa cut in half and said, what would you feel about that? I thought he's right.
Surely the right thing to do is to bring the two parts together and actually, if you look at the history and you look at where they want to put it, it makes more sense that we just loan it back to the, doesn't it?
I'm not massively passionate about the marbles.
I think the biggest mistake was Rishi snubbing Greek prime.
That's what's made this much bigger.
The major, I do agree with the government, is
once you start giving back one artefact,
it's like pulling the thread.
We do give a lot of artifacts away.
We do.
We give thousands away.
All the time, we lend stuff to museums around the world.
What's the difference?
Yeah, that's the right word.
We're lending things.
But if you saw earlier this year, the koi noor,
the diamond in the crown jewels worn by the late Queen Mother,
there's now course for that to be returned to India
and thousands of other artefacts.
As soon as you do one, it's going to go on and on and on.
All right, Ava, what's your response to that?
Well, maybe you should, no.
I mean, what's the argument for us keeping hold of it forever?
You know, if I was sitting here wearing, I don't know, one of your jackets,
you'd probably ask for it back, wouldn't you?
Well, it depends how you acquired it.
I mean, some of these things, if they're looted,
then they will be...
So if you let me borrow it for one minute and then I kept it forever,
You might have something to hear about.
I mean, the point about the marbles, which they call the Parthenon marbles, right?
Whatever they call them.
The point about them is there is a dispute over actually the original propriety, right?
We know that one of our aristocrats bought it back,
but that was from the Ottoman Empire at the time,
who were the ruling power in Athens at the time.
But that is disputed.
It's not like this is clean cut anyway.
No, absolutely.
And a parliamentary inquiry might have found that he had brought them back, you know, above board.
but I mean, how many times have we sat around here
and disputed what a parliamentary select committee has had to say?
I mean, we don't necessarily...
Paul, let me ask you, I mean, just on a general thing,
we were just saying in the break,
in the general scheme of things,
who gives us stuff about a bunch of marbles, right?
There are wars raging, the Greeks do.
The Greeks do.
The cost of living crisis.
We've had a pandemic.
Can't we just lend the marbles back to the Greeks?
I thought the Prime Minister of Greece
put up a really respectful position
and he's right.
We've got two halves of his great work of art
sitting in different countries.
They've got to come back together.
And actually, they began there.
Yes. Yeah, absolutely.
The problem is they should be returned.
We know they should be returned, but we're fussing over it,
and we shouldn't be fussing over it when there are more serious things to discuss.
And Rishi Sunnah shouldn't be snubbing.
I like Rishi, but he shouldn't be snubbing the Prime Minister of Greece.
They're an ally of ours.
This is the problem, isn't it, with this meeting?
Because it wasn't just about the Parthenon.
It was also going to be about Ukraine.
It was also going to be about what was happening in Israel and Gaza.
These are really important issues.
It's also going to be about the cost of the crisis in terms of oil and gas, etc.
So there were issues close to the heart of many of the voters here,
and he snubbed him.
So not just about the Parthaghanes, but also very serious home issues as well.
Okay.
Avery let's turn to Connor McGregor, an unlikely segue,
and I didn't think I'd be talking about him in political terms,
but what's going on in Ireland is really quite terrifying.
And he's at the centre of it,
because you're seeing a huge reaction to what happened with,
this attack on three kids and a woman by someone who's actually a naturalized irisitism
that came in as an Algerian. And this all goes back to this ongoing raging issue of immigration.
Connall McGregor's put himself right in the middle of it. Basically, Ireland, we're at war.
What do you make of this? Well, I mean, Conner McGregor is someone who likes to put himself
in the middle of everything. I mean, he's a pretty abhorrent human being, by all standards.
I mean, I think just a couple of years ago, he was filmed punching an old man in a pub who wouldn't
accept a shot of whiskey from him. He's also had more.
many other sexual assault allegations levied at him.
I mean, I don't know what happened to them,
but there have been many of them.
He's not been convicted of any anything.
The thing that concerns me, though,
and this is going to be a deeply unpopular point,
but it's that to tweet something
and then be investigated for it,
frightens me, because it's setting a quite dangerous precedent.
Well, I felt the same about Tommy Robinson.
This is what I was going to say to you, yes.
Being arrested at the weekend.
I'm like, what did he do to deserve being arrested?
I mean, James, this is a, you know,
you can abhor the people.
I actually like Colonel McGregor, what it's worth,
but in Tommy Robinson's case,
I have no truck with him whatsoever,
and I think he's a pretty poisonous individual.
However, I feel uncomfortable like you did.
Are we overstretching now in the way we police these things?
Yeah, I mean, clearly Ireland isn't at war,
and he's just thrown himself in, whether he was drunk,
but I'm more concerned about the fact
that the police could be knocking at your door for a tweet.
I mean, we all have emotions when they're...
Or turning up at a peaceful protest
and being apparently peaceful.
Well, no, it's not the arrest that concerns me.
The arrest is fine.
What concerned me was the use of, I've forgotten the spray,
pepper spray that was used in his eye.
That concerns me.
So my understanding in relation to Mr. Lennon, Yaksie Lennon,
was that there was a prohibition.
So he wasn't allowed within a particular area
and it was understood that he breached that order.
So it wasn't just that he just turned up.
I know, but the optics aren't good.
And, you know, he just turned up and, oh, poor, poor Tommy.
That's not the case.
Secondly, in relation to the police potentially
turning up to arrest you for a tweet.
Absolutely they should have that right to be able to do that.
Because if it was a tweet that incited hatred,
incited violence, incited someone to commit a criminal act,
of course you can't be investigated.
You never see anybody on the left arrested for a tweet.
You only ever see people on the right.
Guys, we're right now at time.
I'm afraid I'm going to have to arrest this conversation.
But it's an interesting debate.
You know, I think how far we go in policing these things is really important,
both on social media,
the police protest marches and so on.
Gotta be consistent.
Thank you, Pat.
Appreciate it.
That's it from me.
Whatever you're up to, keep it on censor.
Good night.
