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Fife’s coalfields communities showing what life is like during lockdown

The Coalfields Regeneration Trust (CRT) has been doing work with former mining communities across Scotland to capture their stories and produce films about life during lockdown.
The Coalfields Regeneration Trust (CRT) has been doing work with former mining communities across Scotland to capture their stories and produce films about life during lockdown.

Fife’s former mining communities have contributed to a new set of films showing their resilience in adapting to the Covid-19 pandemic.

The Coalfields Regeneration Trust (CRT) has been working with old mining towns and villages across Scotland to capture their stories and produce 13 films about life during lockdown.

Before the pandemic, CRT had planned a film project with villages in the west of Fife to explore the heritage of these communities and let individuals share their personal experiences. Films were to be screened in a collaboration with the Edinburgh-based Folk Film Gathering in May this year.

Covid-19 and lockdown led to the project team having to adapt to the new environment and physical restrictions, although it provided an opportunity for people to share their common experiences.

Nicky Wilson, chair of the Coalfields Regeneration Trust (CRT) in Scotland, said: “The Covid-19 pandemic brought with it an opportunity to shine a spotlight on coalfields communities and demonstrate how resilient they are, and how they are able to find solutions to their own challenges and quickly self-organise to support residents who are vulnerable or in need.

“As discussions on the film project advanced, it became clear that there were many different perspectives of Covid-19 that could be documented. We were hearing from people who organised, developed and delivered services at short notice for their communities, as well as individuals on the receiving end of those services.

“We realised, for example, that we could explore the impact of lockdown on older people, people living alone, single parents with young children, people looking after children with additional needs, young people, women, those who had lost work as a result of Covid, and those directly impacted by coronavirus.”

Filmmaker Anne Milne and curator Shona Thomson worked with CRT to reach out to its contacts, including projects supported through CRT’s Covid-19 Emergency Response Fund.

People have been participating and contributing in various ways, including film-making workshops, self-made videos, photographs and slide show.

Dunfermline photographer Eric Duncan captured the moment when a spitfire flew above Dunfermline’s Queen Margaret Hospital earlier this year.

Telephone interviews have also been carried out with members of communities, including those who were shielding and receiving support.

Caron Hughes, development manager, said: “As someone who is from mining stock, having spent most of my life living and being educated in coalfields areas, and latterly working as a community development professional across Scotland, including in former mining villages, I am continually frustrated by the image that is portrayed of our communities and the negative adjectives sometimes used to describe them.

“I am passionate about giving coalfields communities the opportunity to create a different narrative about life there to change perspectives.

“Coalfields communities have much to celebrate. However they very rarely get the opportunity to showcase such qualities as their resilience, creativity, determination, strong sense of identity, rich heritage and culture and stunning natural environments.”

The films will be shown in local communities once restrictions are lifted, but more on the project can be found via CRT Connect’s main page at https://crtconnect.org.uk or CRT’s YouTube Channel at http://bit.ly/CRTFilmsofActionYT.