For those who fear communal solidarity no longer exists hereâs a tale to lift the spirits.
When five men were sacked in an overtime row 20 years ago, 500 Liverpool dockers refused to cross a picket line. Despite being described by Lloyds List as âthe most productive workforce in Europeâ they too were sacked.
Their 850-day dispute became one of the longest in British labour history. With the men risking everything to uphold the most sacred of trade union principles, it was also seen across the world as one of the most noble.
On day one American longshoremen on both coasts and Australian wharfies brought their countriesâ ports to a standstill.
On other days every Japanese docker stopped working and in South Africa all ports were closed down âin solidarity with the Liverpool dockers who stood by us during apartheidâ.
At home acts like Jo Brand and Noel Gallagher did fundraisers, footballer Robbie Fowler was fined by Uefa for unveiling a dockersâ T-shirt and support groups the length of Britain swung behind the sacked men.
But with the TGWU neutered by Thatcherâs anti-union laws the dockers eventually lost. One legacy of that defeat is those zero-hours contracts that blight so many lives today.
Yet the solidarity never waned. Under the tutelage of Jimmy McGovern some of the dockers wrote a drama about the dispute for Channel 4, using the £130,000 fee to buy a building in the aptly-named Hope Street. They turned it into a communal hub. A not-for-profit bar, function room and advice centre. An open house for anyone in need of help or radical stimulation. A lasting memorial to the spirit of solidarity shown in their dispute.
Downstairs it hosts everything from Greek theatre and salsa to pensionersâ meetings and political forums. Thereâs an exhibition about the Spanish Civil War. I even had my wedding do there.
Upstairs they give free expert advice on benefits, employment, asylum, debt and welfare to anyone who walks in off the street. Over the past 15 years itâs estimated more than £10million-worth of advice has been given to people in desperate need.
But due to loss of funding and rent, The Casa faces an uncertain future. They could keep the bar open but unless the rest of the building is used to fight for social justice they feel theyâd be betraying their founding principles.
So they wonât do it.
Before Christmas it looked like The Casa had only months left, until solidarity came to the fore once more.
Phone calls to comedians John Bishop, Ricky Tomlinson, Neil Fitzmaurice and Mark Steel and to musicians The Farm and John Power gave us a line-up. Another call to the 1,600-seater ÂPhilharmonic Hall gave us a venue.
All of them agreed, in a Âheartbeat, to do their bit.
And so we have The Casa ÂSolidarity Show on Friday April 17, the tickets for which go on sale today at the Liverpool ÂPhilharmonic website.
Buy one and not only are you guaranteed to have a cracking night, youâll keep a treasured Âinstitution built on rare principles going for another few years.
More than that, youâll keep alive a truth which says no matter what you throw at working people, no matter what you try to take from them, when they stick together they wonât be beaten.