Worth Fighting For
I knew the family name long before I came across Julia Ravanis‘ books – Skönheten i kaos, and then Emmy’s teorem. To me, “Ravanis” was plural, denoting the two brothers who lived — and still live — just around the corner from my parents, where they built and restored old boats (and yes, Julia is their niece — the brothers flicker briefly by in her first book).
Though I’d never met the Ravanis myself, their reputation had somehow preceded them. Just hearing their name evoked a sense of fierce independence. It was never clear why, but they seemed to possess an aura of quiet defiance — the kind you sense in people who’d rather rebuild something with their own hands than ask permission. I can only guess what made my subconscious draw that connection — perhaps the boatbuilding brothers came to symbolise a continuation of my own family line, back to the days when my paternal grandfather and his brothers, all in the merchant navy, defied the Nazi blockade. They sailed the seas as if it mattered, and though they all made it home alive, it was by a narrow margin. Stories of torpedoed ships — and of one uncle who survived only because he managed to cling to the ship’s pig — were passed down through the generations.
The connection I’d long since made between the Ravanis name and standing up for what’s right came full circle this morning, when I opened the newspaper to find an op-ed signed by one of the Ravanis brothers, Mathias.
He’s eloquently arguing against an upcoming bill which proposes to outlaw the use of nets, longlines and traps for anyone but licensed commercial fishers. Not that eloquence is called for — one would think it should have sufficed to crudely state the facts:
Exhibit A: There are only twelve industrial trawlers left in the country, and they are the ones devastating the stocks.
Exhibit B: It was small-scale coastal fishing that kept Sweden from famine during both world wars.
Exhibit C: The country is, quite openly, preparing for the next one — which, should it come, will likely see our coasts mined and rendered unnavigable to industrial trawlers.
The proposed law reminds me of the repressive old feudal rule which once dictated small scale farmers weren’t allowed to grind their wheat at home, the so called Mölletvång. The tools have changed, but the instinct of the few to monopolise what belongs to all remains the same.

