Freedom profiles organiser Nicole Rose, a longtime campaigner for animal rights,
the environment, solidarity with political prisoners, migrants and those
suffering from trauma.
Nicole Rose became politically active at the age of 10. She fondly remembers
discovering the anarchist writings of Errico Malatesta while babysitting for her
mum’s friend and concludes, “Everything made sense. I finally had a framework to
describe how I felt about the world.” She learnt how forms of oppression were
connected and how long traditions of revolutionary struggle and social movements
existed throughout history. She soon became a full-time organiser after leaving
home at 16. However, this risk of repression in this work came to a head
following her involvement in the SHAC campaign, an international animal rights
campaign to close Europe’s largest animal testing company, Huntingdon Life
Sciences, now Inotiv. Her house was raided as part of Operation Achilles, a
considerable policing operation to terminate the campaign, and she was arrested
and later sent to prison for three and a half years.
Following her sentence, she continued to be active and kept herself busy. “I’ve
always found it impossible to be ‘single issue’ because of how interconnected
all struggles are”, she says. Indeed, campaigns against hydraulic fracturing,
otherwise known as fracking, and the badger cull, as well as supporting
prisoners, prison abolition collectives and community food projects, are amongst
just some of her contributions. Not realising it at the time, the skills and
knowledge she would learn while in prison would not only strengthen this work
but would develop into a far reaching herbal solidarity project that supports
revolutionary struggle and helps those experiencing state oppression.
TAKING ROOT
“I had an unconventional route into herbalism,” she explains. While serving her
sentence, she worked in the prison gardens for 18 months and learned from other
knowledgeable women. She recalls, “They all had this amazing knowledge of plants
and would tell me little things about weeds we would encounter.” During this
time, she undertook two distance learning courses in herbalism and horticulture,
which she describes as “transformational” and gave her the opportunity to ground
her knowledge in preparation for when she was released.
Nicole then moved in with her mum, who had remarried. Her husband owned a house
with a small holding of four and a half acres, which was the ideal environment
for growing herbs to develop, experiment with, and practise medicine making
together with what she could forage. Initially intended as temporary, she lived
there for 12 years in what she joyfully recollects as “absolutely incredible”.
For five years, she dedicated herself to Feed Avalon, a workers’ co-op which
provides food and horticulture training courses and workshops using a community
garden. Though this work could be placed into the context of food autonomy,
Nicole felt the need to expand her work politically. “I knew that prison was
playing a bigger role in my life”, she clarifies, “[and] That was when I
realised that I wanted my work to focus on responding to state violence.”
Being regularly politically active, or even taking part in single actions and
campaigns, can severely impact the mental health and wellbeing of those
participating. This is often exacerbated through state repression, enforced by
the police and the courts, and regularly leads to chronic stress and anxiety.
Aware of this, Nicole began to provide medicine to those she supported
through Anarchist Black Cross. This, in turn, took her down a route that helped
her to process her own PTSD and trauma through her experiences in prison, as
well as childhood, and how these affect the body.
Later, in 2016, she suffered from costochondritis and was repeatedly admitted to
hospital. While recovering, she began a series of emotive and personal blogs
that reflected the sustainability of political movements and burnout, as well as
blending her interests in radical politics and social movements, health and
politics of care. For her, the reflective experience was reaffirming; “I just
knew that I wanted to work with plant medicines. [They] gave me so much joy in
life to support others in solidarity with them.” And so, Solidarity
Apothecary (SA) was born.
GROWTH
2018 was SA’s first year, and Nicole had already enrolled in a four-year course
at The Plant Medicine School in Ireland. She was unable to study in the UK due
to her criminal record, but this became an “amazing twist of fate”, she
proclaims, as the school had “great politics, [was] very practical and had a
different approach to many of the academic courses [in the UK]”. Before the
COVID-19 pandemic, the course combined in-person and remote learning, which
meant that Nicole could continue her solidarity work by supporting 39 people
with plant medicine on a one-to-one basis.
The following year was transformational for SA. Amongst working for Corporate
Watch part time, Nicole began volunteering with Mobile Herbal Clinic, which has
supported over 10,000 refugees and migrants around Calais since starting that
year. She was formative in supporting fellow herbalist and founder of The Herbal
Barge, Melissa Ronaldson, in building the infrastructure, fundraising, and
finalising recipes. In turn, she received comprehensive training in herbal first
aid and pre-hospital care by clinical supervisors.
Overcoming Burnout, a collection of Nicole’s writings while in recovery, and The
Prisoners Herbal, a practical guide to medicine making and wellbeing for
prisoners, were also published that year. Online testimony shown on SA’s website
shows how meaningful this resource is to those inside and outside prison. In
addition to this, she continued to support anti-badger cull activists with
wellbeing parcels and started the Frontline Herbalism podcast.
2020 was SA’s biggest year. The COVID-19 pandemic had a severe impact on support
work for refugees and migrants in Calais. Nicole described the situation as
“hellish” and that conditions had quickly worsened. Many were without food,
suffering serious cases of dehydration and subsequently had no choice but to be
taken to hospital regularly. Despite the challenges, she was able to dedicate
herself to the ground eight times throughout the year. Amongst this work, Nicole
printed another run of The Prisoners Herbal, distributed in the USA. Fundraisers
and other support campaigns were also organised for those resisting the coastal
gas pipeline in Canada, HS2 and the badger cull in the UK, and those
experiencing political repression in Belarus.
The succeeding year, Nicole graduated from her clinical training. “It was a big
deal for me”, she explains, and fondly recollects her dissertation on herbal
support during medical abortion and learnt from herbalists and abortion support
workers across the world. Then, she stood away from Corporate Watch to pursue SA
full time. Her work in Calais continued but extended to refugees and migrants in
Scotland and Wales who received medicines due to their vulnerability during the
pandemic. Anti-oppression work also continued and included supporting arrestees
during the #KillTheBill campaign, some later imprisoned, and through workshops
about herbalism and PTSD for ex-prisoners. Though she was continuously
fundraising and did secure a grant, balancing all this work financially remained
difficult; “I lived on nothing, but it meant I could go full force energy with
the project”, said Nicole. And that she did.
SPREADING
Then there was the Russian invasion of Ukraine in 2022. Nicole knew it was
important to respond to it through SA, amongst other support work. “I
wholeheartedly threw myself into it”, she states proudly and initiated Ukraine
Herbal Solidarity. During her initial visit to Poland, it quickly became clear
that even though there was an abundance of medical infrastructure in place,
there was still a lack of emotional and trauma support for those fleeing
Ukraine. She responded by helping set up a site in the city of Lublin alongside
locals who were distributing clothing, children’s toys, sanitary items, and sim
cards, amongst other items, ready for arrival. “It was one the most moving
moments of my life”, she says, “[as} people were telling me horrendous stories”.
She continued to explain that some burst into tears with relief over her efforts
to make medicines using plants common to Ukraine. One specific story that
resonated with Nicole was about a woman who previously made her own rose-based
medicine every year using roses from their garden, which was destroyed following
the invasion. Nicole acknowledges the gravity of such testimony; “She was
weeping. It was really intense”.
Nicole did return to the UK, but the space continued to operate while she
focused on medicine making. She returned multiple times with a van full of
medicines and, when she was unable to, had them shipped over. As the number of
arrivals scaled down, distributions continued in Warsaw until it was concluded
that efforts should specifically focus on supplying other distributions in the
country.
SA has seen developments throughout 2023. Nicole has launched a course which she
notes has assisted hundreds of participants with traumatic stress and PTSD.
Accessibility is important to her; she believes no one should be turned away due
to poverty. So far, more than half of the participants have received a free
place on the course. Developing practical systems and structures has also been a
focus, which aims to make SA sustainable long-term and become “deeper rather
than broader”. Not all work, however, has been behind the scenes.
The solidarity work in Calais has continued, and though she describes it as
“continuously intense”, Nicole reminisces “seeing so much humanity and beauty”
in the people she has supported and regards these as special moments. Her
ongoing prisoner support is also highly significant despite both coming with
extensive emotional gravity. The tragic loss of Taylor in 2022, whom Nicole had
built up a relationship with for 13 years, is just one painful example of this.
“Seeing people living in such horrific conditions [in Calais] and feeling a lot
of clinical responsibility”, she explains, is another. Indeed, the nature of her
work is deeply emotive and means confronting a variation of human suffering,
often a direct result of state oppression.
Navigating this is undoubtedly a challenge. She acknowledges that she has a
support network of close friends and her partner but remains grounded by
enabling both physical and psychological self-care in what she describes as a
“rest and digest state.” Herbalism plays a huge role in this and includes daily
intake of medicines and teas, making evident to herself that “these plants
really are our allies.”
GROUNDED
Nicole [was due to give birth in April 2024 at the time of writing and would] be
taking maternity leave, but this won’t mean a pause of SA. She will remain
active behind the scenes with campaigning, fundraising and producing care
packages whilst operations on the ground continue through others. She hopes this
will also give her an opportunity to develop some of her ambitions for SA’s
future. One of these is to train and support other people to run their own
projects similar to the clinic in Calais but in other border hotspots. As well
as offering additional online courses and expanding on prison abolition and
prisoner support, Nicole aspires to write and publish multiple books. She began
2024 by completing her most comprehensive book, a practical guide to surviving
state violence through herbal medicine. But there is more work to be done.
Maintaining SA, let alone expanding it, is a lot of work. Though Nicole has
experienced burnout before, she remains positive about her journey and humbly
describes the project as “deeply nourishing”. Indeed, herbalism is something
that is universally beneficial, as is solidarity.
~ Aidan Frere-Smith
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This story was first published in March 2023
Pic: Forest Farming
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