Paul Calvert chats to Kay Wilson about her traumatic experience, writing her memoir and going on to create The Yellow Brick Road project helping children in Israel.



Continued from page 3

Paul: Has everything that you have experienced helped to open doors, to go and speak into other governments and other nations?

Kay: Yes it has, I mean absurdly so for someone who just likes playing the piano, likes her wine, likes jazz music likes taking the dogs out, I mean I just found myself at the United Nations, that was good , I gave them a piece of my mind, you can see it on YouTube.

Paul: What is your hope for the future?

Kay: My hope for the future is that I will live to outlive this interview, meaning, I don't like all these inspirational memes and stuff but I do have a heightened awareness of the present, meaning that this interview now is the best thing I have done in all my life because I am very aware that this might be all I have, I don't know what is going to happen in the next 10 minutes. So I have a kind of sort-sighted vision of the future, as I am grateful that I am still alive to conclude the interview. The long-sighted future dream is that if I can help one Palestinian child by what I am doing with my friends in that refugee camp, if we can save a child from being groomed and give him a better education and make them a better person and we can save the lives of innocent people.
 CR

The opinions expressed in this article are not necessarily those held by Cross Rhythms. Any expressed views were accurate at the time of publishing but may or may not reflect the views of the individuals concerned at a later date.