Burčák - Pasteurised and Homogenised
By Kamal
Sunavala
Thursday night at Jiřího z Poděbrad I was one among many at the burčák festival
in the square by the church. I remember this from two years
ago with memories that involve inebriation, inelegant upchucking
of bodily contents and distribution of mechanisms for safe
sex. And of course the bands. And the crowd, heaving and
drinking and shouting.
This time, what was different
was the crowd control. There was more security than the
last time, which no one could explain. And the most disappointing
thing was how well mannered in general and how much smaller,
the crowd was. There was none of the deafening screaming,
none of the chucking empty bottles at each other and none
of the usual sirens accompanied by irritated police officers.
It was all almost civilised. People were milling around
in small groups talking about their jobs and babies and
dogs and summer houses. Not strange one might say. For
a PTA meeting! This on the other hand, was supposed to
be a burčák festival where riotous behaviour and lots of
drunken laughs were promised to tourists and their visiting
Canadian uncles.
I stopped in at Náměstí Míru and
it was the same kind of atmosphere. Mellow with a bad band,
people being there but looking as if they would rather
be someplace else. The place being packed with expats who
knew their way around and there was no awe and no wonder.
In fact I overheard a few British and American expats expostulating
to their Czech friends about how bad the burčák festival
had got this year and that last year and the year before
that there were better bands and more varieties of the
sulphur smelling alcohol to be had. Clearly the expat cycles
were getting longer. The local knowledge was spreading
faster and the charm was getting weaker.
I have to admit myself that I
had attended better burčák gatherings than these two. What
saddened me was that the local population were drinking
more beer and singing more American songs and making fun
of the Czech bands. Has patriotism taken a beating? I remember
even young Czechs being quite culture proud. What I saw
at the two squares seemed to be the cold finger of globalisation
creeping up even in the midst of a local or national tradition.
Jingoistic demonstrations are not my style and are infact
dangerous to a nation's health, but come on people; you're
drinking Rum n Cokes and beer at a burčák festival while
singing Guns and Roses instead of politely applauding for
a band from Mělník?
I had observed in an earlier article
that Prague had changed. That I would have to re-introduce
myself to the city and it would have to re-introduce itself
to me. I didn't think at that point, only a few short days
ago, that it would be a disappointing re-introduction.
Prague has been many things to many people but disappointing
has not been one of those things. I am trying not to reach
a conclusion from the evening I spent at the burčák festival
but it is indeed hard not to notice how the slate is being
wiped out in some ways to accommodate what can only be
labelled as a homogenised lifestyle - Made in the EU, packed
in the EU and distributed in the EU. Yes, Prague is part
of the EU, yes it must integrate, yes it must embrace foreigners
and yes they must all learn to speak better English. Must
they be so damned civilised while doing all of this?
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