Wanted: One Czech Hero
By Kamal
Sunavala
I am spurred
to write this on the heels of the recent
election tragedy that we have had in the Czech Republic.
A shameful, apathetic stalemate. Maybe, because I am an
outsider who has lived here long enough, my clarity, even
unintentional, is greater than the people who belong to
this country. I call it tragedy because it is indeed tragic
for at least two reasons. The first reason for this tragedy
is the inability to decipher what you really want. Fighting
communism for forty odd years, flying the flag of freedom
to live life as you please, separating yourself from part
of yourself- these are undoubtedly painful sacrifices that
have been made by the Czech people. And yet, one would
think that after all this heaving turmoil, you would have
the clarity of mind, body and soul to make a clear choice.
Of course it is usually between the devil and the deep
blue sea, where politics is concerned but even so, let
one try and swallow you. By surrendering the reins of your
future to neither one nor the other, you simply allow them
to pound you into the ground from both sides. After all
you have been through, there seems that there isn’t enough
respect for the pain you went through, to make that choice.
The second reason it is a tragedy is because in a country
filled with artists and intellectuals, there isn’t a single
man or woman who has been able to convince-not mesmerise-
people that forsaking politicians who are consummate in
the game, for an artist with soul, would perhaps, while
being risky, pay more dividends. A society that has lost
art and creativity and passion is a society without soul.
A society without soul is a society that has already gone
back to communism without officially announcing it. For
all the galleries and all the exhibitions and all the music
concerts that this country offers, it is somehow not able
to offer up one artist who believes, rightly or wrongly
or even half-heartedly, that he can make a difference and
awaken his countrymen from this strange slumber of apathy
they are floundering in.
What excites people? Flash? Glamour?
Horror? Something must surely announce itself soon or else
very soon, the Czech Republic is going to turn into a diminutive
younger sibling to the giants who are fiercely gobbling
up the European Union. Your membership in the Union is
a long debatable subject that is best left out of this
current situation because it is a useful distraction from
the real issue at hand. You are unable to choose because
you are unable to lead. You, within each of you, have lost
the ability to find and determine what makes a leader.
The pseudo-intellectuals sit around in cafes debating and
bemoaning how the country is going to the dogs. They think
boycotting Tesco is the answer. The favourite bully game
is to talk about how other countries are no better, especially
the US and the UK and now lately, India, because it keeps
making the international news. And yes, all three powers
have a lot that is wrong with them. Terrible perversions
of history and politics. But somewhere deep within there
still lies a spirit that won’t give up. This is not an
argument for the way they are functioning. But rather a
small lamp held up so you can see that it still has people
who believe in soul and are willing to shout for it, no
matter how much it frustrates them. The laughable fact
that Arnold Schwarzenegger became the governor of California,
proves it. People thought about giving a non-politician,
a bad-guy battling, even terrible actor, a chance. The
late Robin Cook, a consummate politician for over twenty
years, stood up in the House of Commons and explained that
he was resigning because he could not possibly support
the British government in the Iraq war; he resigned on
principle. Aamir Khan, a giant of Bollywood has decided
to challenge the mighty Indian government on the building
of a dam and displacing thousands of villagers and is using
his very celebrity to stir the passions of the urban youth
to whom a displaced village used to mean nothing. Of course
one can argue that these sorts of people have their own
selfish motives. Maybe. But if that is what spurs them
on to do something, to stir up the soil and wake up the
sleeping citizens, then I say three cheers to their efforts.
The question that naturally follows
is where is the Czech hero? Where is the famous actor,
the famous dissident, the famous poet, the famous painter?
Instead, all I see are shrugs and frowns. Yes there is
discontent, sadness even, with the way things have not
quite turned out. But still, there is no rising. No person
who will shake off this lethargy and this fatalistic attitude
to say, I want more. I want soul, I want passion and I
want to remember why we fought.
Where is the Czech Hero? |