A Loud Silence
By Kamal
Sunavala
Following
politics in the country I happen
to be living in at the moment is an odd way to spend time,
I concede to that. But surely no more than wandering around
the shopping mall at Andel. Since I also happen to be in
the rather confusing business of teaching and law and teaching
the law or whatever seems to be more convenient on that
particular day, I maintain an involuntary sharp interest
in the law in this country. Naturally, any half sane person
knows that politics follows hot on the heels of the law,
trying infact to chase it down into oblivion.
However, the weekend that the referendum was held in the
Czech Republic to resolve the tired pre-determined question
of whether this tiny country should join the looming EU,
there was no politics chasing the law. Infact the one thing
that signified that Sunday afternoon was complete silence.
My boss Roman is registered in Prague 4 to cast his vote.
Off we went so that he could express his opinion and I
could satisfy my unending curiosity about things that are
none of my business. Naturally out of respect for his confidentiality,
I won't let on which way he didn't vote. We drove up into
a pretty-ish area which proudly displayed an inconspicuous
sign that said Petting Zoo. Digressing from an important
political decision we decided to walk through the zoo.
Naturally, the idea of petting poor trapped animals wasn't
appetizing, so I grumbled while he laughed at me grumbling.
Very soon, I ran out of reason to grumble. There was one
deer that looked like he couldn't give a frog's arse about
anything and a pheasant and an owl unwisely perched on
a cracked branch. Naturally I thought, the location of
the zoo was ideal for political propaganda aimed at visiting
Sunday families. It made complete sense that certain interested
political leagues were hiding in the bushes waiting to
jump out at us and start enunciating the wonders of the
EU. I waited but no one jumped. No torch carrying political
leader, no journalist, no animal, nothing.
My grumbling recommenced as we tried in vain for about
fifteen minutes to look for the office where the voting
was meant to take place. I was listening for loud sounds,
arguing, beer bottles smashing, hordes of people all talking
at once while Roman seemed intent on finding a parking
spot. When we pulled into the building, I told him outright
that this was surely the wrong place. It was as quiet as
Death Valley. He shook his head at me and we went up the
stairs. There was a longish table. There were four people
seated there. One lady was handing out the slips of paper
upon which one apparently ticked or crossed out destiny.
The other gentleman checked Roman's credentials and peered
into his face a couple of times. I knew he should have
shaved. The third one stared at my breasts. The fourth
one I suppose was just there because, well, four is a better
number than three.
I still waited patiently for a man with a
foghorn voice to come out and start blaring at us about
the wondrous
virtues of the Union. I asked Roman if he was sure we were
at the right place. He shook his head at me again and ticked
off his little paper, deposited it in some box and indicated
that we were ready to leave. But I wasn't. Where was the
usual excitement associated with referendums, with voting,
with decision-making politics, lobbying? There was nothing
there. There were no people save the four monkeys behind
the table, one jaded Czech Canadian and one completely
bewildered woman who forgot to slap the man who had stared
holes into her breasts.
As we returned to the city, I was struck
at how dispassionate the populace seemed in general about
the fact that their
country was going to be part of a very large, very pricey
Socialist structure. How it seemed that they had resigned
themselves to the fact that not only would they be pushed
into the train going nowhere for a while but they were
not even given the mandatory provocation to scream in
protest. It seemed to me to be a nation that was tired
and unresisting.
In private, I have heard my students rage against the
EU, talk about how terrible the next few years are going
to
be, how it's a big sham and how the Czechs are going
to get lost in the maze without a voice. All this, they
proclaim
in loud strong voices. I didn't hear any tenors that
voting weekend. Infact, what I remember clearly, as being
the
loudest, was the silence.
Silence is golden is an old universal proverb.
But in this case, Sir Francis Bacon was right. Silence
is the virtue of fools.
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