I
won’t talk about the case, the searches, the interrogations, the tomes, the
trials. It’s boring and pointless. Recently I’ve joined the school of tiredness
and frustration. But even before the arrest, I managed to join the school of
being able to talk about truly important things.
I
would like to talk about philosophy and literature. About Benjamin, Derrida,
Kafka, Arendt, Sontag, Barthes, Foucault, Agamben, Audre Lorde and Bell
Hooks. About Timofeeva, Tlostanova and Rakhmaninova.
I
would like to speak about poetry. About how to read contemporary poetry. About
Gronas, Dashevsky and Borodin. But now is not the time or place. I will hide my
little tender words on the tip of my tongue, at the bottom of my larynx,
between my stomach and heart. And I’ll just say a little.
I
often feel like a little fish, a little bird, a schoolboy, a baby girl. But
recently I found out with amazement, that Brodsky was also put on trial at 23.
And in so far as I am also part of the human race, I will say the following:
In
the Kabbalah there is the concept of Tikkun olam – the repairing of the world.
I see that the world is not perfect. I believe that, as Yehuda Amichai wrote,
the world was created beautiful, for the good and for peace, like a bench in a
garden (in a garden, not in a courtroom!) I believe that the world was created
for tenderness, hope, love, solidarity, passion, and joy.
But
in the world, there is a terrible, unbearable amount of violence. And I don’t
want violence. Not in any form. Not the teacher’s hands in schoolgirls’ knickers,
not the fists of a drunken father on the bodies of his wife and children. If I
decided to list all the violence around, not a day, not a week, not a year
would be enough time.
In
order to see the violence around, you just need to open your eyes. My eyes are
open. I see violence and I don’t want violence. The more violence there is, the
more I don’t want it. And the greatest and most terrible violence is the one I
don’t want most of all.
I
love to study. And so now I will speak with the voices of others. At school, in
history lessons, I learned the phrases: “You may crucify freedom, but the human
soul knows no chains” and “For freedom, yours and ours.” In secondary school, I
read “Requiem” by Anna Andreyevna Akhmatova, “Journey into the Whirlwind” by
Yevgenia Solomonovna Ginzburg, “The Vacated Theater” by Bulat Shalvovich
Okudzhava, “Children of the Arbat” by Anatoly Naumovich Rybakov. From
Okudzhava, most of all I loved the poem:
Conscience,
nobility and dignity
Here it is, our sacred army.
Hold out your palm to it.
No fear for him, even in the fire.
His countenance is imposing and wondrous.
Dedicate to him your humble age:
Maybe you won’t become a victor,
But you will die like a man! [from Sacred Army
– Святое воинство]
I
studied French at MGIMO and learned a line from Edith Piaf: “Ça ne pouvait pas
durer toujours” (“It couldn’t last forever”). And from Marc Robin: “Ça ne peut
pas durer comme ça” (“It can’t go on like this”). At nineteen, I went to
Majdanek and Treblinka and learned how to say “never again” in seven languages:
never again, jamais plus, nie wieder, קיינמאל מער, nigdy więcej, לא עוד.
I
studied the Jewish wise men, and most of all, I fell in love with two bits of
wisdom. Rabbi Hillel said: “If I am not for myself, who will be for me? If I am
only for myself, what am I? And if not now, when?” And Rabbi Nachman said: “The
whole world is a narrow bridge, and the main thing is not to be afraid at all.”
Then
I entered the School of Cultural Studies and learned a few more important
lessons. First, words have meaning. Second, you need to call a spade a
spade. And finally: sapere aude, that is, have the courage to use your own
mind.
It
is ridiculous and absurd that our case is connected with schoolchildren. I
taught children the Humanities in English, worked as a nanny, dreamed of being
a part of the ‘Teacher for Russia’ programme and going to a small town for two
years to sow seeds of reason, kindness, and the eternal.
But
Russia – through the mouth of state public prosecutor Tryakin – considers that
I involved minors in life-threatening actions. If I ever have children (and I
will, because I remember the central commandment), I will hang a portrait of
the procurator of Judea, Pontius Pilate, on their wall so that the children
grow up to be decent people. The Procurator Pontius Pilate standing up and
washing his hands – that’s the kind of portrait it will be.
Yes, it is now life-threatening to not be indifferent in one’s thoughts and way of life. I don’t know what to say about the essence of the charge. I am washing my hands. But now it is the moment of truth. The time when the books are interpreted.
Neither I nor my male and female friends can find a place that is
away from horror and pain, but when I go down into the metro, I do not see tear-stained
faces. I do not see tear-stained faces.
None
of my favourite books – neither children’s books nor books for adults – taught
indifference, disinterest, or cowardice. Nowhere have I been taught these
phrases:
We
are insignificant.
I’m
a simple person, everything is not so clear, no one can be trusted, I’m not
really interested in all this.
I’m
not into politics, this does not concern me, nothing depends on me, competent
authorities will sort it out. What could I do on my own?
On
the contrary, I know and love completely different words.
John
Donne, via Hemingway, says:
No man is an island entire of itself; every
man
is a piece of the continent, a part of the
main;
if a clod be washed away by the sea, Europe
is the less, as well as if a promontory were,
as
well as any manner of thy friends or of thine
own were; any man’s death diminishes me,
because I am involved in mankind.
And therefore never send to know for whom
the bell tolls; it tolls for thee.
Mahmoud
Darwish says:
As you prepare your breakfast, think of others
(do not forget the pigeon’s food).
As you wage your wars, think of others
(do not forget those who seek peace).
As you pay your water bill, think of others
(those who are nursed by clouds).
As you return home, to your home, think of
others
(do not forget the people of the camps).
As you sleep and count the stars, think of
others
(those who have nowhere to sleep).
As you express yourself in metaphor, think of
others
(those who have lost the right to speak).
As you think of others far away, think of
yourself
(say: If only I were a candle in the dark).
Gennadii
Golovaty says: The blind cannot stare in anger, the dumb cannot cry out
furiously. Those without arms cannot hold weapons, those without legs cannot
take a step forward. But- the dumb can stare in anger, But – the blind can cry
out furiously. But – those without legs can carry weapons. But – those without
arms can take a step forward.
Some
people, I know, are scared. They choose silence.
But
Audre Lorde says: Your silence will not protect you. In the Moscow metro they
say: Passengers are forbidden to travel on trains going to dead ends. Lao Tzu says via Tarkovsky:
The main thing is that they believe in themselves and become helpless, like
children.
Because
weakness is great, and strength is nothing. When a person is born, he is weak
and flexible, and when he dies, he is strong and hard. When a tree grows, it is
tender and elastic, and when it is dry and hard, it dies. Brittleness and
strength are companions of death. Weakness and flexibility express the
freshness of existence. Therefore, what has become hard will not be victorious.
Remember
that fear devours the soul. Remember the character in Kafka, who saw “how they
set up gallows in the prison yard and mistakenly thought it was for him, and he escaped
from his cell in the night and hanged himself.”
Be like children. Don’t be afraid to ask (yourself and others) what is good and what is bad. Don’t be afraid to say that the king has no clothes. Do not be afraid to cry out, to burst into tears. Repeat (to yourself and others): 2+2=4. Black is black. White is white. I am a man; I am strong and brave. I am a strong and brave woman. We are strong and brave people. Freedom is a process, in the course of which you develop the habit of being insusceptible to becoming enslaved.
Translated by Clementine Cecil
from Portside
Fabulous!
ReplyDeleteInspiring and heart-breaking at the same time.
ReplyDelete