“When I use a word,″ Humpty Dumpty said in a rather a
scornful tone, “it means just what I choose it to mean – neither more nor less.″
“The question is,″ said
“The question is,″ said Humpty Dumpty, “which is to be
master – that’s all.″
I was
reminded of this passage in Lewis Carroll‘s “Through the Looking Glass″ last autumn,
when Czech and international media were inundated with reactions to the article
in the Czech weekly Respekt that
mentioned a document from the early 1950s according to which writer Milan
Kundera had informed on a man who subsequently spent many years in prison.
The reactions were mostly negative and critical and had one thing in common.
They wondered how journalists dared to slander a man with a monumental
oeuvre and respectable life behind him.
With fire and
brimstone against journalists
A few days ago I was reminded of the same passage in Carroll’s
book in connection with a similar scandal. This one occurred in France
where journalist and writer Pierre Péan published a book
entitled Le monde selon K. Having
researched Bernard
Kouchner’s shady African financial
deals, he presents a rather different perspective on France’s most
popular politician, current Minister of Foreign Affairs and Médecins
Sans Frontières’s founder.
It is necessary
to point out that Péan is no tabloid writer. His work is based on
meticulous research. That is why, under President François Mitterrand, he was
able to publish, without fear of becoming a laughing stock, of being
questioned or taken to court, a bestselling book on the President’s
suspicious Vichy past ( Une jeunesse
française. François Mitterand. 1934 – 1947). Whether, as his critics claim,
he got the facts wrong in Kouchner’s case, is to be decided in the court of law
- the Minister’s lawyers are suing him. But this is not the point I want
to make here.
Just like the
article on Kundera in the Czech Republic, the book has unleashed a media frenzy
in France, led by prominent intellectuals. The following quote from writer-philosopher
Bernard-Henri Lévy sums up their response: “This is
disgusting and sickening. How dare these pathetic people touch someone who has
lived a life of commitment and accomplished great things, risking his own
life for causes he believed in? Enough of these show trials, enough of this
muck-raking by dwarves like Pierre Péan who thrive on and profit from someone
who has achieved something real in his life.”
This sort
of response by a respected intellectual and wholehearted democrat almost makes
one suspect that the two men are having an affair and that Pierre Péan has
simply fallen into a trap. Yet Lévy’s
reaction is not a one-off response. In his article “In defence of Milan Kundera’s
honour” last autumn in the weekly Le Point he refers to “… a malicious blow
inflicted on a giant by simpletons and non-entities who had a non-authenticated
piece of period paper waved in front of their face and immediately accepted it as
holy writ.”
For the
second time within a few months a leading European intellectual has formulated
an elitist idea defining who does and who doesn’t have the right to apply the
written word - the basic tool of journalism - to towering geniuses. He implies
that the right pertains only to those who have properly understood these
towering figures and their work. But to understand someone properly
does not necessarily mean you have to be servile.
Some time ago
poet Joseph Brodsky gave a brilliant description of how people tend to idealise
exceptional personalities and how an admirable oeuvre or personal stance by an
exceptional person prevents people from seeing his/her human or civic
shortcomings: „If someone fights against evil he is automatically considered to
be the representative of good. Even though he might be
a skirt-chaser, a cheat, a bastard. All is forgiven.“ So
whatever might lurk at the bottom of great personalities, their greatness makes
them untouchable forever. This applies as much in their early days, as they
begin their ascent towards the heights of untouchability, as in later times when
they are enjoying a well-deserved rest on their laurels.
„No, I really cannot imagine the author
of Laughable Loves, not even in his previous life, in his prehistory, taking on
the role of a squealer,“ writes Bernard-Henri
Lévy in the article on Kundera mentioned above. But why not? Why should the
ability to write good books guarantee an unblemished life? And does the fact that as a young man
someone had the logistical skills necessary to organize medical aid in
developing countries, endow that person with a life-long immunity to the
temptation to enrich himself illegally?
Yes, it would
be wonderful, it would be ideal if it always worked like that. Unfortunately,
history offers plenty of examples of the opposite. Not even the breathtaking
profundity of his intellect prevented philosopher Martin Heidegger from
collaborating closely with the Nazis. The brilliant writer Louis-Ferdinand
Céline was a pathological anti-Semite. The writer Maxim Gorky bore witness
to the horrifying depth of poverty in Czarist Russia, yet when talking to
Western journalists he knowingly denied the existence of the Soviet Gulag. Not to mention a large number of popular
politicians, moralists and prigs who later turned out to be involved in sleaze
and corruption.
Who is untouchable?
Even
the most experienced and serious journalist can make a mistake. It can happen
for a number of reasons (haste, reliance on unverified information,
manipulation by others). As a result, the feelings of the target of the
criticism may be hurt. However, the victim cannot actually be wronged. After
all, being wronged suggests injustice, unfairness, iniquity. And this, in turn,
implies that the victim is not able to put the slander right and seek justice.
Yet this opportunity is available in a free society and the victim can defend
his honour against unreliable and distorted information as well as against
outright lies. Kouchner has chosen justice, while Kundera chose silence.”
In short,
this is a risk every famous public figure has to run. In his contribution
to the Kundera debate (hier) Václav Havel wrote: „To be a good
writer and to become famous due to one’s writing is a risky business. However,
sometimes you have to take risks. It is in the public interest.“ Exactly the
same applies to the primary task of journalism - making information available
to the public. However, if someone denounces those who take the risk - which in
a democratic society guarantees the basic freedom of press and opinion - as
dwarves and simpletons, he behaves just like Humpty Dumpty. He wants to impose
a usage of words that denotes only what he wants to hear or see. It is
hardly necessary to point out where this might lead. One of the greatest sins
of intellectuals has been heaping false praise on totalitarian leaders and
thereby helping to make them untouchable.
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