Europe's last dictatorship
Europe's last dictatorship
By: Dmitrij Strotsev
Taken From:Dissident Blog
In Belarus
the first constraint on free speech is, often unconscious, self-censorship.
Belarusians are still Soviet, and have been schooled not to talk about
“sensitive” matters. Authors, journalists and musicians who infringe that
national discipline soon lose their celebrity and find themselves in society’s blind
spot. The restrictions and penalties that follow are usually imposed
surreptitiously. Thus, the Belarusian public is now blind to the existence of
Svetlana Aleksievich, a living classic of Belarusian letters and recipient of
numerous international literary awards. Her name is never mentioned on
television, state-owned publishing houses ignore her, her books are unavailable
through the usual distributors, and in school books her name is not among those
of her contemporaries.
You need a
license to publish books and magazines in Belarus. Your political reliability
is checked with the KGB, and you must then be questioned and approved by the
deputy minister of information personally. This oral examination is minuted
without consulting you, and is a soft method for keeping out “undesirable”
would-be publishers. Universities, libraries and cultural centres have
state-appointed ideological monitors with power to permit or ban public
gatherings and activities. There is a covert ban on meetings involving members
of the Belarusian PEN Centre or the Union of Belarusian Writers. Uncensored,
alternative culture in Belarus is ghettoized, its impact on the public severely
curtailed, and it has to fall back on “samizdat” and private distribution
channels. Authors, musicians and artists are forced to seek wider opportunities
by emigrating because of their lack of prospects and, not infrequently, direct
pressure from the state authorities. Although the internet is not banned, this
is because it has little social impact at present in Belarus, but the state
blocks it expertly when necessary.
If people
are unable to express themselves freely, “free speech” is meaningless, and
possibly damaging. Free speech is characterized by political and social
freedoms like freedom of assembly and freedom of the press. Free expression,
however, presupposes inner freedom. Belarusians, like others in post-Soviet
territories, accept that coercion plays an important role in life, which they
see not in terms of cultivating friendly relations with other people and the
world around them, but of exerting influence on the world and other people in
order to achieve desired results. For them the world is a utilitarian place, a
keyboard; language is a tool for management and speech a system of commands. The
only subtlety required in dealing with their world is rational decision-making
about how much pressure to apply where, and how much force to apply when
striking the requisite keys. In tandem with the principle of free speech,
instrumental speech can do considerable damage. What is the difference between
that and free expression? Free expression presupposes that interaction with
people and the world will result, not in the unquestioning obeying of orders,
not in performance of the expected, but in something qualitatively new,
something that was not there before. Desiring the new, curiosity and being
prepared to trust otherness, is a prerequisite for renewing the world.
In the
years of Soviet stagnation under Brezhnev, people actually enjoyed increased
personal, inner freedom. They learned not to listen, to close their ears to the
babble of state propaganda. They expanded their personal space until it
encompassed a global awareness and sensibility. They ignored orders and had no
wish themselves to order others about. They sensed subtle stirrings and the
Soviet world collapsed.
A cruel
joke is perpetrated on today’s Belorusian, who has firmly internalized an
unholy trinity of a glitzy American Dream, understood very naively, which
inclines him to ruthless and even brutal business games; a sincere sense of
having a place in a pyramid of power, a machine of state futurism ruled over by
a firm hand; and susceptibility to a “new” church organized along Soviet
bureaucratic lines. The individual’s inner freedom has shrivelled to the size
of a walnut, and yet our young people are wonderful.
Not, of
course, the Young Pioneers, and not the Orthodox Belarusian Republican Youth
League laying their wreaths at Zair Azgur’s statue of Stalin.
Belarusian-speaking and Russian-speaking windbags and zealous networkers,
shiftless artists, poets and musicians frittering their young lives away in
their native land, unable to let go of each other’s hands or to look each other
in the eye, can only repeat the catchphrase of the eighteenth-century
philosophical tramp, Grigoriy Skovoroda, “The world keeps trying to catch me,
but hasn’t caught me yet.”
The world
is becoming complicated. The machine of modern civilization demands pragmatic,
surgically precise gestures from us, unconditional incorporation in the
mechanism of cause and effect, predictable, approved characteristics. Those
with inner freedom have nowhere to turn. Like Andrey Platonov’s Voshchev in The
Foundation Pit, there is no place for them, with their intuitions of friendship
and freedom, “in the present context of the general pace of labour”.
Free,
artistic, poetic expression is being displaced, like political discourse, into
that blind spot of public awareness. It is considered non-essential,
ornamental, superfluous. Nothing serious is expected of artists or poets.
Innovation itself is no longer perceived “poetically”, with the joy of
recognition, but is seen as an unwanted new challenge, a threat to be analysed
and confronted. This poet, asked to speak about real free speech, sees it as a
derivative of free expression, of quietly testifying to a new life and a
dawning world awaiting joyful discovery and thankful amazement. Not as
something born of alarm, not a panic-stricken fear of threatening changes.



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