Aleksandar Gubas on 9 Nov 99 14:07:34 MET |
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Syndicate: the myth of culture in conflict resolution |
THE MYTH OF CULTURE IN CONFLICT RESOLUTION This text is my reply to Mr Andreas Broeckmann's message, posted on the Syndicate mailing list. With the deepest respect. -------Andreas Broeckmann wrote: I guess that most of you will agree that Europe, and the world, are in a chronic mess these days. Whether this has to do with The Big Conspiracy, with the so-called end of the so-called Millennium, or with some natural, barbarian pre-determination of a continent's inhabitants - I don't know. * Yeah, I agree. The world is really in great mess. I obviously have no answers, but only reformulations of questions, plus some utopian ideas which embittered Balkanians can only laugh about. * As an 'embittered Balkanian', I will criticize here some of your words. Please forgive me, and take it only as the dialogue, not as the attack to your personality. Sister Katarina of CyberRex recently gave me a copy of a text that she had been given at a seminar in Ireland about Cultures, Art and Conflict. The seminar is part of the long-term Phoenix Project that tries to formulate an active role for culture in conflict resolution, and from what Katarina told me about the meetings in Dublin and about a trip that they made to Belfast, it must be a very interesting and strong initiative. * I don't think so. I don't believe in the active role of culture in the conflict resolution. The most important question here is: WHO THIS CULTURE IS FOR??? 'Sister Katarina of Cyberrex' was running the Cinema Rex cultural centre in Belgrade, with art programmes which were gathering 30 people per evening at average - in the city with 2,000,000 inhabitants. I have nothing against these programmes - I myself was running one of them in Cinema Rex! - but I want to say that it's absurdly to consider those elite-oriented programmes as something that can make any influence on the conflicts. Even when Kosovo Albanians came to Cinema Rex, it meant nothing at all in the practical sense, and it would be extremely stupid to hope it meant. I believe those art programmes with 20 or 30 visitors make very deep sense - but only taken as the ART ITSELF, not as a political act. I don't want to deny that some kinds of art and art products and events can be political, even influence the things, but I will always argue with everyone trying to tell me that 20 students paying the visit to an exhibition can change the world and stop the war. There are so much delusions about the role of the culture and intellectuals in conflicts. I wonder why is it so. Do the people really believe that the elite art and culture can stop the war? Or they know it can't, but love to pretend they believe it can? The whole efficacious infrastructure has been built upon these delusions. Various 'sisters Katarinas' travel around the world and live pretty well by getting money for supporting these delusions. I have nothing against the elite culture - and let's be honest and admit that the most of the Syndicate members' area of activity is pretty elitistic culture - I believe it has its own true reasons to exist, and I enjoy it. And it HAS to get money to survive. But I reject the conflict resolution as that culture's purpose. Its purpose can be only enlightening our souls, and strenghtening a few of us to endure. But millions of common people living in troublesome regions won't have any benefit from the meeting of, say, web artists from conflicted nations. The main point here is that people working in art and culture are neither naturally opposed, nor necessarily opportunistic in the face of narrow-mindedness, stupidity and madness. * That's true. it doesn't matter greatly whether artists are good or bad people. If they are to be good artists, they are forced to make things new, to alter the angle of vision, to deal in complexities, ambiguities and contradictions. * Yes, that's true too. But please don't equalize someone's art with his/her everyday behaviour, especially political behaviour. I may be excellent, brave, inventive, curious and experiment-oriented as the artist, but it doesn't mean that I wouldn't believe in TV propaganda. This world is very difficult to understand, especially now when it's, as we have agreed, in great mess - and everyone needs to get some easy understandable explanations of the world around. It's very natural and deeply human need - but it's also an excellent basis for the manipulation, no matter how great artist you are. Artists are humans too, therefore they can be biased and manipulated. In doing so, they bear witness to the fact that reality is not as simple as the propagandist would have us believe. * In some cases, it's true. But not in general. Don't overestimate the artists' immunity to the manipulation. An embittered Balkanian warns you so. The very decision to make art, particularly in a situation of conflict, is a perverse one. * Yeah, I know that.:-) Based on this initiative, a working group was created during the Syndicate meeting in Budapest in April, that is currently working on the preparations for the Future State of Balkania. * Well, could someone please explain me the true sense of that Balkania stuff? I mean, how this initiative can REALLY change the things in the region? Unnumbered mass protests couldn't do that, and several kind-hearted intellectuals and one Web site will do? Should that Balkania be some kind of art network, OK. But should it claim to create peace and prosperity, I can nothing but bitterly laugh. Let us reject the untruth and hatred. * Who? You and me and Mr Pandilovski, and people like us? OK. But if the people like us were asked anything about, the war would never begin. And do we have any practical and realistic idea how to make millions of people 'reject the untruth and hatred'? And what we're talking about at all: religion, art or politics? 32 tunnels which link up all of Europe's capital cities with one another' - creating an alternative, underground, networked reality, deep in the belly of the continent. * Well, that's nice, and maybe then we'll feel better. But what's happening on the ground while we are in our cosy underground? Has our underground reality any truly usable response to the political reality above? Come on, please be sober. I love to be underground, but considering the conflict resolution, I prefer to be ON the ground. With both feet firmly. The Lord be with you. * Don't hate me for saying that, but I think the Lord is obsolete and compromised. The wars here were all lead by the people declaring themselves believers. Being religious, I prefer to salute people with 'May the Force be with you' - no one ever was slaughtering the neighbours in the name of the Jedi knights. brother Aleksandar of the Jedi Brotherhood ____________________________________________________________________ Get your own FREE, personal Netscape WebMail account today at http://webmail.netscape.com. ------Syndicate mailinglist-------------------- Syndicate network for media culture and media art information and archive: http://www.v2.nl/syndicate to unsubscribe, write to <syndicate-request@aec.at> in the body of the msg: unsubscribe your@email.adress