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Posts Tagged ‘Communism’

Google conscience hits Chinese communism

Google-style capitalism with a conscience is butting heads with China’s brand of communism. Google has vowed to stop bowing to Chinese online censorship that came as a legal condition when the California technology firm tailored a search engine for that country in 2006. The impetus for

Better red than dead?

The peacenik past of the EU’s new foreign minister deserves scrutiny

IMAGINE a British Conservative politician—call her Catriona Aston—coming from obscurity to gain one of the top posts in the European Union, just as Lady (Catherine) Ashton (pictured) has emerged from the Labour ranks to be the EU’s new foreign minister. Imagine that on closer scrutiny it turns out that in the early 1980s the fictional Ms Aston worked for a cold-war think-tank called something like the “African Freedom Foundation”, which campaigned against the spread of communism in Africa. Imagine that on closer examination it turns out that this outfit enjoyed strong behind-the-scenes support from the then apartheid government in South Africa. Among its supporters and officials are unrepentant defenders of the fascist regimes in Spain and Portugal and even those who said that Nazism had been a lesser evil than communism.

It is easy to imagine what would happen. The hapless Ms Aston would be publicly disgraced and would have to resign forthwith. How could an EU representative credibly deal with the developing countries when she in the past had been a defender of a racist colonial regime? Nuance, context and balance would go out of the window. Nobody would ask if all causes supported by the former South African regime were equally evil, or if communism had maybe cost more African lives than apartheid. …

The beginning of the end

Looking back at the era of a cold warrior

“MR GORBACHEV, tear down this wall”. Ronald Reagan’s stirring speech at the Berlin Wall on June 12th 1987 was not the death blow to communism, but it did highlight the West’s renewed confidence in demanding what had previously been impossible. Though the president’s advisers egged him on, American diplomats were horrified at what they felt was provocative behaviour: they saw their job as managing relations with communism, not trying to overturn it.

Those glory days were the subject of a day-long conference at the Ronald Reagan Presidential Library in Simi Valley California on November 6th. A motley collection of heroes from east and west (with your columnist tagging along as a moderator) gathered to discuss the great communicator’s role in the collapse of communism and what his approach could still offer today. Nancy Reagan, frail but immaculate, presided. Margaret Thatcher and Mikhail Gorbachev sent messages of congratulation. Freedom fighters such as Mart Laar from Estonia, Leszek Balcerowicz from Poland and Vaclav Klaus of the Czech Republic recalled how Reagan’s approach had inspired them and demoralised their captors. …

The beginning of the end

Looking back at the era of a cold warrior

“MR GORBACHEV, tear down this wall”. Ronald Reagan’s stirring speech at the Berlin Wall on June 12th 1987 was not the death blow to communism, but it did highlight the West’s renewed confidence in demanding what had previously been impossible. Though the president’s advisers egged him on, American diplomats were horrified at what they felt was provocative behaviour: they saw their job as managing relations with communism, not trying to overturn it.

Those glory days were the subject of a day-long conference at the Ronald Reagan Presidential Library in Simi Valley California on November 6th. A motley collection of heroes from east and west (with your columnist tagging along as a moderator) gathered to discuss the great communicator’s role in the collapse of communism and what his approach could still offer today. Nancy Reagan, frail but immaculate, presided. Margaret Thatcher and Mikhail Gorbachev sent messages of congratulation. Freedom fighters such as Mart Laar from Estonia, Leszek Balcerowicz from Poland and Vaclav Klaus of the Czech Republic recalled how Reagan’s approach had inspired them and demoralised their captors. …

Croats should “distinguish anti-fascism from communism”

Croatian President Stjepan Mesić says he is not defending communism, but looking to stress anti-fascism, without which modern Croatia would not exist. Fliers have appeared in several churches in Munich ahead of Mesić’s visit to Germany today, calling the Croatian president a “communist and neo-communist.”

Just saying no

By Brian Hanrahan
BBC News

People cheer in Prague in 1989

Dissidents in Eastern Europe had a bitter joke about the communist approach to compromise. "What do you do when you’ve made someone 99% communist," it went. Answer: "Beat the other 1% out."

It was the approach adopted across the entire Eastern bloc.

Communism wanted to control not just politics but the entirety of daily life. It dictated how people should behave and think. It wanted to run industry, set university syllabuses, and decide what they could read.

Those who questioned the state could lose their jobs, and their homes. Everyday life could be made a misery by denying them the right to buy furniture or travel to another town. Their children’s education could suffer.

When I was stationed in Moscow I ran up against government controls all the time.

I even had to import wood to put up shelves because the local shops refused to sell me any.

Because the state owned and ran everything, it could mess with you in a thousand different ways. But I could leave, the people who lived there would have to put up with it until they died.

Ghost world

In Czechoslovakia – which had suppressed the reforms of the Prague Spring in 1968 – there was a particularly chilling quality to the way that conformity was enforced.

Jan Urban. Photo: 1989

Jan Urban, a leading figure in the 1989 Velvet Revolution, took me along to the secret police archives to show how it was done.

Here was a ghost world that was never meant to see the light of day – 25km of shelving filled with fading files documenting how the StB , the Czechoslovak secret police, went about harassing and intimidating the handful of souls brave enough to stand up against them.

Mr Urban paid for his defiance. His pregnant wife was interrogated and lost their child. Local authorities questioned them about child neglect. He received death threats over his tapped telephone. And once he was sent a coffin with his name on it.

All of this happened in a country where nothing could happen without the authorities say-so.

The files show how the dissidents were watched by up to a dozen secret agents at a time – with a minute-by-minute log of what trams they caught and what they were wearing.

There are snatched photographs of people they encountered in the street – all in the hope of finding something that could be used against them.

Mental resistance

This is the first time that Jan Urban has looked at the records and at first he was amused at how many people were deployed to follow and analyse his movements.

But when he remembers the microphones plastered into his bedroom and his children’s room, his equanimity snaps.

"They were filth," he says, "a criminal organisation. What was the point, except intimidation."

But intimidation was the point. Dissent was the one thing that communism could not tolerate. Simply by existing – by holding different views – the dissidents were challenging the state.

They circulated poetry and plays without permission. They organised underground theatre with banned actors and actresses.

One performance of Macbeth was raided by the police, and so many of the audience were followed that the street outside resembled a secret policeman’s convention.

Vaclav Havel, the dissident playwright who was to become president, argued that it was important to behave as though they were not oppressed.

The more the state tried to occupy all public space, the more it would be undermined by those who carried out normal activities outside it.

Mr Havel was an influential voice in a debate that shaped the way dissidents behaved across the whole Soviet bloc.

So was Adam Michnik, who had told Poles that a society in captivity must produce an illegal literature if it was to know the truth about itself.

Another was Andrey Sakharov, the Soviet nuclear physicist, who would not be silenced by rewards or punishment.

The common concept was that mental resistance could in time bring down even a totalitarian state.

They shaped their philosophy of resistance at secret summits held between dissident leaders in the mountains that bordered Czechoslovakia and Poland.

And the skills gained in organising themselves – even on innocuous issues – meant they had the ability and reputation to step into the vacuum when communism collapsed. It averted a struggle for power that could have become bloody and brutal.

Plastic People

But the unlikely inspiration for many Czech intellectuals was a psychedelic rock group who were banned by the Czech government.

"We weren’t political. We were just trying to be poetical"

Vratislav Brabenec
Plastic People of the Universe

The Plastic People of the Universe were jailed for performing at an underground rock festival in 1976.

They are still in business and I found them playing in a muddy field about an hour’s drive outside Prague, and bickering with the organiser who said he did not have the money to pay them.

Vratislav Brabenec, their saxophonist then and now, looked much as John Lennon might if he were alive today: round-rimmed glasses, long greying hair, with a quirky sense of humour, and a continuing lack of respect towards authority.

"We weren’t political, man," he said. "We were just trying to be poetical."

As to why they would not accept government control, he answered: "That’s freedom, man, I’d die for that."

But whether they wanted to be or not, they found themselves at the heart of the political battle.

Mr Urban practically wrinkles his nose at the mention of them. He does not like their music and thinks they are dirty and drink too much.

But he adds: "The minute they got into trouble, I was on their side. Everyone has the right to express themselves. They became the symbol."

If the state had not jailed them, the Plastic People would have been just another bloody-minded band of rockers.

Instead they became the rallying cry for Charter 77 – the human rights declaration penned by the Czech dissidents which fuelled a decade-long struggle with the communist authorities.

They also taught a whole new generation about dissent. By listening to music the state wanted to ban, they learnt the habit of rebellion – and so were bred the student activists of 1989. </p


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.