(foto David Dickson)
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Visar inlägg med etikett revenge. Visa alla inlägg

lördag 30 juli 2011

Crime and forgiveness revisited

Remember - yes, but how?
A few weeks ago I wrote about the need to forgive and about the impossibility and the necessity of forgiving the unforgivable. This was on the 9th of July 2011.

I wrote about an unforgivable act, done by German troops on June 10, 1944. The killing of almost all the inhabitants in the small French town Oradour-sûr-Glâne. After having called them all to gather on the town square the German troops killed 642 men, women and children. Many were taken to the church and burnt to death when the church was set on fire. People were shot. Infants were killed by being smacked against a wall. Very few people managed to escape.

My mother’s novel Oradour (1958) which I had recently reread, gave, as I thought, an important perspective on the atrocious crime committed in Oradour. The novel describes the revenge taken by one of the survivors who murders a young German tourist in Oradour after the war. It pictures this murderer’s way towards understanding a dilemma that leads him to suicide: his own incapacity to forgive and the necessity of forgiving if life is to be worth living.

In the novel forgiveness is not about excusing the act or understanding the motives. Forgiveness is not about forgetting. Forgiveness is to understand what the perpetrator has done, both to others and to himself. Forgiveness is to see my own thirst for revenge, to understand what IT could do to others and to myself and to allow my knowledge about this to let me find ways of remembering that do not destroy life.

In order to go on with your own life after experiencing a calamity, you need to find a way of freeing yourself from it. The survivor who murdered the German tourist never found a way of freeing himself from the experience of the catastrophe. In the beginning of his farewell letter to his closest friend, he writes: ”You have your life, Marcel, and you must live. You must not take my death too much to heart. You know that I haven’t really lived since June 10 1944.”

An official website about the Oradour massacre in 1944.

fredag 6 maj 2011

OBAMA BEWARE of USA-MA-NIA

O Captain, My Captain 

Abraham Lincoln
The President of the United States of America has at times been thought of as the Captain of a ship. In his poem ”O Captain, My Captain” where Abraham Lincoln is celebrated and mourned Whitman describes the President as the captain who gave his life in steering his ship America safely through the tempests of the Civil War.

Thinking of Barak Obama. What kind of Captain is he? Where does he steer his ship?

Barak Obama
One comment on the reactions of the public to the government-ordered murder of Usama bin Laden:
“Press photos of Americans drunk with glee over the killing of Osama bin Laden recall images from long ago of parents hoisting children onto their shoulders for a clearer view of a public execution. This mindless merriment, based on hatred, fear and foolish indifference to the rage it inspires outside the United States, echoes the mindless viciousness of terrorists. If we become them, what “way of life” will we have left to protect?”("The Progressive Populist")
Is this glee and merriment an expression of an American exceptionalism that allows America to commit crimes abroad that America does not allow others to do to America?

Mindlessness, hatred, fear, foolish indifference? Is that a vortex Captain Obama could steer his ship free of? Reminds me of another Captian.

What kind of Captain is Barak Obama? Is he getting close to enacting certain aspects of Herman Melville’s Captain Ahab in Moby-Dick? 

Ahab - once wounded and mutilated in a ferocious meeting with his opponent. Now letting himself be irrationally blinded by the thirst for revenge, Ahab, seeing his opponent as an incarnation of evil, accomplishes evil himself.

Is there an other way for Captain Obama?
What kind of Captain is he?




Read the article "Bloodlust and barbarism" on the blog Penny for your Thoughts


Seeking revenge and receiving the vengeance of the other.
Is there any other way?
Source for this picture:  http://www.metalexiles.friendhood.net