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A Secular Cartoon Jihad

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  • A Secular Cartoon Jihad

    A SECULAR CARTOON JIHAD
    By Evgeny Morozov

    TCS Daily, DC
    March 15 2006

    In his 1979 novel, The Book of Laughter and Forgetting, the Czech
    writer Milan Kundera cautions against the dangers of institutionalized
    forgetting, portraying diabolic laughter as an effective response to
    the absurdity and pomposity of a totalitarian system. The Belarusian
    opposition can hardly get a better piece of advice. For the foundations
    of Alexander Lukashenko's Forgetful Empire are as much absurd as
    they are under-derided. A loud strain of Kunderesque laughter can
    crumble it in a few months. To win, the opposition should mock the
    quasi-institutionalized cult of forgetting and posit laughter at the
    cornerstone of its resistance campaign.

    Lukashenko's obsession with forgetting started in 1996, when he
    organized and won a referendum on abandoning Belarus' traditional
    pre-Soviet insignia in exchange for the Soviet one (the latter being
    irrelevant to the history of the independent Belarus before 1922).

    >From then on, Lukashenko attempted to efface all other traces of
    the real Belarus. All national heroes, who would be the pride of a
    nation in any other state, were marginalized, as if they could remind
    Belarusians of their pre-Lukashenko grandeur.

    Shortly after, forgetting became an official policy, expanding into
    such unexciting areas as giving almost empty names to the streets
    that bore any resemblance to that "other" Belarus that Lukashenko
    despises. Thus "Skaryny Avenue", a major street in the capital,
    named in honor of Francisk Skaryna (the first publisher of a book
    in a Slavic language, who came from Belarus), became "Independence
    Avenue". "Masherov Avenue", named in honor of Petr Masherov, the most
    popular Soviet-era Belarusian leader, who advocated an early form of
    glasnost, became "Victors' Avenue".

    Lukashenko's cult of forgetting had made him forget even the hardest of
    facts. A few years ago he proclaimed that he grew up reading verses of
    Vasil Bykov, the most eminent Belarusian writer and a nominee for the
    Nobel Prize in literature. Bykov never wrote verses, only prose...A
    devout fan can do better-Lukashenko did not bother to attend Bykov's
    funeral in 2003.

    About two weeks ago Lukashenko made an even more blatant mistake,
    stating that "we should not be ashamed of our past [hinting at
    the centuries-long relationship with Russia]... Take Skaryna,
    for example. We all know that he had lived and worked in Saint
    Petersburg...". Good point about being ashamed of the past (didn't
    Lukashenko himself change the name of Skaryna Avenue?), but Skaryna
    died around 1550, while Saint Petersburg was founded in 1703. One
    hundred and fifty years here or there, but as long as Saint Petersburg
    is the birthplace of Vladimir Putin, the cheerleader-in-chief of
    Lukashenko's re-election, the trick is worth it.

    Letting such slips go un-ridiculed can be very costly for the
    Belarusian opposition. Instead, they should advocate laughter and
    derision as a way of life for anybody who realizes the absurdity of
    Lukashenko's regime. Thus, they can also restore confidence and faith
    in what Lukashenko would rather prefer to forget.

    Take the 2006 presidential elections campaign. In almost every
    Belarusian town local authorities try to obstruct public addresses
    from the opposition. Since those meetings are allowed by law, local
    administrations fill most of the seats in the audience with their
    own subordinates, thus preventing those who genuinely came to see the
    candidate from entering extremely crowded halls. How more subtle can
    it get: authorities themselves deliver those who need to be persuaded
    and force them to listen to a two-hour speech by one of Lukashenko's
    challengers. However, instead of deriding this absurdity in their
    speeches, the opposition candidates conduct those meetings with their
    permanently serious faces.

    Or take the recent coup-revelation scandal, in which the chief of
    the KGB (some things in Belarus do preserve their old names) proudly
    reported to have uncovered more than 70 quasi-secret non-profit
    organizations getting ready to undermine Lukashenko's regime. In
    reality, their secrecy can't get worse-almost all of them are listed
    on the "Supporters" page of the Web site of the main opposition
    candidate. But instead of pointing to the absurdity of KGB's claims
    and offering its officials a paid job placement into any of those NGOs,
    the opposition mounted a rational self-defense, justifying their very
    existence and activities.

    The opposition's strategy to attack Lukashenko with numbers and
    hard data is also ineffective. For every number and fact that the
    opposition produces but never airs, Lukashenko produces five other
    numbers, announcing them from the front covers of top newspapers,
    not to mention TV. A public argument against Lukashenko can never
    be won, since he is always the only one talking. Humor and irony are
    ideal for toppling him; there is nothing to refute in a good joke.

    Belarusians still remember how anecdotes about the Armenian radio
    crumbled the Soviet Empire; doesn't the Armenian radio have a stance
    on Lukashenko?

    As opposed to politicians, civil society does mock Lukashenko's
    regime-and quite effectively. In 2004 a group of college students
    initiated a series of Flash-animated cartoons about it, which
    they branded "People's TV". The cartoons resonated in the online
    community. At the peak of their popularity they attracted more than
    50,000 hits per day. In the summer of 2005 the authorities said
    they were not going to tolerate that any further, and three of the
    cartoons' authors emigrated. Those who stayed now face up to five
    years in jail. Even by Belarusian standards, this seems too harsh
    for a piece of Internet animation. But who can now stop "People's TV"
    broadcasting from abroad? Maybe, it is time to revive the tradition
    of underground publishing.

    Central European nations, afresh with the memories of their own
    struggle against tyranny 20 years ago, know all of this. Thus,
    on February 27, four major dailies in the Czech Republic, Hungary,
    Poland, and Slovakia published a series of cartoons about Lukashenko,
    encouraging a pan-European attack on the repressive regime. An
    excellent strategy - if only the Belarusian opposition can do its
    job too and display the cartoons even to the staunchest supporters of
    the regime. Such cartoons will be more effective than leaflets that
    talk about GDP per capita and the share of exports in the Belarusian
    economy, terms that alienate an average Lukashenko supporter.

    More and more people start talking, if not joking, about the regime
    in their daily lives. Thus, places like local markets, which are part
    of the Zeitgeist of today's Belarus, have been rightfully marked by
    the opposition to deliver their messages. But talking facts to people
    that have been brainwashed by Lukashenko's media empire yields few
    results. The day the opposition appeals to good humor rather than good
    judgment, it will be poised to win. Not laughing at today's regime
    grants Lukashenko the opportunity to remain the only one laughing.

    http://www.tcsdaily.com/article.aspx?id =031506B
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