Brazzil Every Saturday for the past three weeks, people have been taking the streets of the world to rally against the war in
Iraq. The war, however, started almost a week ago and it's getting bloodier and bloodier. Moreover, internal support for the
belligerent governments increases every day.
Something is wrong with the preaching for peace. A theoretically unquestionable humanitarian cause is not reaching
the expected results, in spite of intense mobilization.
** Hypothesis 1: Pacifists forgot to prioritize the pre-requisite of non-violence. Some rallies are extremely aggressive
and confront basic principles of the anti-bellicose doctrine.
** Hypothesis 2: Pacifists have forgotten that pacifism requires absolute neutrality.
** Hypothesis 3: Marches have become narcissistic happenings. Once the march is over, participants go to the TV
monitor to check the latest combat news.
No use blaming the press or looking for conspiracies. Part of the American media may be sporting combat uniforms
but another part, maybe the most prestigious one, is not. Irrefutable proof are the large pacifist rallies in New York, Chicago
and San Francisco.
The big British press, specially BBC, is providing competent and balanced coverage. Nonetheless, public opinion is
steady in supporting the coalition with the U.S..
The case of Brazil is exemplary: the Brazilian press behaves in correct fashion, in spite of the habitual failings of a
technical nature (fragmentation of the newscasts, for example). Coverage has been generous with all pacifist marches, but the
ones taking place in Brazil are far from impressing in terms of numbers. The result is that the reaction from the Brazilian
government to the Anglo-American attack was, at most, discreet.
The terrible truth is that the logic of war prevailed over the spirit of peace. The new information technologies (above
all videophones and digital cameras) are bringing the fighting inside every home, live, in color, with every sound, scream
and voice of command.
This logic of war makes the more sensitive pacifists, the ones concerned with the humanitarian issue, wish for a brief
war. What they don't realize is that, by doing so, they are betting on the capitulation of Iraq and/or its devastation. The more
politically engaged pacifists, on the other hand, hope that the Iraqi resistance (following the exhibition of imprisoned or dead
soldiers) is able to demoralize the American commanding officers. They don't realize that they are betting on the exacerbation of
the rage.
We need to constantly be reminded: pacifism is anti-triumphalist by nature. This is a commitment and a burden that
not all pacifists realize.
The political schemes confronting each other in this war may have different institutional bases, but they are
precisely the same in their conviction: both are totalitarian and fanaticized. The utter misfortune is that this perception escapes a
great number of opinionists, most of all our domestic ones. And this is where one of the failures of pacifist preaching may be
hiding: they appeal to violence. Verbal violence, for the time being; but it may soon feed the other violence, this one effective.
If the famous columnist from Folha de S. Paulo
proclaims she will never drink Coca-Cola again, in retaliation to
Bush's unilateralism, let's applaud her: our own
guaraná, no doubt about it, tastes much better (Sunday, 3/23, Front Page
headline). Cause for concern, though, is when a political analyst who has had a permanent seat for years in the opinion pages of
the same newspaper writes the following:
"...The ordinary citizen of the United States has the specific culture of fighting, of violence. It is not by chance that
the only film genre Americans have created is the western, the struggle between the good guy and the bad guy
" etc., etc.
(Saturday, 3/22, page 2).
Taking aside his lack of motion picture history knowledge, what the writer, a member of the Academy of Letters, is
saying is that the ordinary citizen of the U.S. is as violent as Bush. Just as the "ordinary citizen" of Iraq cannot be generalized
and stigmatized as a clone of Saddam, the Yankee "ordinary citizen" eating a sandwich at the fast-food joint while watching
on CNN the images of the bombing in Baghdad cannot be seen in such a totalitarian and unfair way.
Just like at every moment of great commotion, what is in force here is the marketing of indignationthrough which
all those with little to say, or too lazy to engage in reflection, appeal to simplistic and reductionist vociferation. The "Letters
from Readers" section of the newspapers show that the Brazilian "ordinary citizen" is often more sophisticated than some of
those who are paid to enlighten him or her.
As detestable as Bush's troupe may be, anti-Americanism is as reprehensible as anti-Frenchism, anti-Germanism,
anti-Arabism or anti-Judaism. They are all manifestations of prejudice and racism (in its broad sense) which, in instances of
paroxysm such as now, can produce extremely dangerous results. We must be reminded that, in spite of the much celebrated
Brazilian cordiality, in 1942, when the Nazis sank Brazilian ships, mobs aroused by newspapers grabbed German citizens living
peacefully and legally in our country and lynched them to death.
If the U.S. is no good and the American press is junk, then everything goes. This type of worn-out reasoning, quite
frequent today in certain pockets of our domestic journalism, does nothing to stimulate the ability to reflect. A pacifism built with
this type of ingredients is prone to be confused with bellicosity.
In these same pockets of the press we notice a visible complacency with the regime of Saddam Hussein. To the
extent that the Iraqi dictator manages to embody anti-Americanism, his crimes are gradually emptied out and thrown under the carpet.
Elio Gaspari, last Sunday (3/23, Globo,
Folha and Zero Hora) denounced a worrisome episode of the "whitening" of
the dictator in the Brazilian Congress last week. When the Iraqi ambassador in Brasília came to the joint session of the
Foreign Relations committees of both House and Senate, the representatives of the Brazilian people made clear that the Baghdad
regime is legitimate, generous and decent. The gentleman was not asked a single question about human rights in his country.
Besides their monumental ignorance in international affairs, our legislators unveiled something even more serious: this ignorance
results from the publications they make in their own heads.
The notion of imminent catastrophe is built into the culture of peace. Pacifists may paint their faces, show their rear
end, carry posters, chant songs and prayers. But they can't dispense with the major part of their spiritual equipment: their
sense of tragedy. [Text completed on 3/25 at 10:00 a.m.]
Alberto Dines, the author, is a journalist, founder and researcher at LABJORLaboratório de Estudos Avançados
em Jornalismo (Laboratory for Advanced Studies in Journalism) at UNICAMP (University of Campinas) and editor of
the Observatório da Imprensa. He also writes a column on cultural issues for the Rio daily
Jornal do Brasil. You can reach him by email at
obsimp@ig.com.br
Translated by Tereza Braga, email:
tbragaling@cs.com
This article was originally published in Observatório da Imprensa -
www.observatoriodaimprensa.com.br
Ideas
April 2003
Waging Peace - The View from Brazil
Just as the "ordinary citizen" of Iraq cannot be generalized as
a clone of Saddam, the Yankee
"ordinary citizen" cannot be seen
as violent as Bush. We must be reminded that, in 1942, when the Nazis
sank Brazilian ships, mobs aroused by newspapers grabbed German citizens
living peacefully and
legally in our country and lynched them to death.
Alberto Dines