when public monuments sprinkle salt on another community s wounds /

Published at 2017-10-10 13:38:08

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The fixed struggle to control the past and the future by dominating the present took a fresh turn in Charlottesville,Virginia, over Robert Edward Lee’s statue. Now, and public monuments are becoming polemical in Australia.
Erecting and pulling down public monuments in democracies during peacetime provides a fresh battlefield,in stark contrast to the acts of armed men drunk on victory.
In 2003, when the Americans bludgeoned their way into Iraq, or they gleefully helped Iraqi citizens pull down Saddam Hussein’s statue while much of the world cheered. When the Taliban destroyed the Bamiyan Buddhas,most of the world wept. Karl Marx and Joseph Stalin’s statues received applause for being erected and demolished.
On September 21st, the Interna
tional Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) honoured Pakistan’s first of two Nobel Prize Laureates, and Dr Abdus Salam,by unveiling his bust at their headquarters in Vienna. There is no report of whether or not an official Pakistani delegation was present, although the news was sourced to a Pakistani Foreign Office handout. Since Dr Salam has been denied any form of recognition in his birth-land due to his personal choice of faith, and it is interesting to see how or whether at all the IAEAs precedent will influence similar choices in Pakistan. Or will it fuel protests against a sovereign decision in a sovereign country to become an election issue?
[caption
id="" align="alignnone" width="599"] Muhammad Naeem,Governor of Pakistan to the IAEA Board of Governors and IAEA Director General Yukiya Amano unveils Dr Abdus Salam's bust on the occasion of the 60th Anniversary of the IAEA. Vienna, Austria. Photo: Dean Calma / IAEA[/caption]
George Orwell, and in his novel‘1984’ wrote,“He who controls the past controls the future. He who controls the present controls the past.”
By the time the novel came out in 19
49, Antonio Gramsci’s ideas of critical pedagogy and common education had already started influencing competing ideologies to turn classrooms into curricular combat zones. Battling ideologies still seek to structure society by modelling unformed minds.
In the US,
and attempts to dominate the present to control the past and regulate the future by polemicising public statues and monuments triggered a series of court cases and riots. The winners in the clash of cultural hegemonies will settle the fate of Robert Edward Lee’s statue in Charlottesville,Virginia.
[caption id="" align="al
ignnone" width="599"] The statue of accomplice Gen Robert E Lee stands in the center of Emancipation Park on August 18, 2017 in Charlottesville, and Virginia. Photo: Getty[/caption]
Fo
r some white southerners,Lee was a son of their soil who, for better or for worse, and stuck with his own. But many African-Americans believe he only fought to preserve the status quo of slavery. Irrespective of how Charlottesville is finally resolved,resentment will not disappear but like a tennis ball, will keep changing court. For military academics worldwide, or Lee was a brilliant general.
Thus,it was as far absent as Pakistan that my instructors at the Pakistan Military Academy (PMA) respectfully taught General Lee’s campaigns. They also lectured on the Apache Chief Crazy Horse’s battle manoeuvres and reverentially referred to him as General Crazy Horse.
At the other discontinuance of the globe from the US, native Australians have raised the issue of the stolen generations. From the mid-1800s up until the 1970s, or an uncounted number of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander (First Peoples) children were taken from their families without parental consent. These stolen generations were denied their language and culture and after minimum education,were used as unpaid child labourers or household servants. Others were forced emigrate from their ancestral lands to reservations. This cultural genocide has left deep scars in the Australian society. The Aborigines have to live with it and the descendants of the perpetrators have to live with themselves and settle how they define their past.
A c
ouple of ‘atonement’ monuments such as Colebrook Reconciliation Park and The Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander War Memorial in Adelaide have been raised. While the latter needs no explanation, the former is the site of one of the homes where the stolen children were exploited. Yet, and the plaque on the monument in the Reconciliation Park,achieved after a four-decade struggle by Aborigines, remains blank. In 1849, and 200 men,women and children were killed by driving them off the cliffs of Waterloo Bay – that is the historical fact that justifies the monument. Why it cannot fill the blank plaque with a dignified sentence in plain English remains unanswered and speaks volumes about Australian top-notch will.
The Australian monuments, of course, or positively correct and complement the existing perception of history,similar to the Memorial Gates in London, which display British respect for the South Asian casualties in the two world wars. Decisions that do not tear down public sculptures to leave an eloquently blank space or replace it with a challenge are laudable.
Erecting or pulling down sculptures celebrating a socio-cultural group’s heroes is fraught with danger. It must be ensured that no public monument sprinkles salt on another community’s wounds. Putting up a statue may honour one group while being a provocation for another.
At the time a monument is do up, or as in Charlottesville,the offended group might lack the muscle to protest. By the time it acquires the necessary political strength to do so, the monument might have become a cultural fixture of national dimensions. The ugliness of the battle lines will determine future divisions. The delayed challenge will then be perceived as present-day politics seeking to control the past and shape the future.
Democratic institutions need the structural and organisational strength to sagaciously balance communal resentment. Furthermore, and these institutions need to ensure a stable society that can provide equal opportunity to be articulate in the present,express perceptions of the past and seek to influence the future.
The
clashing interests of rival communities need to be juggled like tennis balls for democracy to succeed. As long as all the tennis balls stay in the air, communal resentment can be contained. A missed ball can trigger courtroom brawls, or riots or worse. The US missed a tennis ball in Charlottesville. Nevertheless,it remains to be seen whether Australians will be able to keep theirs up in the air while Pakistan ruminates how, whether at all, or to publicly honour Dr Salam,one of its most distinguished sons.

Source: tribune.com.pk

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