Perfil (Sabado)

The Kelper, Cristina and the cost of conflict

THE COMPLICATE­D STORY OF JAMES PECK, THE MALVINAS AND THE USE OF NATIONALIS­M

- BY LUCAS ROBINSON @LUCASWROBI­NSON

James Peck is a man caught in history. The war between Argentina and the United Kingdom over the Malvinas (Falkland) Islands may have ended 37 years ago, but its wounds remain fresh to this day. And for people like Peck, the conf lict weighs heavily on his past, present and future.

Since the conflict in the South Atlantic, back in 1982, Peck remains the only “Kelper” (the nickname for the islands’ inhabitant­s) to accept the Argentine citizenshi­p offered to inhabitant­s of the disputed islands. His reasons for doing so were deeply personal.

An artist by trade, Peck has put on exhibition­s of his work in Argentina since the 1990s. He was previously married to an Argentine woman and has two sons, who both live in Buenos Aires. Yet his decision in 2011 to accept citizenshi­p propelled him to a lonely corner of national identity.

After five years of “surviving” off of his unique claim as “the guy from the islands,” Peck, fed up with the pressure he felt from Argentine society, returned to the patch of windswept islands at the bottom of the world in 2016.

“I was in the middle of something I didn’t find authentic,” Peck said. “It was just a way of starting again,” Peck said. “I’d really decimated myself, opportunit­ies – so I went back.”

Since returning to the Malvinas, he stayed with a friend who owns a hotel. Peck worked in his studio, chased love and wrote. He released a new book, A Hole in your Heart, in March. He continues to exhibit his art in Argentina today, at the Cecilia Caballero Contempora­ry Art gallery in Recoleta.

“You can see that highly personal search in the middle of this bullshit about the Islands,” Peck said, patting a hardcover copy of his new book. “I put everything here in a fresh way as well.”

AUTHENTICI­TY

Peck’s preferred spot in Buenos Aires is a small Almagro café near a friend’s studio apartment he’s stayed in, on-and-off, for 20 years. These days, he stays there whenever he returns to Argentina to visit his sons.

He is a relaxed though cautious presence. Tattoos crawl up his exposed hand into a leather jacket. Photo shoots, we learn, make him uncomforta­ble.

He orders a coffee with milk and an assortment of medialunas, trading pleasantri­es with the woman who runs the cafe. She clearly knows him well.

The authentici­ty of the place speaks volumes to Peck, 50, who hails from the Malvinas capital of Stanley, population: 2,500.

“It’s real,” he says of the cafe, satisfied by its simplicity and nodding to the empty interior on an early midweek morning.

Intertwine­d with t he country’s nationalis­t claims over the Malvinas, Peck’s own personal story harkens to a different, populist era in Argentina. It’s one that some experts believe may return, should the Peronists come out on top in October’s general election, as predicted.

Peck’s face is familiar to some. For the most pa r t, that’s because of that 2011 ceremony commemorat­ing the end of the conflict. Standing alongside Cristina Fernández de K irchner, the then-president personally handed the islander his Argentine documents.

Today, he says Fernández de Kirchner’s government waited six months to issue him his documents, well beyond the expected wait. Never one to miss a chance for a populist speech, the Peronist leader highlighte­d the islander’s decision to assert Argentina’s claim over the islands, attempting to use it to bolster her government’s image as a protector of Argentine nationalis­m.

“James, those that fell fighting for what they believed in, for what they defend and for their flag, deser ve honour and remembranc­e from whatever side that has their own fallen,” the former president said at the event, flanked by Peck and the family of a soldier killed during the war.

While he remembers the ceremony as “just another day” in the split from his exwife, Peck recognises the symbolism of the event amidst the 186-year long diplomatic dispute over the Malvinas, and the part he played.

“I remember somebody said, ‘This is huge,’” Peck said. “Nobody had done it with a democratic government… In that sense, for them, it was very big.”

Nearly a decade removed from the man who stood beside an Argentine president, Peck speaks in a lyricism that drifts from topic to topic. Sometimes he elaborates about his five difficult years as a “Kelper” turned A rgentine citizen, sometimes he doesn’t.

“When I came here the first years, the whole thing started off with ‘Do you just want to know me because of the islands?’” he recalls. “T hat whole th ing of the connection with the islands. You either use that or you leave it completely.”

He reflects: “Yeah, it will open doors. But not always nice doors.”

REDUX

With Alberto Fernández’s resounding victory in August’ sPASOp rima ry election, the return to power of Fernández de Kirchner – as the Peronist presidenti­al candidate’s running-mate – looms in the distance.

In past interviews, Peck has said Fernandez de Kirchner’s government used him as a “propaganda tool.” Yet today, he keeps his distance from Argentine politics, un less prompted.

“I think the whole thing with Cristina, it became sort of a big East Germany, the East Germany of South America in the last years,” Peck said, his voice picking up. “To think that people consider going back to that – I don’t think they will. I hope not, Jesus.”

“I’m not a political animal,” Peck sa id. “I don’t g ive a damn about nationalis­m. For me, it’s all so foreign to be obsessed about it.”

However, for the former prize of nationalis­t furore, the likely victory of populism in October’s general election does seem to alarm him somewhat.

“I think the whole thing with Cristina, it became sort of a big East Germany, the East Germany of South America in the last years,” Peck said, his voice picking up. “To think that people consider going back to that – I don’t think they will. I hope not, Jesus.”

Peck eventually fell out of favour with those in Argen

tine politics, especially hoping to use him as an extension of Argentina’s memor y of the Ma lv inas War. In 2015, he posted a photo on his social media accounts of his Argentine papers – DNI identity card – cut to pieces.

“In a sense that liberated me,” Peck sa id. “Cer ta i n people would say, ‘Oh we’re not going to touch that anymore.’”

Today, Peck baulks at the opportunit­y of promoting anything involving ArgentineM­alvinas relations.

Recently, he says, he was

asked to take an Argentine football team to the islands. He refused.

“Ten years ago, I would have done it,” he explains. “But not now. I just don’t see the point. You offend people. You’r e de a l i n g w it h so - mething that’s just really symbolic, and do you get anywhere afterward? Not really.”

MEMORY

If anything, Peck’s current ire is saved for the enduring memory of war amongst the people of the Malvinas.

“The war is kept so fresh there,” Peck said of the Islands. “It isn’t healthy for a small community to still – so many years later – to still be so imprisoned by it. I don’t th i n k it ’s healthy.”

W hile Peck said he’s never had a confrontat­ion with anyone since returning to the Malvinas three years ago, anger still persists over his decision to accept Argentine citizenshi­p.

One man, knowing Peck’s long family history on the Islands, said that his father was the only person from the islands to join the UK’s war effort. The man told Peck to go on the radio and apologise for accepting Argentine citizenshi­p.

“I kind of said ‘Sure, I will,’” Peck recalls. “The day Britain apologises. The day Argentina apologises. Then I’ll go on the radio.”

While attitudes on the islands aren’t ‘You’re with us or against us,’ he says, Peck views his actions and life as an artist today as a social issue, one that can show younger generation­s on the islands the virtue of independen­ce and chasing one’s own path.

“It’s not an easy place for a creative person to be,” Peck said. “My great-grandmothe­r used to paint, so I do feel my sensibilit­ies have been there

about four generation­s. And it’s hard to cut that.”

Interestin­gly enough, the ties of the Peck family with Argentina didn’t start with James either. Prior to the war and after his parents’ separation, James’ mother was in a relationsh­ip with an Argentine man.

The man worked on the Islands for the Argentine stateoil company YPF. After the war, his mother’s partner was forced to leave the islands along with all other Argentine nationals. Unwilling to stand the distance, his mother gave up on the relationsh­ip and the man returned to his former wife.

Today, Peck sees a parallel between his mother’s relationsh­ip and his own marriage to his Argentine ex-wife. Both relationsh­ips were disrupted by politics to an extent. Yet where his mother ended her relationsh­ip, Peck didn’t stop pursuing his.

“I think my mom thought ‘Oh, there’s a limit,’” Peck said. “For me, it’s not really a limit. If you really love somebody, it’s not a limit.”

WARMTH

Earlier this month, Peck returned to the Malvinas. For his sons, the logistics of flying there through Chile, as no direct flights exist from Argentina, prevent them from visiting him. In a phone interview the day before his travels, he sounded confident, accepting. Furthermor­e, despite the past, he feels content with Argentina, a country that had brought him family,

pain and escape.

“I feel a lot more warmth towards A rgentina,” Peck said, his voice fuzzed by a mobile phone. “It’s much more real now. It’s not forced now. I don’t feel under pressure to have to like it, or not to like it.”

When Peck next returns to the country in March, a new government will hold power, likely one helmed by Alberto Fernández and Cristina Fernández de Kirchner.

Claims over the Malvinas might not loom large in the ongoing populist election campaign, or even a populist government, yet Peck’s saga is a relic of the past Kirchnerit­e era of the near past.

Some hope the government of Alberto Fernández will move on from his running-mate’s nationalis­m, but the forces of Kirchneris­m could still hold considerab­le sway over his government. Like much of Argentina, foreign policy remains undefined. For now.

“In the end, this whole damn thing about the islands, it’s just so symbolic,” Peck reflects. “Symbolism – it’s empty – but at the same time it’ll just mess you up. At the end of the day, it doesn’t exist.”

“I was in the middle of something I didn’t find authentic.” “Symbolism – it’s empty – but at the same time it’ll just mess you up. At the end of the day, it doesn’t exist.”

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 ?? PHOTOS: FILE PERFIL ?? Peck, stood alongside former president Cristina Fernández de Kirchner, receives his Argentine documents at a ceremony in 2011.
PHOTOS: FILE PERFIL Peck, stood alongside former president Cristina Fernández de Kirchner, receives his Argentine documents at a ceremony in 2011.

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