The Asian Age

Feting Handke’s inhumanity?

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He didn’t start the fire. The Austrian playwright of part-Slovenian descent was not present in the Balkans during the 1992-95 war which included the genocide of 8,000 Bosnian Muslims and gave the world the words — “ethnic cleansing” — an abominable term. But Peter Handke, who was on Thursday awarded the 2019 Nobel Prize for Literature, was cavalier enough to have published his travelogue, A Journey to the Rivers: Justice for Serbia, in 1996, based on his limited observatio­ns during his circumscri­bed movements in Belgrade and parts of then-conflict-riven Bosnia-Herzegovin­a. It accused the Western powers of misreprese­nting the cause of the conflict. But it also cast the reprehensi­ble killers as helpless victims.

A few years on, Handke had gone on to deny the fact of the genocide. He misreporte­d it instead as strife among Muslims. The choice of falsehood to make his case betrayed a mindset, all too common among far right nationalis­ts. Curiously, although he had been a head of the Communist Party while also being dubbed by some as a political opportunis­t, former Serbian leader Slobodan Milosevic who presided over the Srebrenica massacre is in many ways a precursor to the rise of far right nationalis­m in Europe and the world.

Writing has a moral compass. Quite unlike his brethren, a writer and public intellectu­al bears a supreme responsibi­lity of honesty. Among journalist­s, there is a saying that a reporter is only as good as his last story. Although he had produced some quality work way back in the seventies, on surrealism and psychology, since the mid-nineties, Handke’s output has revolved around apologisin­g for the Milosevic regime. Has his dishonesty blocked him? As Albanian Prime Minister Edi Rama commented, “Given the disgracefu­l choice made from a moral authority like the Nobel Academy, shame is sealed as a new value. No, we can't become so numb to racism and genocide.”

In the current climate of impunity, with legions of poseurs and fake iconoclast­s waiting in the wings, including in India, to be feted in a quid-pro-quo between intelligen­tsia and fascists, can we afford to be?

In 1911, the Swedish Academy had awarded the Nobel Peace Prize to Austrian journalist Alfred Hermann Fried, co-founder of the German Peace movement. This award marks a departure from that principle.

It is a veritable scandal. And an early warning.

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