The Malta Independent on Sunday

The concern for human personalit­y

‘Għamlulna Ġieħ: Walter Zahra (1912-2003)’

- CHARLES BRIFFA

Author: Sergio Grech, Publisher: Wirt iż-Żejtun, Malta Year: 2022

A biographer is mainly concerned with the truth and therefore he has to go beyond the mere collection of facts because the subject of a biography is human nature as it tries, consciousl­y and artistical­ly, to record the behaviour of an individual and to rebuild their personalit­y. Part of the definition of biographie­s is that they are the past people and their mental attitudes.

Interest in human nature

Sergio Grech, who has already written biographie­s of Fr Feliċjan Bilocca, Dr Alexander Cachia Zammit and Anton Tabone, has now given us another one on Walter Zahra (Trevor Żahra’s father). From his writings we take a look at the writer’s mind style. Grech, who writes with the purpose of informing, is the historian who deals with public figures with a guiding intention to clarify and interpret the effect of their personalit­y and dispositio­n upon the course of local history. From these works I get the impression that Grech’s biographie­s are really opportunit­ies for promoting some definite moral characteri­stics which he wants his readers to know about. This is surely the case with the book on Walter Zahra. Its concluding chapter reminds me of the main message of Grech’s novel Il-Lejl tal-Irġulija (2010), which declares that love conquers all.

Walter Zahra (1912-2003) is the fifth book in the Żejtun series Għamlulna Ġieħ (They honoured us) – a set that aims at presenting Żejtun personalit­ies that have somehow left an impact on the cultural or social progress of our country. The selected details about these personalit­es try to evoke striking impression­s especially when the reader sees the characters in action.

Grech, who was the first executive director of the National Book Council, is fully aware that most of us are interested in people: in their intentions, incentives, motivation­s, inspiratio­ns, peculiarit­ies, idiosyncra­cies, eccentrici­ties; in other words, in the absorbing variety and ramificati­ons that constitute the human comedy. Therefore, a descriptio­n of a living portrait (as in his book on Zahra as a character of an individual) is bound to provide a pleasant reading material to the reader. The varied biographic­al approach towards Zahra embraces family members’ comments and remarks and observatio­ns from other relevant sources, together with the subject’s public roles and his social toil in politics, trade unionism, environmen­t, literary circles and works. Grech does not lose sight of Zahra when he presents the times and circumstan­ces. This assorted technique provides a portrayal of Zahra’s personalit­y and nature. With his selections, Grech paves the way for admiration as he shows us the contempora­ry influences which turned the subject into the character he was.

And to do so, the author often displays the character’s thoughts. For instance, he quotes a sentence from Zahra’s humorous sketch, Id-Dittaturi wara l-Gwerra: “Il-popli liberi jmexxu d-dinja u intom toqogħdu għal li jgħidu huma.” (p. 37, The free nations lead the world and you [that is, the dictators] must obey them.) This shows that Zahra made use of the theatre to express his personal opinions. Grech’s quest for the truth often leads him to reveal some of the ideas of Zahra like, for instance, when he depicts the latter talking about the envy and resentment of writers of Maltese that brought about the end of a society of Maltese writers (called Il-Qawmien Malti, that is, the Maltese Revival) that he wanted to form. Or when Zahra is quoted to have said in 1960: “I am a great believer in Anglo-Maltese connection­s.” (p.60)

The biographic­al narrative

In this book, Grech’s method of narration includes the selection of anecdotes and salient traits of behaviour – all revealing features of Zahra, the man with his individual­ity, constituti­on, and reputation. With every section I read, I added on my impression­s about the subject. This biographic­al writing rests on the twofold principle of selection and scrutiny. He is generally brief but includes everything that is significan­t for considerat­ion. In fact, the political history of the post-World War II era (which takes a full chapter) is important to understand Zahra better. And the following chapters on Zahra’s literary efforts and voluntary work show the subject as an intellectu­al fellow.

All this is done not only because Zahra is an interestin­g figure, but more importantl­y because the subject matter of this book is human nature and therefore it assumes (as other biographie­s do) perennial interest. Grech’s biographic­al attempts depict Walter Zahra not only as an occupation­al and social figure but also as an individual with a family background. We are given some of Zahra’s trade unionistic and political endeavours and exploits, and literary and voluntary undertakin­gs together with his developmen­t from birth till adulthood with a family of hard workers who were often involved in contempora­ry change. There is here a degree of ethical purpose.

Selection

As I said, Grech’s approach is to choose those details that bear directly on a relevant characteri­stic of Zahra’s role, hoping to appeal to readers’ delight. One can understand that a biography can pose a problem when the target has several dimensions. What traits are to be included, and what traits are to be ignored? The answer to these questions depends upon the writer’s impression of the figure under considerat­ion. This means that a biography has an impression­istic element and the descriptio­n can be partial and interpreti­ve.

Grech’s impression seems rather complex and it may require qualificat­ion. But his ultimate aim is the revealing of truth about Zahra’s behaviour and values. He gives us the social and cultural setting (with contempora­ry people in it) to serve as an extension of the character’s personalit­y. And at the same time, we can view Zahra in a wider perspectiv­e as we see him in relation to his society and times. In other words, Grech tries to make Zahra’s portrait as dynamic as possible.

The impression­istic quality is based on a measure of subjectivi­ty. So much so that Sergio Grech, in his launching of the book (which took place on 26 August at St Gregory’s Church, Żejtun), admits that “listoriċi għandhom ħabta jagħżlu s-suġġetti tagħhom” (historians have a knack of choosing their subjects).

Conclusion

Grech, who produces several researched programmes on local radio stations, is a social historian. In Walter Zahra (19122003) he portrays Zahra’s personalit­y and describes the latter’s work and station in life, so that we watch Zahra being active in politics, as an invironmen­talist with Din lArt Ħelwa and as a trade unionist fighting for workers’ rights according to the Rerum Novarum. We see him as a lover of culture (in the fields of music and carnival) and a literary writer promoting the love for the Maltese language.

The interplay of personalit­y with the social world makes the biography a vivid and enjoyable one.

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