Daily Southtown

Cultural boycotts provide no help

- By Martin Ivens

Banning Tchaikovsk­y is not the way to win a war. Last week, the Cardiff Philharmon­ic Orchestra removed the composer’s popular “1812 Overture” from its forthcomin­g program due to the invasion of Ukraine. The work noisily celebrates Russian resistance to Napoleon’s invasion.

This absurd decision — Tchaikovsk­y was seen by his 19th century rivals as a westernize­r — follows cultural bans that combine modern cancel culture with old-fashioned war hysteria. One Italian university has even tried to withdraw a course on the great Russian writer Fyodor Dostoyevsk­y.

At the outbreak of World War I, the English novelist Graham Greene recorded that anti-German feeling was so fierce that a dachshund was stoned on his local high street. (The U.S. Kennel Club renamed the breed “The Liberty Pup,” and the British rebranded German shepherd dogs as “Alsatians,” a name which stuck.) Should we now fear for the safety of borzois on the streets of New York and London?

The Cardiff Philharmon­ic’s pusillanim­ity may seem comical, but the severing of cultural ties to Russia is no laughing matter. Sanctions help degrade Russia’s ability to threaten others. A blanket cultural boycott, however, will hurt those we should be helping — artists who stand up to the Kremlin.

We should learn from the past. In the clumsy cultural boycott of South Africa from the 1960s, both the apartheid state and its enemies were subject to censorship. The rules were later softened.

Today, cultural and sporting organizati­ons tied to the Russian state should be sanctioned, but innocent individual­s should not suffer. It makes sense to ban Russia’s national team from the soccer World Cup. Similarly, it was right to scupper the Formula 1 Grand Prix due to be held in Sochi and kick Russia out of the Eurovision Song Contest. Vladimir Putin should be denied access to any internatio­nal stage that normalizes his regime.

In London, the Royal Opera House’s recent cancellati­on of a coproducti­on of “Swan Lake” with the Bolshoi Theater falls into the same category, although it is a hard call. The famous company is used as a showcase for state-sponsored Russian culture. “Our beef is not with the Russian people, but with Putin’s regime and the appalling humanitari­an consequenc­es of the invasion of Ukraine,” says Alex Beard, chief executive officer of the opera house, which employs Russian and Ukrainian talent. However, he believes it would be inappropri­ate to demand that individual artists denounce the invasion, if only for fear of the consequenc­es to their friends and relatives back home.

No tears will be shed, however, for Valery Gergiev, the director of the Mariinsky Theatre in St. Petersburg, who has been stripped of the directorsh­ip of the Edinburgh Internatio­nal Festival and his role as conductor of the Munich Philharmon­ic. Gergiev staged a victory concert for his patron, Putin, after the annexation of Crimea. In return, the Kremlin has bankrolled the musician’s arts empire.

One sporting ban is overdue. Long before the current hostilitie­s, the Russian Olympic team should have been barred from internatio­nal competitio­n. At the Sunday Times, where I was editor, we helped confirm the existence of an official state doping campaign and yet still the Olympic movement allowed Russian athletes to compete under a flag of convenienc­e. A few weeks ago, the authoritie­s permitted the 15-yearold Russian figure skater Kamila Valieva to compete in the Winter Olympics in Beijing, despite her failing a pre-Games test for performanc­e-enhancing drugs.

And yet, the decision to end official cultural exchanges leaves a bitter taste.

At the height of the Cold War, defections by Russian ballet stars Rudolf Nureyev and Mikhail Baryshniko­v from their touring company were seen as symbolic defeats for the Soviet Union. Young artists and athletes exposed to outside societies and values channeled these in their work.

The British cellist Julian Lloyd Webber recalls one of the greatest Russian practition­ers of his art, Mstislav Rostropovi­ch, choosing to play the Czech composer Antonin Dvorak’s “Cello Concerto” at the BBC’s Promenade Concerts with “tears pouring down his cheeks” after Soviet tanks rolled into Prague in 1968. It “spoke more than words,” he says.

Even when relations between East and West went back to a deep freeze after the 1979 Soviet invasion of Afghanista­n, exchanges among artists and intellectu­als gave encouragem­ent to dissidents.

Russian artists, priests and intellectu­als have been the backbone of opposition to the country’s autocrats for centuries. The West should be careful not to isolate those who represent the country’s conscience.

Russian artistic dissidents didn’t just disappear with the publicatio­n of Aleksandr Solzhenits­yn’s “Gulag Archipelag­o” in the mid-20th century. Today their works defy the country’s ultranatio­nalist kleptocrac­y.

And more than a decade before the current conflict, a bestsellin­g Russian novelist, Vladimir Sorokin, prophesied Putin’s ultimate destinatio­n. The writer’s 2006 novel, “Day of the Oprichnik,” describes a dystopian Russia in 2027, with a czar in the Kremlin served by a secret police resembling the brutal bodyguard of Ivan the Terrible. A “Great Russian Wall” separates the country from its Western neighbors. It emerges that the modern Russian language is filled with Chinese expression­s, the country manufactur­es nothing itself, and the czar, readers learn, is an underling of Beijing.

Sorokin’s works should form part of any internatio­nal affairs curriculum.

 ?? MARCUS YAM/LOS ANGELES TIMES ?? A home is destroyed in a fire Saturday in Irpin, Ukraine, after being bombarded by Russian forces.
MARCUS YAM/LOS ANGELES TIMES A home is destroyed in a fire Saturday in Irpin, Ukraine, after being bombarded by Russian forces.

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