['The
Morning Inspection' is the title of a column I wrote for the Daily News
from 2009 to 2011, one article a day, Monday through Saturday. This is the 218th article in the
new series that began in December 2022. Links to previous articles are given
below]
Steve
Almond, a short story writer and essayist from the United States of
America, has reflected on 9/11 (‘The decade of magical thinking,’ in www.therumpus.net).
At least on one occasion, he wrote down his thoughts. That was 12
years ago. A decade allows one to have what he calls a long view. So he
could look back on the events that occurred on the 11th of September,
2001 from a distance of a decade. Steve Almond took a longer view or
rather he imagined it.
‘Say you took the long view of September 11, 2001, the view from the heavens, the view of a compassionate celestial being. From up there, you’d see that approximately 150,000 earthlings died that day. Most of these deaths were caused by malnutrition and age-related illnesses, roughly 1500 were murders, hundreds more were due to civil wars. Also, 2,977 Americans were killed in terrorist attacks on New York City and Washington.’
That’s distance that is longer than time and therefore offers greater perspective. Almond does much more. He abstracts himself from the incident, time and distance to talk about the morality of memory; the what we remember and forget, the why and why not, and, by extrapolation, what we ought to do about it all.
Every victim was mourned privately, he reminds us. Such mourners and mourning go unreported. That 9/11 was a spectacle that benumbed Almond’s country to the point that the vast majority of her citizenry found themselves mesmerised by what he calls ‘the raving of the demagogues’ whose demagoguery ‘provided cover for [their] own quieter, more subtle abdications.’
Almond says they were made to endorse the pursuit of ‘vengeance over mercy.’ Even the vengeance was misdirected; the benumbed citizenry were sold a lie about weapons of mass destruction that were non-existent. Almond was correct when he pointed out that the people of the United States of America, ‘were deciding – with the help of all that deeply feeling propaganda on our television sets – that the only human suffering that mattered was American.’
If there was memory and amnesia, savage urge and suspension of empathy with regard to September 11, 2001, how on earth could Almond’s America even remember the other 9/11, the one that took place 5,125 miles away and 28 years before where the hand of the tragedy-dispenser was unmistakably American and therefore, unlike with regard to the 9/11 of 2001, it could not be considered, in Almond’s words, ‘a narcissistic injury that [Americans of the US could] return to as a talisman of self-victimization’?
That 9/11 ‘happened’ a half a century ago. Steve Almond wasn’t seven years old then. I was almost eight. He lived in Palo Alto, California at the time, 5,913 miles from Santiago, Chile. I was in Colombo, Sri Lanka, 9805 miles away. I don’t know how Almond spent that day and I can’t remember how it unfolded for me. However, I do know that at least one child, probably around our age, living in Santiago, had felt happy.
He was happy, as he told the makers of the documentary ‘Chile: Obstinate Memory,’ because it was a holiday. More than 20 years later, prior to watching a documentary by the same team ('La batalla de Chile: La lucha de un pueblo sin armas’ of ‘The Battle of Chile: The Struggle of an Unarmed People), led by Patricio Guzmán, many in the audience generally denounced Augusto Pinochet as a tyrant but also opined that had he not overthrown the president and government things could have been worse: ‘they were communists.’ The boy, a young man now, and in that audience, would have agreed.
Salvador Allende, the democratically elected President of Chile. On September 11, 1973, the military, led by General Pinochet, was ousted in a coup d'état supported by the CIA (acknowledged in 2000) with the full knowledge of the then US President, Richard Nixon and the United States government. Allende gave a farewell speech to Chileans on live radio, reaffirming his love for Chile and is reported to have killed himself with an AK -47 even as Pinochet’s men stormed La Moneda, the presidential palace.
From the distance of time, that young man had exorcised the demagoguery that had quietly taken up residence in his mind and nurtured ‘quieter and subtle abdications.’
And that, thanks to the above-mentioned essay by Steve Almond, referred to me by my sister, Ru Freeman, when I told her that I want to write about Salvador Allende, is the thought I take away from that other 9/11 from half a century ago.
malindadocs@gmail.com.
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Poisoning poets and shredding books of verse
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The lost lyrics of Premakeerthi de Alwis
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Recovering run-on lines and lost punctuation
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To be an island like the Roberts...
Debts that can never be repaid in full
An island which no flood can overwhelm
A melody faint and yet not beyond hearing
Heart dances that cannot be choreographed
Remembering to forget and forgetting to remember
Authors are assassinated, readers are immortal
It is good to be conscious of nudities
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Kumkum Fernando installs Sri Lanka in Coachella, California
Hemantha Gunawardena's signature
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The slowest road to Kumarigama, Ampara
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Mind and hearts, loquacious and taciturn
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The circuitous logic of Tony Muller
Rohana Kalyanaratne, an unforgettable 'Loku Aiya'
Mowgli, the Greatest Archaeologist
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Landcapes of gone-time and going-time
The best insurance against the loud and repeated lie
So what if the best flutes will not go to the best flautists?
There's dust and words awaiting us at crossroads and crosswords
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From A through Aardvark to Zyzzyva
Words, their potency, appropriation and abuse
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No 27, Dickman's Road, Colombo 5
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Ithaca from a long ago and right now
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The interchangeability of light and darkness
Sisterhood: moments, just moments
Chess is my life and perhaps your too
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The integrity of Nadeesha Rajapaksha
Signatures in the seasons of love
To Maceo Martinet as he flies over rainbows
Fragrances that will not be bottled
Colours and textures of living heritage
Countries of the past, present and future
Books launched and not-yet-launched
The sunrise as viewed from sacred mountains
Isaiah 58: 12-16 and the true meaning of grace
The age of Frederick Algernon Trotteville
Live and tell the tale as you will
Between struggle and cooperation
Neruda, Sekara and literary dimensions
Paul Christopher's heart of many chambers
Calmness gracefully cascades in the Dumbara Hills
Serendipitous amber rules the world
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