Circle the wagons – and
keep the equipment dry
It was a foggy morning when I cycled to the centre. Grey
& still – at last a reprieve from the wailing sirens. Very much a White Thursday (“Witte Donderdag”
- Maundy or Holy Thursday) I thought, briefly cherishing the mirage of Easter tranquillity
… until I got to the Wetstraat – where local television crews and press had gathered
in front of the parliament – looking for local political responsibilities for
the catastrophe. (Is it because it offers
an illusion of control, this tendency of self-blaming when evil strikes? The illusion
that we can pursue politics as usual.)
The city-centre felt hung-over, looking shabby and lost.
Aha, the place to be for the international press : la Bourse / de Beurs, where the night before people had gathered to
light candles and to chalk messages of peace & love on the pavement. The crowds were gone now – a dozen of people
loitered aimlessly on the porch of the building, with behind them colourful international
flags flapping listlessly. But the international press was perky & alert,
going about their business in orderly fashion.
Circle the wagons! About
twenty different TV crews formed a neat circle around a bunch of fading flowers
and a handful of locals. Each crew was set up with a heap of coffers & equipment under a marquee tent (rainy Belgium), a technician/operator , a camera
on a tripod + one journalist in front of it, busy commenting or interviewing whoever
was available.
An eager journalist looked my way – I quickly mounted my
bike, before Telewisja Polska could
stick a mike under my nose.
Later I watched on the web a BBC video on Molenbeek - the journalist had difficulties finding someone
who would speak up, apparently it didn't for a moment occur to him to ask his
questions in a language other than English.
“Could you please open
your rucksack?“
Later that day, in the afternoon, I had picked up my laundry at the Polish laundromat and doggedly
continued my way to the local supermarket. Head in hood against the drizzle, my
thoughts were bleak.
Silently I was delivering incendiary speeches. Railing against
all those predictable opinions so predictably voiced again. Railing against the tiring usual right wing
and left wing discourses – both equally inadequate. What an unholy alliance – divisive
right wing discourse and naïve ostrich left wing discourse.
My glasses were getting fogged and I was seething – brimming with bloody thoughts. But then I sternly admonished
an inexistent audience that we should keep our heads cool. Yes, that’s what we
must do! Step back, regroup, analyse
what went wrong - dispassionate, objective analysis, without right wing or left
wing blinders. Let each (Right, Left, Middle,
Muslim, Christian, Jew, Atheist) look in his own sphere of influence and do his
bit. And stop telling me that Islam is peace – but please do keep
telling it to those whose words and deeds shout out to the world that it is
not.
I sped up my step – Yes!
That’s what we should do! And we should
wake up, too! We are no longer one of
the safest cities in the world, as we were 30 years ago (oh yes we were, once).
We must realise that “those who have chosen to be our enemies”
are not like the homely CCC-terrorists
of old, who spread flyers with “ attention –voiture piégée’” around the car
they booby-trapped. Today, “those who have chosen to be our enemies”
put nails in their bombs – determined to kill and maim as many as possible.
I entered the supermarket resolutely. The young Securitas guard (at terror level 4,
BXls supermarkets now put private guards at their doors) was clearly taken aback by my apparent
grim resolve – bravely he stopped me and asked “Could you please open your rucksack? “.
My combativeness deflated, I took off my
hood, opened my rucksack and showed him my laundry.
The guard was embarrassed (I could almost see him thinking: is this how I’m going
to prevent a terror attack, by checking people’s laundry?). And I was embarrassed – suddenly aware of the futility
of my thoughts.
But we smiled at each other,
this young 'Mediterranean-looking' guard and I, as he waved me through with a polite “merci bien madame , bon après-midi!”
3 comments:
Wonderful post, fff!
b.
well, frankly, my thoughts get ever bleaker (in a world where not even playgrounds are safe from bombs. The pictures in your post show grief which could be "from a scene 10.000 years ago" - immemorial grief caused by immemorial human evil)
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