If Noam Chomsky and Gore Vidal have a Greek analog,
it is Nikos Dimou. One of his generation's most fertile minds, a
legendary advertising man and a prolific writer, Dimou is best known as
the author of The Misfortune of Being Greek-the book that earned him
the label of an "anti-Hellene." Nearly a quarter century after it was
first published, Dimou comes clean.
Nikos Dimou is a master of provoking passions.
It is an art that he learned, perhaps, as one of the pioneers of
advertising in Greece (his bloodied map of Cyprus, overlaid with the
slogan "I Do Not Forget," is the primal symbol of the island's
occupation). He honed it as a columnist for the newspapers To Vima and
Kathimerini in the 1980s and 1990s-famously being forced to leave both
? the latter in 1996 after its publisher accused him of subverting
church and military.
In the meantime, beyond the crucible of the
country's political debates, Dimou indulged a series of less
controversial passions: In over 40 publications, ranging from poetry to
photography, he revealed his love of everything from cars to cats,
philosophy to Greek light. While the country's political press has
waxed and waned in its enthusiasm for Dimou, his columns have been a
popular constant for over a decade in specialty publications like 4
Troxoi and RAM (Greece's leading car and computer magazines,
respectively).
Recently, Dimou decided to revisit the text
for which he is most famous-The Misfortune of Being Greek. First
published in 1975, The Misfortune is a series of 193 mostly brief,
often cutting aperηus about Greece and Greeks (see sidebar). In the
very last lines of the postscript, Dimou writes: "I have tried, simply,
to articulate my observations in such a way so that serious people will
find them to be serious, while less serious ones will find them less
serious. I am now tortured by the possibility that the exact opposite
will occur."
Perhaps it did. What is certain is that
although the book became a best seller and an evergreen one (over
100.000 copies sold) as time passed Dimou came to be known as a gadfly
at best and a traitor at worst. Reading through The Misfortune today,
it is difficult to understand why: While he is at times viciously
blunt, and while many of his observations are clearly debatable, Dimou
always exudes a love for Greece in his text-a love more pure, many
readers have observed, than that of the most ardent (self-proclaimed)
patriots. The negative reactions to The Misfortune seem to betray as
much about the critics as they do about the author.
The essay that follows is Nikos Dimou's response to his critics.
The Apology of an Anti-Hellene
This text, with the Greek title "Apologia Enos
Anthellina", is the introductory essay of the eponymous collection
(1997, Opera Publishers) as translated by the staff of Odyssey
magazine. A few paragraphs have been omitted.
Hemlock is no longer prescribed by the city of Athens-there are,
however, other poisons. As the century comes to a close, the
accusations weigh heavily on my mind, and I feel the need to unburden
myself. Especially since most of the attacks leveled against me concern
things I have never said. I am charged with harboring ideas, attitudes,
and theories in which I have never believed. And so, once more, I will
attempt to clarify what I do in fact believe, so that those who wish to
judge me will be able to base their case on facts.
Let me say up front that I feel no guilt, and
that I use the term "Apology" ironically-with Socratic irony, if you
will. And I deliberately omit placing quotation marks around the word
anti-Hellene. They are unnecessary. I consider the term an honorable
title, won by many worthy Greeks. As Nietzsche once wrote (I don't
remember where and haven't been able to find it again), it was the
anti-Germans who proved to be the best Germans.
To whom do we refer as an anti-Hellene? As a
rule, to Greeks or foreigners who write (or say) unpleasant things
about Greeks, who criticize us, or express opinions we don't like.
Regarding the Greeks who are placed in this
category: Is it really so difficult to understand that such a critic
does his country a greater service than the most enthusiastic
cheerleader?
The foreign anti-Hellene is another story. He
may be a journalist who reports or editorializes, or an academic who
propounds a theory. He is called an anti-Hellene from the moment we
disagree with his opinions, regardless of how appropriate or how
accurate. Fallmereyer would be considered an anti-Hellene, even if his
theory of the descent of Greeks from Slavs were proved 100 percent
correct. (Indeed, then he would be considered even more culpable).
In truth, this categorization of people into
Philhellenes and anti-Hellenes is, at best, naive. Journalists,
politicians, and (especially) academics, historians, etc., rarely think
or act on the basis of emotion. (I very much doubt that Fallmereyer
hated Greeks). Nor are they such racists as to be prejudiced against
entire peoples. The ludicrousness of the label becomes even more
obvious when one of those supposedly confirmed anti-Hellenes (Henry
Kissinger, for example), comes out pro-Greece on the Macedonian issue,
whereupon he is immediately credited with a philhellenic outlook.
Dimou the Anti-Hellene
In 1975 I published The Misfortune of Being
Greek and immediately became 1. well-known, 2. of questionable
intellectual gravitas (because the book became a runaway best-seller),
and 3. the bearer of the two titles I have carried since, as does a
camel her humps: "the author of The Misfortune" (so what if I've
written 40 other books), and "Dimou the anti-Hellene".
It didn't happen right away. The first
reactions to the book were positive. Greeks, still dazed from the
dictatorship, initially embraced a text laden with bitter truths. But
soon this introspective phase passed, foreigners were blamed for
everything ("puppet" dictatorship), and The Misfortune became
bothersome. Even more bothersome was a seven-page interview I gave in
1977 to the German magazine Der Spiegel. This interview, which once
again stated bitter truths, was deplored and distorted by the Greek
press, while the original text was never published in Greece. I
actually managed to land in the line of fire of the Left and the Right,
being christened an anti-Hellene by both.
But my reputation wasn't really sealed until
the period 1991-1996, during which I rebelled against the eruption of
Greek nationalism. The daily newspaper Kathimerini promptly expelled me
from its ranks. Meanwhile, The Misfortune was added to the Index of
Anti-Hellenic Publications.
Yet now as then, I maintain that this document
was born out of a love (possibly an excessive one) of Greece. If anyone
reading it failed to perceive how much I feel for this country, then
surely he must be biased. Satire is always born of pain-the satirist is
a sensitive person who transmutes his disbelief and rage into bitter
sarcasm. Nevertheless, there are many who maintain that I do not love
my country, that I would rather live elsewhere, (e.g. Western Europe),
and that this is the cause of my discontent.
It is true that I would rather live elsewhere.
But I would prefer that other place to be here. That's what I've fought
for-to spread and to cultivate the positive elements of Western (i.e.
Greek) civilization in our country. For 20 years, in addition to my
books, I have made use of all forms of media in order to publicize my
views. I got involved with newspapers, television, and magazines -all
of which, in the eyes of the intellectuals, called my credibility into
even greater question. And it was all pretty much in vain. In the past
few years, waves of nationalism, religious fundamentalism, racism,
anti-westernism, and isolationism have overcome our country. As I read
the various studies analyzing the opinions, the outlooks, and the
attitudes of Greeks, I think how pointless all my efforts have been.
The brainwashing by the Helleno-centrists is insidious and unremitting.
In this land, the words "Europeanist" and even "modernizer" have come
to sound like insults, or, at least, like ironies.
Maybe my leaving would have been, on a personal
level, the simplest and most effective solution. I wasn't forced to
stay. I had managed (after much effort), to acquire the financial means
to live abroad. As for the other requirements (foreign languages,
familiarity with foreign lifestyles), I was already prepared. And I do
admit that there were moments when I seriously considered it. It
saddens me when I compare my experience to that of western European
friends and classmates, who have never had to confront the
cannibalistic and small-minded behavior that prevails in our
spiritually cramped marketplace.
I stayed, though, and fought. Because what mattered to me wasn't just to
live in a decent place-but to improve the one I lived in. I believe that
this country has a lot to gain from proper modernization and a lot to learn
from the West. Because the West is not something foreign-it is a
continuation of our culture. What Greece should aim for is a synthesis of
the positive aspects of our neo-Hellenic identity and heritage with the
positive qualities of the West. (At the moment, we do exactly the opposite:
combine the least flattering elements of our national character with the
worst the West has to offer).
I won't discuss here my love for Greece-for the past 40 years I've shown it
through my writing, and illustrated it with my photographs.... But for me
love doesn't mean uncritical praise, blind adherence to myths and mirages,
jingoism and demagoguery. As the old Greek saying goes, He who loves,
troubles. Real love is revealed by how much we grumble and rage at all
that's wrong and crooked in our land.
Greece gets to me so much that I've devoted
seven books and countless other writings to her. In Diary of a Heat
Wave, I wrote: "This country is killing me. You know how we say 'flood
victim,' or 'earthquake victim'-well, I'm a Greece victim. Greece-with
all her beauty and all her absurdity-has run me over like a steam
engine."
The Pitfalls of Fanaticism
My image of my country isn't based on an idea,
but on a feeling, an affection for the familiar. I consider my homeland
neither better nor more important than any other land; I merely love
it-the way I love my neighborhood, because it's my corner of the world.
But, just as I would never dream of turning my neighborhood into an
ideology and killing for it, I don't see any reason to do the same in
the name of the nation, and to sacrifice people for a false idol.
I love Greece the way someone loves his house
and the people close to him. But that doesn't mean I'm blind to her
faults, just as I don't consider my own house and my own relatives
better than other people's. Even as a child I used to wonder at
fanatics-whatever their cause. And I still find it hard to understand
how someone can become a sworn supporter or a blind follower. It always
surprised me when I saw grown-ups argue over political parties or
soccer teams, and stop speaking to friends because they backed the
"wrong" group.
Personally, I never felt such a passionate need
to belong. Perhaps as a result of the fanaticism I witnessed as a child
(I was nine years old at the time of the "Dekemvriana"-the December
1944 clashes between rightists and leftists), I developed the opposite
passion: that of fanatic disengagement. As a consequence of this, I've
now become, at the age of 60, completely marginalized. (In Greece,
unless a political party, clique, media group, religious or soccer
organization backs you, you might as well not exist).
Still, in spite of all this, I'm not in the
least inclined to alter my opinions. I'm merely tired of
arguing-especially with people who haven't the slightest interest in
what anyone else has to say. In Greece, the minute you express a view
you get stuck with a label (e.g. supporter of the West), and,
subsequently, anything you say is considered more or less predictable.
The supporters of your group will automatically agree with you, while
those on the opposite side will disagree, without even knowing what you
said. A Panathinaikos fan will never discuss the views of an Olympiakos
supporter. As a result, there's never any real dialogue. What with all
the slogans, the labels, and the stereotypes, the intellectual scene is
coming to seem more and more like a soccer stadium.
Know Thyself
Greeks' contemporary self-image is built upon a series of myths. The myth
of continuity. The myth of the racial and cultural superiority of our
ancestors (and, thanks to continuity, our own). The myth of being special.
The myth of racial and religious purity. The myth of the genius of the
Greek race.
The existence of these myths provokes certain predictable reactions. Thus,
my typical compatriot, while proud to be Greek (95 percent, according to
polls) will abuse and censure his countrymen at the slightest provocation.
And this, naturally, because they fail to live up to the expectations and
the demands created by the myths.
This explains why we're simultaneously the greatest eulogizers and the
worst critics of ourselves. Depending on our point of view (and on the
moment), we either denigrate Greeks or sing their praises. (In the former
case we usually refer to them as "Romious"). Naturally, both attitudes are
wrong. Instead of applauding or cursing, it would be better to stop, and
think. Calmly, and rationally.
(But I forget myself. Rationality is also a Western, imported Evil for our
Helleno-centric intelligentsia. So much for Aristotle!)
The "Evil" West
Manichaism (i.e. the contrast between black and white) is one of the ills
that corrupts us. There is no such thing as pure evil or pure good, and
what's called for isn't antithesis, setting one against the other, but
synthesis. Yet we've become so used to this game of tug-of-war, that when
we don't have enemies, we invent them. Thus, for example, we have the
"evil" West, or our "bad" neighbors.
It's amazing how much we oversimplify and distort certain things, in order
to transform them into enemies. We have a distorted image of Europe. But
Europe contains everything, including us. It contains rationalists as well
as anti-rationalists, nationalists, cosmopolitans, and romantics. There is
no tendency in Greek thought today that doesn't have its European
counterpart-maybe even its progenitor. The West today includes the East,
which has had such a profound influence on the art and thought of this
century. It encompasses the whole range of schools of thought, from
rationalism to non-rationalism, from Descartes to Derrida. Even
Dostoyevsky-the anti-Westerner, the slavophile-is a fundamental part of the
Western tradition.
Actually, its a mistake to speak of Western
culture. What the West
represents now is a world culture, one that has integrated all the
cultures
that came before it. It's the first culture in history that has kept
and
still cultivates all tendencies and traditions. Older cultures, on the
other hand, always began by uprooting those that came before them, or
those that were different (as the Christians, for example, destroyed
the
monuments and writings of the ancients).
Of course, as soon as we hear talk of a world culture, we're gripped by the
anxiety of integration, of losing our identity. It's an understandable
reaction for a small nation. But there really isn't anything to fear.
Centuries of coexistence within the same national bounds didn't turn the
Sicilians into Milanese, the Bavarians into Prussians, the Welsh into
English, the Proven?ales into Normans. So why will our culture be swamped?
The spread of Coca-Cola and blue jeans doesn't necessarily go hand in hand
with the spread of cultural values. (Most anti-Americans I know wear
jeans). Concurrent with the internationalization of culture is the opposite
tendency, an obsession with difference, which, as witnessed in the former
Yugoslavia, can be defended with far too much zeal. At no other time in
history has humanity been so sensitive to the rights of minorities-and at
no other time have local traditions been so respected and nurtured. The new
international culture can ensure both unity and difference.
I don't know how bad the West is for us. I do
know that we owe it a lot.
From our independence (no one ever mentions Navarino in 1827, when
Western navies helped salvage our battle for independence) to our love
of
ourselves.
If any Western import has harmed Greece, it's been neither
rationalism, nor the political system, nor technology. It's been the idea
of the continuity of Hellenic civilization.
Oddly, this idea, which today is waved about like a banner by
anti-Westerners, is an entirely Western notion. Foreign "Philhellenes"
uncovered our ancient monuments, and it was they who taught us to believe
that we were the immediate successors to the ancients, responsible for the
continuation of their traditions. The Romioi of the 18th century didn't
feel Greek-much less of the ancient variety. They were a Balkan nation,
originating from the admixture of many races and cultural traditions, with
their own attitudes and ways of thinking. Out of the blue, the Western
"Philhellenes" (and their mimics, our own "scholars") stuck a helmet on
their head, dubbed them keepers of the ancient flame, and injected them
with a passion for purity.
Pure race, ergo, pure language. How this nation has suffered in the name of
purity! It was a first in the history of linguistics: the creation of an
artificial language, a retro-dialect. All impurities were rooted out, place
names were changed, history was distorted-for the sake of proving...what?
That Greece was not a Balkan nation like the others, but a racially pure
aristocracy, not only of the region but of the whole world. Like certain
pseudo-bluebloods who fake their family trees to prove their superiority.
But you don't become worthy on the strength of your lineage, but on the
basis of your achievements. The son of a Nobel prizewinner has no
birthright to a Nobel prize. The ancient Greeks belong to the whole world,
especially to those who study them. An English classicist at Oxford is
nearer to the ancients than an ignorant Greek.
Yet even today our intellectuals call the Greeks "the aristocracy of
nations." Even today many (most) Greeks believe in their hearts that we
are
a chosen people. This is why we're always complaining about the way
we're
treated. Like spoiled children, we demand of everyone their
unconditional
support-even when we're wrong. And we insist on believing that we're
always being cheated, ignoring the fact that we happen to be the only
country in the region to have doubled its size in the last 150 years.
We've woven endless conspiracy theories so as to absolve ourselves of
responsibility, and to cast the blame on others instead.
Our belief in our superiority shows up clearly in our racist attitudes.
What Greek doesn't consider himself better than the Turk, the Albanian,
or
the "Gypsy-Skopjan"? Go ask an Greek educated audience about Turkish
civilization-they're certain to chuckle.
Well, this Greek, this Greek who asks the world
"Do you know who I am?",
who shouts at demonstrations, who denies the Other his basic human
rights,
who has conducted pogroms against his Jewish (in the past) and Muslim
(today) compatriots, who ends up shooting (by mistake) the Albanian and
the gypsy; this Greek, I don't like. And on this point I remain,
incurably, an
anti-Hellene.
History as a Western
Not a day goes by without the papers ranting
about some anti-Hellenic
threat. The Turk coughed, the American scratched himself-woe to us!
Since
my childhood, Greece's history has seemed like a (cheap) Western movie,
one in which the Greeks were, always and unequivocally, the Good Guys.
The Bad Guys were always changing. There was "the threat from the
North," then from the East, then it was the North again, and back to
the East. When I was a child, the word "Bulgarian" was a curse, more so
than "Turk." It was forbidden for Greeks in northern Greece to design
themselves as "Macedonian." "Albanian" then had a neutral tone; today
it's become a
threat.
Sooner or later we need to free ourselves from this Balkan mindset. That in
which, in the words of the writer Fred Reed, "one man's national martyr is
another's war criminal, where one country's founding myth is another's tale
of woe and usurpation." Here, the ideological exploitation of history has
become state-of-the-art. I was amazed to realize, on reading the history
books of West European nations, that there are histories that aren't based
on competition and enmity, that don't indulge in nationalism and hate.
Where neighbors are even regarded with sympathy.
But do you dare compare Greeks with other nations? Well, yes, I do, and we
would do well to forget our uniqueness in misfortune as well. History isn't
a comforting mother who you can run to when things go badly-who will pet
you and show you special favor. All the nations on earth have been through
bad times-there's no sense in competing to see who can feel the most sorry
for themselves. It's time we grew up!
And above all we have to stop living history as
Western. Every morning the
papers scream (like the little kid in the movies), "Look out! He's
right
behind you!" Every day the same fear: What are the Bad Guys up to? (As
if
they do nothing else from morning till night but conspire against us.)
When will we realize that in history, as in life, people can't be
divided
up into the purely good and the purely bad. That the greatness of
nations
isn't measured in myths or fears, but primarily by their capacity to
overcome problems of the present (and of the past, when it becomes
present).
Consider what it took for the French and the Germans to reconcile their
differences-differences reinforced by centuries of bloody warfare. Each
time I read about the European Community's French-German axis, I
remember my first French teacher, and how she used to curse the
"Boches" with rabid fury.
The One & Only "National" Issue
I don't consider the Aegean or the Macedonian issues "national issues." Nor
even the economy and public administration problems.
For me, the one and only national issue is the one posited by poet
Dionysios Solomos: The nation must equate the national with the true. If
this isn't done (and it can't be achieved from one day to the next-it
requires years of effort, mainly in education) then we won't be able to
stand up in today's world. We'll always be in a limbo between whining and
belligerence. We'll spend billions-in blood and sweat-on useless armaments.
We'll continually be quarreling with our neighbors, and with the whole
world. We'll see paranoid schemes and conspiracies everywhere. Like a sick,
maladjusted person, we'll spend our lives wavering between hysteria and
depression.
Who will dare to teach Greeks the truth about their history? (Including,
for example, the aforementioned pogroms...). About the history, and
culture, of their neighbors? Who will dare to teach them the truth about
certain "national issues" (like the FIR Athinon, our irrational airspace)?
When will Greeks succeed in seeing themselves as they really are: a nation
like all the others, with abilities and weaknesses, with talent (often more
than this land can hold), and insecurities, capable of both generosity and
meanspiritedness.
Beyond the overhaul of the economy, I preach the revamping of our
attitudes. Am I really an anti-Hellene? Or do I love Greece? The future
will decide.