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Sorry for all the apologies

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  • Sorry for all the apologies

    Sydney Morning Herald , Australia
    Nov 20 2004

    Sorry for all the apologies
    By Ruth Wajnryb

    It might bemuse a visiting anthropologist from Mars to discover
    within Earth culture a speech event loosely called "saying sorry". If
    s/he stays around long enough, s/he may discover that the sorry
    speech event is an umbrella term for a diverse collection of
    utterances (or sorry noises) that leaders of democratic nations emit
    - or feel compelled to emit - usually at some symbolic occasion.
    Anniversaries of genocides are good.

    I say "democratic nations" because for the life of me I can't
    remember one such verbal engagement with the issue of sorriness
    coming out of the mouths of tyrants. It's not the Idi Amin Club
    members who wrestle with apologetics. At the bookends of the 20th
    century, descendants of the dispersed survivors of the Armenian
    genocide and those of Saddam's gassed Kurds are still waiting.

    I'd like to propose "apologetics" (note the small "a") as a
    superordinate to cover all the verbal noises that accrue with the
    issue of sorriness. The word refers both to the verbal act and the
    rumblings that surround it.

    A recent example comes from Tony Blair. Jeered on by anti-war
    protesters outside the annual conference of the British Labour Party,
    and with considerable visible angst (most angst, of course, being an
    interior experience), Blair wrestled with his apologetics, struggling
    to find a way between the simplicity of straight-talking and the
    complex pressures of public opinion mixed with party constraints.

    He refused to apologise for the Iraq war. "The world is a better
    place with Saddam in prison, not in power." When it came to
    allegations about the "sexing up" of prewar intelligence reports,
    Blair's ice got thinner: he "admitted", "acknowledged" and "accepted"
    that evidence about the weapons of mass destruction "has turned out
    to be wrong". It was a tenuous path to walk - between the cajoling of
    anti-war protesters (they who, strangely, only surface in
    democracies) and the sensitive fact that, as he speaks, he has boys
    in the field. Even amid the party faithful, "guarded" and "gingerly"
    are the ways to go.

    An apology means saying you're sorry. This seems straightforward
    enough until you poke at the scar tissue of history. Sometimes,
    etymology offers insights. It was not until the 18th century that
    "apologise" seriously took on the meaning of "a frank expression of
    regret for wrong done". Before that, its meaning was closer to the
    Latin and the original Greek, apologia, where apo (from, off) and
    logos (speech) combine to produce an account mounted in defence or
    justification. In modern terms, think of the closing argument of the
    defence lawyer.

    English retains this original sense in its "apologist", though this
    too has been tainted by negativity. Alleged apologists usually deny
    that they are. The pseudo-historian David Irving denies being an
    apologist for Hitler even while uttering his absurd claims that
    openly seek to exonerate or explain away or diminish the monstrosity
    of Nazism.

    If you key "apologetics" into case-non-sensitive Google, you get
    almost a million hits. These are mostly (big-A) Apologetics - a
    Christian term for the practice of defending the Christian faith
    against those who raise objections to its validity. This usage more
    closely resembles the original Greek sense.

    Contrast is a great mechanism for discerning the less-than-obvious.
    To grasp the navigational complexity of apologetics, consider the
    sheer simplicity of an uncomplicated act of sorry. At
    http://www.sorryeverybody.com, Democrat-voting Americans apologise
    for Bush's re-election.

    One is reminded that English allows both forthrightness and
    obfuscation, each achieved through words.
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