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  • Taking Cover

    Taking cover

    Where can people go for sanctuary when the bombs go off, as they did
    in Srebrenica 10 years ago? Into the timelessness of good writing,
    GORAN SIMIC says

    By GORAN SIMIC

    Saturday, July 16, 2005 Page D15

    I know where my nausea comes from every time I get into a situation
    that resembles a war. The stomach pain is like an inherited disease:
    Your family pretends not to see it until somebody else notices. Once,
    by accident, I was cornered by a crowd at the Orange Parade in Belfast,
    surrounded and scared by angry drummers and pipers, and I found myself
    running toward the nearest bar as if running to a basement. I spent the
    New Year celebration in Bari, Italy, with piles of pillows over my head
    because of the firecrackers exploding on the streets. In a Paris park,
    I was ashamed to find myself jumping over the bench after some kid's
    balloon suddenly deflated, sounding like a whistle of a grenade. And
    then there was the time I finished an AC/DC rock concert in Toronto
    outside the hall because artificial cannons started shooting from
    the stage.

    There is no country where one's Pavlovian reflexes fade, once they've
    been acquired. I asked myself more than once, am I a coward? I doubt
    it. A coward would immediately leave a city under siege. Not me:
    I stayed four years in war-torn Sarajevo. I lived with those other
    400,000 humiliated citizens who were forced to burn the books from
    their own shelves to warm up the stoves when the city's gas and
    electricity supply was cut off. My only excuse is the fact that
    minus-20 Celsius in a room is almost equal to the minus 20 books
    missing from my shelves. (My biggest comfort for burning my dearest
    friends, books, was the fact that I helped organize the rescue of
    300,000 books from the burning National Library when Serbian grenades
    set the building on fire.)

    Like so many of my fellow poets who've experienced violence and
    bombings, I didn't choose to get into trouble -- but I chose to stay,
    to be a witness. I was haunted by the idea that what isn't written
    will be forgotten.

    Compared with stories, essays or newspaper reports, it seems to me
    that poetry is the best writing form to express such experience.
    There is no more resistant literary form than poetry; it lets writers
    absorb the horror and yet produce sorrow and condemnation wrapped in
    a form of beauty. That's probably why Soren Kierkegaard once said that
    poets are humans with unique lips -- their inner suffering sounds like
    beautiful songs. Still, I don't like the romanticization of poetry, at
    least out of respect for the graveyard of those poets who took the risk
    to criticize those in power. Since there is no adequate way to measure
    human pain and suffering, out of curiosity I decided to weigh three
    of the books I consider to be guides to the dark side of our times.

    Against Forgetting (Norton, 1993), which weighs 989 grams, is an
    anthology of the 20th-century poetry as a witness, edited by Carolyn
    Forche. It's a guidebook through the last century's conflicts, in
    which poetry has been used as a testimony. I just love a selection
    that begins with Siamanto (born Atom Yarjanian), who refused to let the
    Turks' massacre of Armenians be forgotten, and goes on to the Austrian
    writer Georg Trakl's poems about the Great War; Marina Tsvetayeva,
    who committed suicide in 1941 as a response to Stalin's repression;
    Holocaust witness Paul Celan -- and ends with the poems of Duoduo
    and his struggle for democracy in China.

    Even if this book were not a shortcut through the dark side of the
    last century, I would still love it because it follows the observation
    of Bertolt Brecht: "In the dark times, will there also be singing?/
    Yes, there will be singing./ About the dark times."

    Scanning the Century (Viking, 1999), edited by Peter Forbes, is also
    an anthology of 20th-century poetry, weighing 946 grams. It captures
    the relevant dilemmas, from decolonization, civil-rights struggles
    (including Lewis Allen's lyrics to the Billie Holiday song about
    lynching, Strange Fruit) to the way we live right now. But the best
    part is the selection of poetry dealing with war. From the Great
    War to the war in Bosnia, poets tirelessly take up the challenge to
    fight against forgetting. Pity there's no poetry from Rwanda, but no
    collection is perfect.

    Crimes of War (Norton, 1999), edited by Roy Gutman and David Rieff,
    is a collection of essays by journalists and scholars -- a kind of
    dark guide to those politicians who think force of arms is the way
    to a better world. During the Sarajevo siege, I met Rieff through his
    mother, Susan Sontag, on one of the city's worst days of bombardment.
    Instead of going to see a film about Bosnia, we spent the day in a
    basement, talking. Why watch a film about a crime if we're living it?
    This book reminds me of Rieff: sharp, honest and grounded in reality.
    Oddly, Crimes of War weighs just 652 grams. I expected more.

    So now I contemplate three books that I consider to be crucial to
    my understanding of cities and people suffering through times of
    violence. Together they weight just 2,587 grams. Is this all? I ask.
    Where is the weight of human suffering?

    Unfortunately, there is no measure for that.

    Goran Simic, a poet and short-story writer, is the author of From
    Sarajevo, With Sorrow. He and his family arrived in Canada in 1996,
    after surviving four years of siege.
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