FOREWORD
This is a "soft-focus" edition of
The Link in that we have concentrated on human
interest stories for the most part, but nevertheless
stories with a topical point. We
offer two reviews one of a book, the other of a film.
"Rowing without Oars" is a remarkable
autobiographical account of her last
few months on this earth by Swedish writer,
Ulla-Carin Lindquist, which has been widely hailed
as a major contribution
to understanding the mind and needs of a
person suffering a terminable illness, and "The
Sea Inside", reviewed
by Terence Skene, is
a prize-winning film that
deals with the fraught topic of
euthanasia.
Autumn is the season of harvest and Church Harvest
Festivals, and our opening contribution pays tribute
to both and celebrates harvests past and present
while noting the great change that they and the world have undergone
during the span of one life-time.
David Kelso is a S.U.F. member who gets around. the world and uses the
vehicle of Esperanto to make friends and share in the lives
and culture of people in distant lands. His lively
article "Around the World. ....Hopefully," is
a classic example of Unitarian best
practice, offering the hand of fellowship to
strangers and leaving them as friends.
Envy is one of the most destructive of the seven deadly sins
as identified by the mediaeval Roman Catholic Church
and in her article on the topic, Essie Wise, demonstrates
that its effects are as corrosive as ever and
are deeply embedded in our current way of life.
Back to contents
"HARVEST REFLECTIONS"
Bill Stephen
About a fortnight ago I happened to walk
past the field where I saw people harvesting for the very first time in my
life more than sixty years ago. Once again the field was full of waving
grain, fanned by a soft, warm wind, but it seemed much larger now than
then, and I realised that several smaller fields had been knocked into one
huge expanse and that all the stone dykes, mottled with hazleraw, and the
quirky little hedges had been replaced by a characterless, barbed-wire
fence. In the distance, where the slope of the field tipped over the
horizon, a cloud of dust followed a combine harvester and its attendant
tractor and wagon as the yellow corn stalks were cut, stripped of seed and
compressed into bales of straw in one remorseless operation, a day's work
for two men, enclosed in their respective cabs, sealed off from the
elements and deaf to the clatter of their machines. Sixty-odd years ago,
this same field was a whirl of activity, men, women, children, animals,
birds, insects, all swirling around, before and behind the great plodding
Clydesdale pulling the flailing reaper through the corn. With faces red and
shining under the afternoon sun, women and children gathered up the stalks
cut by the reaper, bound them into sheaves and set them up into stooks.
Dogs dashed hither and thither in pursuit of rabbits and hares; mice
squeezed themselves between the boulders at the foot of the dyke. Rooks
foraged for insects and beetles between the lines of stubble, and wood
pigeons gleaned the fallen ears of corn along the bottom of the he4ge. Over
the field drifted the sounds of harvest, rising and falling, people
calling, dogs barking, rooks cawing and in the occasional lull, the jingle
of harness and the song of a yellow hammer. By late evening the the
harvesters had gone home and the field, cool and shadowed now, was occupied
by a silent regiment of stooks standing stiffly at attention, as if on
parade.
One Saturday afternoon, on our way to the forest to gather
firewood, we were overtaken by the wagons, piled sky high with sheaves,
bound for the rick yard, where a small village of corn stacks was already
rising, its straw - strewn streets, as chaotic as a building site, loud
with the noise of people shouting, dogs yelping and the cooing of wood
pigeons. Our village, nestling at the foot of a heather-clad hill was
almost self-sufficient in the essentials. Each household grew its own
potatoes, vegetables, strawberries and black currants and we gathered rasps
and brambles from the hedges. Each cottage had its stack of peat won from
the moss by means of great effort and mutual help, and a woodshed filled
with wind-blown timber, gathered from the forests during forays in the long
summer evenings. The butcher could watch his meat and mutton grow on the
rich pastures by the river and the baker of a Sunday afternoon would stroll
among the wheat fields that come Christmas would supply his flour.
We were
a close-knit community. Everyone knew everyone else and how he or she
fitted into the life of the village. The farm labourer who guided the
plough and the harrow was the cousin of the miller who ground the wheat
into flour and the oats into meal. The blacksmith who shoed the horses
lived next door to the old man who sowed the seed and hoed the fields. We
school kids, at the morning interval, drank milk provided by the farm just
over the playground wall. In the Winter, a local farmer provided a team of
horses and a huge wooden snow plough, shaped like a wedge of cheese, to
clear the village streets.
As a community, we were committed to one
dominant purpose, producing sufficient food and fuel to see us through the
twelve months to the next harvest and if possible to create a surplus that
could be sold on to purchase the necessities we could not provide
ourselves. In pursuing this single aim, everyone was dependent upon
everyone else and there was a general, if unspoken, understanding of what
it cost each individual in terms of physical strength, time, skill and
commitment to fulfil his or her part of the bargain. Sore backs, aching
muscles, chapped hands and fingers, soaking wet clothes and mud plastered
boots and leggings were the common lot of the village outworkers for much
of the year and there was a brisk barter trade in embrocations, balms,
salves, ointments, mixtures and the occasional magic potion to combat the
discomfort and pains of severe physical labour in cold, wet weather.
On a
Sunday morning towards the end of October, the Church was crowded for the
harvest thanksgiving service. It seemed the whole village was there, the
ladies in their hats, the girls in their print frocks and smelling of
scented soap, the men in their dark suits, the police-man and the
school-master sporting gold watch chains, the doctor with his silver topped
cane and top hat, the station master in his bowler, we kids, scrubbed,
combed and curbed in our Sunday best. For many of the people squeezed into
the narrow pews that Sunday, this service was the most important of the
year. This was no dutiful gesture towards the almighty, but a sincere
recognition of their vulnerability to the vagaries of Nature and their
dependence upon forces which they could not control and could barely
understand. Survival to a certain extent was due to their own unremitting
efforts but much more so to mysterious processes far beyond their
influence. Farming was a partnership between humankind and Nature, but
Nature was very much the dominant partner and made all the important
decisions without consulting the farmer.
There they were, then, proud,
independent, practical folk, admitting their own weakness and thanking God
for protecting them and their crops against disease, drought and foul
weather, all of one mind, no voice dissenting, and of one mind with their
ancestors back through the hundreds of years of the Christian period and so
further back to those ancient, pagan farmers who built the great stone
circle not a mile distant from the church and who also spent sleepless
nights worrying, about soil, seeds, weather and a malign fate and sought
the help of their gods. Stone circle and church, different in ritual but
united in purpose. These ancient farm-folk also decorated their altars with
the fruits of their harvest in tribute to that mysterious principle of
creativity and life, just as we had piled up before the pulpit, sheaves of
corn, loaves of bread, kebbucks of cheese, reeking in the warm air, sacks
of potatoes, baskets of vegetables and stands of leeks, as thick as organ
pipes.
Religious faith is a remarkable human phenomenon. It is part of our
evolutionary survival kit. It is our response to the uncertainties of life
in a universe unaware of our existence and therefore indifferent to our
needs. Faith is a belief contrary to reason and evidence that no matter how
bad things may seem at the moment, in the end they' will turn out well, if
not for the individual then certainly for the species. We are persuaded
that if we live honestly, decently and according to the highest attributes
of our nature, in the great universal struggle between good and evil,
virtue will eventually triumph. Faith gives us the strength of will to keep
on believing in ourselves and in our ability to overcome our problems no
matter how severe they may be. It is faith that persuades us that even when
we think we may have lost, the battle against evil, we are nor aware of the
whole picture and virtue may have triumphed after all in a way we cannot
understand, for there is an instinctive element of faith that has an
inkling of an overarching power that is immensely greater than self and
beyond self and operates in ways that we cannot perceive.
Without faith we
are without hope and without hope we cannot survive as functioning human
beings.
Our community knew all about faith. Having no control over nature
and the weather, the farmer planted his seeds in the spirit of faith that a
benevolent providence and his own knowledge and skill would bring all to
fruition in the fullness of time.
One windy Saturday afternoon in the first
week of December, the mill went on fire. Bright orange and red flames broke
through a skylight and spread across the roof like a gigantic flag
streaming in the wind. The miller who lived next door to us had been drying
grain in the kiln attached to the mill and the grain had over heated and
fanned by a strong draught had caught fire. The village was in an uproar.
Next to the mill was the granary, and almost a quarter of the harvest was
already stored there along with dozens of bags of flour and meal. There was
no regular fire brigade but there was a fire engine of sorts operated by
volunteers. Every able bodied person rushed across the river to the mill.
Carts and wagons were manhandled to the loading bay (the horses were too
frightened by the smoke and commotion to be of any use). Loose grain was
shovelled into the wagons and the sacks were wrestled and levered on to
carts which then had to be pushed away from the building. We stood on the
opposite bank watching, excited and terrified as the flames quickly
consumed the roof, burst through the windows and driven by the wind started
to lick the side of the granary. Someone in the crowd started to sing
"Oh God of Bethel by whose hand, thy people still are fed, who through
this weary pilgrimage, hast all our fathers led." The old Scottish
paraphrase. Gradually others joined in till the sound of our singing was
loud enough to cross the water and be heard by the people on the other
side. One of the firefighters waved across to us but they were losing the
battle for the mill and were trying to prevent the flames reaching the
granary which was still more than half full.
Then, unaccountably, the wind
dropped. The roaring from the inferno subsided, and smoke and flames
deprived of the wind's en now loafed upwards into the
air. Next morning the mill was a blackened ruin but the granary was still
intact and most of its contents had been saved. Many people claimed a
miracle had saved the winter's food supply and there were prayers of
thanksgiving in Church. Others pointed to the co-operation and commitment
of the fire-fighters, who inspired by one purpose had never thought of
giving up. Perhaps they too had believed in a benign providence. The
village had saved itself, some said, but nature had helped, at the last
moment.
The combine harvester went skimming across the yellow sea of
barley, and the transition from its mechanical ease to the plodding labour
of the sturdy Clydesdale and the flailing reaper, is a difficult one to
make. There is a gaping chasm separating our recent and even more distant
past from our contemporary society. Spiritually, I have lived in two
entirely different worlds possessing largely different values. The village
of my childhood, nestling between its hill and its river, self sufficient,
out of the world, single-minded in its beliefs and values, is now
incorporated in what we choose to call the global village. Now its
provisions come not from its native fields and woodlands but from every
quarter of the globe and are not picked fresh from the garden or from the
hedge-rows but processed, packaged and date-stamped from the supermarket
shelves, which know no season, but which are replenished daily from
whatever part of the world the produce happens to be available. The fruits
of affluence and a high-speed transportation system. Convenient, accessible
with a minimum of effort, quality and quantity assured, choice wide enough
to suit every taste and to stimulate jaded appetites in search of novelty,
but the link between consumer and nature is now much more tenuous, as is
the link between producer and purchaser. Indeed the human link has
disappeared altogether and been replaced by a very long commercial one.
We
place a can of pineapples, say, in our supermarket trolley. Where did they
come from? Who grew and harvested them? Who sliced them and sealed them in
the tin? How do these people live? What motivates them? What do they
believe in? Are they paid a fair price for their labour? We open the can,
eat the fruit and never give it another thought.
Such values as
neighbourliness, understanding, co-operation and above all consensus and
compromise, which bound our old community together are much less in
evidence in our global village. While the folk at the western end of the
global village live in the lap of luxury benefiting from the labour and
produce of the people in other less privileged parts, these poorer people
suffer the rigours of deprivation and want, and only occasionally receive a
hand-out from their wealthier neighbours who then feel quite pleased with
themselves for being so generous.
Again, many of us at the west end of the
Main Street, have made our affluence our way of life, buying things, owning
things, bigger and better things, as if our purpose in life is to pile up
possessions. We become selfish and self-centred so that having our own way
must always have precedence and so we find it difficulty to work together
as a community.
There is no common vision, any longer; no common faith. We
are self-confident arrogant even in our independence and in the power of
our wealth. Then Nature throws us into confusion by releasing a tsunami, or
a Hurricane Katrina or Rita or an irresistible strain of influenza and our
technology dependant civilisation is swept away in a matter of minutes and
we find ourselves less well prepared to cope with life than the folk who
built the stone circle, two thousand years ago. We should not take anything
for granted. The food on the supermarket shelves exist there by virtue of
that partnership between nature and humankind, by virtue of co-operation
between peoples, but while its quality may be guaranteed, its appearance
there is not. The vast commercial operation that brings it to our shops is
as vulnerable to the elements as any other human endeavour.
If indeed we
live in a global village, then we need to care for it as the farmers of my childhood cared for their little
fields and the villagers cared for
each other. We need a common vision of humanity that embraces
both ends of Main Street, so that the consumers understand the needs
of the producer and the rich align themselves with the poor
for above all a Harvest celebration recognises the importance of
cooperation between people and the fact that we are all subject to the
power of Nature and are in the hands of Providence.
As I started to walk
on, a profound silence settled over the field. The clatter of the combine
harvester had stopped. Two figures stood knee high in the corn,
contemplating their arrested machinery. Now it was quiet enough to hear
the wind sighing among the barley stalks and a yellow-hammer still
complaining about a little bit of bread and no cheese.
Back to contents
FOLK TALE
Eaves-dropping usually stirs up a
right old broth of feeling. In the first place there is a hint of
guilt that we are invading a person's private space. then there is
frustration: we usually come into the conversation in the middle and don't
hear the end of it. There is also curiosity. Who are these people whose
lives we have blundered into? Most of the conversation is either unintelligible or boring,
particularly if we are listening to a mobile phone
conversation. "Hello, it's me. I'm on the bus. I'll be home in twenty
minutes. Oh, by the way, I've left the blue bag behind the door. Oh. you
fell over it! Sorry. Does it hurt?"
A few days ago I was standing in a
bus queue behind two young women. I think they were students. The one with
he purple scalp said, " Did you see the sunrise this morning? It was
fab!"
"Get a sanity check!" replied her chum, the of the sea-green
hair. "I'm not around in the middle of the night to see a * * * * *
sunrise. Get it!"
"It started a pale green, then a pearly, then a
creamy colour, then pink. I felt really good seeing it."
"Get a
life!"
"I've got a life. So've you but you don't live it."
"Get
real!"
"Look, you should live your whole life, not just the juicy
bits! You take the rest or granted!"
There was some more
be-"getting" from the the sea-green mop with orange high-lights
before we boarded the bus. I thought out of the mouths of passers-by
and cool cats comes wisdom. We are so wrapped up in ourselves and take things
for granted that when one day we take a step outside ourselves we discover
that the world has changed and we hadn't noticed.
Take a thing for
granted and it just melts away. |
Back to contents
"ROWING WITHOUT OARS"
Bill Stephen
I have been reading a book published last
year and recently serialised on the BBC 4 programme, "Book of the
Week". It was written by Ulla-Carin Lindquist, a fifty-year old
Swedish woman who was a journalist and was a presenter on the main evening
news programme on Swedish Television. It is entitled "Rowing without
Oars", translated by Margaret Myers and published by BCA. Apparently
it has become an international best seller. It is quite
a short book, very simply written, with short sentences and short chapters
most of which are only two or three pages long. You can read it in a few of
hours. It is superbly written, clear, concise, honest, profound, and
challenging, in that it invites the reader to consider
his/ her reaction to the appalling situation the author finds herself in.
It is autobiographical; almost a diary, in fact, of the last eighteen
months or so of her life. She died in March 2004, three months after
writing her last chapter which finishes with the sentence, "Every
second is a life".
Ulla-Carin Lindquist was married to her second husband, Ollie, a surgeon,
and they had two sons, Pontus aged 11 and Gustaf, 9. She also had two
daughters of an earlier marriage, now both in their early twenties and
studying away from home. Ulla was a high-flyer, at the top of her
profession, recognised wherever she went in Sweden as a TV
presenter, much sought after, feted, and celebrated. She was a keen
athlete, a skier, a swimmer, and she could handle a yacht single-handed. At
the same time she ran her household looked after her husband and two sons
and kept a close motherly eye on her two student daughters.
Her week days were spent juggling job, children, household duties and
family needs, regulated by a strict time-table and dominated by the need to
be well-prepared, calm and collected to face the TV cameras for
an hour, every day, Monday to Friday. At the weekend they usually went to
their country cottage to sail or ski or walk or go horse-riding in the
hills. In spite of her nerve-wracking work in the highly charged atmosphere
of a TV studio and the demands of her family and domestic responsibilities
she was coping, well on top of everything, with strength and energy to
spare for socialising and taking strenuous holidays.
One weekend she and her husband are out sailing and as she
tries to row their dinghy to shore, she has barely the strength to swing
the oars and has to give up. A few days later she discovers she has
difficulty hanging out clothes and holding a pen, and her right hand feels
numb.
At first they think she has a slipped disc as a.
result of a tumble she had taken when riding but after many exhaustive
tests, her doctors conclude she is suffering from a rare disease, known as
A.L.S., amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, a process in which the motor neurone
cells in the brain and spinal cord die off, causing the muscles elsewhere
in the body to waste away as they no longer receive any signals from the
brain and, therefore, do not receive any nourishment and eventually stop
work. The thinking part of the brain remains
unaffected and is clear and alert to the end.
The patient dies when the muscles that control the breathing are eventually
unable to operate. As it is a very rare disease, very little research has
been done into its cause and cure; consequently it is
currently incurable; there is no treatment apart from palliative care and
it is fatal in less than three years. Ulla-Carin
Lindquist was, therefore, facing a delayed death sentence.
The physical difficulties created by creeping paralysis can be addressed by
adapting her house for disabled living and over the months a stair- lift
and a special toilet and shower are installed and so on. She is also
assigned several carers and counsellors, all provided by the Swedish
National Health Service. Soon she is forced by her deteriorating condition
to give up work and in order to keep her mind employed
decides to write an account of what is happening to her, of her thoughts
and feelings, as stage by stage, the disease takes control of her whole
body. Sometime in June 2003 she starts to write her diary and from then
until Christmas of that year she records the changing seasons, notes
important national events to keep herself aware of the world beyond and
charts her rapid decline. She observes the strictest discipline
and control over her writing: everything is lucid, coherent and strictly
relevant. Most of her book is concerned with her
emotional state and the personal problems, she and her family face.
After many chaotic weeks of uncertainty and worry during the investigation
of her symptoms, she accepts the news of her terrible fate fairly calmly.
She is not angry or resentful. Her illness was not caused by anything she
had done or had failed to do. It had befallen her by sheer blind chance.
Plain bad luck. It may have been triggered by a virus or a faulty gene.
Nothing she could have done would have prevented it.
She is, however, distraught by the thought of how it will effect her
children and how she will tell them, especially the
young boys. Understandably her husband is deeply upset but she would much
rather he were not because she needs his strength and
support, his good humour and cheerfulness above all. Her daughters are
devastated and realise that their world has changed for ever, that the most
important person in their lives will not be part of their future and that
the support they had assumed would be there for years to come, has been
removed. Her sons, of course, know about her illness but she has to make
them understand that she will never get better and
that very soon she will die. She does it as gently as possible. They don't
say much, but are profoundly shocked by the news.
She is anxious that her illness does not damage them
psychologically, nor interferes with their schoolwork
or their relationship with their friends and classmates. She thinks they
may feel embarrassed to tell people that their mother is dying. Her
sensitivity and sense of responsibility extends to the other children in
school. She is concerned that the news may upset them and undermine their
belief in the health and survival of their own parents. Drawing upon
her remaining energy and strength she
arranges a meeting with her children's teachers and an educational
psychologist to discuss the best way of coping with an these concerns.
Hers is a very close-knit family which includes her own mother and her
in-laws. She realises she cannot relieve them of the sense of loss that
will assail them when they are bereaved. She longs to
comfort them, but no words that she or anyone else may utter will help at
first. She feels profound sympathy for their plight and cannot ignore a
sense of guilt that she has somehow let them down, a feeling that she is to
abandon them when they rely on her so much.
She thinks a lot about grief and discusses it with her closest friends. She
thinks that members of a family feel grief differently at different times.
One person has to rein in their grief in order to comfort another whose
suffering is severe. While much of grieving has to be
done by each person individually, as the deepest sorrow has to be borne
alone, she also feels that there is some reassurance
in shared grief and when she sees her family grieving for her she accepts
it as an expression of their love.
She tries to maintain their normal life-style as far
as is possible, taking an interest in everything that
her children, husband, friends and colleagues
are doing. She knows how important it is that she
should remain part of her children's lives and
that she tells them what she needs from them and how she hopes that they
will keep her expectations of them in mind when she is now longer with
them. She tries not to show any unhappiness or feel self- pity, as much to
reassure her sons as to sustain her own morale. She
refuses to become a prisoner of her condition, locked within
her own misery by pain and fear. Her increasing disability creates anxiety
and tension enough for the rest of the family; if she were to appear to be
suffering emotionally as well as physically, the strain might very well be
more than they could cope with.
She makes up her mind to live in the present. The past is another country
which may be visited in memory but never with regret and she recalls many
happy occasions. The future, however, is closed to her. And so she lives
from day to day, making the most of every hour. When
at work, she was always rushing around preparing for the next day and the
one after that. She was never able to focus on the
immediate but always on the potential. Never on what is, but always on what
might be. Now she observes the passage of the sun across the sky; the buds
bursting into leaf and the slow approach of Autumn, the intricate patterns
of bare twigs and the unique designs frost paints on the window. Now she
has time for everyone, to listen to their stories, to look into their eyes,
to feel their touch and to revel in their presence. Her
family are closer to her than ever and she also has
time for herself: relieved of professional and domestic responsibilities,
she can find herself again. Each of her days passes at a measured pace.
each exists as a train of separate minutes, each one of
which is treasured and savoured as a thing unique in
itself. Not a moment is taken for granted. She is alert to everything
around her and aware of every little difference that
separates one moment from the next.
She is surrounded by family, friends and devoted carers who see to her
every need, but as her condition worsens to the stage where she cannot
speak or eat or move her limbs, she sometimes feels lonely and finds
herself grieving alone. She wonders if her illness will be the sum and
substance of her existence, that all her sons will remember of her will be
her disability and death. Perhaps all the good times they have had together
and all the worthwhile things she has achieved will be completely
overshadowed by the sorrow felt at her passing. She tries to fight against
these thoughts by telling herself that although she is compelled to live in
darkness, she herself is not that darkness. She feels that her life has
amounted to very much more than misery and that she is still very far from
being utterly pointless.
Her Minister, a woman of her own age, visits her regularly and they talk
about religion and death and her funeral. She is not sure about God but she
feels that there is something beyond herself and she knows that when she
dies life will continue and there will be good things and joy and
creativity still on earth. She takes comfort from the thought that although
dying is a solitary process, she will die surrounded by those who love her
and that she will continue as a loving presence in their memory for as
long as they themselves shall live.
I feel her account is to be trusted, not only because of its candour and
intimacy, but because of its rationality. It is human throughout. It makes
no claim upon the miraculous, nor does it seek or hope for supernatural
intervention. She sees her problem as being a human one and its solution,
in so far as there is one, must also be human. Preparedness, candour,
composure, mutual trust and respect and the acceptance of the inevitable
pain of bereavement constitute her practical
response.
In accepting this state of affairs without complaint, she demonstrates the
capacity of the human spirit to confront catastrophe
and its inevitable result with courage and dignity.
In the wider sense of the term, I would class "Rowing without
oars" a religious book. Not only does it encourage us to confront our
own mortality, it also deals unsentimentally with the human condition,
repeatedly asserts the value of human life and sets
human consciousness in an infinite environment, that
not only takes cognisance of the past, present and future, but also does so
in a climate of hopefulness and trust.
She also reminds us of the contradiction that lies at the heart of the
human condition. In the face of death we are
powerless, physically, and none is exempt, but as long as we have faith in
the continuing power of human love and the creative power of nature, then
spiritually we are invincible.
When we are told by a woman who has suffered as much and lost as much
as Ulla-Carin Lindquist that life is beautiful and well worth having, I
feel obliged to believe her.
Bill Stephen
Back to Contents
AROUND THE WORLD............
HOPEFULLY?
By
David Kelso
Unitarians, generally, are quite well
educated, no? In the US, the Unitarian-Universalist church has a bit of a
reputation as the highbrow church; not, I think, because they're
all Nobel
laureates, but because Unitarianism is a philosophy and approach to living
that appeals more to people who think about things. Only a minority of us
are birthright Unitarians (to borrow a Quaker expression); most of us have
chosen Unitarianism, often after a fair bit of searching, reading and
thinking.
That being the case - I don't hear any
objections 1 - I'm sure most of my readers will have heard of Esperanto,
the international language. When it comes up in conversation, many people
say "Oh yes, is that still around?" or "Yes, it was a good
idea. Pity it never caught on." So, educated people (Unitarians, for
example !) usually know what Esperanto is, but think of it as something
from the Past: from between the Wars, or perhaps from the 1960s - depending
on your age. Well, Today's News is that Esperanto is still around; and, yes,
it is a pity it hasn't caught on - yet! You see, I'm an esperantist -
There, I've said it! - and I don't understand why more people don't take it
up.
I learned Esperanto as a teenager, because
"it seemed like a good idea". Teenagers do that kind of thing;
maybe we all should? Over the years, I must have used Esperanto in 20 or more countries, at conferences, on Esperanto
holidays, in people's homes, or just over a meal or a glass of beer when I
am in a strange city. How? Well, you don't exactly bump into
Esperanto-speakers in the street: there are perhaps a million, maybe even 2
million, in the world. It's difficult to be precise because Who's
counting?
I mean, how many people in the world can play the mouth organ? - Well, how
many? No, you don't bump into esperantists in the street but you can easily
make contact with them because there are plenty of directories, address
lists and websites that tell you whether there are any esperantists
in Malaga, or Delhi or Addis Ababa. (There are, by the way: there are
esperantists in over 120 countries in every continent). So, nowadays I
usually send an e-mail saying when I'm coming and asking if there's any
chance of meeting. Sometimes I'm invited to visit the family (yes, there
are Esperanto families) or come along to the local Esperanto Club;
sometimes I get a conducted tour of the city (as in Palermo, last winter);
often it's just a matter of meeting for an hour or so for a chat; and, of
course, sometimes nothing is possible because dates don't match or they're
too busy. (Even esperantists have to earn a living).
But if we meet, when we meet, we don't speak
my language, or their language, we speak our language, a beautiful, simple,
very expressive language that belongs to everyone, not just people born in
a particular country. If you think about it, that's something quite
remarkable: to talk with a Mongolian (as I did a couple of months ago,
in London), not in English (which she spoke only haltingly) or in Mongolian
(which I speak - ahem - even more haltingly!) but in a common language
which we both spoke equally comfortably. So, if we talk about Iraq, or
Global Warming, or GS, or the Olympics, or what's on TV tonight, neither of
us has a built-in advantage, we're conversing, communicating, relating, on
equal terms.
What language do Unitarians use when we meet
internationally? Or Christians in general? Or even World Federalists? Yep,
that's right - English. A bit tough on the French, Russians, Chinese,
Hungarians..... in fact, a bit tough on 90% of the world's population!
So you're convinced? Great. But why isn't
everyone? Well, you do have to learn Esperanto before you can speak it.
Sure, it's a lot easier than any national language, but even an easy
language takes a bit of time to learn. If you do an evening class in
Esperanto (or the equivalent correspondence or internet course) - and do
your homework! - after a year (i.e. 8 months) you can write a simple letter
in Esperanto and conduct a simple conversation. After two years, you should
be able to cope with most everyday situations, fairly comfortably. After
three years - if you do your homework! - you should be more or less fluent.
Honest, no kidding. But that's still a bit of work: you can join Amnesty by
filling in a form and writing a cheque.
I suppose another reason is the same reason
why there are so few Unitarians: you can't eat it, drink it, wear it or
spend it, so what's the point? Idealism is out of fashion, I'm afraid. Or
is it? Esperanto is going great guns in Brazil, China, India and Iran; I
think idealism is a bit more fashionable in these countries, who see real,
promising prospects for a better world opening up, and hope for the best.
Which is what Esperanto means - someone who hopes. When Ludovik Zamenhof
published his project in 1887, he very modestly called it The International
Language and used the pseudonym Doktoro Esperanto, "Dr. Hopeful".
So, the language of dro Esperanto became just Esperanto. A good name,
though, because that is what characterises the Esperanto community - Hope:
hope for a better, fairer, more just world where we all relate to one
another, not as Rich and Poor, Powerful and Weak, North and South, but on
equal terms, as equal, fellow human beings. Is that such a daft idea?
I haven't burdened you with a lot of
detailed information. If anyone would like to know more about this
extraordinary language and its community, drop me a note at one of the
addresses below, go to www.esperanto.org. or do a Google search: when I
tried a few minutes ago, it came up with 12.600,000 results. That should
keep you going until the next issue of The Link!
davidekelso@yahoo.co.uk
David Kelso, 5 Craigenhill Road, Kilncadzow, Carluke, ML8 4QT
Back to contents
ENVY
"Schadenfreude" is a a wonderful
German word and may very well sell more copies of newspapers, particularly
tabloids, than any other cause. It means taking delight in another person's
misfortunes, especially of someone we might have envied. The process is
well understood and exploited by newspaper editors. They create celebrities
of footbaIlers and their female adjuncts, TV performers, pop singers,
film actors of both genders, supermodels, socialites and so on by informing
their readers of every trifling feature of their day- to-day existence.
They are interviewed about their clothes, their houses, their favourite
recipes, their exotic holiday villas, their taste in pop music etc. and
their views on any number of topics of which they have minimal knowledge
and less interest, are widely publicised. They are presented as living
exciting, glamorous, extravagant exclusively company lives, in the of other
'celebs'. Above all, we are constantly
reminded of their great wealth, their wonderful possessions, their superbly
furnished mansions, their designer clothes and custom-built motor cars, all
to stoke up the fires of our envy, until each of us is a blazing furnace of
covetousness! Then, the bubble is burst! At the peak of their popularity or
celebrity, they do something monstrous! They insult the Queen, run off with
another person's wife and/or husband/partner. Confess they are an alcoholic
or use drugs regularly. Owe vast sums of money to the Inland Revenue. Kick
their neighbour's arthritic dog down a flight of stairs. Punch a beggar in
the face outside a very expensive restaurant. Attempt to drive while
heavily intoxicated. Anything at all that will demonstrate to the great
British public that after all, our hero has feet of clay and never deserved
the adulation poured upon him or her. Then we are supposed to
bathe in that wonderful feeling of "schadenfreude" , delighted
that this icon in whom we have been so deceived has justifiably been
trodden into the mud by the guardians of public decency, who raised him/her
up in the first place. How are the mighty fallen, and how we are supposed
to enjoy it! Envy is a very nasty characteristic and it seems to permeate
human nature through and through, and has been the curse of every society
in every historical period. Not even God is above envy. "Thou shall
have no other gods before me," he thunders in Exodus Chapter 20.
"For I the Lord thy God am a jealous God!" and, somewhat
inconsistently he warns the Israelites against the very sin he admits to
himself. "Thou shall not covet thy neighbour's house, or thy
neighbour's wife, manservant, maidservant, ox, ass or anything that is thy
neighbour's." Ancient thinkers in addition to the writers of Exodus, were
clearly deeply worried about the effects of envy. In fact they identified
envy as the root of all evil. It provoked the great civil war in Heaven
which ended with the expulsion of the rebel angels from the sight of God
and eventually of Adam and Eve from paradise. Lucifer, the brightest of all
the angels, was deeply envious of God's power and tried to wrest it from
him. God proved too powerful for him and he was driven into Hell, where to
this very day, he rules as Satan, the Prince of Darkness and the Lord of
Envy.
The very first murder narrated in the Bible, that of Cain upon Abel
was motivated by envy, because God preferred Abel's sacrifice to Cain's.
Joseph's Brothers tried to murder him because their father, Jacob, favoured
him above all his other sons and they were envious of his coat of many
colours. King David had his chief general, Uriah the Hittite, assassinated
in battle, so that he could take possession of his wife, Bathsheba, whom he coveted.
Ancient Greek myth also reflects the malign power of envy. The Goddesses,
Aphrodite (Venus), Hera (Juno) and Athena wish Paris, the son of King Priam
of. Troy to decide which one of them is the most beautiful. He chooses
Aphrodite. The other two are so envious that out of sheer pique they bring
about the Trojan war and the defeat of Troy.
The Classical world was so
wary of provoking the envy of the Gods that they invented the sin of "hubris", that is of over-weening pride. A mere mortal might feel
himself/herself to be doing rather well and might boast of the fact. A
God, envious of that person's success, or talent or good looks or courage,
might then do something particularly nasty to humiliate and destroy him or
her. The Greeks had a saying that you can never say a person has had a
fortunate life until he or she is dead. To do so earlier might provoke the
wrath of a jealous God. This, of course is a sentiment shared
by many peoples and has come down to our own time in the shape of the
superstition, "Touch wood". This is a kind of magic spell to
deflect the ire of fate or the ancient gods, when we admit openly that
things are going well for us but do not wish to be thought boastful.
The 6th century B.C. writer of fables, Aesop, also exploits the same theme in
the tale of the Fox and the Grapes. When Fox cannot reach the grapes high
up on the vine, he comforts himself with the thought that "They are
sour anyway", and the phrase "sour grapes" has become a
popular expression for indicating envy.
Envy of his virtuous reputation and
great intellect was the death of Socrates and in order to preserve their
greatest statesmen, the Athenians would banish them for up to ten years
after a particular triumph so that they would not suffer the wrath of
envious people. The Greeks detested envy as a destructive and murderous
emotion, but realistic people that they were, thought that nothing very much could be done
to curb it.
Jesus was also aware of envy and recognised that rivalry over
material possessions and power was at the root of it. He tried to persuade
people that pursuit of earthly rewards is a waste of energy. What really
matters is to stockpile riches in heaven by being kind, compassionate,
loving and generous to other people, rather than trying to undermine and
humiliate them. St. Paul reminded his followers that love will have no
truck with envy. "Charity envieth not".
Envy continued to worry
the early Christians and St. Gregory the Great, in 6th the century numbered
it among the Seven Deadly Sins along with, Pride, Avarice, Lust, Anger,
Gluttony and Sloth, all reconfirmed by St.Thomas Aquinas in the 13th. These
sins were defined as "deadly" because they provoke a whole train
of further wrong doing and anti-social attitudes. David Hume, the 18th
century Scottish philosopher, who was reputed to be an atheist seems to agree. In his
"Treatise of Human Nature" he describes the growth and
consequences of envy thus," Grief, disappointment give rise to anger,
anger envy, envy to malice and malice to grief again, till the whole circle
is complete."
At the root of envy is a feeling of injustice. A person
feels a sense of unfairness if someone else is wealthier, or has more
possessions or appears to be more fortunate, especially if he or she seems
to be no more talented or industrious or astute or even better looking.
"Why should the folk next door have a BMW car and we only have a Ford
Fiesta? They're no better than we are and we know for a fact they never pay
parking fines. They get away with anything and then seem to prosper. It
really is very unfair." And then we begrudge them their good luck and
so on. People often would rather be slightly better off than worse off than
the folk next door. "Keeping up with the Jonses" is just another
term for competition or rivalry which flourishes
throughout the whole range of human endeavour, at work, at leisure, in
business, in the world of arts and entertainment.
Competition is usually
seen as a positive process as it improves performance and efficiency but it
is impossible to disentangle it from its darker side which is envy. In many
cases it is envy that drives people on to be first or best or most powerful
or win acclaim, rather than the desire to excel or serve humanity. Many
people cannot bear the thought that they may be seen as being second best,
to play second fiddle, to take a backseat, to be just one of the crowd, to
be in some-one else's shadow, or to be a has-been or worse still,
a-never-was, while all the time they know in themselves they deserve to be
top dog, the leader of the pack, the decision maker, the mega-star earning
hyper bucks, indeed, the envy of all! Such people, be they in politics, or
commerce or show business, troop across our newspapers in a never-ending stream, their intrigues, their
manoeuvrings, their plottings, their successes and their downfalls, the
mainstay of popular journalism.
Envy is such a dominant influence upon us
that it is the driving force behind certain philosophical and political
movements, including Marxism, Communism Socialism. Marx claimed that the
people who actually produce the wealth, that is the working class, ought to
control and possess it. However, all the wealth and power is in the hands
of the great landowners, the factory owners the financiers and professional
classes, who certainly do not deserve what they have, since they don't make
anything. The proletariat, according to Marx, is justifiably envious of the
wealth and possessions of the rich and should therefore rise up and take it
all from them by force. Envy, then, is used as a political weapon to
achieve regime and social change.
Socialism, ideally was intended to
eliminate envy altogether. Once everyone is the equal of every other
person, there would be nothing left to envy . However, this ideal was also
motivated by envy because those who have are compelled to give to those who
have not, who wish to possess themselves of the goods of the better off. In
practice, of course, equality is impossible to achieve, because the leaders
claim that they are more equal than the others, deserve a bigger slice of
the cake and so perpetuate the climate of envy that they were pledged to
end. George Orwell's devastating expose of the totalitarian socialist state
in his short novel "Animal Farm" is a closely observed study of
the causes and effects of envy in a political context. In historical terms,
the same process has been identified in Stalinist Russia, Mao Tse Tung's
China and currently in Robert Mugabe's Zimbabwe.
Envy also plays dominant
role in literature. It is a vital component of the novels of Charles
Dickens. Uriah Heep, for instance, in "David Copperfield" is one of the nastiest creations one would
ever wish to meet, whose obsessive envy of his employer, Mr Wickfield,
extends to his business, his home and possessions, his good name and even
his daughter, Agnes. His remorseless efforts to possess himself of
everything that is his employer's brings Mr Wickfield to utter ruin and
eventually leads to Heep's own well merited destruction.
However, the most
intense and perceptive study of envy appears in Shakespeare's play
"Othello". Othello is a moor, a black man who has been made
commander in chief of the armed forces of Venice. He is middle aged but has
won the heart of Desdemona, the young daughter of a leading nobleman. Many
aristocrats and military men are envious of Othello and feel that he, a
mere foreigner, has not deserved so much good fortune. Iago, Othello's
personal assistant in particular, is consumed by envy and is determine d to
destroy his superior for whom he claims the greatest admiration and to whom he swears undying loyalty. There is a
dog-in-the manger aspect to all envy, which says that, " if I can't
have what you have, then I shall do all I can to prevent you having it
also." In extreme cases of envy this attitude engenders malice and
hatred and so it is with Iago. He will never be Captain General of Venice
nor married to Desdemona but he will ensure that such good fortune will not
be long enjoyed by Othello either. Shakespeare's forensic analysis of Iago'
s bitter, frustrated mind reveals that self...pity, self-delusion and a
readiness to feel slighted and insulted by whatever is said to him not only
sustains his jealousy of Othello, but also proceeds from his own self
loathing. He hates, Othello; but he also hates himself because he is
not Othello. The murderers of Julius Caesar, betray similar feelings. Iago
is completely successful. He persuades Othello that Desdemona is having an
affair with his best friend. The friend is humiliated, Desdemona is smothered by Othello who then
commits suicide. Iago's plot is eventually discovered and he is punished.
Again, as is usual, in these cases, neither the perpetrator nor the victim
survives unscathed.
Envy is a disorder we must guard against. It burrows
deep into the spirit, spreading its poison, making us feel dissatisfied
with our lot, unhappy about ourselves and distorting our view of reality. It
warps our judgment and blocks our clarity. It undermines creativity and
encourages cynicism. It greets the world with a sneer and regards
achievement in others with scorn. It promotes malice and hatred and
achieves nothing but discord and misery.
We Unitarians accept full moral
responsibility for our motives and our actions. Recognising that we are all
subject to it, how do we guard against it? We must be honest with ourselves
about our motives for what we do and say and feel. When we think about what
is happening to us and to others our judgment must be balanced and rational. We
should never jump to conclusions about our own worth and that of other
people.
The most powerful antidotes to envy are contentment and love. A
true understanding of ourselves and of what we have been given helps us to
find contentment with our own lives. And if take joy in the success of
others, if we take pleasure in their good fortune, what harm has come to
us? If we are unhappy the cure may be found in ourselves and certainly not
in envying the lives of others. We have lost nothing but have gained
spiritually by the selfless expression of our love for our fellow
creatures. We should try to appreciate the skills and talents of other
people as part of the immense richness of the universe, as we might enjoy a
beautiful landscape, while at the same time recognising that we too have
our own unique personality that no-one else can possess. In our own
originality, we too may be enviable.
Back to contents
A MATTER OF DIGNITY
A party of young men and women are spending
a hot summer's afternoon on a beach in Northern Spain. The men are showing
off to the girls by diving from a low cliff into a deep pool. The caper is
very risky. They have to time their dive to coincide with an incoming wave
so that there will be sufficient depth of water in the pool. One young man
steps up to take his turn. He times a wave as it surges into the pool,
raises the water level and then recedes, reducing the level by several
feet. He gathers himself to leap with the next wave. Momentarily, he
glances sideways to see if his fiancée is watching him. Without thinking,
he then launches himself off the cliff just as the wave retreats. He
plunges through the water and collides head on with the sandy sea bed. His
head is driven back between his shoulders. The sudden shock ripples through
his whole body. He loses consciousness and floats face down at the bottom
of the pool. Immediately he is pulled out and laid
on the shingle. As his friends start to resuscitate him he comes round.
There are shouts of joy. They have saved his life. A few minutes later,
however, he is wishing they hadn't bothered.
This event and more
particularly its consequences, brings the victim, thirty years later, to
worldwide notice as the hero of the film "The Sea Inside",
directed by Alejandro Amenabar, starring Javier Bardem, and winner of the
2005 Golden Globe award for best foreign film. The hero, Ramon Sampedro, is
in his early twenties when he makes that fateful dive. Born near La Corruna,
on the Galician coast of Spain, he has an inbred love of the sea. He is a
ship's engineer and has sailed around the world several times. He is
adventurous, full of energy, always on the move and impatient to explore
whatever is over the horizon. Life is opening up for him in so many
exciting ways. He enjoys using his body, walking,
climbing, swimming, delighting in his senses, in the colours and scents of
nature, the touch of the wind on his face, the warmth of the sun on his
skin. The world fascinates him, with its great cities, its monuments, its
peoples, He collects postcards of the countries he visits and has himself
photographed beside iconic landmarks such as the Eiffel tower. the
pyramids, the Temples of the far East and so on.
As he stood on the cliff
top preparing to dive, he was blissfully happy. He had become engaged to be
married during his leave and was looking forward to one more world trip
before deciding how to spend the rest of his life. But fate had decided for
him.
He was rushed to hospital. He had broken his neck and had permanently
damaged the nerves to the rest of his body. He was paralysed from the neck
down, incapable of any movement or any feeling. He could live a normal
life-span, but would be dependent upon other people for
his every bodily need.
When the film opens, he has been bedridden for
almost thirty years. He lives in a small upstairs bedroom in his older
brother Jose's grim, little farm-house, where he is looked after by his
sister-in-law, Manuela, and young Javi, his teenage nephew. Most of the
action takes place in this cramped setting, with its huge bed,
computer-screen, record-player, TV set and telephone. There is a view of
low hills from the window but no sight of the sea. Although he loves the
sea, Ramon explains that its absence does not bother him, because he has
the sea inside him and can visit it in his imagination any times he wishes.
For three decades almost, Ramon has occupied himself with one project, how
to engineer his own death. Being a resourceful and ingenious person, he has
invented several simple tools that he can operate with his mouth, such as a
spatula with which he can operate a computer keyboard, but he cannot commit suicide without the
help of at least one other person and this is where he collides with the
law. Any person assisting him in this way would very likely be charged with
murder by the Spanish authorities, and Ramon, clearly, would not wish
that.
That Ramon woos death so passionately, seems inconsistent with his
character. He is witty, vivacious, alert, a lively conversationalist and is
interested in everyone and everything around him. Javi, of whom he is very
fond, particularly engages his interest and concern. Ramon is highly
intelligent, writes poetry, reads, listens to the radio, occasionally
watches TV and is very fond of classical music and opera. A steady stream
of visitors comes to his bedside to swap yarns, listen to his views about
the state of the world, ask his advice and enjoy his company.
Ramon is the
centre of his family; supporting him, caring for him is the prime purpose
of their lives. His sister-in-law is up and down the stair a dozen or more times a day, bringing food and
drink, feeding him, washing and shaving him and seeing to all his needs.
His nephew fetches and carries for him and does his homework and watches TV in his room. His brother who is a surly, awkward, person, nevertheless
gave up a successful career at sea to become a market gardener, in order to
look after him. His widowed father likes to spend his time sitting by him.
They love him and his brother is the only one to mention the sacrifice he
has made for him. They are firmly bound to him by family loyalty and love.
They want him to be there. They need him. They cannot understand,
therefore, his wish to die. He seems to have so much to live for.
A
worthwhile life for Ramon however, includes the ability to roam about at
will. From time to time, he goes off on an imaginary flight across the sand
dunes to the beach where he follows the tide line around the whole world
but this is no substitute for experiencing the world at first hand. He
also longs to touch and be touched. No relationship has any meaning, any
proper intimacy, he says, if the sense of touch is absent. He refused to
accept his fiancée's offer of marriage years ago because he could never
caress her and he could never feel her touch. This life imprisoned within
an immobile, unfeeling body was sheer torture to him. All dignity was
denied him. He had no independence, no freedom of action. There is no hint
of self-pity or bitterness in his character but the misery of his
situation, his obligation to be eternally grateful to others is clearly
stated in his remark, " When you depend on others for everything, you
learn to cry with a smile." He is also constantly embarrassed because
every private, bodily function is performed with the help of someone else.
He says that "Dependence robs him of intimacy." He is aware that
he is loved by his family, that he is important to them and that his
decision to kill himself must seem very selfish and ungrateful to them after all they have
done for him, but a life without physical freedom, is no life at all and
should be ended. He is a talking head, he says, attached to a lifeless
body, an absurdity.
Assisted suicide is illegal in Spain so Ramon enlisted
the aid of an organisation called Death with Dignity to plead his case with
the Spanish Courts to allow him to die with dignity. They brief a lawyer,
Julia, who is also suffering from a serious degenerative disease to handle
his case. She immediately succumbs to his charm. He understands her plight,
is deeply sympathetic and she feels uplifted by his good-humour and sunny
temperament. She reads his poetry and is impressed by the sincerity and
clarity with which he describes his life as a free spirit shackled to an
immobile body. She decides to find a publisher for his work and together
they start to select and edit his poetry. She becomes very fond of him and
aware of the hopelessness of her own condition, enters into a suicide pact
with him, to be fulfilled when the book is published.
Another woman, Rosa,
has also entered his life, a young factory worker who saw him on
television. A single parent, she is poor, at her wits' end, coping with
full-time work, a house-hold and two demanding children. Depressed and
disillusioned with life herself, she admires his serenity, relaxed
acceptance of his terrible affliction, and on impulse visits him. She needs
someone to talk to, and Ramon seems to be approachable and wise, an older
relative who might bring her comfort. After an initial misunderstanding,
they take to each other, and Rosa falls under his spell. In his presence,
her own troubles seem trivial and his interest in her reassures her of her
own worth. They discuss religion and he explains that he has no belief in
an after-life: "After we die, there is nothing. Just like before we
were born." She is impressed by his sincerity and simple acceptance of
death. She becomes deeply attached to him and
eventually considers him indispensable to her own happiness. Ramon's
tussles with the authorities to allow him to die with dignity is a personal
matter. He is not waging a campaign for the euthanasia lobby nor is he
championing the cause of other quadriplegics who may wish to die. However,
as soon as his case is heard in court, he becomes a controversial figure.
Various interested groups for and against euthanasia, enter the fray. The
Roman Catholic Church, for instance, argues that life is a gift from God and
only God can take it away and since each individual derives his/her dignity
from God, that dignity can never be lost, no matter what the individual's
circumstances may be. Others argue that if euthanasia were ever to be
legalised, it would eventually be used for sinister purposes by
unscrupulous people wishing to rid themselves of burdensome relatives - the
slippery slope argument. Ramon's response in court is, "I think living
is a right, not an obligation. Nevertheless I have been obliged to tolerate
this pitiful existence. Life that costs freedom, isn't life."
The
courts dismissed his case on the grounds that the law quite clearly
prohibited any form of assisted suicide. Frustrated and disappointed, Ramon
addressed an open letter to the legal, religious and political authorities.
He said, "It is not that my conscience finds itself trapped in the
deformity of my atrophied and numb body, but in the deformity, atrophy and
insensitivity of your consciences."
The court's summary dismissal of
his plea, reinforces his decision to die by his own hand. His family being
resolutely against his intention, he leaves home and finds shelter with
Rosa in a little house by the sea, the sea which gave him life and then
took it away again. Rosa loves him deeply. She tries hard to change his
mind but moved by his suffering agrees to let him die in her home.
His book is
published, but Julia has changed her mind about dying. Ramon is now on his
own. Through several friends he obtains poison, others mix it in a glass of
water for him, another places it with a straw beside his head and he drinks
the mixture in front of a video camera in an empty room. No one else is
involved. He chooses to take the drink; he administers the poison himself.
The fact that this film appears now is symptomatic of the growing support
for euthanasia in the Western world. Physician assisted suicide is legal
in Finland, Sweden, The Netherlands, Switzerland and in the American State
of Oregon. Ramon's battle with the Spanish courts echoes that of Diane
Pretty, the British woman who unsuccessfully petitioned the European
Court of Human Rights in Strasbourg to allow her husband to help her commit
suicide and so to die with dignity at a time of her own choosing. Diane
stricken by motor neurone disease and paralysed from the neck down eventually
died in a hospice in May 2002. In December 2004, however. the husband of
another 66 year old British woman suffering from a degenerative, terminal
disease was permitted by the English High Court to accompany her to Zurich
where she committed suicide with the assistance of a physician. In the past
three years, 37 British people have travelled to Switzerland to kill
themselves in the clinic of the Dignitas organisation, which is on the
point of opening premises in the U.K. A major debate is currently taking
place in the House of Lords on the possibility of legalising assisted
suicide.
In spite of all this activity, as yet, there seems to be no
consensus among all the liberal democracies on this matter of euthanasia.
On the one hand there is an acknowledgement that the individual has a right
over whatever concerns himself only. As John Stuart Mill, the great 19th
century champion of liberal democracy, wrote in his essay, 'On Liberty',
"This core sphere where the individual has sovereignty, comprises
first, consciousness, second, liberty of
tastes and pursuits, of framing the plan of one's life to suit one's own
character..... The only freedom which deserves the name is that of
pursuing one's own good in one's own way." A life, in other words,
cannot be a good life unless it is freely chosen and one may choose to end
a life that has been deprived of all dignity or that is made intolerable by
persistent, severe pain. On the other hand is the religious argument,
favoured by the majority of traditional Churches, that human life is sacred
and, therefore, inviolable; and the legal bugbear of the "slippery
slope" effect, that if any form of euthanasia is legalised it will be
impossible to prevent its being extended into areas where it was never
intended to be applied. Opinion is divided among quadriplegics also. The
late Christopher Reed, for instance, the "Superman" actor
paralysed from tbe neck down as a result of a riding accident was as
determined to survive and find a cure for his condition as Ramon was to
die.
Although "The Sea Inside" is clearly in favour of euthanasia it is not a strident
piece of propaganda. Not only does it acknowledge contradictory arguments,
it is also sensitively and discreetly performed. This is not a tear-jerker
- there is much humour, laughter and fun in it nor is it melodrama,
striving for cheap emotional effects, but a restrained, compassionate
portrait of a remarkable man struggling to cope with a nightmarish
existence. It is an uplifting film in that it is life confirming. Ramon,
charismatic and benign, is as much alive as anyone you might ever meet and
paradoxically positive and upbeat in his determination to die. His life is
tragic but never sad or defeated. Eventually, an ethical consensus about
euthanasia will emerge, and the terminally and incurably ill will be
permitted a free choice between life and death according to how they rate
the quality of their life. No doubt the producers of "The Sea
Inside" hope that their work will contribute to this desirable end.
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