In praise of truth, in defence of human
dignity Harold Pinter’s
Nobel Prize Acceptance Speech
Fateh Sheix
There are moments
when a voice comes along and it immediately touches your heart. More
eloquently than one can imagine, it speaks ones mind. Furthermore it
seems that, more or less, it cries out the inner thoughts of many
other people. It comforts you. Harold Pinter’s acceptance speech at
this year’s Nobel Prize award ceremony for literature was one such
voice. An exhilarating call which began by praising the truth and
concluded, spectacularly, with the defence of human dignity.
The 75 year old
Pinter, who was not able to attend the ceremony due to ill health, had
recorded his acceptance speech on a hospital wheelchair. His 46 minute
long speech which was projected onto large screens in an elegant hall
in Stockholm, mesmerised the Swedish aristocracy and the world’s elite
in the field of science and culture. Pinter’s invigorating speech was
not only the most important speech on the day but, from a political
and humanist point of view, was the most important event of the year.
Pinter not only won the best literary prize but also, in one of the
most important gatherings of the year, and against the two major world
reactionary powers, the US and the UK governments, came out as a
political winner.
Pinter is a
prominent English play write. He writes in English but thinks and
writes globally and humane. His literary works have been at the
forefront of drama for the past fifty years and is still a leader in
this field. His subject is the alienated human being in the
contemporary world and her/his attempts to hold on to human identity
and humanity against the imposed capitalist alienation. Pinter’s
political views and stance have always been intertwined with his
avant-garde artistic works. He has, in the past 15 years, used
political satire as an effective weapon in his battle against the US
military aggression. In one of his recent works he satirically
describes his battle against the US’s “New World Order” as we have not
yet accomplished our task; we have not even started.
Pinter’s speech,
under the title of “Art, Truth and Politics”, starts from dealing with
the concept of truth in Art (and in particular drama in his case) and
step by step enters into the domain of politics, the ruling powers,
politicians and the statesmen and unravels the relationship between
truth and power and states that the ruling powers are not interested
in truth but in power. Truth and power for the leaders of the world,
in Pinter’s view, are poles apart. Feeding the people with a tapestry
of lies, with all the means and resources at their disposal, serves to
assert and maintain their power. From here Pinter leads onto the
invasion of Iraq by the US and the UK forces and all the lies on the
weapons of mass destruction and the dangers that Saddam posed. Pinter
asserts that all these pretexts were lies and the invasion of Iraq was
to do with how the US perceives its role in the world and how it
chooses to embody it. Pinter goes on to criticise the US foreign
policy since the end of the Second World War and sheds light on its
atrocities. Pinter highlights the tragedy of Nicaragua and the
widespread US support for the Contra forces as an example and returns
to the invasion of Iraq and calls it a blatant act of state terrorism
and openly calls for George Bush and Tony Blair to be brought before
the international Court of Justice for committing mass murders and war
crimes.
At the end of
his speech, Pinter once again returns to man and truth, and calls on
the world and says: “If such a determination is not embodied in our
political vision we have no hope of restoring what is so nearly lost
to us – the dignity of man”.
The ability to
pour out and express one’s inner feelings, thoughts and sentiments is
a precious gift. Harold Pinter uses his gift to embody his fifty years
of artistic, literary and political works, in his radical message. He
is the legacy of the optimistic decades of fifties and sixties that is
inviting the current generation to assume its radical and avant-garde
and humanity position; particularly at the time when it is not easy to
be an optimist in the face of all miseries surrounding us. This ray of
hope and optimism must be cherished.
For me who
follows the political developments in Iran from a humanistic and
communist perspective, I find it an exhilarating and meaningful
similarity between the content of the Pinter’s speech and the Tehran
University students’ statement on December 11, 2005, on the occasion
of the Students Day in Iran.* The timing of these two events could
have been a coincident, but the two events were responses to one and
the same need: the need of the world civilized humanity, and the
global need of the human being to revolutionise the existing world, to
turn the world on its head.
* The
translated text of this statement is printed in this issue of KOMONIST-
Please see page X