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Two Peace Heroes Brought Together
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PARADE From the Parade Archieve
Date: 12/27/1987 Author: Elie Wiesel
What Really Makes Us Free
During this particular time of the year, inevitably our thoughts turn to peace. What is
peace, though, without freedom--and what really makes us free? We asked Elie Wiesel--author,
educator, lecturer, moral leader, winner of the 1986 Nobel Peace Prize and the Congressional
Gold Medal of Achievement--to explore these questions. Here are his reflections, and perhaps
some answers.
Does there exist a nobler inspiration than the desire to be free? It is by his freedom that
a man knows himself, by his sovereignty over his own life that a man measures himself. To
violate that freedom, to flout that sovereignty, is to deny man the right to live his life,
to take responsibility for himself with dignity.
Man, who was created in God's image, wants to be free as God is free: free to choose between
good and evil, love and vengeance, life and death. All the great religions proclaim this. The
first law after the Ten Commandments had to do with slavery: It prohibited not only owning
slaves but also entering into slavery voluntarily. One who gave up his freedom was punished.
To put it another way: Every man was free, but no man was free to give up his freedom.
To strip a man of his freedom is not to believe in man. The dictator does not believe in man.
Man's freedom frightens him. Imprisoned as much by his ambition as by his terror, the dictator
defines his own freedom in relation to the lack of freedom of others. He feels free only
because, and when, other people--his subjects, his victims--are not free. The happiness of
others prevents him from being happy himself. Every free man is his adversary, every
independent thought renders him impotent.
Caligula felt sure of his won intelligence only when faced with his counselors' stupidity;
Stalin derived morbid pleasure from the humiliations he inflicted on his ministers; Hitler
liked to insult his generals. Every dictator sees others as potential prisoners or victims--
and every dictator ends by being his own prisoner and his own victim. For anyone who claims
the right to deprive others of their right to freedom and happiness deprives himself of both.
By putting his adversaries in prison, his entire country will be one vast jail. And the jailer
is no more free than his prisoners.
In fact, it is often the prisoner who is truly free. In a police state, the hunted man
represents the ideal of freedom; the condemned man honors it. As Jean-Paul Sartre said,
in Occupied France, the only free people were those in prison. These men and women rejected
the comfort of submission and chose to resist the forces of oppression. When they were put
in prison, they no longer had anything to fear. They knew they were lost.
When the great French humorist Tristan Bernard was arrested by the Germans after months in
hiding, his fellow prisoners were surprised by his smiling face. "How can you smile?" they
asked. "Until now, I have lived in fear," he said. "From now on, I will live in hope."
For the free man is open to hope, whereas the dictator is a man without hope. It is because
his victims cling to hope that he persecutes them. It is because they believe in freedom as
much as they do in life itself that he is determined to deprive them of both. Sometimes he
succeeds, but more often he fails. For, in dying, the free man reaffirms the value of life
and freedom.
We find many examples in the tales told about all revolutionary movements, in the histories
of every struggle for national independence. Heroes and martyrs became the pride of their
people by fighting with a weapon in their hand or a prayer on their lips. In a thousand
different ways, each proclaimed that freedom alone gives meaning to the life of an
individual or a people.
For a people--that is, for a social, ethnic or religious group--the problem and its solution
are both simple. When a people loses its freedom, it has a right, a duty, to employ every
possible means to win it back. The same is true of the individual--with one difference: An
individual's resistance can be expressed in more than one way.
The Jews who lived in the ghettos under the Nazi occupation showed their independence by
leading an organized clandestine life. The teacher who taught the starving children was
a free man. The nurse who secretly cared for the wounded, the ill and the dying was free
woman. The rabbi who prayed, the disciple who studied, the father who gave his bread to
his children, the children who risked their lives by leaving the ghetto at night in order
to bring back to their parents a piece of bread or a few potatoes, the man who consoled his
orphaned friend, the orphan who wept with a stranger for a stranger--these were human beings
filled with an unquenchable thirst for freedom and dignity. The young people who dreamed of
armed insurrection, the lovers who, a moment before they were separated, talked about their
bright future together, the insane who wrote poems, the chroniclers who wrote down the day's
events by the liight of their flickering candles--all of them were free in the noblest sense
of the word, though their prison walls seemed impassable and their executioners invincible.
It was the same even in the death camps. Defeated and downcast, overcome by fatigue and
anguish, tormented and tortured day after day, hour after hour, even in their sleep,
condemned to a slow but certain death, the prisoners nevertheless managed to carve out a
patch of freedom for themselves. Every memory became a protest against the system; every
smile wa a call to resist; every human act turned into a struggle against the torturer's
philosophy.
Do not misunderstand me: I am in no way trying to minimize the Nazis' maleficent power.
I am not saying that all prisoners succeeded in opposing them by their will to be free.
On the contrary, locked with a suffereing and solitude unlinke any other, the prisoners
generally could only adapt to their condition--and either be submerged by it or carried
along by time. The apparatus of murder was too perfect not to crush people weakened by
hunger, forced labor and punishment. But I am saying that the executioner did not always
triumph. Among his victims were some who placed freedom above what constituted their lives.
Some managed to escape and alert the public in the free world. Others organized a solidarity
movement within the inferno itself. One companion of mine in the camps gave the man next to
him a spoonful of soup every day at work. Another would try to amuse us with stories. Yet
another would urge us not to forget our names--one way, among many other, of saying "no"
to the enemy, of showing that we were free, freer than the enemy.
Without trying to compare different periods or regimes--one has no right to compare anything
to Auschwitz--I want to tell about a struggle for freedom that still is going on in our
world today, mainly in the Soviet Union. I cannot write a meditation on freedom without
referring to it. Ever since I learned about this struggle in 1965, I have participated
in it with all my heart and soul.
In 1965, at the time of my first trip to Moscow, I met thousands of young Jews who had
gathered before the city's largest synagogue on the evening of Simchat Torah (the
celebration of the Law) to dance and sing their faith--which they freely proclaimed--in
the Jewish people. They were the first Soviet citizens to free themselves from the police
terror. I never will forget our meeting. I made their fight my own. Their love, their
passion for freedom, inspires my own.
For the Soviet Jews, writing, translating, reading and studying are free and liberating
acts. By passing the word on, as by living the fatih, they are integrated into an ancient
collective experience and memory. Suddenly they are less alone, less vulnerable. Thus we
have the bravery of people like Prof. Alexander Lerner and Dr. Alexander Ioffe--people who
have been waiting 17 years for visas that would allow them to live an authentic Jewish life
among their own people in the land of Israel.
Each of these modern heroes, the "Refuseniks," already has paid a high price for his or her
desire to abandon everything and start over again far away. How can one help admiring them?
During the many years they have lived as outsiders, spurned by their old neighbors or
colleagues, how have they managed not to lose their courage? How do all these courageous
Jews, as well as the non-Jewish political dissidents, manage to preserve tehir faith, not
to speak of their sanity? More simply, how do they manage to remain human?
For the are, all of them, human. Their humanity is moving, even staggering, their
solidarity exemplary. The ways in which they help one another have to be seen. If a man
is arrested, the others immediately organize an action in his support. If a woman is in
pain, they rush to her side. They are always there for one another. And here again tehir
act, their being there, is a free act.
The truth is that even in a climate of oppression, men are capable of inventing their own
freedom, of creating their own ideal of sovereignty. What if they are a minority? It does
not matter. Even if only one free individual is left, he will be proof that the dictator
is powerless against freedom. But a free man is never alone; the dictator is alone. The
free man is the one who, even in prison, gives to the other prisoners their thirst for,
their memory of, freedom.
I went to the Soviet Union for the fourth time last October. In a private apartment
somewhere in Moscow, in a crowd of 100 or so Refuseniks, a man still young addressed
me shyly: "A few years ago," he said, "I decided to translate your first three books
in samizdat [the illicit publication of banned literature in the USSR]. Friends and I
distributed thousands of copies, but I knew I would meet you someday, so I kept the
first copy. Here it is." Blusing, he held it out to me, and I felt like embracing him
in thanks for both his courage and his devotion. An hour later, in the same apartment
but in a different room, an older man came up to me: "I have something for you," he said,
smiling. "A few years ago, I translated your first three books. I kept one copy. I knew
I would meet you someday." I took him by the arm and introduced him to the first translator.
They fell into each other's arms, crying. Yes--joy makes people weep. Freedom does too.