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When Vaclav Havel was elected president of a
Czechoslovakia just emerging
from the Velvet Revolution in December 1989, Western observers were
intrigued
by the idea of a dissident playwright turned politician. In fact, in
the
following interview we do see a politician with a human face, one who
is
willing to engage "on record" the complexities of his intellectual
and social life rather than to retreat behind euphemism, doublespeak,
or
vacuous generality. But-even more importantly-we see that for the most
part
the underlying motifs of his life have remained constant, that Vaclav
Havel
the head of state is still the same individual who became known to the
world
first as independent playwright and social conscience.
Born in 1936, Vaclav Havel appeared on the
Czechoslovak cultural scene
as early as 1956, when as an aspiring young writer he took advantage of
Khrushchev's post-Stalin "thaw," which to varying degrees was
taking place in the U.S.S.R. and in Poland, Hungary, and
Czechoslovakia.
Havel's first published text was a letter to the editor of the new
literary
magazine Kveten, challenging the magazine's claim that it really had
jettisoned
the strictures of socialist realism. This outspoken critique of the
official
literary culture was then followed by an outspoken address at an
official
gathering of new writers at the Dobris Writers' House outside Prague.
Raised in an educated, upper-middle class family,
Havel as a child was
steeped in the democratic traditions of the first Czechoslovak
Republic,
founded at the end of the World War I. Unfortunately, due to his
"bourgeois"
background, Havel's attempts to enter the university were repeatedly
thwarted
by the communist regime. Nonetheless, he discovered his love for the
theatre
early on, first while serving an obligatory two-year stint in the army
(1957-59),
and then briefly as a stagehand at the ABC Theatre in Prague. In 1960
he
joined the Theatre on the Balustrade, again initially as a stagehand,
and
ultimately as its literary advisor, a position he held until his
resignation
in the summer of 1968. It was during his years at the Balustrade that
Havel
seriously began writing plays. The first to be produced, The Garden
Party,
had its premiere there in December 1963, followed by The Memorandum in
July
1965-the latter receiving the prestigious Obie Award when it was staged
in New York in 1968. By the mid-60s Havel was also prominently involved
in the developing scene of literary politics, as Czechoslovakia
experienced
the gradual liberalization that would culminate in the Prague Spring,
followed
by the Soviet-led invasion in August 1968. He also managed to complete
a
university degree at Prague's Academy of Performing Arts in 1967.
With the suppression of Alexander Dubcek's
"socialism with a human
face" and the post-invasion onset of "normalization," Havel
and his colleagues found themselves turned into virtual internal
exiles.
In his book-length interview with Karel Hvizdala (published abroad in
Czech
in 1986 as Dalkovy vyslech [A Long-Distance Hearing], but in the 1990
English
translation entitled Disturbing the Peace ), Havel referred to those
years
as "an era of apathy and widespread demoralization. . . , an era of
gray, everyday totalitarian consumerism." He spent most of his time
at Hradecek, his family's cottage in the Krkonose Mountains, writing
and
meeting regularly with friends from the intelligentsia. They even held
unofficial
writers' congresses there every summer. Yet Havel longed for more. In
1974,
partly from malaise, he went to work for ten months in a local brewery,
an experience which inspired the play The Audience (1975), in which he
created
the character, Ferdinand Vanek, who soon attained within Czech
alternative
culture a celebrity akin to that of Jaroslav Hasek's classic Good
Soldier
Svejk.
Then, with the writing of his open letter to
Dubcek's hardline successor
as president, Gustav Husak, a document which circulated widely in
samizdat,
Havel again became openly and actively engaged in the political and
cultural
arena. For example, he helped found Charter 77, the Czechoslovak human
rights
organization that served as the focus of resistance to the communist
regime
until its demise in November 1989-but not before Havel had been
sentenced
for his activism to four and a half years in jail, of which he served
all
but a year. It was there he wrote his Letters to Olga, philosophical
musings
in the guise of correspondence with his wife.
To his role as president Havel has brought the
moral and existential
concerns that have been with him from the start. If earlier he was a
political
playwright and philosophical essayist, now he may be seen as a
philosophical
politician. Certainly he is atypical among his fellow heads of state.
At
the same time, however, within a specifically Czech context, it is
perhaps
not so surprising that a playwright might become president, given the
legacy
of the founder of the first Czechoslovak Republic, the professor Tomas
G.
Masaryk.
The interview that follows was conducted and
translated into Polish by
Andrzej Jagodzinski, the Czech and Slovak correspondent of the Warsaw
newspaper
Gazeta wyborcza, currently the leading Polish daily, and appeared in
Gazeta
wyborcza on October 19, 1993, on the eve of Havel's trip to Warsaw on
an
official state visit to discuss with Polish President Lech Walesa the
issue
of Czech and Polish entrance into NATO. It might seem ironic that the
content
of such an interview would involve the personal side of
Havel-especially
at a time when he is grappling with the enormous complexities of
political
transition within post-Cold War Central Europe. But Havel, indeed,
seems
constantly to emphasize the human measure of all things. His recent
remarks
upon receiving the Philadelphia Liberty Medal at Independence Hall
(July
1994) also come to mind, echoing a theme that has run consistently
through
his essays and, implicitly, his plays: ". . . in today's multicultural
world, the truly reliable path to peaceful co-existence and creative
cooperation
must start from what is at the root of all cultures and what lies
infinitely
deeper in human hearts and minds than political opinion, convictions,
antipathies
or sympathies: it must be rooted in self-transcendence."-Elena Sokol,
Wooster, Ohio, August 9, 1994
Andrzej Jagodzinski: Except for
a short interruption, you have
already been president of the Czech Republic for almost four years. One
of your closest associates until fairly recently, Prince Jan Karel
Schwarzenberk,
said in an interview with the Czech Playboy that if a person wants to
dedicate
himself to politics, he must be willing to come to actual decisions, to
defend them and be willing to pay for them. Have you somehow had to pay
for your entrance to politics?
Vaclav Havel: I think I've paid
doubly. First, I am aware of a
great responsibility for every decision and every step I take,
something
that constantly weighs down on my nervous system. Moreover, compared to
that earlier time when I could say whatever I wanted, now I must choose
my words diplomatically. I never lie, but nonetheless I am forced to
use
a different language, because in politics there is no other way. I
admit
that for a long time I could not get used to this.
AJ: How much did your going
into politics change you as a person?
Havel: In this matter others
should be the ones to say, because
I certainly am not able to judge everything. But since you ask, I'll
reply
that in my opinion I haven't changed, that I'm still the same.
AJ: Then maybe we should use a
concrete example. After the appearance
of Charter 77 you moved within a community of people threatened by the
communist
regime, people who due to this threat were very close to each other.
After
the Velvet Revolution, this situation had to change. Has anything
remained
among you from those former ties?
Havel: Of course, I'm not in a
position now to meet with friends
as often as before, because each day I have a horribly full schedule of
activities. Nevertheless I strive not to lose contact with them, and it
seems to me that nothing has changed in our relationships as friends. I
don't hide the fact, though, that there is one group of former friends
with
whom my relationship has considerably cooled. I believe, though, that
the
fault has not been mine-and if so, then only a little. They just
couldn't
understand that I couldn't go out for beer every evening. And they took
from this the conclusion that I was either alienating myself or that I
had
soared up to the heights of power someplace. Several even think I've
betrayed
the original group. They act like scorned lovers, and in some of them
the
love has turned to hate. Then they criticize me in public for all
mistakes
real and imagined, when actually at the heart of every criticism they
make
is the feeling I have cast them off.
AJ: In fairy tales the leader
is often very lonely. But could
it be that what you are lacking is a moment of solitude?
Havel: I don't feel lonely.
Just the opposite. It's a difficult
struggle to find a moment for myself-that just for an hour I could sit
by
myself in a bar and think, or to have the luxury of being alone for an
entire
weekend so that I could read or write something. A speech, of course,
since
I no longer write anything else. I am most certainly not some lonely
ruler,
shut up inside my castle.
AJ: Let's back up to the time
of your childhood. Today, in fact,
you took part with your brother Ivan in a promotion for the memoirs of
your
father, Vaclav Milos Havel. I should add for my readers that your
father
was a well known Prague building contractor, the creator of not only a
prominent
entertainment-restaurant complex but also the Barrandov residential
district,
and that alongside your uncle (the creator of the Barrandov Film
Studios)
and grandfather (the creator of the art nouveau Lucerna Palace) he has
gained
for himself a permanent place in the history of Czech architecture.
Havel: The entire atmosphere of
my family home had its effect
on me. Above all my parents, of course, but also my grandfather, the
family
friends, the family traditions and home library. My father was friends
with
many prominent intellectuals of the interwar period, and as a result I
grew
up within the ideological climate of Masaryk humanism. Thanks to this
as
well as to my early reading I had favorable conditions for a good start.
AJ: You are the first and as of
right now the only Czech politician
to disclose your personal assets. What prompted you to do this?
Havel: Various speculations and
rumors about my assets were reaching
me. To many people it seemed strange that I-someone who always would
laugh
when the communists swore I was fighting them because I wanted the
return
of my family property, and someone to whom it honestly seemed a joke
that
I could ever become a private entrepreneur-that all of a sudden after
the
re-privatization I would in fact become joint-owner of the old family
businesses.
This might very well seem paradoxical, inconsistent or contradictory to
someone. Moreover, I believe that the private assets of politicians
should
be universally known, especially in our situation. In the West it's a
matter
of course that politicians should disclose their personal finances. For
instance the wife of the President of the USA must account publicly for
every new outfit. It should be even more like that with us, since such
a
huge transformation of the means of ownership is being brought about
right
now. It's essential to remove any suspicion that someone who has
political
influence might abuse this power for personal gain and might
participate
in the privatization process in an unclean way.
AJ: In the book, Disturbing the
Peace, you admit to being influenced
by the counter-culture of the 1960s. To the present day I still run
into
you at rock concerts-the Rolling Stones, Velvet Underground, Frank
Zappa,
Paul Simon. What do you notice in their music? And what do you talk
about
during your private get-togethers with them before or after the
concerts?
Are these only courtesy calls?
Havel: When I meet with such
famous rock stars, our conversation
touches on all sorts of subjects, and in general we talk less about
music
than we do politics, because their opinion on various events interests
me.
Of course I belong to a generation upon whom rock and roll exerted a
tremendous
influence. And I also must say that in my case Poland played a
substantial
role. In the mid-50s, when rock hadn't yet caught on very much in
Prague,
in Poland after October 56 it was already being played everywhere. In
1957
I went for the first time to the Polish Wybrzeze Festival for a ten-day
vacation. My wife Olga and I went every day to the bars or clubs, where
the rock music would be pounding out and we would dance like crazy to
the
next morning. They didn't call those places discos yet. All of this is
still
a very pleasant and vivid recollection for me.
AJ: In 1976 you came to the
defense of the Czech rock group Plastic
People of the Universe, which was being persecuted then.
Havel: This group did not
enjoy the respect of any of the artistic
or intellectual circles, which looked upon its members as lunatics,
eccentrics,
long-haired out-of-control dilettantes. But I knew it would be hard for
these upstanding philosophers or writers or former politicians,
especially
the older ones, to get caught up in this type of music. Several of
these
intellectuals would ask me, "Are those truly important people? They
drink beer, they have long hair." I felt, however, that in their work
there was a valid expression of the experiences and emotions of a
generation
younger than mine. And, besides, they were being wronged and needed our
solidarity. So this gave me an even greater incentive to get involved
and
I was able to convince many colleagues as well. And also, thanks to
this
experience with solidarity, soon Charter 77 was to appear.
AJ: Also thanks to this you
were able to organize in the barn
of your summer house in Hradecek several Festivals of Alternative
Culture.
Havel: There were three or four
of these shows, in fact. Every
one of them was held in dramatic circumstances, because it was
necessary
to keep them under wraps from the police for as long as possible. As a
result
the majority of the participants didn't know until the last minute
where
they would actually be travelling to. From each group only one person
would
know, while the mission of the conspiratorial "cell" was to coordinate
the routes so that the groups would all reach Hradecek from different
directions,
but more or less at the same time, so that the police would not be able
to move in and seal off entrance to the house. There was a lot of drama
involved while it was happening, but now it's rather pleasant to recall.
AJ: What kind of music do you
listen to now, when by chance you
have a moment of time?
Havel: I don't have any time as
a rule, but I still listen to
music. Most often it's in the car, while I'm going somewhere, and I
listen
to different things, depending on my mood. Most often it's rock
standards
from the 60s or jazz, but it can also be Mozart or Honegger.
AJ: And what do you do to amuse
yourself?
Havel: Speaking frankly, I'd say my work now is at
times unbelievably
amusing, but I won't be writing anything about this until later and
only
under the condition that it will appear 50 years after my death. But,
despite
my numerous obligations, I do sometimes find a moment free for pure
amusement
or play. For example, today I'm going to the premier of Jurassic Park.
AJ: What kind of place does the
theater hold in your life today?
Havel: I have an assistant here
at the Castle, who looks after
my contact with the theater for me. About every two months I take in a
show,
which I select with great care. I can't allow myself to do it more
often.
AJ: In 1989, when you hosted
Adam Michnik and some other Polish
colleagues at your house in Hradecek, you treated them to some homemade
goulash. Do you like to cook? What is your specialty?
Havel: I don't consider myself
any expert of the culinary art,
but I do love to cook. I treat it as a possible way to relax, and I
gladly
let it open up my imagination. I wouldn't enjoy cooking that involved
following
recipes at all, whereas the testing of different combinations and
mixtures
is exciting and dramatic. I never know for certain if what I've made
will
be edible.
AJ: Hradecek. A small house in
the Krkonose Mountains near the
foot of Snezka. It's a place inextricably bound up with the history of
the
Czech opposition in the 70s and 80s. Do you still go there? What is
Hradecek
for you today?
Havel: Hradecek is too far from
Prague to travel there for a day,
but whenever I have just a few days free, it is there I like to spend
them.
I am rooted with this place, if only because it was there that I wrote
all
of my most important texts of the past twenty-five years. Together with
my wife I lived through a thousand different things there-fun,
pleasant,
dramatic, sad. It's the place I consider to be my real home, and it's
the
only place where I can be a private person these days. Prague's Castle
or
the Palace in Lany always remind me that I'm the President. Only
Hradecek
has nothing in common with all this.
AJ: With the exception of the
guard detail, perhaps-though you
also had one at Hradecek earlier. . .
Havel: Yes, though my present
guards are considerably better and
nicer than the earlier ones, the secret police ones.
AJ: In your play The Audience,
Ferdinand Vanek divulges that he
isn't an excessive fancier of beer, but prefers wine. What about you?
Havel: It depends on the mood
and the circumstances. At times
I have a taste for a noisy beer-hall, while at another time I'll prefer
a cozy little wine cellar. It also depends on whom I'm meeting. If for
example
I was meeting with some minister or other in a packed beer-hall, then
we
wouldn't get very many things talked through.
AJ: In your Letters to Olga you
don't write one word about personal
sentiments, while in Disturbing the Peace you came out with an
extremely
beautiful expression of the emotional and spiritual bonds still
connecting
you with your wife:
It seems it's been two hundred years since Olga
and I expressed our love
to each other, yet despite this we still feel inextricably bound. . . .
My whole life I have consulted her on everything, though scoffers claim
I am just demanding acquiescence from her to the sins with which I have
caused her pain, and that I consult her only about the problems I've
heaped
on myself by my periodic "rebounds" of affection.
AJ: Have your present
professional lives influenced your relationship?
Havel: Not to a great degree.
We see each other more rarely, but
nothing in our relationship has changed otherwise. When we are
together,
I tell about something that has happened and if necessary my wife will
critique
my actions just as before. And I continue to listen gladly to her
criticisms.
Frankly, it has amazed me that in the time since she became First Lady
my
wife has not changed one bit. She is still just the same, with the same
habits as before, and has not tried to act all-powerful. Even if she is
being harsh or unpleasant in regards to someone, it's not because she's
now the president's wife, but because this is the way she has been all
her
life.
AJ: There have been many
beautiful women working in the Presidential
Chancellory. What meaning do women have for your personal life? Is this
influence significant?
Havel: I don't dare speak out
on the role of women in my personal
life, but I won't try to avoid your question, either. Politics is
principally
a male domain, especially in the Czech Republic. When suddenly I broke
into
politics and found myself in a world of men, I missed the female
element.
I needed a bit of female warmth. That is why I've always tried to have
women
amongst my closest advisors. At first there were even two women in my
guard
detail, two absolute gems, top quality sharpshooters. But now I have
opened
my eyes to realize a life in high-level politics is a little
reminiscent
of my situation in prison-where you're a man alone among other men.
AJ: Have you given any thought
about what you will do when you
are no longer President?
Havel: It's fairly clear. And
it doesn't require any special thought.
I'll take a rest and travel around the world like a common tourist. And
I'll write.
AJ: Plays, also?
Havel: Also.
(Translated from the Polish by Daniel Bourne)
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