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- <text id=93TT1401>
- <title>
- Apr. 12, 1993: A Moral Mystery:Serbian Self-Pity
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- Apr. 12, 1993 The Info Highway
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- ESSAY, Page 84
- A Moral Mystery: Serbian Self-Pity
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>By Lance Morrow
- </p>
- <p> The President's lunch in Belgrade dragged on for hours,
- into the gloomy Balkan dusk. The bruised voice across the
- banquet table belonged to an interpreter--off duty for the
- moment--a thin, brittle woman with black circles under her
- eyes. She smoked cigarettes one after another, down to the
- knuckle. She said she had not slept in days. Outrage burst from
- her mouth in agitated spurts of smoke: How could the world be
- so stupid? How could the media be so evil? How could everyone
- treat the Serbs--the Serbs, of all people!--so unfairly?
- </p>
- <p> The air tasted of some heavy, acrid East European woe.
- Beside the woman, a Serbian political journalist--a dandy in
- houndstooth jacket, wearing Jean-Paul Sartre glasses--nodded
- angry agreement and flicked ashes onto the fish carcass on his
- plate.
- </p>
- <p> Here might be a key to a moral mystery. I had wondered for
- months how in the face of the world's almost unanimous
- condemnation and disgust, the Serbs could keep up a war
- conducted by rape, murder and the starvation of whole cities.
- "Ethnic cleansing" has generated the worst public relations
- problem since Pol Pot went into politics: How do the Serbs keep
- on? How do they explain themselves to themselves?
- </p>
- <p> The Serbs have found an amazing solution: they feel sorry
- for themselves. They marinate in self-pity. In their own minds,
- they have solved their formidable moral problem by declaring
- themselves the injured party. An artful, if disgraceful display
- of jujitsu; this is a tactic one encounters in wife beaters and
- child abusers, who ingeniously manage to convince themselves, if
- not the authorities, that they were driven to it by the
- terrible behavior of their victims. A filthy conscience often
- goes to hide in the refuge of self-pity.
- </p>
- <p> The Serbs have other means to talk themselves into an
- attitude of aggrieved innocence. The Belgrade television
- stations endlessly show atrocity scenes, dramas displaying Serbs
- as victims, with grinning Muslim devils holding the severed
- heads of Serbs. The truly accomplished ethnic self-pitier
- projects all around him as a siege of malevolent conspiracy.
- </p>
- <p> Self-pity is one ingredient in the black brew. Slivovitz,
- plum brandy, taken in great quantities, starting at breakfast
- time, is another; alcohol numbs the conscience and lubricates
- the trigger finger. The sacrament of slivovitz--though some
- get there without it--helps keep Serbs, both fighters and
- sideline supporters--in that fourth dimension of tribal
- passion where heroic patriotism and great atrocity become
- equally possible. This is the dimension of tribal memory,
- drifting in time, across centuries. Grievances float through the
- dimension like ghosts, crying out for justice--for the Serbs
- whom the Croats massacred during the Hitler years, say, or for
- those Serbs who died at the Battle of Kosovo in 1389, when they
- stood against the Muslims' westward tide toward Vienna and tried
- to save ungrateful Europe. The fourth dimension is the blood
- dimension, the great tribal justifier.
- </p>
- <p> Mobs have an evil dynamic. An ethnic tribe, at its worst,
- is a supermob. A sense of narcissistic self-pity that is merely
- contemptible in an individual is transformed to heroism in the
- tribal context: a fierce, virtuous assertion of the group. That
- is why ethnic grievance--a rising force in so much of the
- world--is so dangerous. When the subjective goes tribal, the
- self-indulgence of one man or woman comes frighteningly alive,
- collective, suddenly legitimized, glorious even. What would be
- individual shame now blossoms into shamelessness. The weak and
- vicious transfer their worst defects to the larger cause
- (Greater Serbia, perhaps). Thus does self-pity become selfless
- and, by this magic, righteous. And thus a brute killer portrays
- himself as a victim, who is therefore infinitely justified.
- Ethnic cleansing is merely injured virtue catching up. Nothing
- is more empowering, as they say, than being a victim. It is the
- Rolls-Royce of self-justifications, a plenary indulgence. W.H.
- Auden described it as if it were one of Newton's laws: "Those
- to whom evil is done/ do evil in return."
- </p>
- <p> In any case, self-pity congeals to make a hard shell. The
- Serbs are indifferent to mere world opinion. Their leaders have
- manipulated them to obduracy. So Bosnia becomes another parable
- (savoring ominously of the '30s) of the primary human mystery,
- the beast potential in everyone. Sometimes the beast can be
- talked out--negotiated out--and calmed and recivilized. But
- the bully-beast loves to play with the people's hopeful
- illusions. Sometimes the beast, once risen among us, needs to
- be beaten until it is helpless to harm any longer. Sometimes it
- simply needs to be killed.
- </p>
- <p> Will anyone drive the beast out of Bosnia? The terror of
- getting involved is powerful. The craven thought is that one
- Bosnia begets another. But Bosnia will happen again and again
- elsewhere unless this one is stopped. Europe should have
- undertaken the job. But the Europeans long ago exhausted
- themselves in sponsoring such projects as colonialism and two
- world wars. They have ended up smug, fat-bottomed and morally
- useless.
- </p>
- <p> Who then? The U.S., leading the U.N.? Perhaps. Or is it
- all too late? The least that America should do, for now, is to
- end the arms embargo that has kept the Bosnian Muslims from
- defending themselves against the ruthless "victims" from Serbia.
- </p>
- <p> Some of us thought that the coming of electronic glasnost
- to the global village would bring a reign of sunshine in which
- the germs of atrocity would have trouble surviving. We were
- wrong. The germs can flourish in the light. How many divisions
- does CNN have?
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-