Andreas Broeckmann on Thu, 20 May 1999 08:57:46 +0100 |
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Syndicate: <nettime> The Unanswered Phone Pt. 4 'Warmth of Strangers' |
Date: Thu, 20 May 1999 10:18:36 +1000 From: Kevin Murray <kmurray@mira.net> 'the house belongs to god and his guest' Leke Dukagjini Kanuni (trans. Leonard Fox) New York: Gjonleka Publishing Company, 1989 (orig. 1933) Two Melbourne stories of 'icing on a burnt cake': WARMTH OF STRANGERS Australia has made space for at least 2,000 Kosovar refugees. They are being greeted with an extraordinary display. Political leaders have turned out to welcome the dazed refugees as they stumble off the plane. The Prime Minister was photographed hugging a weary unshaven Kosovar. At Melbourne airport, the Premier of Victoria, which has the largest proportion of Albanians, went to the length of having the words of welcome 'mire se na erdhet' written on his hand. But an Albanian beat him to it, busting out of the plane with 'Good morning everyone'-the three words of English that he had practiced on the plane journey. On Monday 17th May, the popular daily newspaper Herald Sun had its first ever headline in Albanian 'Welcome to Victoria, Mirse erdhet nÃ? Victori'. Inside were headlines: 'Kosovars in from the cold', 'Barriers tumble as hearts rejoice', 'Tears flow for loved ones'. Under the heading 'Winning words' were ten Albanian greetings with phonetic pronunciations. (see http://home/mira.net/~kmurray/kosmelb.htm' for image) Much attention to directed to the country army base where Victorian Kosovars are housed. Shooting of rifles has been cancelled for the first few days, and its name has been changed to 'Haven Centre'. There are kangaroos and emus in the vicinity. Responses to these strange creatures have been monitored, and newcomers are advised light-heartedly not to feed the wildlife. As one of the most isolated nations in the world, the Kosovars offer the opportunity to reconfigure Australia from a 'backwater' to a 'haven'. The unparalleled attention given to their arrival provides a collective expression of the 'good life' that can now be appreciated here. There is a powerful undercurrent of relief in offering sanctuary to these battered people-not only for Kosovars, but also for Australians themselves. For several years, popularist racism under the leadership of Pauline Hansen has created an atmosphere of distrust towards strangers. Here finally was an opportunity to share the enjoyment of life in Australia with those who might really need it. THE WARMTH OF NEIGHBOURS Susanna's sister visited her home in MitroviÃ?a. Her Serb neighbour in Pristina travelled to MitroviÃ?a every day. She told her that her home was about to be occupied by Serbs. They travelled together in the neighbour's car. When she arrived at her house, she covered the broken windows with black plastic, recovered her belongings, and asked Albanian neighbours to occupy her home in her absence. She made it back to Pristina safely. She was able to report to that the parents of Susanna's husband were still alive. Susanna's 15-year-old brother died of stress. He had been living in a state of shock since the bombing began and had sustained extreme levels of blood pressure. Susanna's other brother had to organise with the hospital for a permit to bury him. In the hospital, the brother saw many bodies of young Albanians lying unburied. He recognised many of them, and knew their parents were unaware of their current state. They were crawling with worms. He would not tell Susanna any more-'Don't make me talk more.' Susanna's mother refuses to show any weakness, and talks of how they will all be together when it is over. Susanna has been translating for refugees during the medical checks on their arrival in Sydney. She says she can't really feel her brother's death, and 'soon it will hit me. One day I will sit down and write a book.' Still she manages to maintain daily phone contact with her family in Pristina-'I can't start the day without having fresh information'. We joke about the way Australians are learning Albanian, and how her job as translator might soon be redundant. What was a devastating tragedy is almost becoming a way of life. Maybe the real grief is waiting for the tragedy to be over. --- # distributed via nettime-l : no commercial use without permission # <nettime> is a closed moderated mailinglist for net criticism, # collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets # more info: majordomo@desk.nl and "info nettime-l" in the msg body # URL: http://www.desk.nl/~nettime/ contact: nettime-owner@desk.nl ------Syndicate mailinglist-------------------- Syndicate network for media culture and media art information and archive: http://www.v2.nl/syndicate to unsubscribe, write to <syndicate-request@aec.at> in the body of the msg: unsubscribe your@email.adress