(originally
published in The Outreach Connection
in July 1997) (obviously at a very specific time in modern Canadian history – a
referendum on independence for Quebec had failed very narrowly in 1995, and the
risk of a second, successful attempt at it felt very high).
It’s obvious by now
that I can hardly articulate my thoughts, except by referring to movies. But
then, why would I need to, when fate (or as the case may be, Alliance, Norstar
and so forth) keeps delivering such eerily topical stimulation to our local
screens.
Last Friday night I
had some drinks and, the way the conversation went, I ended up getting all
depressed about Quebec. The next afternoon, clear-headed again, I went to see Broken English, a new film directed by
Gregor Nicholas. This movie tells us (a) that diverse societies can be hell,
(b) that they needn’t be, and (c) that either way, it’s better than the
alternative.
The alternative, in Broken English, is war. In one of the
more idiosyncratic melting pots I’ve encountered in a movie-going life, based
largely on the search for diversity, the movie presents a family of Croatian
refugees, living in New Zealand, and the consequences when one of the daughters
(played with effective sexiness by Aleksandra Vujcic) falls in love with a
Maori cook from the restaurant where she’s a waitress.
The most prominent
subplot involves the Vujcic character’s arranged marriage (she has citizenship
by virtue of her mother having been born there) to a workmate’s Asian
boyfriend. Just on a basic line-by-line and scene-by-scene level, the movie
isn’t always easy to assimilate for the very reason suggested by its title: the
mix of accents and idiosyncrasies – intermingled with bursts of foreign
dialogue that are sometimes translated and sometimes not – means that your
sense of what’s happening is occasionally only approximate.
This isn’t a big
problem, though, because the characters aren’t staking out particularly complex
positions. The Croatian father (Rade Serbedzija, whose other movie this year
was The Saint) has managed, through
his entrepreneurial activities (at least some of which aren’t quite within the
law) to acquire a passably middle-class house and such trappings as a mobile phone,
into which he talks a lot.
Economically and
structurally, he’s essentially absorbed into the society. Culturally, on the
other hand, he doesn’t even try. He basks in his difference; he asserts it
frequently. He doesn’t even seem to try modifying his hot temper and (by
Western standards at least) wildly unreasonable treatment of his family; he
conducts himself with a self-righteous, passionate swagger. When Vujcic’s
character brings her Maori boyfriend and Asian friends for a visit (a venture
that we always know will end in tears), he makes a remark about it resembling a
UN peace-keeping force, which isn’t delivered with the tone of an endorsement.
This all plays out
in a relatively unsurprising fashion (and, coming on top of Once Were Warriors a couple of years
ago, has the effect of making you a bit depressed about New Zealand). The
climax of the movie is violent and hopeless – a racial war on a suburban lawn.
But the final image is uplifting: a moment of unambiguous, pragmatic, cultural
unity that, however – because it consists of people posing for a photograph –
is also an explicitly artificial creation. So can we take away a feeling of
optimism about this particular melting pot (and, by extension, our own), or are
we just being thrown a final reconciliatory mirage to distract us from the
ongoing fractures?
As usual, the answer
is probably both, although it’s encouraging that the younger people are, on the
whole, better integrated than the older ones (also as an aside, the Croatian
daughters seem to be more independently minded than the son). Love, economic
opportunity and the plain desire to have a life that’s easy and uncomplicated,
and that allows you a measure of pride and self-respect: these seem like
obvious motives for assimilating as much as you can of your governing
environment.
On the other hand,
depending on the time and place, and on how the cards are dealt, they might all
seem like equally obvious motives for rejecting it. Serbedzija’s character
might be described as prejudiced against the Maoris and the Asians (one wonders
how he’d react to a WASP, but the movie hardly contains any of them), but his
actions are based in his desire to perpetuate values and traditions that he
knows will otherwise be swallowed whole by the multi-cultural society. That’s
not a justification, but it’s the way he is.
So I said I was
thinking about Quebec. As Jack Nicholson said in Mars Attacks, just before the aliens zapped him, “Why can’t we all
just get along.” Movies, or any media
products for that matter, seldom suggest that any situation is utterly
intransigent. The nature of a narrative, of the artistic process, and of
imagination itself, is to find a way to get from here to there – however crazy
and idealistic the goal.
The real world,
unfortunately, generally follows more incremental mechanisms: in politics, it
pretty much always does. Our leaders
may or may not have vision, but they seldom apply it to their policy-making
(which is perhaps just as well, given that the Megacity idea was a bold enough
leap to be attributed to a vision of some
sort). And I guess we just have to accept, for the most part, that they do the
best they can given the tradeoffs required.
The thing that
depresses me about our current situation is that we might actually need some inspiring
leadership. If I were in Quebec, listening to the Bloc trying to pull me out of
the country on the one hand and (if this is how it develops) Preston Manning
seeming to push me out of it on the other – of
course I’d be tempted to vote for independence.
Why would I want to
be locked into that perpetual debate and psychic trauma with its uncertainty
- I’d rather pull the plug and hope for
the best. Which would be the wrong decision. The economics of separation are probably
just devastating. But as we know, people play their hunches as far as economics
goes.
Next time round,
then, the argument for continuing unity had better be as clear as a bell. Which
it wasn’t last time, and won’t be again, unless someone starts meticulously
communicating it long before the situation becomes dire. And as for whether
Chretien’s the person to lead that communication…well, I think we’re all aware
of his limitations by now.
Paradoxically,
perhaps, the reason that Broken English
gives me some hope isn’t in the characters who assimilate, but in the Croatian
father who doesn’t. Despite his hot-headedness, he knows that culture and
economics are two different things: separation in one can – in a diverse world –
must coexist with assimilation in the
other. Not everything is a matter for the gun, or even for the ballot box.
Although the world of Broken English
is hopelessly fragmented, this is just a reflection of the fact that in an open
facilitating society, people make the choices they must. And if they choose to
erect internal walls, well…there’s nothing wrong with separation as long as we’re
all in it together.
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