"The Unbearable Lightness Of Being" By Milan Kundera
117
Then he tried again to think through what he should have done. Even though he did his
best to put aside everything belonging to the realm of the emotions (the admiration he
had for the editor and the irritation his son caused him), he was still not sure whether he
ought to have signed the text they gave him.
Is it right to raise one's voice when others are being silenced? Yes.
On the other hand, why did the papers devote so much space to the petition? After all,
the press (totally manipulated by the state) could have kept it quiet and no one would
have been the wiser. If they publicized the petition, then the petition played into the
rulers' hands! It was manna from heaven, the perfect start and justification for a new
wave of persecution.
What then should he have done? Sign or not?
Another way of formulating the question is, Is it better to shout and thereby hasten the
end, or to keep silent and gain thereby a slower death?
Is there any answer to these questions?
And again he thought the thought we already know: Human life occurs only once, and
the reason we cannot determine which of our decisions are good and which bad is that
in a given situation we can make only one decision; we are not granted a second, third,
or fourth life in which to compare various decisions.
History is similar to individual lives in this respect. There is only one history of the
Czechs. One day it will come to an end as surely as Tomas's life, never to be repeated.
In 1618, the Czech estates took courage and vented their ire on the emperor reigning in
Vienna by pitching two of his high officials out of a window in the Prague Castle. Their
defiance led to the Thirty Years War, which in turn led to the almost complete
destruction of the Czech nation. Should the Czechs have shown more caution than
courage? The answer may seem simple; it is not.
Three hundred and twenty years later, after the Munich Conference of 1938, the entire
world decided to sacrifice the Czechs' country to Hitler. Should the Czechs have tried to
stand up to a power eight times their size? In contrast to 1618, they opted for caution.
Their capitulation led to the Second World War, which in turn led to the forfeit of their
nation's freedom for many decades or even centuries. Should they have shown more
courage than caution? What should they have done?
If Czech history could be repeated, we should of course find it desirable to test the
other possibility each time and compare the results. Without such an experiment, all
considerations of this kind remain a game of hypotheses.
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