Sprawa Polańskiego

Stanislav Barszczak- Listen to the voice of the children
(to the Power over Roman Polanski)
Roman Raymond Polanski “is a Polish-French film director, producer, writer, and actor. Polanski began his career in Poland, and later became a celebrated Academy Award-winning director of both art house and commercial films, making such films as Rosemary’s Baby (1968), Chinatown (1974) and The Pianist (2002). Polanski is one of the world’s best known contemporary film directors and is widely considered one of the greatest directors of his time. He is also known for his turbulent and controversial personal life. In 1969, his pregnant wife, Sharon Tate, was murdered by the Manson Family. In 1977, Polanski was arrested in Los Angeles and pleaded guilty to unlawful sexual intercourse with a minor, a 13-year-old girl (he was 44 years old at the time). Released after a 42-day psychiatric evaluation, Polanski fled to France, and has had a U.S. arrest warrant outstanding since 1978, and an international arrest warrant since 2005. Polanski for many years avoided visits to countries that were likely to extradite him, such as the United Kingdom, and travelled mostly between France, where he resides, and Poland. As a French citizen, he was protected in France by the country’s limited extradition with the U.S. On September 26, 2009, he was arrested, at the request of U.S. authorities, by Swiss police, on arrival at Zürich Airport while trying to enter Switzerland to pick up a lifetime achievement “Golden Icon Award” from the Zurich Film Festival. After fleeing to Europe following his 1977 U.S. conviction, Polanski continued to direct films, although there was nearly a seven-year break between 1979’s Tess (a romantic drama adapted from Thomas Hardy’s 1891 novel Tess of the d’Urbervilles, dedicated to the memory of his late wife, Sharon Tate) and 1986’s Pirates, an adventure comedy. Later films include Frantic (1988), Death and the Maiden (1994), The Ninth Gate (1999), The Pianist (2002), and Oliver Twist (2005). The most notable of his later films is The Pianist, a World War II-set adaptation of the autobiography of the same name by Jewish-Polish musician Władysław Szpilman, whose experiences have similarities with Polanski’s own (Polanski, like Szpilman, escaped the ghetto and the concentration camps, whilst family members did not). The film won three Academy Awards including Best Director (2002), the Cannes Film Festival’s Palme d’Or (2002), and seven French Césars including Best Picture and Best Director. He has also done occasional work in theatre.” (resp. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Roman_Polanski)
In 1977, he was convicted of unlawful sexual intercourse with a minor, but he subsequently fled the United States and is presently (since 26 September 2009) under arrest in Switzerland pending extradition proceedings…In 1989, after the Ayatollah Khomeini issued his fatwa condemning Salman Rushdie to death for the crime of apostasy, Pamuk (Orhan) was the first writer from a Muslim country to speak out in Rushdie’s defense. During the 1990s he played an increasingly active role in the human rights movement in Turkey. He’s written an article titled “Listen to the Damned”—subtitled “It is not Islam or poverty that succours terrorism, but the failure to be heard.” On many occasions Orhan Pamuk says: ” I’d like to tell your readers this note not to believe anything you say about me, anything you say about any of us. No one could understand us from so far away. But if you would put in what I said, at least your readers will keep a little room for doubt in their minds”/…/ “The problem facing the West today is not to discover which terrorist is preparing a bomb in which tent, which cave, or which street of which remote city, but to understand the poor, scorned majority that does not belong to the western world.” What is needed is to accord them the dignity and respect that all human beings deserve…”(resp. http://www.orhanpamuk.net/biography.aspx) I would like to say: it is not poverty that succours terrorism, weakness but there is the failure to have the voice for a life.
For century I think there is a great problem of ours. Do you know what this summer has meant for me? Constant raptures over Emmanuel Levinas and a whole series of spiritual delights which I’ve never experienced before. No student has ever studied so much on his course, and learned so much, as I have this summer. But am I also an author of a dazzling collection of essays on my life, my city, my work. There is the example as I have been writing other writers. From ordinary obligations such as applying for a passport or sharing a holiday meal with relatives, I take extraordinary flights of imagination; in extreme moments, such as the terrifying days following a cataclysmic earthquake in Italy. Again and again I declare faith of mine’s in fiction, engaging the work of such predecessors as Orhan Pamuk, John Maxwell Cotzee, Audrey Niffenegger, Richard Powers, Haruki Murakami, Roger Willemsen, Steffi von Wolff. For 14 years I have been making a share in a great investment , its fruit is a profound faith in God and man. I am since a glutton for books. Now, I may say I know a relationship between two men, who look for instance like identical twins. So, it becomes a story of the fragility and shifting nature of identity, as the two appropriate each other’s memories and exchange places…
As an artist, a film director, producer, Roman Polanski must bring a burden of visible responsibility so far as it is possible. Nevertheless he is the man of weakness that knows of us nobody. The biography of Polanski is concerned us, concerned for ‘life’. In the course of his travels, Polanski becomes a poor man for many, also altruistic reasons, but first of all he is involved in a truth about family of today, which opens the door to the promise of a life, it affects me to the point that I abandon my studies, turn my back on home and family and embark on a wondrous odyssey. I apply to the powers that be over a polish film director to come to a clement decision for him. Mr Roman Raymond Polanski should have been delivered.
Yours faithfully
Stanislav Barszczak

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