Openingsspeech Job Degenaar
WiPC/ICORN-conferentie, De Duif, Amsterdam, 25.05.2015
In a rich and democratic country as
The Netherlands there is still freedom of speech and expression. There are no
writers in prison. As a writer at the sunny side of the
world you can do two things. Enjoy your luxury free life and write as a free
human being about your free life.
Or enjoy this luxury and write, but
also try to support your colleagues at the shade side of the world that can't
defend themselves: the path less traveled by, as Robert Frost should
say.
Many of you, here gathered, do the
same. You try to do something for writers who are in big trouble, writers, not criminals, who are in prison, or under threat,
or who have killed with impunity, writers who are unable to help themselves:
you can't open a prisoner's door from inside. Most of them live in countries
with dictatorial governments as China and Vietnam or with powerless
governments, like Mexico and Honduras:
There is no distance
between writers, only between the circumstances writers have to live.
In my capacity of the national WiPC
Chair, for nearly 10 years now, I became a member of the international
PEN-community – and I'm proud to be so. Most of our work is in silence, in the
lee, because of diplomatic reasons. It needs carefulness and hidden actions,
which is not the same as chicken-heart: when lights are spotted on a writer who
is in danger, he could become in more danger. You always have to keep in mind
what you want to reach: not your so called bravery, but the life of a colleague
who is unable to fight for himself. The Dutch WiPC is at this moment especially
focused on actions for East-Asiatic countries where most of the writers in the
world are imprisoned.
What we do, is seeking contact with
governments and diplomats, and of course with other PEN-centres for consultation
about the way how to take action, supporting imprisoned writers by sending
cards to them, telling their stories in our own country, translate their work
and give them a name and a face. The basic principle for our work is the
dialogue, not the confrontation. You can't win anything by offending regimes
if you want to change their minds.
To mention three small, recent
successes from our centre: we received from the Vietnamese Nguyẽn Hũu Caũ, who was freed after 40 years imprisonment, and his
family, personal thanks for the work we have done. And together with a French
sinologist we nominated two years ago the Chinese Li Bifeng for the American Hellman-Hammett Grant and we translated some texts of him
into Dutch. He received the award. Unfortunately he is still in jail. Our work
continues.
We also supported the foundation of
the North Korean Writers in Exile Centre and the South-Korean president Lee
Gil-won did a lot for them. And now some work of them also has been published
in important Dutch papers and in a literary magazine.
David van Reybrouck, from PEN
Flanders, once said: 'WiPC is the core business of PEN' and Larry Siems, from
PEN America, summarized in Kyrgyzstan what should be the main subject in
conferences like these: 'The key core issue is dynamic engagement on every
case'.
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