Showing posts with label homophobia. Show all posts
Showing posts with label homophobia. Show all posts

Wednesday, August 22, 2012

Latvian society still needs freedom after 21 years of independence


By the standards of adulthood in some countries, the age of 21, Latvia has reached adulthood in its second period of independence. 21 years ago, in late August, 1991, Latvia’s independence was recognized by the brave little nation of Iceland. Others quickly followed, although it took a while for both the United States and what was left of the Soviet Union/Russia to get on the bandwagon. With that, the issue of formal independence was settled, followed by Latvia’s admission to the United Nations, to other international organizations, and, in 2004, to both NATO and the European Union (EU). Latvia has fully joined “the community of nations” and all that.
The reason Latvian engaged in a struggle to regain their independence was, in large part, because they were not free, not able to discuss the status of their nation without fear of arrest or persecution, they were unable to make key decisions of economic policy, they were not free to leave the USSR or even to travel internally with full freedom. With independence, many of these freedoms were renewed, at least at the national level. The nation state was free within the rules of the international communities it had joined.
Under the expanded freedoms of assembly and expression of the perestroika period of the late 1980s, Latvian society was able to vent 40 years of frustration and anger at the injustices, oppression and absurdity of the Soviet occupation. This meant that most “liberated” (unleashed, rather than free) expression was, in a sense, one dimensional. The system was bad, Communists were bad, the Soviet economy was unable to meet consumer needs, etc., etc.. By Soviet standards, to be able to criticize, even to rant against the existing order was an unprecedented form of “free expression” of opinions almost universally shared.  This was something quite different from what was understood as free expression in the West, that is, at times a cacophony of diverse voices and viewpoints.
To be sure, there were debates during the “awakening” movement of the late 1980s, among them, on whether Latvia should seek autonomy inside a reformed USSR (whatever that meant), or whether there should be complete independence (which happened, essentially, in the middle of this incomplete debate).  Independence was suddenly a reality, rather than a goal to which progress could be controlled or paced. There could be little more debate on this issue.
After 1991, so-called political parties were formed across the entire political spectrum, from ultranationalists to revanchists, who wanted a return to the Soviet Union, perhaps with some modifications. To some extent, there was free political debate among these parties, but it was largely based on superficial preconceived ideas of what conservatism, social democracy, even nationalism meant. After 40 years of occupation, preceded by six years of authoritarian rule, there was little or no practical democratic tradition in Latvia. The country had only been a rather shambolic parliamentary republic up to the bloodless coup in May, 1934, just 16 years after declaring independence from Czarist Russia, hardly a model of freedom and openness.
Latvia regained its independence never really having had any tradition of democratic societal debate (OK, historians may contradict me), at least not in modern times (post WWII) and therefore in the living memory of anyone except 90-somethings. Latvians, during the freedom struggles of the late 80s , experienced freedom as the license to vent their own, largely similar rage and pain, without having to listen to other, noticeably different voices. One was, after all, standing in a largely harmonic choir. Instead of respecting diverse different opinions, there was just “us” and a “them” whose power and authority was waning. “Them” were only capable of  responding with “Soviet” arguments and warnings of the dire consequences of separatism that largely fell on deaf ears or were laughed at. Such “debates” with darkly comical, pernicious buffoons (hard line Communists) hardly prepared anyone for serious and respectful political debate.
Later, debates in the Saeima also reflected this lack of democratic tradition, as well as the limited political and economic education (in a modern Western sense) of may parliamentarians. Certainly, the parliament was not a glowing example for society at large. Looking at present day attitudes toward free expression, non-conformity, opposing opinions – never mind such “hot” issues as gay rights – it is clear that 21 years ago Latvia regained its national independence, but in 21 years it has failed to become a truly free, democratic society. The independence came, perhaps, too fast and easy, the freedom is still struggling at the everyday, practical, interpersonal and intergroup level. Latvians are still “free” to rant at others, to vent their own rage, but reach for the tools of repression when others do the same, but from different positions. So thanks for the independence, but please, bring on some real freedom, the kind where people aren’t threatened by diversity, open debate and tolerance.  

Saturday, June 05, 2010

Riga hotel removes "Gay Pride" photos during gay-related conference

The management of the Hotel Alberts in Riga  ordered the removal from a bar area to elsewhere of a photo exhibit of last year's Pride event in Riga that was to be displayed during a low-key conference on lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender (LGBT) issues organized by the Latvian LGBT organization Mozaika.
The photographs were by Austrialian photographer Madeleine Marcus Bentley and showed scenes from last summer's march, in which LGBT marchers and their supporters were allowed to march down a short, police protected stretch of a public street instead of being confined to a park or a cordoned-off area to keep angry counter-demonstrators at a distance.
This year there was no Pride march in Riga, it took place as a pan-Baltic event in Vilnius, with some incidents caused by anti-gay protestors. Instead, Mosaika held a conference with some speakers discussing the history of LGBT people in Latvia and the like. While I did not attend the conference (the reason I have supported Pride is as a pro-free expression, pro-tolerance libertarian) it appears the photo exhibit was intended as a backdrop to the event.
The hotel management, apparently afraid the photos would offend patrons in the bar, ordered the photographs removed to another area. It is not clear whether the exhibit may have been put up where it originally was because of a misunderstanding, but it is clear that the it was removed because of a presumption of homophobia among potential bar guests.  As far as the Latvian population goes, the managers of "Alberts" may not have been off the mark. Foreign guests probably have seen political and social-issue demonstrations and shouldn't be upset unless they come from some ultra-religious Third World rathole, and not too many of them make it to Riga as hotel guests.
Whatever the reasons, this incident is yet another reflection of Latvia as a still-backward, failing society, that cannot bring itself to exhibit photos of a controversial event with, as far as I know, little or no controversial content (images of Pride events in other countries have shown extreme costumes, same-sex embraces and the like, as if that had never been seen before...).
I am still not sure whether this post belongs in my other, Free Speech Emergency blog, or here. However, the issue concerns the actions of a private hotel in either breach or misunderstanding of a private contract to host a conference on homosexuality in Latvia, not the actions of state authorities. From a libertarian position, I am uncomfortable with forcing people to tolerate or interact with others. Breaching a contract or altering the rules in the middle of the game doesn't sit well either. The whole event just reflects the incompetence, provincialism and primitive prejudices of Latvian society and its "business" community.  It comes against the background of the removal of the head of the "For A Good Latvia" (Par Labu Latviju) movement, a businessman who said he didn't object to gay marriage, at the instigation of the closely-linked cryptofascist, openly homophobic Latvia's First Party/Latvia's Way (LPP/LC in Latvian)
Whatever the reasons for sudden removal of the Riga Pride 2009 photo exhibit, the Hotel Alberts has certainly removed itself from any list of  gay-tolerant establishments in Latvia (anyone keeping count can now lower the other hand...).  That probably doesn't matter and the managers of Alberts probably don't give a flying f**k.  For reasons I mentioned, I didn't attend the conference, nor did I see the photo exhibit, but I think we now have a snapshot of Latvia, purportedly a democratic European Union member country, in June 2010, starting the second decade of the 21st century.