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A
Chill in an Unresolved War
Reflections
on an historic concert in Pynongyang
By
Fred Storm
Dateline: Feb. 26, 2008, Pyongyang, North Korea.
The Academy is pleased to present a Lifetime
Achievement Award for Best Musical Performance During Wartime, seeking
to thaw the glacial global chill of relations, if ever so slightly,
between the United States of America and the Democratic People's
Republic of Korea. And the Oscar goes to ... The New York Philharmonic
Orchestra.
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Tuesday night's historic concert at Pyongyang's
Grand Theater Concert Hall by the New York Philharmonic, conducted
by Lorin Maazel, was certainly the most symbolic symphonic exchange
between the Communist East and the Capitalist West in decades. Not
since 1959, when Leonard Bernstein directed the Philharmonic in
the Kremlin, during the height (depth?) of the Cold War, has the
world witnessed a cultural event with such significant political
overtones. Leave it to the Big Apple's Philharmonic to show up big-time,
put on a big show, on a big stage, when it really mattered, helping
to shore up Uncle Sam's battered Ugly Betty image that prevails
throughout most of the world community, as the U.S. enters into
the sixth year of its war in Iraq.
Stunning developments have come out of both Cuba
and North Korea lately, the last pair of America's creaking hard-line
communist foes left standing in the aftermath of the last century's
Cold War. In the same week when Fidel finally relinquished the reins
of power in Cuba's Revolutionary Worker's Island Paradise, to his
septuagenarian little brother, Raul, we see Old Glory unfurled on
the same stage as the flag of the North Korean Marxist-Stalinist
State. We hear the sounds of the Star Spangled Banner played after
the North Korean anthem.
The concert was broadcast on a live feed by the
North Korean state-run TV to CNN International and to the BBC, as
well as the entire North Korean nation (at least for all households
fortunate enough to have radios and uninterrupted electric power
all evening long). America's most renowned classical musicians played
before a packed house of select senior Korean Communist Party dignitaries
and elites, the Reddest of the Red, the Pinkest of the Pink. An
American in Paris? No problemo. But more than 400 Americans in Pyongyang,
exporting unfiltered American music and culture directly into the
homes of the North Korean people, in the very heart of the Axis
of Evil? Virtually unthinkable only a few weeks ago. What in the
name of General Douglas McArthur is going on here?
Although the Korean War was just a bit before my
time, that conflict has been of special interest to me over the
years. As the kid of a single mom, before there was such a word
as "mentor," my next-door neighbor "Uncle" Charlie babysat for me
after school. Cpt. Charles Fisher was a Navy flyer. He flew combat
missions in Korea. While I was still in kindergarten, I learned
all about the Korean War from a decorated war hero who had fought
dogfights against Chinese MIG fighter pilots in the skies of North
Korea, and who had lived to talk about it. The tragedies of the
Korean War and the horrific suffering of the Korean people, both
North and South, were indelibly printed in the lines on Cpt. Fisher's
face.
Recently, another decorated war hero, Sen. John
McCain, gazed into his Straight Talk crystal ball and predicted
that American forces would be in Iraq for 100 years or more. The
political pundits howled, "You can't be serious." The U.S. mired
in Iraq for an entire century? Think not, America? Better think
again. We have been in a state of undeclared war with the North
Koreans since June of 1950. The intractable American-North Korean
conflict has dragged on for more than half a century already, with
no negotiated peace in sight. Unless we enter into some kind of
parallel political universe this summer, and hopelessly divided
Democratic delegates deadlock in at their convention in Denver,
after the 91st ballot or so, select Dennis Kucinich as the ultimate
dark horse candidate to run against McCain and the Republicans in
the fall, there will be no peace with the North Koreans any time
soon.
American troops, backed by an arsenal of American
weapons of mass destruction, financed by the Chinese of all people,
buying U.S. Treasuries, seem destined to remain on the Korean Peninsula
for another generation or more. North Korean strongman Kim Jong
Il, the Dear Leader as he is known, is more of a comic caricature
of himself than a true communist dictator. He is merely a figurehead
of the collectivist military regime, due solely to being the anointed
son of his famous revolutionary father, Kim Il Sung, the Great Leader,
the George Washington of North Korea.
Kim Jong Il is no Kim Il Sung. If his last name
were not Kim, he would be a nobody within the North Korean Communist
hierarchy, much less leading the regime. Remind you of anyone stateside
with a similarly fortunate political pedigree? Since the Dear Leader
and our Decider-in-Chief won't be getting together anytime soon,
the Korean and American people must look for someone else to carry
the tune for peace.
The dysfunctional diplomatic dissonance that
has existed since 1950 between the U.S. and North Korea was held
in abeyance, if only for just one night by the Philharmonic, by
a magical performance for the ages, that just about brought the
house down in Pyongyang.
Back in 1971, with the war in Vietnam grinding along
into its 7th year of fighting, it was innocuous little
ping pong balls that finally got the Americans and the Communist
Chinese to begin talking to each other. Those little ping pong balls
led the following year to Nixon and Kissinger toasting Mao and Chou
in the Forbidden City, and eventually to the American pull-out from
South Vietnam. As the 21st century unfolds, could it be that musical
notes played in Pyongyang might usher the first cautious steps toward
an eventual peace between these wary adversaries?
A box of Ping Pong balls: $3.75. A pair of orchestra
seats, front and center at Lincoln Center: $196. The sound of peace
on earth, good will toward men: priceless.
Ancient Chinese philosopher Lao Tzu, founder of
Taoism, wrote that a journey of a thousand miles begins with but
a single step. The Grand Symphony of Peace & Harmony for all
peoples of Planet Earth may be one day be written by a composer
not yet born. The first movement of that elusive symphony of peace
and understanding between all nations and all peoples may have been
written on Feb. 26 as an overture of reconciliation between the
Americans and the North Koreans, sounded by a single note of harmony
played in Pyongyang. Bravo.
Fred Storm of Eugene is a freelance writer and
former newspaper reporter.
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