Reykjavík Grapevine - 07.01.2011, Blaðsíða 28

Reykjavík Grapevine - 07.01.2011, Blaðsíða 28
28 The Reykjavík Grapevine Issue 1 — 2011 Christopher Peterka was a panellist at YAIC 2010, and he made some damn fine points! By Guðrún Eva Mínervudóttir Illustration by Inga María Brynjarsdóttir The perfect gift was a personal one, Aldís believed, but not too personal. A gift that showed the giver knew something about the receiver’s tastes while at the same time providing an unexpected addition; something that would expand his world. A luxury item, but in a price range that would not betray any ulterior motive. Aldís strolled up Bankastræti and Laugavegur in the pleasant fall weather, treading by clothing racks, clearance sales and food stands. The colourful crowd of people was shaded in certain places by yellowing tree crowns, some of which towered over the houses. Excuse me, she said as she bumped into a black-haired woman who pulled a cart of handmade candies. She paused and watched the cart as it delicately wobbled with the woman's every step and she considered how she usually wanted things that perished. Soaps, cheeses, coffee, candles, oils and spices. But that sort of gift was not suitable now. In this case, she did have an ulterior motive, something beyond that pure warmth of friendship which in her mind characterized the perfect gift. Aldís wanted to give something that would serve as a reminder of her own existence. She wanted to occupy a space in the recipient’s mind. The gift was intended for a man named Ben who worked with her in the sorting facility. Along with a few others, they oversaw an army of youngsters that sorted recyclable consumer plastics into seven different categories based on the small embossed markings they bore. Ben was talkative and boisterous, short, portly, with big hands and a quick laugh. Aldís had been in love with him ever since he began working at the plant. He had a girlfriend at the time. He had broken up with her and started seeing another, and now he was newly started on the third. It was Ben’s birthday next week. The new girlfriend would probably give him something well thought out and perfect. Aldís shook her head and tried to divert her thoughts by focusing on something neutral. The sidewalk. But the kerbstone indirectly reminded her of Ben. Because of a news story that he had read out loud for her on a coffee break, about how city officials had been criticised for leaving stacks of loose kerbstones beside a freshly laid sidewalk. They were said to be inviting danger by leaving ‘potential blunt instruments’ lying around for anyone to pick up and use, and what's more, so close to the city’s watering holes, whence intoxicated crowds f lowed after nights of heavy drinking. Ben thought that mentioning this was an embarrassing affront to humanity’s unspoken agreement to pretend civilization was more deeply rooted than it actually is. Have they gone mad? he had laughingly exclaimed. You can’t say that sort of thing out loud! We need to keep on pretending if we are to keep our faith in democracy! Aldís couldn’t speak, she was laughing so hard. Ben’s news commentary always made her laugh. She even laughed now, as she remembered it. At the same time, she felt a familiar jab of nervous fear, something she had inherited from her conservative parents. The inheritance she was continually trying to exorcise away. She wanted to believe that all the exotic people who surrounded her were trustworthy, but she could never get rid of the feeling that people in general were merely a rabble, and even if they temporarily toed the line, that didn’t mean everything was safe. Still, she could never envision turning back the developments of the last twenty years or so. She shuddered at thought of how her life would be if three million “new” Icelanders suddenly moved away and left her in the bland, inbred homogeneity. She remembered it as worse than boring. It was a watery soup of over-used genes and paranoid politics. It was not just dull and grey, but positively unhealthy. Nothing came out of it other than narrow-minded bullying disguised as “common sense”. Twenty years ago, her weekends had consisted of endless drives cruising down Laugavegur with her girlfriends. All of them sporting fresh driver’s licenses, all of them referred to as “ham”, because they were pink and they glistened. Laugavegur had long since been turned into a pedestrian- only street, and the ham-look had transformed into a fringe culture mostly connected with prostitution and drug abuse. Reykjavík’s main shopping street, which used to be quiet except for special occasions, was now teeming with life every day of the week, and the merchandise on offer crowded the sidewalks and f lowed into the side streets. The thought of which made Aldís aware that she had been wandering around for half an hour without entering a single shop. She was mesmerised by the vibrant atmosphere. And the omnipresent smell of food, which nowadays brought to mind actual big cities. It made her feel almost happy. A little girl, holding her mother’s hand, smiled to Aldís and Aldís smiled back. A freestanding sign pointed to a lamp store on the second f loor, above a small but popular falafel hut. She squeezed past a roomful of patrons waiting to be served and climbed up a narrow staircase in the back. The shop was roomy, but the space appeared cramped because the selection of lamps was so overwhelming. There were lava lamps surrounded by crystal chandeliers. Antiques mixed with new items. Lampshades of silk, leather, vinyl and glass. At the back of the store a woman sat behind a small counter. Can I help you? she called out in French-accented English. I don’t know, Aldís shouted back. I’m just looking for the perfect gift, she added and gave out an embarrassed laugh. Who for? asked the woman? A friend, Aldís replied and approached the counter, where the woman sat with a cup of coffee and a tablet computer. The woman, who had appeared quite plain from afar, was wearing a tight, low-cut one piece and was heavily made up, as if she had just stepped off some stage. She wore fake, glittery eyelashes. Aldís became unnerved. She pointed to a lamp at random and asked: How much? 7900 Euros, the woman replied. That’s too much, Aldís responded. The lamp was made of glass, shaped like a mushroom, the amber hat covered in coloured gemstones like cake sprinkles. The stones are semi-precious, from China, the woman remarked as she nodded to Aldís. Carefully, as if she were worried about her eyelashes or lip-gloss. A lamp makes a beautiful gift for a friend. Symbolic. Exactly, Aldís replied and feigned an interest in the lamps surrounding her as she made her way towards the exit. This one is only 1500, the woman said and pointed to a lamp of white, sandblasted glass. Aldís thought her voice sounded curt and angry, but maybe the woman had only raised her voice because Aldís was now further away. She hurried down the stairs and was glad to be under the open sky again. She felt as if she had been exposed. She saw herself all too clearly now; a petit-bourgeois wannabe cosmopolitan. A pathetic and scared little person looking for the perfect birthday present for a man who was almost certainly at this very moment doting on his girlfriend—without ever considering that Aldís might have a life outside of the workplace. She went limp, she couldn’t move or decide whether to soldier on and keep searching or give up and go home. A Thai ladyboy gently grabbed her arm and to her abject horror offered his services. Hi sexy mama, he quietly said. Want a date? By Haukur Már Helgason Illustration by Lóa Hjálmtýsdóttir – Clubs and bars in Iceland have always been run by members of the Progressive party. – Dad! – Listen, this is important. Your mother thinks you're too young, but it is important that I tell you about these things early enough. About management. You will not learn this at school. The Progressive party has always been concerned with the preservation of our nation. Like all regulation, this management is achieved by controlling what is open and what is closed. Open. Closed. Farmers once took care of these things. What have I told you about all things on earth? – All things on earth make sense. – That's it. There is always a reason why things are the way they are. No one profession realises the significance of leading a cow under a bull as naturally as farmers. What today is seen as chaotic outbursts of 'violence' in the city centre has never been in the least chaotic. That so-called 'violence' is a vital part of a delicate set of manoeuvres and interferences during negotiations of possible procreation. This history has not been written, and possibly it will only ever be passed on as oral heritage. So listen carefully— one day you will want to tell your children this story, and hopefully you will have your own chapter to add to it. Now, at the 20th century county balls, informal groups of attentive, unselfish guardians of integrity took care that no undesired goo would be mixed in our genetic pool. In a rare display of national solidarity, men from all classes, all families, with all sorts of different background, kept the least fortunate bulls away from our most precious cows. This is our most valuable natural resource, the gene pool. When foreign elements tried to spoil it, men would take care of it. That goes for the lax, liberal periods. Different circumstances call for different measures. In the 19th century when hundreds of people gathered to form towns for the first time, this was met with an absolute, nationwide dance-verbot—which lasted for a hundred years. When that ban lifted, our sages banned alcohol. You see: open and close. If you want to keep a gate, you must first raise a wall—this is the only secret of effective management. A wall and a gate. Ban beer, sell moonshine. And now that alcohol and dancing are allowed, smoking is banned. You see the pattern, right? Now, I have told you about the Situation—tell daddy what the Situation was about. – The Situation was when the British and American soldiers lured the weakest among Icelandic women... – Weakest how? – Psychologically and morally weakest, lured them into sin, by offering them chewing gum, nylon stockings and cigarettes. – And what? – And music. – And? – And... money. – And the fantasy of a better life. That's right honey. What is that fantasy? – Daddy, we've been through this so often. – That's because it is important sweetie. What is the fantasy of a better life? – The illusion that the world outside Iceland has better things to offer than life as it is, the illusion that happiness is somewhere else and that it can be achieved by giving in, through moral laxness. – Correct. And what does that fantasy make of women? – The fantasy of happiness makes all women prostitutes. – Perfect, sweetie. An A+. So now, then, we had the Situation. The government, of course, demanded that there would be no Negroes among the military personnel. That's not racism but what honey? – That's not racism, but national integrity. – That's right. Now, the Progressive party ran all the important clubs in Reykjavík after the war, and got things more or less under control again, until the early ‘70s. Boy, did things get out of hand! Not only the ideological invasion that we have spoken of so often—but at the same time the U.S. government gave in to pressure from its media and opened the gates, our gates, for their so-called 'mixed races' policy. Which is precisely not policy, but what? What's the opposite of order? —Chaos, daddy. —Chaos. And at the same time they re-baptized every ambition for control and order as 'violence'. All sorts of derogatory terms were invented for those of us who feel responsible for the good of others. Management escaped into the shadows. Spacious men's rooms became vital for the prolongation of our national existence. Now, darling, if this was an ideal world, I would not be telling you this. In an ideal world it is the privilege of women not to have to fill their pretty heads with everything that men do to protect them. In an ideal world it is woman's privilege to believe in happiness—and man's duty to play Santa Claus. Women do not want to know and they should not have to know about these things. However, this world of ours is less than ideal, I'm afraid. And I am less than certain that there will always be men around to keep you from harm's way. Daddy only wants what is best for you, you know that, right? – Of course I do, daddy. – Now, then, listen very carefully: when an intruder attempts to seduce an Icelandic woman, no matter how polite and gentle, no matter how humorous and respectful he may seem, or even genuinely attractive, such attempts are and always will be attempted rape. Sexual intercourse between an Icelandic woman and a foreign man is rape, no matter how consensual it appears to both. Not merely in the sense that the man thereby exploits the female's lack of defence and judgement, but more seriously, on a deeper level, it is the rape of the nation itself. Such acts violently rip apart the very material we are woven of. Penetration, in such cases, is invasion. It not only resembles, but fundamentally is, a terrorist act. Just imagine, if you had black skin, brown eyes, curly hair—if your parents spoke some ali-baba-language, if Iceland had fallen into the same pit as our sorry neighbouring countries and fed you shish kebab for breakfast—you would not be you. You would not be my dear little Ásdís. You would simply not exist. Likewise, had my own mother fallen during the Situation, I would not exist. So much is at stake, precious. And now, we have another Situation. The enemy is constantly by the gates. That is what they call globalization. What will then be our gate policy? – Keep them closed, daddy. – Keep your gates closed. That's it. The world's finest young men are all right here, born to the world's finest mothers, bred in the world's cleanest country. Daddy loves his little Icelandic angel so much. And one day you will love your children, too. You just, you have to take care, when the time comes, that your children will really be your children, and not some other children, alien to their own mother and her family. You understand? The Gates </2010 LITERATURE> 2031

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