Reykjavík Grapevine - 10.08.2012, Blaðsíða 22

Reykjavík Grapevine - 10.08.2012, Blaðsíða 22
22 The Reykjavík Grapevine Issue 12 — 2012 Hörður Torfason has a website at www.hordurtorfa.com. His Facebook page is also regularly updated with articles and videos from his tours at www.facebook.com/hordurtorfa. London, and beyond. “Last June, protes- tors in four cities—Barcelona, Palma de Mallorca, Córdoba, and Madrid—col- lected money, called me, and asked me to come and tell them about what we did here.” In the most unlikely places, protes- tors are reading the words and discov- ering the life story of one of Iceland’s modern icons. “The other day I had a call from Panama. They’re really waking up there, and they’ve heard all about me online.” When he addresses his audiences— often crowds of hundreds at a time—he shares the familiar tale of his fabled life: the promising theatrical career; the no- torious ambush which made him the first Icelander to be outed as gay; the years in exile; the struggles for human rights. And wherever he speaks, he gains a host of new disciples. “These people all seem to know who I am. One guy came up to me and said, ‘There are two people I listen to, who I read and who I believe in: Che Guevara and Hörður Torfason.’” But, he confides, with a self-effacing chuckle, “I think woah! That may be tak- ing it a bit too far.” From the experience of his own battles, he insists: “All change begins with one person who simply cannot take it anymore.” He is habitually described as a mild-mannered, warm and person- able gent. “I am not an angry man,” he insists. “I got over all that years ago.” Preaching non-violence So it is unsurprising that he preaches a firm philosophy of nonviolence. The insurrection that was brewing on the streets of downtown Reykjavík in late 2008 troubled Hörður. “People wanted to go to the homes of the bankers, to cause trouble, to start violence. I said no. These are human beings; they have fam- ilies, children and relatives. There was a lot of anger around, but you make it of- ficial and go to where they are working and approach them with reason.” “We reason and we know it takes time,” he concedes. “We don’t kill peo- ple; we don’t use violence; we don’t use masks. I don’t want to live in a society where terror reigns.” Iceland however is a very different nation to some of those he has visited of late. “In our country we have the right to protest. We are allowed to step forward and criticise,” he says. So it remains a cultural clash when he visits peoples bred on civil strife and violence. “People in South America say to me: ‘In your so-called revolution, you didn’t even burn one car! You call that a revolution?’” For all his insistence on reason and nonviolence, Hörður nonetheless knows the importance of holding a personal stake in the struggle—as he did in his early campaign for gay rights. “I made fun of some Icelanders, dressing up and going protesting in their best suit to show off. Their heart was not in the protest. Many didn’t even know what it was about. It was just the in-thing.” Returning to a bygone era But what does he tell them abroad about the Icelandic experience in recent years? “When the crash came in Iceland,” he says, “we weren’t surprised—but shocked.” He paints a vivid picture of a nation that had lost its traditional values. “You should have been here in 2007!” he tells me. “We had become superficial. You walked around and met people who were all—” (he strikes a theatrical pose; the actor in him at last has a chance to shine through unabashed) “‘Oh hi there! How are you? Oh I do like your shirt. Is it Boss?!’” “The reason I started fighting back in the very beginning is because I think human values are worth more than money.” His determination is bound- less: “I got seriously sick after the pro- tests. People asked me if I regretted it. I said no—this is my vision. I can feel that what I’ve done has mattered. We have to stop thinking just of our little selves.” A happy romantic sissy “We have this word in Icelandic, Kærlei- kur, which means love or caring. Some people believe the world is harsh and tough, and so you have to be harsh and tough to beat it. But I have more belief in love.” He goes on, “So if someone calls me a romantic or a sissy then I say yes, I’m a happy romantic sissy—that’s fine.” And now it is that heartfelt conviction which propels him wherever he goes. His globetrotting missions he confesses are “very demanding work.” “Massimo came to Italy with me recently,” he con- fides, “and told me it was unbelievable: ‘You wake up early in the morning, go in meetings and interviews all day, three big speeches in one day, then questions for two hours, then you’re in the car driv- ing to the next place. I’m tired just fol- lowing you. How on earth are you?’ And I say I’m fine. I’ve been doing this all my life. My fuel is my interest in the matter, it’s alive in me.” He insists: “I don’t try and get into the papers. I do my job in silence be- cause I know the importance of it. I don’t try to be popular, because I detest that way of working.” He travels with an entourage: his driver, a trip planner, a photographer, a translator—and a bodyguard. He recalls quite clearly the moment during his ex- ile in Copenhagen when an Icelandic “homosexual hater” attempted to stab him. “I was in a large group of people, and suddenly I saw the f lickering of the light on a knife close by. If I hadn’t seen it, I would have had it straight into my heart.” “The people I meet love me—I know that; I can feel that. But there’s always that one person who has a different opinion, so you have to always be care- ful.” The job is not done But continue the fight, he most certainly will. “After my break, my next visit will be to France next month.” He has no plans however to continue protesting at home. “Many people have been calling after me to do that. But I refuse—not for political reasons, but because we have to learn. We have to feel what really hap- pened to us.” He is at his most animated now, the closest he comes to expressing anything that might resemble anger. Banging his fist on the table, he insists, “We have to suffer to understand what happened in Iceland. People only learn through suffering.” The debate over the new constitu- tion he believes is a good sign. “We are fighting the people who have been rul- ing Iceland, who have practically owned Iceland, for the last sixty years or more. We have to go through this to learn and understand how we want our society to work.” He echoes Gandhi, declaring that we have to be the change we want to see in the world. “Life is change. We’re always changing, so let’s do it together. I say to people start in your own community—if you succeed, people will listen and come to you.” “When I set out to do something,” he concludes, reminiscing on his role as the instigator of the Pots and Pans Revolution, “I finish the job and I walk away—I’m done.” As the calls continue to come in from all over the world, he shows no intention of walking away just yet; the job is not yet done. Hörður Torfason will not be on vacation back home for long. Iceland’s Troubadour Takes His Love Song Around The Globe Continued 1995: Tupilak, Swedish Gay Organization, for his pioneering work and bravery 1995: Freedom Prize, Samtökin 78, for his courage, bravery and honesty in the fight for human rights 1998: Golden Needle, Samtökin 78, for his life achievement 2008: Community Prize, Fréttablaðsins, for his work in the fight against prejudice 2008: Man of the Year, Rás 2 Icelandic Radio Broadcast, for his outstanding contribution in human rights 2009: Tupilak, Swedish Gay Organization, for his outstanding contribution to gay rights 2010: Siðmennt Award, Icelandic Human- ists, for his outstanding contribution in human rights Glittering CV: The Many Accolades Of Hörður Torfason “ You should have been here in 2007! We had become superficial. You walked around and met people who were all— ‘Oh hi there! How are you? Oh I do like your shirt. Is it Boss?!„ The pots and pans revolution www.ishestar.is For further information check out our website www.ishestar.is, call +354 555 7000 or be our friend on Facebook. Come ride with us For almost 30 years Íshestar has given people an opportunity to experience the Icelandic horse on long and short trips. Horses are our passion. Come ride with us in the beautiful surroundings of our Íshestar Riding Centre. You get free transport from all major hotels and guesthouses in the capital area. ISK 500.- discount!* Name the magic word, "tölt", and you will get ISK 500.- discount on the Lava tour. Only valid when paid at our Riding Centre. *Not valid with other oers. Iceland | Activism
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