WHEN
I was asked to direct “One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest,” my
friends warned me not to go anywhere near it.
The
story is so American, they argued, that I, an immigrant fresh off the
boat, could not do it justice. They were surprised when I explained
why I wanted to make the film. To me it was not just literature but
real life, the life I lived in Czechoslovakia from my birth in 1932
until 1968. The Communist Party was my Nurse Ratched, telling me what
I could and could not do; what I was or was not allowed to say; where
I was and was not allowed to go; even who I was and was not.
Now,
years later, I hear the word “socialist” being tossed around by
the likes of Rick Perry, Newt Gingrich, Rick Santorum, Sean Hannity,
Rush Limbaugh and others. President Obama, they warn, is a socialist.
The critics cry, “Obamacare is socialism!” They falsely equate
Western European-style socialism, and its government provision of
social insurance and health care, with Marxist-Leninist
totalitarianism. It offends me, and cheapens the experience of
millions who lived, and continue to live, under brutal forms of
socialism.
My
sister-in-law’s father, Jan Kunasek, lived in Czechoslovakia all
his life. He was a middle-class man who ran a tiny inn in a tiny
village. One winter night in 1972, during a blizzard, a man, soaked
to the bone, awakened him at 2 in the morning. The man looked
destitute and, while asking for shelter, couldn’t stop cursing the
Communists. Taking pity, the elderly Mr. Kunasek put him up for the
night.
A
couple of hours later, Mr. Kunasek was awakened again, this time by
three plainclothes policemen. He was arrested, accused of sheltering
a terrorist and sentenced to several years of hard labor in uranium
mines. The state seized his property. When he was finally released,
ill and penniless, he died within a few weeks. Years later we learned
that the night visitor had been working for the police. According to
the Communists, Mr. Kunasek was a class enemy and deserved to be
punished.
I
found myself in an equally absurd, but less depressing, situation
when I was moonlighting on Czech TV as a moderator, introducing
movies, in the early ’50s. It was live, so there was no chance to
bleep politically undesirable words. Every utterance, even in
supposedly spontaneous interviews, had to be scripted, approved by
the censors, learned by heart and repeated verbatim on the air.
When
I was preparing to interview one Comrade Homola, a powerful
Communist, I sent him questions, but didn’t receive his answers. My
boss, also a powerful party member, told me: “He is lazy! Write his
answers for him, and remind him to learn them by heart.” So I did.
Comrade
Homola arrived at the last moment. When the red light went on and I
asked the first question, he reached into his pocket, took out my
answers and started to read them, awkwardly and obediently —
including my inadvertent grammatical mistakes. And thus, to my
consternation, went the whole interview. In the control booth, my
boss hit the roof. I was fired the next day for ridiculing a
representative of the state.
Whatever
his faults, I don’t see much of a socialist in Mr. Obama or,
thankfully, signs of that system in this great nation. Mr. Obama is
accused of trying to expand the reach of government — into health
care, financial regulation, the auto industry and so on. It’s fair
to question whether the federal government should have expanded
powers: America, to its credit, has debated this since its birth. But
let’s be clear about how frightening socialism actually could be.
Marx
believed that we could wipe out social inequities and Lenin tested
those ideas on the Soviet Union. It was his dream to create a
classless society. But reality set in, as it always does. And the
results were devastating. Blood flowed through Russia’s streets.
The Soviet elite usurped all privileges; sycophants were allowed some
and the plebes none. The entire Eastern bloc, including
Czechoslovakia, followed miserably.
I’m
not sure Americans today appreciate quite how predatory socialism
was. It was not — as Mr. Obama’s detractors suggest — merely a
government so centralized and bloated that it hobbled private
enterprise: it was a spoils system that killed off everything, all in
the name of “social justice.”
What
we need is not to strive for a perfect social justice — which never
existed and never will — but for social harmony. Harmony in music
is, by its nature, exhilarating and soothing. In an orchestra, the
different players and instruments perform together, in support of an
overall melody.
Today,
our democracy, a miraculous gathering of diverse players, desperately
needs such unity. If all participants play fair and strive for the
common good, we can achieve a harmony that eluded the doctrinaire
socialist projects. But if just one section, or even one player, is
out of tune, the music will disintegrate into cacophony.
I
am not asking Mr. Obama and the Republican leaders to stop playing
instruments of their choosing. All I am asking is that every player
keep in mind the noble melody of our country. Otherwise the noisy
dissonance might become loud enough to wake another Marx, or even
worse.
Milos
Forman won Academy Awards for best director for the films “One Flew
Over the Cuckoo’s Nest” and “Amadeus.”
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