| 21st
MARCH, 2006 WORLD PUPPETRY DAY
International Message by Michael Meschke
Born in Danzig Germany (nowadays Gdansk – Poland)
on the 14th July, 1931. In 1939, with the arrival of the Nazi
Government to Germany, he goes into exile with his family
in Sweden.
His
first setting up was at his 18 and was the mediaeval farce
of Mäster Pathelin. He studied, among others, with Harro
Siegel at the High School of Decorative Arts of Braunschweig.
Founder
and director of the Marionetteatern of Stockholm He was Vice-president
of UNIMA from 1976 to 1988.
I
am writing this message following my return from Banda Aceh,
Sumatra, Indonesia where, on the sunny morning of 26 December
2004, the catastrophic tidal wave hit with the most force. One
hundred and twenty-six thousand dead in just a few minutes,
suddenly engulfed, perhaps right here, where I am standing.
Heartbreaking, black desolation, written on the faces of the
survivors.
With a few puppets in a suitcase, I have come to try and entertain
the lost orphans, wandering up to their knees in puddles of
poisoned, salty water, which just will not go away. I would
have done better to be carrying bricks with the sweating workers
who, all around me, are rebuilding the walls of demolished houses,
if my seventy-five year old bones were up to it.
In the face of all the cares which these destructive natural
forces had heaped upon their victims, my puppets stayed in their
case.
This, in a nutshell, is how powerless our instruments are.
However, other destructive forces – those of men –
do not stand defeated. After each bloody conflict, man seems
to clamour for yet another crisis. From bad to worse, he cannot
stop himself from walking the tightrope of the latest nuclear
threat, as though it were written into his very being. We are
all tainted with it.
In this year, 2006, humanity is being incited to race towards
even greater polarisation between the various fundamentalist
ideals, both in the East and in the West, towards the left and
towards the right. How? By besmirching what the other holds
most dear, be it Islam, freedom of expression, human dignity
or other essential values.
Bringing a puppet into the midst of all this seems laughable.
It makes people laugh, but not in the traditional sense, by
delighting the audience: mostly because it is so powerless.
And all around us, this powerlessness is the true strength of
the puppet. Because it is part of that “in spite of everything”,
without which human beings would have perished long ago.
Times change. The puppet-master who, in days of yore, wanted
to save the world, is happy today if he can live by his own
hand. Let us, then, be humble, but without giving way to defeatism:
let’s make our puppets dance, because that’s what
we know how to do, because we are privileged to do what we love
the most – and because our reward is and will be the emotion
we kindle in so many hearts.
also... International Message from Dario
Fo (Italy) |