Shanghai: refugee heaven
9/3/2005 17:25
Shanghai Daily news
Australian author Thomas Kenneally visits the Ohel Moshe
Synagogue in what used to be the Jewish Quarter in Hongkou District.
An internationally acclaimed author recalls the
days before World War II when Shanghai's reputation as a safe refuge saved the
lives of thousands of persecuted Europeans. Zhao Feifei talks with Australian
writer Thomas Kenneally. Award-winning novelist Thomas Kenneally first came
to Shanghai 25 years ago just to have a look around. But on his current visit he
is on a mission ¡ª to pay homage and to stop to ponder. He is also in the city to
take part in the Second Shanghai Literary Festival which began last Saturday and
runs through March 19. But first, the 70- year-old Australian author of the
celebrated book ¡°Schindler¡¯s Ark¡± visited the Ohel Moshe Synagogue in what used
to be the Jewish Quarter in Hongkou District. He met and talked with
86-year-old Wang Faliang, a local resident who befriended his Jewish neighbors
in the 1930s and who now works in the synagogue as doorkeeper and tour guide.
¡°It¡¯s fascinating that one can see what happened here in Shanghai ¡ª the fact
that the Jews had such a full and rich life living here,¡± Kenneally says. ¡°There
were so many cafes and they gave them very European names like ¡®Little
Vienna.¡¯ ¡°Great human cataclysms such as World War II produced strange
bedfellows. I¡¯m aware that a lot of people went to Australia via Shanghai who
were Russian refugees. There seems to have been a connection between Australia
and Shanghai throughout the past century. The present Consul General (of
Australia in Shanghai) Sam Gerovich was born in Shanghai. ¡°And I also did
know that many Jews found refuge in Shanghai. It¡¯s interesting that Jews were
better treated here than they were in Europe. From Baruch Spinoza to Albert
Einstein, they contributed so much to European civilization, yet Europe decided
they were too dangerous to be allowed to go on breathing ¡ª but some of them
found breath in Shanghai. So I think it¡¯s an interesting and appropriate
place to visit during the 60th anniversary of the liberation of Auschwitz.¡± A
prolific writer, Kenneally has penned more than 40 books of fiction and
non-fiction. He won the Man Booker Prize for ¡°Schindler¡¯s Ark¡± which was
adapted to become Steven Spielberg¡¯s Oscar-winning film, ¡°Schindler¡¯s List.¡±
When it comes to talking about his writing or discussing history, Kenneally has
always been articulate, expansive and occasionally fills the room with great
bursts of joyous laughter. He talks with such complete passion that his audience
can not help but be swept away ¡ª an entirely apt quality in a novelist. ¡°It¡¯s
a teasing thought that on the 60th anniversary of the liberation of Auschwitz,
that is not the only issue that fascinates writers,¡± he says. ¡°There are some 50
million refugees around the planet. They are going to remain scattered all over
the world because there are no real international efforts to deal with the
problem, apart from the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees. Some
governments would rather posture locally on the issue than join together and
bring about an international solution. ¡°It¡¯s said we¡¯re pretty immune to
history. Those who ignore history are doomed to repeat it. In fact, a lot of
people who know their history repeat it nonetheless. Our immunity to history,
even on the part of those who know it, is breathtaking. All the problems we
are having in Iraq the moment are the problems the British had when the state
was rather artificially formed. They haven¡¯t learned anything from World War I,
let alone from the Holocaust.¡± Spielberg bought the rights of Kenneally¡¯s
award-winning book the year after it was published and the movie took 10 years
to make. ¡°Steven was very anxious to make the film quickly,¡± says Kenneally.
¡°Having decided in 1983 to acquire the film rights of the work, he then took
another nine years before it was ready to go. One of the reasons was that I took
(the whole year of) 1985 trying to produce a screenplay that he¡¯d like. Then he
started to think that even if he made some serious films the critics would still
all wait to sneer at him like they did at his ¡®Empire of the Sun.¡¯ ¡°In the
end, he had four writers including myself. And in 1992, he caught influenza in
Guangdong Province. That¡¯s why it took so long." The story was born in 1980
when Kenneally walked into a shop in California to buy an attache case and
purchased it from one of the Schindler survivors who told him the story. ¡°As
a matter of fact, in Sydney a few years ago I spoke with Michael Ondaatje, the
author of ¡®The English Patient¡¯,¡± says Kenneally. ¡°He was happy with his film
and I am with mine. It was a great story and I didn¡¯t make it up ¡ª I could only
mess it up, if anything. It¡¯s like watching your football team ¡ª you can
criticize the coach¡¯s decisions but when the score is good at the end of the
game, you are happy.¡± When Spielberg¡¯s heartwrenching picture made Kenneally
an overnight sensation, it also posed some ¡°benign challenges¡± to him. He is
afraid that readers will only be interested in one of his considerable body of
works. ¡°I always feel that some of my neglected ¡®children¡¯ are the best
ones,¡± the jovial writer says. Kenneally¡¯s latest work is ¡°The Tyrant¡¯s
Novel,¡± inspired by the former Iraqi dictator, Saddam Hussein. In this
novelwithin-a-novel, Kenneally returns to the political themes which won him
prizes like ¡°The Chant of Jimmie Blacksmith¡± and ¡°Schindler¡¯s Ark.¡± It takes
place in an unnamed oil-rich country in the Middle East ruled by a tyrant who
calls himself ¡°Great Uncle.¡± A reviewer says the novel centers on a short-story
writer named Alan Sheriff who is given one month to write an "autobiographical
novel¡± for which Great Uncle will take full credit. Sheriff tells his story
to a Western journalist in a detention camp in an unnamed Arab country where he
has languished for three years. ¡°I wanted to write about the sort of factors
that turn people into refugees,¡± Kenneally says. He is now working on the
final draft of another book entitled ¡°The Sydney Experiment,¡± which tells the
story of convicts, slaves, Originals, women, Jews and the
Irish.
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