Ismail Kadare - The Concert

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Ismail Kadare once called The Palace of Dreams "the most courageous book I have written; in literary terms, it is perhaps the best". When it was first published in the author's native country, it was immediately banned, and for good reason: the novel revolves around a secret ministry whose task is not just to spy on its citizens, but to collect and interpret their dreams. An entire nation's unconscious is thus tapped and meticulously laid bare in the form of images and symbols of the dreaming mind.The Concert is Kadare's most complete and devastating portrayal of totalitarian rule and mentality. Set in the period when the alliance between Mao's China and Hoxha's Albania was going sour, this brilliant novel depicts a world so sheltered and monotonous that political ruptures and diplomatic crises are what make life exciting.

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“Yes, you’re right,” he answered. “That’s what we’ll do. The Albanian women will be the first ones in Europe to be de-feminized. I’m told they managed to throw off the veil after being forced by Islam to wear it for five hundred years. But we are much stronger than Islam!”

As dawn approached, their conversation grew more and more incoherent: sometimes he would nod off, sometimes she sounded as if she were talking in a waking nightmare. She would get into a rage, then a moment later be overcome by an icy wave of doubt. “Unsex all white women, master!” she cried out once as in a dream. Thee became cast down again at the thought of how long it would take. She was afraid everything would peter out when he died. She feared he himself might not be determined enough. He reassured her as best he could. “Don’t worry! Once we get the thing started there’ll be no stopping it,” If it hadn’t still been ie the future, he might have quoted the example of Cambodia: “Look at Cambodia — it started there with hatred of culture and ended up with hatred of everything else. Now they’re even allergic to buildings in their cities!” As it was, he just had to listen to her breathless fretting: “What if this? Supposing that?”

It was getting light when he started talking about marihuana. Perhaps the rosy gleams of dawn made him think of it. Perhaps he thought it was time to put an end to her ravings. At any rate, he suddenly heaved a sigh and said: “There’s another way I can achieve my ends.” Then he told her of what his enemies called the latest bee in his bonnet — his marihuana plan.

“When I gave orders for farmers to start growing it, a couple of months ago, everyone thought it was for the four or five billion dollars it might bring in. The idiots! My reasons were quite different…”

She listened open-mouthed.

“I’d have told you about it before,” he said, “but I was waiting for an opportunity like tonight.”

Then he rambled on about the waves of red that would eventually spread out over the whole earth like-ripples on a pond, and about the hallucinations that would fill all those gradually softening brains. A few years’ addiction to the drug brought about a weakening of the mind, while a few years more produced further deterioration, and so on until the persons concerned had lost about half of their mental faculties.

“And that’s the key to the whole thing,” he murmured. “That’s what will make all the rest quite easy — do you see?”

And so they began a new day, hovering between sleep and waking. All that was needed was the hoot of an owl to complete Jiang Qing’s resemblance to Lady Macbeth, as there lay in the next room, with their throats cut, Shakespeare, the Ninth Symphony, the Mona Lisa, and all the drunken governments who, like King Duncan’s drugged grooms, woke too late to prevent the murder…

Mao Zedong took a deep breath as if to drive away the memory of that night. Some time had gone by since then, and what had once been a dream had long since turned into fact. So much so that foreigners had begun to smell a rat. He froze again, thinking he heard the sound of another plane. But when he looked up the sky was empty except for clouds dotted here and there, as before. I must have been dreaming, he thought. Then, a moment later, growled: “They sniff around my marihuana like a pack of hyenas.” But let them fly as low as they liked, let them take photographs, make films, even analyse samples of soil, they would never guess his ultimate object. Their minds are too stale too discover our secrets, he told himself. Even Marx couldn’t have done so, explaining everything in terms of economics and politics as if that were all! He’d have like to remind Marx of Genghis Khan — there’d been no economics or politics, no profits or surpluses, in his tide of conquest: only violence, annihilation, the grinding of everything to dust. How do you explain that, eh, Herr Marx? Your mind can’t cope with our Asian ardours. That’s why you were doomed never to succeed with us.

He realized his thoughts were becoming confused. Europe, marihuana, the need to strengthen the dose again — the various ideas were not combining into any sort of order. “Mari-hua-na,” he mumbled. “Mao-mari-huana.” He laughed. “The thoughts of Maorihuana! Laugh, the rest of you! You’ll still be the first to come crawling to me for mercy! Ave Mao-Maria!” And he laughed to himself again. But this time it was more like a sneer.

They’d say he was raving. It was a word they were very fond of. They were always in a hurry to stick labels on any ideas their sluggish minds couldn’t understand, any concepts a bit larger than what they were used to. “Cosmic ravings” indeed! Of course, if someone’s mind isn’t capable of standing back and regarding the world impartially, everything strikes him as crazy. But his mind was capable. He could stand a thousand yards back from the world and examine it closely, even though he was only a tiny particle compared with the whole cosmos. Not for nothing was he the spiritual leader of a billion men. It was this multitude that conferred on its guide the power of seeing the world in its true proportions. You had only to look at it properly to see a tiny globule revolving in the heavens like millions of others, inhabited by at most four or five human beings: one white, one yellow, one red and one black. The white is physically the strongest, with a well-nourished brain that enables him to dominate the other three. These submit to him because they have neither the physical nor the mental strength to oppose him. And so the days (the centuries) go by, until the yellow man happens to discover a plant, which he slyly boils and gives to the white man to drink. The white man swallows it, has sweet dreams, and his mind is weakened. He goes on drinking the potion for years. And then comes the day (the century) when the yellow man, seeing the white man at the end of his tether, seizes the opportunity to wrest his power from him, Now, thinks he, it’s my turn to rule the world. What a pity it’s not a bit bigger!

That’s all. The rest was just stuff and nonsense. This was the whole history of the globe, past and present. A waste of time to discuss it further. To complicate things was mere foolishness. And now he was brewing the potion for the whole of mankind.

Mao blinked, thee looked out over the landscape. This was the cauldron in which he brewed his philtre. The red steam rose to the brim. Was the world troubled? Then its fever must be soothed as soon as possible. This was what he’d been working towards for a long time: he was going to give the world a sleeping pill of his owe making.

He felt drowsy too. Again he thought he could hear a plane, but once more when he looked up the sky was empty. “That’s how the problems of the world might be settled,” he thought. “It’s too small a one to be worth any more bother. I could have dealt with a world that was much bigger.”

The roaring sound returned. But this time Mao didn’t look up, “It must be just a buzzing in my ear,” he thought.

Gjergj Dibra’s plane had been flying for ages over the Arabian deserts. The return journey seemed so long it was as if the desert had grown larger since the journey out. He’d given up looking out of the window a long while ago: the monotony of the scene below only made the time creep past more slowly. He tapped nervously at the locks on his briefcase, which as always he was holding in his lap. It was a bit fatter than it had been on the way out, but sealed in the same way. Yet, though he knew nothing of its contents, his intuition told him that even though it might look heavier, its contents were in a way less weighty than they had been.

And he was right. The briefcase didn’t contain any reply to the letter from Albania to China. At first sight the papers it did hold had nothing to do with the letter. Some of them dealt with economics: four reports trying to explain the freighters’ delay. The fifth document was a long memorandum, accompanied by maps and sketches and drawn up by seven Chinese experts, warning that the main compensating dam serving the northern hydro-electric power stations might burst if there was an earthquake. Work on the site should be halted at once in order that the necessary precautions might be taken. Documents 7 and 8 were accounts of a long series of negotiations between the two economic delegations, strewn with misunderstandings arising largely out of language. The ninth document was the X-ray of a Chinaman’s foot, together with two interpretations of it — one by a group of surgeons at the osteology centre in Peking and the other by a group of barefoot doctors — together with a note from the ministry for foreign affairs. The last paper of all was a detailed report on the evidence collected concerning the murder of Lin Biao, with various theories as to who was responsible. This was the only document with whose contents Gjergj Dibra was more or less familiar, since in the course of the tedious evenings he’d spent in Peking he’d often discussed the rumours about Lin Biao’s disappearance with his friends at the embassy. During the flight home he’d been turning what was said over and over in his mind, perhaps because these comments had disturbed him, or perhaps because Lin Biao’s end had involved a plane journey. As soon as Gjergj had set foot on the steps leading up to the aircraft, he couldn’t help imagining the marshal in some secret airport, hurrying towards a plane over which the shadow of death probably hung already. He was with his wife and son, and all three looked terrified, So much so that at the last minute, just as he was about to enter the plane, Lin Biao appeared to halt, as if petrified, and had to be dragged inside …It was a strange and senseless journey, aboard a plane without a crew — was it possible that his son, a squadron leader in the Chinese Air Force, would have chosen such an aircraft, let alone one with insufficient fuel aboard? It was all very hard to believe, as was the alleged phone call from Lin Biao’s daughter, who betrayed her father by telling Zhou Enlai about his attempted escape five hours beforehand. Not to mention Mao Zedong’s words, “Let him go,” and the suggestion by one of the marshal’s fellow-conspirators that the plane should be brought down by rockets so as to remove all traces of the plot. Thee Mao again: “You’d better let him go, so people won’t be able to say we murdered him.” And then the plane crashed and caught fire in Mongolia…

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