PRAGUE, Czech Republic -- On the night of the
Lisbon Referendum my landlord’s son called to help me with bills.
‘I am
hoping the Irish will do the right thing.’
‘What do
you mean?’ I asked.
‘Lisbon. I hope they stick
to what they said last time.’
That night
I wrote a letter to President Klaus. Consequently, I discovered many people,
including other Irish persons residing in Prague,
were doing likewise in or around the same time. At four o’ clock a news report
about early indications was posted on a national broadsheet website. I stepped
onto the balcony, lit a cigarette and spit into the courtyard below. Spitting
is a disgusting habit, but I was disgusted.
The Lisbon juggernaut has since
rolled on. Today, I was teaching an employee of a computer game publishing
company. He began the class by saying he had bought and watched the Michael
Collins DVD the week before, which prompted a short impromptu history lesson. I
must admit a little lump stuck when I spoke about Oliver Cromwell, Father
Murphy and Charles Stewart Parnell -- call it a little homesickness. He opined
that Collins was a ‘good guy’ and asked about Northern Ireland. He was really
eating into time set aside for teaching phrasal verbs, but what better way to
learn a language than by speaking. I finished on the Good Friday Agreement.
‘And
Lisbon,’ he said, ‘why change? Why a second time? That is not democracy.’
Frankly,
the topic wore me down. It was before eight. The hot chocolate and croissant
had not yet settled and he was unintentionally upsetting me. ‘I don’t know. I
really don’t know,’ was all I could manage.
From
history and culture Czech and Irish people are not too dissimilar. After all,
the Celtic migration originated in the Bohemia
region. Other students have told me about genetic studies on a particular
disease of the liver undertaken, linking the two populations. The population’s
views of what democracy should be are one of the same. The effectiveness of a
bureaucratic establishment is viewed with equal amounts of scepticism, which is
where the EU presents problems in the minds of the ordinary citizen. Clarity of
thought is shared and suspicions about power-mongering and ‘jobs for the boys’
arise.
The student
used the metaphor of an anchorman reading the news with a hammer and sickle on
his back.
‘Now they
replace it with the EU flag. It’s crazy, man. It’s not what a democracy should
be.’
Ireland and
the Czech Republic are victims of recent
occupations. They know too well how fractured European issues can become. Out
of all European countries these two should be most willing to avail of the
security a federation could provide. Yet the cultural instinct is powerful.
Geography is a factor too. Ireland misses the continental vibe, the freedom of
crossing borders without boarding aircraft or boats. Yet these populations seem
to share the view, regardless of how this is misrepresented by their political
representatives, that rule is unproductive.
After Lisbon, whether these
populations will ever again have the opportunity to speak truthfully without
resorting to protest is a good question.
Paul
O’Sullivan is an aspiring journalist and currently lives in Prague, due to economic
circumstances in his native Ireland.