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- MAN OF THE DECADE, Page 58In Any Language . . .
-
-
- Intimate whispers, silent vigils, joyful chants all echoed with a
- single, precious word: freedom
-
-
- EAST GERMANY: FREIHEIT
-
- "I must weep for joy that it happened so quickly and
- simply. And I must weep for wrath that it took so abysmally
- long."
-
- -- Wolf Biermann, East German poet and protest singer who
- was stripped of his citizenship in 1976 while on tour in West
- Germany. An idealistic socialist, he returned to his country in
- December.
-
- POLAND: WOLNOSC
-
- "Polish society, often badly assessed by itself and its
- leaders, has proved itself better and much more mature than we
- thought it was."
-
- -- Andrzej Wajda, Senator and movie director.
-
- HUNGARY: SZABADSAG
-
- "I am proud that these historical changes have come about
- without bloodshed or force. This is the result of the wisdom of
- the people. No one called for revenge."
-
- -- Arpad Goncz, author and playwright. He was sentenced to
- life imprisonment in 1956 and released under a 1963 amnesty.
- Unable to publish, he worked as a pipe fitter.
-
- CZECHOSLOVAKIA: SVOBODA
-
- "In everyone there is some longing for humanity's rightful
- dignity, for moral integrity, for free expression of being and
- a sense of transcendence over the world of existence."
-
- -- Vaclav Havel, playwright and leader of the democracy
- movement
-
- BULGARIA: SVOBODA
-
- "Until now silence has been the only form of honesty, but
- today we cannot be silent any longer. We are being drowned in
- the torrent of applause from a claque; suffocated in the sewage
- of lethargy and sunk in the superidealized cesspool."
-
- -- Edvin Sugarev, poet and literary critic
-
- SOVIET UNION: SVOBODA
-
- "The many countries crushed into some semblance of
- historical and ideological unity under communism are at long
- last beginning to assert their claims to separate identities.
- These countries are claiming their right to be themselves."
-
- -- Andrei Sinyavsky, one of the leading dissidents of the
- 1960s, immigrated to Paris in 1973 after almost six years in a
- labor camp
-
- CHINA: ZEE-YOU
-
- "The pressure against the system is building, and there
- comes a point beyond which one cannot turn back. However naive
- our faith may seem, we will continue the fight. Even if we are
- convinced the battle is lost from the beginning, at least for
- the time being we will have to answer the challenge."
-
- -- Wuer Kaixi, a leader of the students' movement, now in
- self-imposed exile in the U.S.
-
-