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- <text id=93TT0337>
- <title>
- Oct. 04, 1993: From People Power To Polenta
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- Oct. 04, 1993 On The Trail Of Terror
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- ESSAY, Page 94
- From People Power To Polenta
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>Charles Krauthammer
- </p>
- <p> When Katherine Anne Power--'60s radical, bank robber, fugitive--turned herself in last week after 23 years on the run, she
- added another entry to her already crowded resume: unwitting
- historian. Her brief explanatory statement released upon her
- surrender to Boston police is a document historians of the future,
- puzzling over what happened to the '60s, will find useful.
- </p>
- <p> They will ignore the usual mitigating phrases about actions
- she now characterizes as "naive and unthinking." One does not
- ordinarily think of a bank robbery in which a policeman, father
- of nine, is shot in the back, as an act of naivete. "My intention
- was never to damage any human life," she says. It apparently
- never occurred to her that when robbing a bank in the company
- of three ex-cons, a shotgun and a submachine gun, somebody might
- get hurt.
- </p>
- <p> Nor is there anything unusual about her spirit-of-the-age defense,
- wherein she insists that her deeds should be seen in the context
- of a time when many others--she cites, for example, Daniel
- Ellsberg, leaker of the Pentagon papers--were breaking the
- law. There is a certain moral gap between unauthorized leaking
- and armed robbery that this defense does not bridge.
- </p>
- <p> No matter. These run-of-the-mill self-justifications are window
- dressing. What everyone wants to know is not why Katherine Power
- robbed a bank in 1970--we know: she wanted to save the world--but why she finally gave it up in 1993. It is her account
- of the return that yields the one truly memorable line in this
- text, the one historians will ponder to their benefit: "I know
- that I must answer this accusation from the past, in order to
- live with full authenticity in the present."
- </p>
- <p> So Katherine Power came in from the cold in search of "full
- authenticity." Not out of remorse or resignation. Not seeking
- forgiveness or repentance. "She did not return out of guilt,"
- explained her husband. She just tired of telling lies, of living
- as Alice Metzinger, wife, cook, restaurateur, but with a shrouded
- past and troubled future. "She wanted her life back," said her
- husband. "She wanted her truth back. She wants to be whole."
- </p>
- <p> That Officer Schroeder will not get his life back troubled her
- ("his death was shocking to me"), but that is not why she surrendered--or she would have done so 23 years ago. In fact, as elaborated
- in a front-page New York Times story about her psychotherapy
- for depression, her surrender--for the sake of "full authenticity"--was a form of therapy, indeed the final therapeutic step
- toward regaining her sense of self.
- </p>
- <p> Allan Bloom once described a man who had just gotten out of
- prison, where he had undergone "therapy." "He said he had found
- his identity and learned to like himself," writes Bloom. "A
- generation earlier, he would have found God and learned to despise
- himself as a sinner."
- </p>
- <p> In an age where the word sin has become quaint--reserved for
- such offenses against hygiene as smoking and drinking (which
- alone merit "sin taxes")--surrendering to the authorities
- for armed robbery and manslaughter is not an act of repentance
- but of personal growth. Explains Jane Alpert, another '60s radical
- who served time (for her part in a series of bombings that injured
- 21 people): "Ultimately, I spent many years in therapy, learning
- to understand, to tolerate and forgive both others and myself."
- </p>
- <p> Learning to forgive oneself. Very important nowadays for revolutionaries
- with a criminal bent. What a pathetic trajectory from the '60s
- to the '90s: from revolutionary slogans to New Age psychobabble,
- from Frantz Fannon to Robert Fulghum, from the thrill of the
- underground to the banalities of the couch.
- </p>
- <p> But the banality does not stop there. This revolution has not
- just gone into therapy. It is heavily into food. When Bobby
- Seale, co-founder and chairman of the Black Panthers, finally
- produced his oeuvre, it was Barbeque'n with Bobby. Karleton
- Lewis Armstrong, jailed for a 1970 University of Wisconsin bombing
- that injured four and killed one, now runs a fruit-juice business
- in Madison, Wisconsin. And Katherine Power, expert chef and
- cooking instructor, was renowned in her adopted Oregon for her
- recipes. Power's therapist, reports the New York Times, found
- it impossible "to believe that this bespectacled cook with the
- terrific polenta recipe...had spent 14 years as one of the
- Federal Bureau of Investigation's 10 Most Wanted fugitives."
- </p>
- <p> It starts with people power. It ends in polenta. A fitting finish
- to the radical '60s.
- </p>
- <p> But it is not quite right to close the book with this touch
- of cute domesticity. Let's remember who Katherine Power was
- and what she did. This was not a flower child caught up some
- wild afternoon in a robbery. She was found to have in her apartment
- three rifles, a carbine, a pistol, a shotgun and a huge store
- of ammunition. She is accused of having fire bombed a National
- Guard armory. She took part in a bank robbery in which a hero
- cop, father of nine, was shot dead. This is someone very hard
- who has now softened--out of feelings of loss, principally
- for herself.
- </p>
- <p> "After all these years," concludes Newsweek, "it's hard to know
- whom to feel the most sympathy for: the [Schroeder] children
- who lost a father...[or] the young woman who lost her
- way in the tumult of the '60s."
- </p>
- <p> That's a hard one? Reflecting on the man who learned to like
- himself in prison, Bloom notes that in the mind of this ex-con,
- "the problem lay with his sense of self, not with any original
- sin or devils in him. We have here the peculiarly American way
- of digesting Continental despair. It is nihilism with a happy
- ending."
- </p>
- <p> Except for the orphans.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-