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Why Studying at a Portuguese<br />

University is a Great Idea<br />

Maria de Lurdes Rodrigues<br />

Another Way to Strengthen<br />

Portuguese-American Relations<br />

Allan J. Katz<br />

A Step toward Doing Business<br />

in Portuguese<br />

Rui Boavista Marques<br />

Portugal: A Place to Live<br />

and a Place to Learn<br />

Luís Patrão<br />

A Groundbreaking Program<br />

António Rendas<br />

Fall | Winter 2011 53 06<br />

SPECIAL<br />

9/11<br />

A <strong>decade</strong> <strong>later</strong>


2<br />

<strong>Luso</strong>-American Foundation<br />

BoArd oF TrusTees:<br />

Teodora Cardoso (President)<br />

Allan J. Katz (Ambassador of the US in Portugal)<br />

Jorge Figueiredo Dias<br />

Jorge Torgal<br />

Luís Braga da Cruz<br />

Luís Valente de Oliveira<br />

Michael de Mello<br />

Vasco Pereira da Costa<br />

Vasco Graça Moura<br />

execuTive counciL:<br />

Maria de Lurdes Rodrigues (President)<br />

Charles Allen Buchanan, Jr<br />

Mário Mesquita<br />

GenerAL secreTAry: José Sá Carneiro<br />

direcTors: Fátima Fonseca, Paulo Zagalo<br />

e Melo, Miguel Vaz<br />

depuTy direcTors: Rui Vallêra<br />

HeAd oF FinAnciAL services:<br />

Maria Fernanda David<br />

HeAd oF AdminisTrATive services:<br />

Luiza Gomes<br />

proGrAm oFFicers: João Silvério, Paula Vicente<br />

Address: Rua do Sacramento à Lapa, 21<br />

1249 ‑090 Lisboa | Portugal<br />

Tel.: (+351) 21 393 5800 • Fax: (+351) 21 396 3358<br />

Email: fladport@flad.pt • www.flad.pt<br />

parallel<br />

direcTor: Maria de Lurdes Rodrigues<br />

cHieF ediTor: Sara Pina<br />

coordinATor: Paula Vicente<br />

conTriBuTors To THis ediTion: Allan J. Katz, Álvaro<br />

Rosendo, Ana Curtinhal, Ana Maria Silva, Ana<br />

Marques Gastão, António Rendas, Carla Maia<br />

de Almeida, Carla Martins, Carlos Leone, Clara<br />

Pinto Caldeira, Claudia Colla, Catarina Martins,<br />

Cátia Soares, Charles Buchanan, E. Mujal‑Leon,<br />

Eduardo Pereira Correia, Fábio Rodrigues, Isabel<br />

Marques da Silva, Isabel Nery, Isabel Carreto,<br />

João Miranda, José Carlos Carvalho, Luís Patrão,<br />

Kathleen Gomes, Manuel Silva Pereira, Maria de<br />

Lurdes Rodrigues, Marina Almeida, Marta Rocha,<br />

Mónica Carvalho, Patrícia Fonseca, Paula Vicente,<br />

Pedro Faro, Raquel Duque, Raquel Ubach<br />

Trindade, Rui Boavista Marques, Rui Ochôa, Sara<br />

Pina, Sandra Pereira, Susana Almeida Ribeiro,<br />

Susana Brito, Susana Neves, Vanessa Rodrigues<br />

TrAnsLATion And revision: Americonsulta<br />

desiGn: José Brandão | Susana Brito [Atelier B2]<br />

prinTed By: www.textype.pt<br />

THis prinTinG: 2,000 copies<br />

niF: 501 526 307<br />

erc reGisTrATion numBer: 125 563<br />

BiAnnuAL puBLicATion<br />

paralelo@flad.pt<br />

Legal deposit: 269 114/07<br />

ISSN 1646 ‑883X<br />

© Copyright: <strong>Luso</strong> ‑American<br />

Development Foundation<br />

All rights reserved<br />

dear reader<br />

The tenth anniversary of the September 11 th tragedy sparked a wave of<br />

commemorative events in the US that were witnessed by some of the<br />

journalists on FLAD’s 2011 José Rodrigues Miguéis scholarship program<br />

in the States. In Lisbon, 9/11 was marked by a Foundation-sponsored conference<br />

series. Both the conferences and the book are discussed in this issue.<br />

One of the Foundation’s main drives in the last few months has been the Study<br />

in Portugal Program, an initiative undertaken by FLAD in partnership with the<br />

Council of Portuguese University Chancellors, the Portuguese Agency for Investment<br />

and Foreign Trade, the Portuguese Tourist Board, and the Fulbright Commission.<br />

The main aim of the program is to highlight Portugal as a study destination for<br />

prospective students from the US. Of the 140 thousand American students who<br />

leave the US to study, nearly half choose Europe as an educational destination.<br />

Portugal is anxious to make it to the top of these students’ wish list and a number<br />

of articles in this edition of Parallel detail the rationale behind the drive to make<br />

Portuguese universities more popular among prospective students.<br />

In the coming year FLAD will be organizing the 3 rd Roosevelt Azorean Forum.<br />

Next year’s event will focus on the historical, strategic, and scientific importance<br />

of the ocean. The international gathering is scheduled to take place from the<br />

27 th -29 th of April in Horta in the Azores at a venue with a stunning view of Pico<br />

island, the site of Portugal’s highest mountain, depicted here by the Californiabased<br />

painter Lucina Ellis, a Portuguese descendant. sArA pinA<br />

Parallel no. 6 | FALL | WINTER 2011


contents<br />

OFERTA<br />

DO EDITOR<br />

04 | Editorial by<br />

Maria de Lurdes Rodrigues<br />

The role of remembrance<br />

in building the future<br />

08 | September 11 th in America’s<br />

collective memory<br />

by Kathleen Gomes<br />

12 | A <strong>decade</strong> of global terrorism<br />

by Patrícia Fonseca<br />

44-49 | study in portugal<br />

44 | Why studying in Portugal<br />

is a great idea<br />

by Maria de Lurdes Rodrigues<br />

46 | Another way to strengthen<br />

Portuguese‑American relations<br />

by Allan J. Katz<br />

47 | A step toward doing business<br />

in Portuguese<br />

by Rui Boavista Marques<br />

[poLiTics]<br />

9/11<br />

A <strong>decade</strong> <strong>later</strong><br />

32 | Transatlantic Trends 2011<br />

Asia gains ground in US public<br />

opinion<br />

by Ana Maria Silva<br />

COMPLIMENTARY<br />

COPY<br />

48 | A place to live and a place<br />

to learn<br />

by Luís Patrão<br />

49 | A groundbreaking program<br />

by António Rendas<br />

[socieTy]<br />

Cover<br />

“Study in Portugal”<br />

Campaign by<br />

www.ideia.pt<br />

Why Studying at a Portuguese<br />

University is a Great Idea<br />

Maria de Lurdes Rodrigues<br />

Another Way to Strengthen<br />

Portuguese-American Relations<br />

Allan J. Katz<br />

A Step toward Doing Business<br />

in Portuguese<br />

Rui Boavista Marques<br />

Portugal: A Place to Live<br />

and a Place to Learn<br />

Luís Patrão<br />

A Groundbreaking Program<br />

António Rendas<br />

14-27 | conference series<br />

9/11 ten years <strong>later</strong><br />

50 | No risk, no glory<br />

an interview with Paul Jerde<br />

52 | Losing in order to win<br />

an interview with Michael Fernandez<br />

Fall | Winter 2011 53 06<br />

9/11<br />

A <strong>decade</strong> <strong>later</strong><br />

53 | Opportunities rather than money<br />

an interview with Mario Calderini<br />

by Sara Pina<br />

Parallel no. 6 | FALL | WINTER 2011 3<br />

SPECIAL


4<br />

ediToriAL<br />

The role of remembrance<br />

in building the future<br />

mAriA de Lurdes rodriGues<br />

On the occasion of the 10 th anniversary of the<br />

9/11 tragedy, FLAD joined the vast worldwide<br />

movement to spark remembrance of the events<br />

that occurred that day, and the wave of discussion<br />

and reflection in which participants over<br />

the globe remembered and celebrated the values<br />

of freedom, reason, and universalism. These<br />

values are the fundamental premises of democracy<br />

and were threatened – not only by the<br />

9/11 attacks themselves – but by interpretations<br />

‘ “study in portugal” [...] The object is to<br />

bring more students to portugal to take<br />

advantage of the very best this country<br />

and its universities have to offer.<br />

’<br />

of the attacks as a manifestation of a clash of<br />

civilizations. That is why promoting remembrance<br />

of 9/11 is indispensable to understanding<br />

the tragic events that occurred on that day<br />

and strengthening our grasp of the causes<br />

underlying the events and their consequences.<br />

It is also indispensible in allowing us to move<br />

forward to build a future that is based on shared<br />

choices, instead of resigning to the fate that<br />

others have mapped out for us.<br />

The results of yet another edition of Transatlantic<br />

Trends Survey show that citizens on both sides of<br />

the Atlantic share a common vision of the pressing<br />

issues of our time and converging opinions<br />

that may well allow us to build a common<br />

future. These shared US-European perceptions<br />

on subjects such as the role of the US in leading<br />

transatlantic relations, the evolution and construction<br />

of the European Union, the dynamics<br />

of the economic and financial crisis that has<br />

swept the world, and relations with emerging<br />

economies such as China and Brazil, show us<br />

that both sides share a common platform for<br />

understanding and values and ambitions that<br />

will allow them to interact democratically<br />

despite the natural political and ideological differences<br />

that exist between<br />

them.<br />

Last but not least our magazine<br />

discusses a new FLAD<br />

program we have dubbed<br />

“Study in Portugal.” This<br />

project aims to support<br />

Portuguese universities in<br />

their efforts to create better<br />

awareness of the institutions<br />

themselves and their programs<br />

among US students<br />

and their families. The object<br />

is to bring more students to<br />

Portugal to take advantage of<br />

the very best this country<br />

and its universities have to offer. The international<br />

projection of college-level programs has<br />

become a challenge for all universities throughout<br />

the world but especially those in the US and<br />

Europe. But in the worldwide bid for more study<br />

abroad students, Portugal has unique advantages.<br />

It belongs to the Community of<br />

Portuguese-Speaking Countries, which places it<br />

in a special position when it comes to access<br />

to countries such as Angola, Cape Verde,<br />

Mozambique and Brazil. The task is now to<br />

bring the US and Portugal closer together by<br />

demonstrating that the country itself and the<br />

Portuguese language are a gateway to the world<br />

– a portal that can eventually lead to countless<br />

career opportunities.<br />

Parallel no. 6 | FALL | WINTER 2011


A trail of war and debt<br />

“The ten years following the 9/11 attacks have left a trail of<br />

war and debt. A study by the Watson Institute estimates that by<br />

last June, the Afghan and Iraqi Wars had cost nearly 225 thousand<br />

lives, which included 6 thousand US service personnel and 1200<br />

allies. The US Congress estimates that the War on Terror, carried<br />

out by George W. Bush, ran up a tab of between 3.6 and 4.4<br />

billion dollars. The cost of secret service operations, responsible<br />

for the death this year of Osama bin Laden, has increased by<br />

250%, with close to 30 thousand people working in wiretapping<br />

in the US alone.”<br />

[ Diário económico, September 7, Lionel Barber ]<br />

Being a Muslim<br />

in the US<br />

“Being a Muslim in the United States those days didn’t mean<br />

you were under suspicion. The greatest obstacle was ignorance.<br />

Then 9/11 happened. […] No other community has suffered the<br />

consequences of September 11th as much as the Muslims, who<br />

began to be subject to questioning and were prevented from<br />

traveling solely based on their appearance. […] The legacy of 9/11<br />

has sparked different reactions among the Muslim community in<br />

the United States, which is estimated at 2.4 million.”<br />

[ Público, September 7, Kathleen Gomes ]<br />

Works of art destroyed<br />

“A significant number of artworks […] were lost forever when<br />

the World Trade Center collapsed with the 9/11 terrorist attacks<br />

in New York, ten years ago to the day on Sunday. […] There is<br />

still no certainty about how many artworks and historical documents<br />

were lost because of the attack. Records tell of letters and<br />

40 thousand photo negatives of President John F. Kennedy.<br />

The World Trade Center housed the headquarters of over 400<br />

companies and at least 21 document libraries, which were all<br />

destroyed. In the Ferdinand Gallozzi Library alone there was a<br />

collection of documents dealing with US trade since 1840.”<br />

[ Lusa, September 9 ]<br />

9/11<br />

A <strong>decade</strong> <strong>later</strong><br />

press revieW<br />

by Ana maria silva*<br />

Reality trumps fiction<br />

Reality trumped fiction on September 11th , when the most<br />

truth-defying attacks of all occurred; and in the ten years that<br />

have followed, we have seen fiction attempt to trump that reality,<br />

leading us to reflect on how much the world has changed.<br />

American writers like Philip Roth, Don DeLillo, and John<br />

Updike and Britain’s Ian McEwan and Portugal’s Pedro Guilherme-<br />

Moreira are just a few of the authors who have written about<br />

the hyper-reality of 9/11, when a terrorist strike targeting the<br />

Twin Towers of the World Trade Center in New York, and the<br />

Pentagon in Washington provoked the highest number of civil<br />

casualties in history.”<br />

[ Lusa, September 10 ]<br />

In America<br />

and Afghanistan<br />

The US – namely Washington, DC and New York City – were<br />

on red alert after receiving ‘specific, credible, but unconfirmed<br />

intelligence’ that Al-Qaeda was preparing another strike. […]<br />

‘Every September 11th , the Afghans are reminded of an event<br />

that they took no part in, an event that served as the pretext for<br />

American colonialist designs to shed the blood of millions of<br />

innocent, poverty-stricken Afghans,’ the Taliban stated.”<br />

[ Diário de Notícias, September 11, Susana Salvador ]<br />

The world has changed<br />

It is practically undeniable that the world has changed since<br />

September 11th , 2001. Al-Qaeda’s 9/11 attack on the Twin Towers<br />

in New York has gone on to shape ideals, opinions, and the<br />

<strong>decade</strong> that ensued and is coming to a close this weekend. The<br />

attacks pushed the US into two wars, a financial crisis the country<br />

had never experienced before; and one can go so far as to<br />

say that the US does not wield the same hegemonic power it<br />

did until 2001.”<br />

[ Jornal i, September 10, Joana Azevedo Viana ]<br />

Parallel no. 6 | FALL | WINTER 2011 5


6<br />

A safer world<br />

“Ten years after the 9/11, the world is ‘safer’ and the United<br />

States ‘stronger,’ affirmed Allen J. Katz, US Ambassador to<br />

Portugal today as he met with journalists on the tenth anniversary<br />

of the terrorist attacks, which will be on Sunday. The<br />

diplomat added that he thought ‘the world is currently a safer<br />

place.’”<br />

[ Lusa, September 6 ]<br />

Collective catharsis<br />

“We’re being cautious and there are people holding maps.<br />

There’s a police contingent, roadblocks, x-ray machines in New<br />

York’s main subway stations, streets blocked off, soldiers with<br />

weapons, inspections of garbage cans. There are sirens, horns<br />

honking, fast footsteps, tourists and locals surrounding<br />

Manhattan’s new business center. […] Today is ‘charity day’<br />

read the signs behind Ground Zero, where the 9/11 Memorial<br />

is opening its doors for the first time in a private ceremony<br />

[…].<br />

It’s a tribute with onomastics from all over the world: 2,983<br />

names geometrically engraved in bronze – and there are 1,100<br />

that remain to be identified. […] That’s why September 11th is a collective catharsis: today we are all New Yorkers.”<br />

[ Diário de Notícias, September 11, Vanessa Rodrigues<br />

– in the US on a FLAD José rodrigues Miguéis fellowship ]<br />

Revisionist strategy<br />

“The world didn’t change on 9/11, 2001. It changed in 1989<br />

and 1991, with the fall of the Berlin Wall and the implosion<br />

of the Soviet Union. […] America, however, changed on<br />

September 11th , 2001. It changed its perspective on security<br />

and its foreign policy. […] We have seen deep-seated changes<br />

in American foreign policy, with the passing of a conservative<br />

strategy […] and the advent of a revisionist one.”<br />

[ Público, September 11, Tiago Moreira de Sá ]<br />

9/11<br />

A <strong>decade</strong> <strong>later</strong><br />

Bush and Obama<br />

“Together George W. Bush and Barack Obama today marked the<br />

end of a <strong>decade</strong> since the 9/11 attacks […] The former chief<br />

executive and current President of the US strolled around the<br />

memorial to the victims of the attacks with a mournful air.[…]<br />

Together in an unprecedented appearance in New York, were the<br />

man who sent US troops into the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq,<br />

and the man who vowed to get them out. […]”<br />

[ Diário de Notícias, September 12, Patrícia Viegas ]<br />

Birth of a generation<br />

“The US administration claims that the 9/11 attacks marked<br />

the ‘birth of a generation.’ The US believes that it has come out<br />

stronger and more united than ever after the terrorist attacks<br />

that struck New York and Washington on September 11 th , 2001.<br />

[…] ‘I can say, without fear of contradiction or of being accused<br />

of exaggeration, that the 9/11 generation is among the greatest<br />

our nation has ever produced. And it was born right here on<br />

9/11,’ Joe Biden said.”<br />

[ Diário económico, September 12, Pedro Duarte ]<br />

Ceremony at<br />

the Pentagon<br />

“Close to 1,600 people, including a hundreds survivors of the<br />

attack, were at the ceremony, where a huge American flag was<br />

placed on the façade of the building where the plane hit.”<br />

“The 10th anniversary of 9/11 was observed in many ways<br />

throughout the world. In Lisbon, President Cavaco Silva made<br />

a statement stressing “the need for international cooperation<br />

in dealing with terrorism.”<br />

[ Público, September 12, Marco Vaza – in the US on a FLAD José<br />

rodrigues Miguéis fellowship ]<br />

Parallel no. 6 | FALL | WINTER 2011


Three iconic sites<br />

“On the 10th anniversary of September 11th , 2001, as the<br />

nation reflected on its losses, thousands of families gathered<br />

at the new World Trade Center rising in Lower Manhattan, at<br />

the Pentagon, and on a field of wildflowers in Pennsylvania to<br />

commemorate nearly 3,000 killed on that infamous morning<br />

when jetliners were turned into missiles and a new age of<br />

terrorism was born.<br />

The day’s centerpiece unfolded at ground zero, where more<br />

than 10,000 members of the victims’ families […], gathered in<br />

a parklike setting of swamp white oaks and emerald lawns – a<br />

strangely futuristic plaza with precisely spaced trees rising from<br />

a five-acre granite floor, surrounded by a gouged wasteland of<br />

unfinished skyscrapers and silent construction cranes.”<br />

[ New York Times, September 11, Robert McFadden ]<br />

The superpower<br />

has run its course<br />

“It’s hard to tell if the world changes in a split second or if<br />

the great moments in history are merely the results of a long,<br />

in-depth process that – for the most part – unfolds invisibly.<br />

It is difficult to determine whether 9/11 transformed the United<br />

States or if it was the catalyst for an inevitable decline that was<br />

already underway. In any case, the last ten years have proved that<br />

the US has run its course as a superpower. It is not only straining<br />

to assure its lone position as the universal guardian of the<br />

values it defends; but it is also losing ground in the contest with<br />

other nations in this new era, which is no longer an exclusively<br />

American century.”<br />

[ el País, September 11, Antonio Caño ]<br />

Acts of simplicity<br />

and remembrance<br />

“Simplicity, unity, and devotion. The 10th anniversary of the<br />

September 11th attacks were marked by countless commemorations,<br />

as the American people and their leader, Barack Obama, honored<br />

the memory of the nearly 3,000 people who died in New York<br />

City, Washington DC, and Shanksville, Pennsylvania on September<br />

11th , 2001. […] The silence was surreal, as the workmen in the<br />

morning ground their machines to a halt and the traffic was<br />

blocked in downtown Manhattan. Barack Obama ran his fingers<br />

across the names of the victims engraved in stone before greeting<br />

the victims’ families and dignitaries. Then he took the lectern and<br />

read Psalm 46 that states, ‘God is our refuge and strength.’”<br />

[ Le Monde Monde (Agence France Press and Reuters), September 11 ]<br />

9/11<br />

A <strong>decade</strong> <strong>later</strong><br />

Tribute at Ground Zero<br />

“The names of the Sept. 11 dead, some called out by children<br />

barely old enough to remember their fallen mothers and<br />

fathers, echoed across ground zero Sunday in a haunting but<br />

hopeful tribute on the 10th anniversary of the terror attack.<br />

[…]<br />

Weeping relatives of the victims streamed into a newly-opened<br />

memorial and placed pictures and flowers beside names etched<br />

in bronze. Obama and his predecessor, George W. Bush, bowed<br />

their heads and touched the inscriptions.”<br />

[ Washington Post (Associated Press), September 12 ]<br />

Ten years of war<br />

“America grieves, reflects.[…] America paused Sunday to<br />

remember what was lost and how it has changed forever a<br />

<strong>decade</strong> after four hijacked jetliners felled New York City’s Twin<br />

Towers, split open the Pentagon, and bore into the ground in<br />

a quiet Pennsylvania meadow.<br />

The anniversary of the Sept. 11, 2001, terror attacks provided<br />

a moment to take stock of 10 years of war and worry,<br />

while at the same time paying tribute to honorable deeds performed<br />

not only in the earliest moments of the attack, but in<br />

the years since as well.”<br />

[ The Wall Street Journal, September 12, Michael Howard Saul ]<br />

The 9/11 Memorial<br />

“Some people wept. Some embraced. Others silently stared into<br />

the dark pools where the Twin Towers once stood as the 9/11<br />

Memorial at Ground Zero opened its gates to the public.<br />

About 7,000 people had tickets to visit the Memorial as it debuted<br />

on Monday, and another 400,000 have signed up online to<br />

visit in the coming months.”<br />

[ Chicago Tribune (Associated Press), September 13, Samantha<br />

Gross and Verena Dobnick ]<br />

Parallel no. 6 | FALL | WINTER 2011 7<br />

*LPM


SANDRA PEREIRA<br />

Brent Glass is Director of the Smithsonian’s<br />

National Museum of American History<br />

in Washington, DC. He is also a member<br />

of the Flight 93 Memorial Advisory<br />

Commission whose goal was to construct<br />

a memorial in Shanksville, Pennsylvania,<br />

at the site where the aircraft hijacked by<br />

terrorists on 9/11 plummeted to earth.<br />

8<br />

9/11<br />

A <strong>decade</strong> <strong>later</strong><br />

september 11 th<br />

in America’s collective memory<br />

From the Holocaust to 9/11: why do we need memorials to remember tragedies?<br />

And is there such a thing as too much remembrance?<br />

By KATHLeen Gomes<br />

PhOTOGRAPhy By sAndrA pereirA AND vAnessA rodriGues<br />

Like the memorial to the World Trade<br />

Center victims in New York, the Flight 93<br />

Memorial was inaugurated on Sept. 11 th ,<br />

2011, ten years after the disaster.<br />

Memorials combine the way we wish to<br />

be remembered in the future with people’s<br />

need to be consoled in the present. They<br />

“tell more about ourselves and our own<br />

times than they do about the events that<br />

we are supposedly commemorating,” affirmed<br />

Glass in this interview conducted in<br />

Washington.<br />

[Parallel] Whether it’s the Columbine massacre<br />

or 9/11, the building of memorials seems to be<br />

a growing industry in the United States. Why?<br />

The elements of the memorial are positioned to distinguish between those that symbolize the victims inside the pentagon building and those that represent the<br />

victims on the plane. Those in which you can read the victim’s name and simultaneously see the pentagon building memorialize those who died in the pentagon.<br />

Those facing in the opposite direction, where the sky acts as a backdrop to the name, pay tribute to the people who perished aboard AA Flight 77.<br />

Parallel no. 6 | FALL | WINTER 2011


[Brent Glass] Remembering is a very human<br />

attribute. In fact it’s what defines us in<br />

many ways as human beings. As human<br />

beings, when we lose our memory it’s a<br />

catastrophic event. For a society, it’s equally<br />

important to have a collective memory. And<br />

one way we do that is through memorialization<br />

– where we want to capture or<br />

recognize and honor an event or people<br />

for their accomplishments or for their<br />

experience. It can take a variety of forms:<br />

it can be a landscape, it can be a statue, it<br />

can be something more abstract.<br />

Have you ever visited Ground Zero in<br />

New York? There’s a fire station across the<br />

street that got tired of waiting for the<br />

memorial to be built so they put up their<br />

own memorial. And it’s very representational,<br />

it’s very narrative: you see the firemen<br />

running into a building, and you see the<br />

towers on fire. I was there on a day when<br />

a father and son were standing next to me,<br />

and the little boy was probably 8 or 9, so<br />

he wasn’t born when 9/11 happened. The<br />

father was explaining what the memorial<br />

is about, and the boy kept asking: “Why<br />

were they doing this? Why did the planes<br />

fly into the buildings? Why did these people<br />

take over the planes? Why weren’t they<br />

happy with the US?”<br />

The kid kept asking these “why” questions.<br />

And it made me realize that that’s what we<br />

have to do with our museums and our interpretative<br />

centers – is answer the “why”<br />

questions. And that’s what memorials don’t<br />

necessarily do. They don’t have that obligation.<br />

They’re really in that moment of just<br />

remembering the loss that occurred. They’re<br />

part of the healing process.<br />

[P] Memorials are different from historical facts.<br />

They are more sentimental than history itself.<br />

[BG] Yes. Some of the worst memorials,<br />

I think, are the ones that try to tell a<br />

story. Some of the Holocaust memorials<br />

around the country, around the world,<br />

are quite evocative without a whole long<br />

narrative about what happened. Some<br />

failed because they try to be encyclopedic<br />

and tell that story.<br />

The message is not objective, necessarily. In<br />

fact, by definition, it’s subjective because it’s<br />

being sponsored by either the state or by a<br />

group of people who want to remember<br />

individuals or an event in a particular way.<br />

[P] What is the memorial planned for the World<br />

Trade Center site supposed to commemorate?<br />

[BG] I think the primary interest has been<br />

to make sure it’s a memorial to the people<br />

who died.<br />

At the Flight 93 memorial, you have 40<br />

names, of the passengers and crew who<br />

9/11<br />

A <strong>decade</strong> <strong>later</strong><br />

“Hidden constellations” is the way designer michael Arad describes the concept behind the memorial<br />

at Ground Zero in which the names are clustered according to relationships of kinship and friendship.<br />

‘ remembering is a very human<br />

attribute. in fact it’s what defines<br />

us in many ways as human beings.<br />

As human beings, when we lose our<br />

memory it’s a catastrophic event.<br />

For a society, it’s equally important<br />

to have a collective memory.<br />

’<br />

died on that flight, not the 4 hijackers<br />

who also died on the flight; their names<br />

will not be listed on the memorial.<br />

That’s an interesting problem in memorialization:<br />

what do you do with the<br />

names of the people who were the terrorists?<br />

How do you account for the tragedy<br />

if you don’t mention who they are?<br />

It’s like going to Ford’s Theatre here in<br />

Washington and not mentioning John<br />

Wilkes Booth. But I think that in a memorial<br />

it is appropriate not to list these individuals<br />

because you’re not honoring them;<br />

you’re honoring the victims. But in a<br />

museum you would perhaps list the names<br />

of the 19 hijackers in some form.<br />

[P] Aren’t these memorials also about victimhood<br />

or even martyrdom? Because they also have a<br />

death toll purpose.<br />

[BG] It’s an interesting question because<br />

at the Flight 93 memorial they use the<br />

word “heroes.” Because<br />

the passengers, at least<br />

many of them, resisted<br />

and tried to disrupt the<br />

plans of the hijackers;<br />

maybe they tried to capture<br />

the plane back – we<br />

don’t know exactly what<br />

went on in those 30<br />

minutes of what must<br />

have been pure mayhem<br />

and pure terror.<br />

But the New York story<br />

is more complicated. You<br />

have passengers, you have<br />

office workers, you have responders.<br />

You’ve got people who did survive and<br />

who did get out of the towers safely and<br />

avoided injury. You’ve got survivors, you’ve<br />

got responders, you’ve got responders<br />

who died, you’ve got responders who<br />

didn’t die, you’ve got people who died<br />

without even knowing what hit them. So,<br />

you have people who lost their lives on<br />

different levels, not all at once, not all<br />

performing the same function.<br />

The World War II Memorial here in<br />

Washington is clearly a memorial to the<br />

people who were soldiers – who went<br />

into battle knowing they were at risk of<br />

dying, fully conscious of fighting for their<br />

country. Here it’s a little different. You have<br />

people who died not knowing in many<br />

cases what the cause was or why they were<br />

dying.<br />

For all they knew, it was an accident: a<br />

plane accidentally flew into their tower,<br />

at least the first one.<br />

Parallel no. 6 | FALL | WINTER 2011 9<br />

VANESSA RODRIGUES


SANDRA PEREIRA<br />

I guess it’s a different type of death. I<br />

think it’s legitimate to ask: why do they<br />

need a memorial? Some believe that you<br />

10<br />

9/11<br />

A <strong>decade</strong> <strong>later</strong><br />

will feel a sense of healing if you honor<br />

your loved one this way, so the families<br />

take quite an active role in this. Almost<br />

‘ Aren’t memorials less about the dramatic events<br />

they’re supposed to evoke than about<br />

our contemporary sensibilities and needs?<br />

’<br />

The pentagon memorial is composed of 184 units: one per victim, each one displaying a name.<br />

passengers, flight crew, and people in the building died when American Airlines flight 77<br />

slammed into the pentagon at 9:37 a.m. on september 11 th , 2001.<br />

immediately after the Civil War, even<br />

before the war ended, some of the veterans<br />

went back to the battlefields and<br />

started to make plans for memorials to be<br />

put up. At Gettysburg there are more than<br />

1300 memorials.<br />

[P] Until very recently Berlin, bombed during<br />

World War II, didn’t have memorials. They seemed<br />

superfluous in a city where you could still find<br />

the ruins of destruction. But in the last <strong>decade</strong>,<br />

a Holocaust museum and memorial have opened<br />

up in Berlin.<br />

Aren’t memorials less about the dramatic events<br />

they’re supposed to evoke than about our contemporary<br />

sensibilities and needs?<br />

[BG] I think so. When I was in Portugal,<br />

I gave a lecture about “Public Memory<br />

in the US” at four different universities.<br />

One student raised her hand and asked:<br />

“Don’t you think there’s too much<br />

remembering of the Holocaust now?<br />

Don’t you think it’s enough?” She was<br />

maybe 20, 25. I said: it really depends<br />

on what country you’re in, what the current<br />

feeling is, and the impact of the<br />

Holocaust on your country or community.<br />

I don’t know if you can ever remember<br />

too much, or whether the past<br />

becomes too much of a burden and prevents<br />

you from moving forward. But I<br />

agree that it tells more about ourselves<br />

and our own times than it does about<br />

the events that we’re supposedly commemorating.<br />

[P] The issue with the 9/11 memorial is also<br />

its scale. It will exceed other memorials dedicated<br />

to millions of victims, even though it represents<br />

less than 3000 people. What do you make<br />

of that?<br />

[BG] Well, it’s in New York, which makes<br />

everything big. It has to be on a scale that<br />

New Yorkers feel is part of their identity.<br />

It’s the biggest city in the country, a world<br />

capital. And there’s the moral question of<br />

building a memorial or doing anything on<br />

a site where death has occurred and probably<br />

the remains of people are still there.<br />

I know that’s an issue in Pennsylvania.<br />

[P] For many relatives of the victims that’s their<br />

burial ground.<br />

[BG] Right. Even though human remains<br />

have been found and identified, I think<br />

they have only identified maybe a third<br />

of the people who died in New York. I<br />

know there’s still a controversy about the<br />

vault where the human remains are kept<br />

Parallel no. 6 | FALL | WINTER 2011


‘ i don’t know if you can ever<br />

remember too much, or whether<br />

the past becomes too much of<br />

a burden and prevents you from<br />

moving forward. But i agree that<br />

it tells more about ourselves and<br />

our own times than it does about<br />

the events that we’re supposedly<br />

commemorating.<br />

’<br />

on site. There’s an inscription that’s on the<br />

wall outside that vault where the human<br />

remains are being kept. Some of the relatives<br />

have said: “We don’t want anything<br />

on that wall because we don’t want to<br />

turn the vault into part of an exhibit or<br />

part of a tour where people will take pictures<br />

of the inscription.”<br />

At the Flight 93 Memorial Commission<br />

we have four meetings a year. And at each<br />

meeting a handful of family members<br />

come, and there are a lot of tears, and<br />

there’s still a lot of emotion. The shock<br />

has worn off, but it’s been like a prolonged<br />

grieving process. I don’t think it<br />

will ever end. But I think in September it<br />

will reach a point where they will feel<br />

their mission has been fulfilled. The 10 th<br />

anniversary is going to be a sort of feeling<br />

like: “Ok, we’ve done our share to remember<br />

our family members.”<br />

[P] When you talk to New Yorkers, you don’t get<br />

a sense that the memorial is important for them,<br />

personally. To them, the rebuilding of the World<br />

Trade Center, the fact that towers have started to<br />

come up again on the site is a more powerful<br />

symbol than the actual memorial. The memorial<br />

seems to be much more about appeasing the<br />

victims’ families.<br />

[BG] Yes, everyone is being very deferential<br />

to the family members because the<br />

event is so immediate. And I often ask<br />

the questions at Flight 93 site, which has<br />

a much smaller population to deal with:<br />

“Who constitutes a family member? How<br />

do you qualify or not as a family member?<br />

Do you have to be a blood relative?<br />

How distant – a second cousin, an aunt,<br />

or an uncle?” So that’s another political<br />

issue: Who speaks for these people? It’s<br />

easy if it’s a son or daughter, a husband<br />

or wife, but it gets a little more difficult<br />

9/11<br />

A <strong>decade</strong> <strong>later</strong><br />

when the relationship is<br />

someone more remote.<br />

Yeah, I think that’s the primary<br />

audience.<br />

In the case of New York,<br />

you’ve got nearly 3,000<br />

deaths that have occurred,<br />

so you’re not going to get<br />

a consensus. Even in<br />

Shanksville we didn’t have<br />

a total consensus about the<br />

design of the memorial.<br />

The crash occurred at a former<br />

coal mine site, and<br />

although the landscape had<br />

been restored, it was still<br />

sort of bowl-shaped. And<br />

the bowl has a 10, 20%<br />

incline, so the designer of the winning<br />

design used that to recommend a semicircle<br />

of trees. I think it’s 40 trees for<br />

Brent Glass in Portugal<br />

“A Guardian of Memory” is how Brent Glass can be described.<br />

A firm believer that “the way in which we remember history<br />

also reveals much about our own times,” during his first visit<br />

to Portugal, Glass shared his vision of history and museum<br />

expertise with curators and government officials in Lisbon,<br />

Porto, Coimbra, Madeira and the Azores. As a public historian,<br />

Glass’ deals with both remembrance and oblivion, and stresses<br />

that planning, partnerships, outreach and feedback are<br />

essential tools for today’s museums.<br />

each victim, so 1600 trees altogether are<br />

going to be placed in this semi-circle.<br />

But he named his memorial “A Crescent<br />

of Embrace.” And someone jumped on<br />

that and said: “Ah-ha, this is a tribute to<br />

Islam.” Because it was red maples, in the<br />

fall, when the leaves turn, they would be<br />

red. So from the air, if you were flying<br />

over, it would look like a red crescent.<br />

And there was some controversy about<br />

that, and that led one of the family members<br />

to say, “I won’t support this.” The<br />

families had been very close together and<br />

they took this very hard because they<br />

wanted everybody to approve it.<br />

[P] What was the outcome of that discussion?<br />

[BG] The designer made it more of a<br />

circle and extended both ends of the<br />

crescent.<br />

seven thousand ticket-holders were allowed to visit the Ground Zero memorial on sept. 11 th , 2011.<br />

more than 400 thousand purchased tickets to see it in the upcoming months.<br />

Parallel no. 6 | FALL | WINTER 2011 11<br />

D.R.<br />

VANESSA RODRIGUES


1 September 11 th , 2001<br />

(NYC, Washington DC,<br />

Pennsylvania)<br />

Twin Towers – 2,752 fatalities<br />

Pentagon – 169 fatalities<br />

Flight 93- 44 fatalities<br />

2 October 26 th , 2001<br />

(Washington DC)<br />

George W. Bush signs the controversial<br />

Patriot Act, an acronym for “Uniting<br />

and Strengthening America by Providing<br />

Appropriate Tools Required to Intercept<br />

and Obstruct Terrorism.” The Act<br />

curtails many civil rights in the name<br />

of fighting terror<br />

3 October 7 th , 2001<br />

(Afghanistan)<br />

Afghanistan is invaded without<br />

UN approval, marking the start<br />

of a US-sponsored war against<br />

global terror<br />

4 2002 (Guantanamo Bay, Cuba)<br />

The first prisoners from Afghanistan<br />

are brought to the detention facility<br />

in Guantanamo. Other detention<br />

sites in unknown locations<br />

around the world – some run<br />

by the CIA – are used to interrogate<br />

suspects<br />

12<br />

1<br />

1<br />

4<br />

2<br />

poLicy<br />

9/11<br />

A <strong>decade</strong> <strong>later</strong><br />

A <strong>decade</strong> of global terrorism<br />

Ten years ago, two planes hit the Twin Towers<br />

and the world shook.<br />

From that morning on, nothing was the same.<br />

Highlighted in yellow are the attacks<br />

attributed to Al-Qaeda.<br />

TEXT Patrícia Fonseca INFOGRAPH Álvaro Rosendo<br />

5 2002 (Algeria)<br />

The Salafist Group for Preaching<br />

and Combat decides to join forces<br />

with bin Laden’s organization and,<br />

as of 2007, is called the Al-Qaeda<br />

of the Islamic Maghreb<br />

6 April 11 th , 2002 (Tunisia)<br />

A truck bomb is detonated outside<br />

the Ghriba Synagogue in Djerba,<br />

killing 21, 14 of whom were German<br />

citizens<br />

7 October 12 th , 2002<br />

(Bali, Indonesia)<br />

A truck bomb and a suicide bomber<br />

sow chaos in Bali killing 202,<br />

164 of whom are foreign tourists.<br />

The attack is blamed on radical<br />

Islamists tied to Al-Qaeda<br />

8 November 28 th , 2002<br />

(Kenya)<br />

A suicide bomb goes off in a Mombasa<br />

hotel where a group of Israelis are staying.<br />

18 people are killed<br />

11<br />

18<br />

14<br />

5<br />

9 March 20 th , 2003 (Iraq)<br />

American planes start bombing<br />

Baghdad while British forces<br />

occupy the south, controlled<br />

by Saddam Hussein.<br />

Iraq, Iran, and North Korea<br />

had been dubbed “The Axis of Evil”<br />

by Bush for possessing<br />

weapons of mass destruction<br />

10 May 12 th , 2003<br />

(Saudi Arabia)<br />

A three-pronged attack kills 35<br />

in a Riyadh residential zone<br />

11 May 16 th , 2003 (Morocco)<br />

Four suicide bombers kill 33 people<br />

in Casablanca<br />

12 November 15th and 20th , 2001<br />

(Turkey)<br />

Four car bombs parked near two<br />

synagogues, the British consulate,<br />

and Britain’s HSBC bank, kill 63,<br />

including the consul general<br />

of Great Britain<br />

23<br />

Parallel no. 6 | FALL | WINTER 2011<br />

6


15 22<br />

9 13<br />

10<br />

16<br />

19<br />

3<br />

26<br />

poLicy<br />

A Revolution on Board<br />

The September 11 th attacks radically changed airline security throughout the world<br />

Sept. 2001 Passengers have to<br />

show up three hours before their<br />

scheduled international flights.<br />

Swiss knives are forbidden,<br />

and even lighters and nail-clippers<br />

are seen as potentially dangerous<br />

weapons<br />

12<br />

21<br />

8<br />

24<br />

13 2004 (Iraq)<br />

A shocking series of photos is published<br />

showing American service men and<br />

women torturing the inmates of Abu<br />

Ghraib Prison<br />

14 March 11 th , 2004<br />

(Madrid, Spain)<br />

Al-Qaeda claims responsibility for<br />

coordinated attacks on suburban trains on<br />

the outskirts of Madrid that kill 191 people<br />

15 October 8 th , 2004 (Egypt)<br />

Three attacks at tourist sites on the Sinai<br />

Peninsula kill 34 people<br />

16 December 6 th , 2004<br />

(Saudi Arabia)<br />

Terrorists attack the US Consulate<br />

in Jeddah killing 9<br />

17 February 14th , 2005<br />

(The Philippines)<br />

Three attacks carried out on the same day<br />

in Manila, General Santos, and Davao<br />

leave 12 dead and more than 120 wounded<br />

Dec. 2001 A passenger<br />

intending to blow the plane<br />

up en route, manages to board<br />

a flight from Paris to Miami<br />

with explosives in his shoes;<br />

all passenger footwear is now<br />

x-ray scanned<br />

Source TSA - Transportation Security Administration (USA); EASA/European Aviation Safety Agency<br />

Parallel no. 6 | FALL | WINTER 2011<br />

25<br />

9/11<br />

A <strong>decade</strong> <strong>later</strong><br />

No knives Shoes off Black list No Liquids<br />

18 July 7 th , 2005<br />

(London)<br />

Al-Qaeda is responsible for the detonation<br />

of three bombs in the London<br />

underground causing 52 fatalities<br />

19 July 23 rd , 2005 (Egypt)<br />

Suicide bombers attack tourist<br />

spots in Sharm el-Sheikh causing<br />

68 deaths<br />

20 October 1 st , 2005<br />

(Bali, Indonesia )<br />

Over 23 people are killed by suicide<br />

bombers in Bali<br />

21 November 9 th , 2005<br />

(Jordan)<br />

Al-Qaeda claims responsibility for a triple<br />

suicide strike against hotels in Amman<br />

that takes 60 lives<br />

22 April 24 th , 2006 (Egypt)<br />

Three terrorists attack a beach resort<br />

in Dahab on the Red Sea, leaving<br />

20 dead<br />

Sept. 2004 The US analyzes<br />

all passengers’ biometric data<br />

and compiles a “no-fly list”<br />

with thousands of names<br />

of people suspected of having<br />

terrorist ties (which generates<br />

countless misunderstandings)<br />

Nov. 2006 A frustrated<br />

attempt to use a liquid<br />

mixture as an on-board<br />

bomb leads to an almost<br />

total ban on liquids<br />

in passenger hand<br />

luggage<br />

7<br />

20<br />

17<br />

23 December 11 th , 2007<br />

(Algeria)<br />

Algiers is rocked by two suicide<br />

bombings claimed by the Maghreb<br />

Al-Qaeda. Among the 62 fatalities<br />

are 17 UN employees<br />

24 September 17 th , 2008 (Yemen)<br />

Car bombs kill 16 in the US Embassy<br />

in Sanaa<br />

25 September 20 th , 2008<br />

(Pakistan)<br />

A truck bomb explodes near the Islamabad<br />

Marriott killing 60<br />

26 May 1 st , 2011 (Pakistan)<br />

Osama Bin Laden is killed<br />

in Abbottabad, Pakistan by US Special<br />

Forces. Documentation found at his<br />

compound shows that new attacks<br />

were planned in the US on the 10 th<br />

anniversary of the attack on the<br />

Twin Towers.<br />

13


As FLAD administrator Mário Mesquita<br />

explained, in partnering with the US<br />

Embassy in Lisbon and the Literary Guild<br />

to hold this series of events, FLAD aimed<br />

to “acknowledge the date with reflection<br />

and discussion on some of the major<br />

issues that have arisen from the terrorist<br />

strike that so brutally marked the start of<br />

the 21 st century.”<br />

Once known as the “land of the free,”<br />

the US <strong>later</strong> shouldered the role of “land<br />

of the powerful,” after the implosion of<br />

the Soviet Union in 1991 solidified this<br />

as the country’s strategic approach. On<br />

September 11 th , and for the first time in<br />

its history, the US was caught unawares,<br />

with an attack on its mainland carried<br />

out by a foreign agent. The strike irrevocably<br />

destroyed the country’s perception<br />

of itself as an unassailable fortress and,<br />

as Mário Mesquita pointed out in the first<br />

conference of the series, “The large-scale<br />

strikes on the United States displayed<br />

evidence of greater sophistication, meticulous<br />

strategy, and a vile and contemptuous<br />

type of planning.”<br />

But it wasn’t only a relentless attack on<br />

US territory. Conveying a sinister message,<br />

the extremist group chose the heart of<br />

the United States as the brunt of its<br />

wrath, a symbol of the free world and<br />

an emblem of the Western way of life<br />

– New York City. Yet what made the<br />

attacks even more brutal and inhumane,<br />

as Mário Mesquita stated, was the fact<br />

that “it wasn’t mere symbols that were<br />

at stake on that day, but innocent human<br />

beings.”<br />

14<br />

9/11<br />

A <strong>decade</strong> <strong>later</strong><br />

A look at 9/11 ten years <strong>later</strong><br />

Ten years after the Al-Qaeda attacks on the US, we now have a clearer picture<br />

of the events. In an attempt to examine the repercussions of 9/11 – not only<br />

in America but also in the rest of the world – the <strong>Luso</strong>-American Foundation<br />

sponsored a series of five conferences entitled “Ten Years after September 11 th ,”<br />

headed up by journalist Sara Pina.<br />

By mArTA rocHA*<br />

is THe WorLd Any diFFerenT?<br />

In the first conference, Allan J. Katz, US<br />

Ambassador to Portugal, and Portugal’s<br />

ambassador to France Francisco Seixas da<br />

Costa, who was serving as the Portuguese<br />

ambassador to the United Nations in 2001,<br />

asserted that we can distinguish<br />

between a pre-9/11<br />

world and a post-9/11<br />

world. The US Ambassador<br />

called September 11 th “the<br />

type of moment that every<br />

nation has; it is a seminal<br />

moment. It is a time after<br />

which everything is different.”<br />

In the first analysis,<br />

in his view, the attacks<br />

acted as a wake-up call for<br />

Americans, and produced<br />

a growing awareness that<br />

“there is no place left in<br />

the world that people who<br />

are determined to disrupt cannot create tremendous<br />

problems.”<br />

Francisco Seixas da Costa first analyzed<br />

the international scenario that was the<br />

backdrop to the attacks, stating that, “The<br />

act had taken place because there were<br />

contexts within the international scene in<br />

which the United States was viewed, by<br />

large sectors of the Arab world and others,<br />

as being in agreement with Israel’s policy<br />

on Palestinian territories and Palestinian<br />

rights,” which in turn explains why “these<br />

terrorist acts were greeted by applause by<br />

the man on the street in certain places of<br />

the Arab world.”<br />

Ambassador Seixas da Costa also stressed<br />

that “Al-Qaeda and September 11 th were<br />

engendered in a weird cultural brew,<br />

cooked up in kitchens where the everpresent<br />

ingredient was anti-Israeli haranguing:<br />

the only real ingredient binding the<br />

tentative stew that unifies the Arab world.”<br />

‘ on september 11th , and for the first<br />

time in its history, the us was caught<br />

unawares, with an attack on its<br />

mainland carried out by a foreign<br />

agent. The strike irrevocably<br />

destroyed the country’s perception<br />

of itself as an unassailable<br />

fortress.<br />

’<br />

After discussing the geographical locations<br />

in which terrorist attacks have been carried<br />

out, he considered it crucial to add “that<br />

September 11 th was a positive test of the<br />

unity of strategic principles on which the<br />

transatlantic world is based,” since “right<br />

from the beginning, the mood internationally<br />

was very widespread and sympathetic<br />

with regard to combating terrorism.”<br />

THe concepT oF THe WAr<br />

on Terror<br />

In the second conference, Mitchell Cohen,<br />

American politologist and former editor<br />

of Dissent magazine, and Nuno Severiano<br />

Parallel no. 6 | FALL | WINTER 2011


RUI OChÔA<br />

Teixeira, professor of political science and<br />

international relations at the Universidade<br />

Nova de Lisboa and former Portuguese<br />

minister of the interior and defense, discussed<br />

the new strategic concept spearheaded<br />

by George W. Bush, the Global War<br />

on Terrorism, and its impact on US policy<br />

since 9/11, as well as the different government<br />

approaches to combating terrorism.<br />

They examined how today security is being<br />

perceived as a global phenomenon requiring<br />

well-coordinated measures, strategies,<br />

and policies among the world’s players.<br />

They also discussed the nature of today’s<br />

terrorism, whose main dissimilarity with<br />

terrorism of the traditional ilk is that it<br />

makes civilians its principle target.<br />

Mitchell Cohen analyzed the Global War<br />

on Terror, a new concept implemented by<br />

George W. Bush that consisted of combating<br />

“terrorist groups of global reach and<br />

their helpers.” However, he adds, “reality<br />

has a way of overwhelming definitions.”<br />

Nuno Severiano Teixeira mentioned that<br />

9/11<br />

A <strong>decade</strong> <strong>later</strong><br />

Lisbon’s Literary Guild was the venue for a series of talks on the 10 years that have ensued since 9/11. The main hall was filled to capacity<br />

with the general public and students from portuguese universities.<br />

9/11 had reinforced his perception that<br />

“security, or the nature of security had<br />

changed and was now absolutely global.”<br />

In his talk he gave special attention to the<br />

issue of security vs. freedom and the<br />

unavoidably conflictual relationship<br />

between the two concepts saying that,<br />

“transnational terrorism has raised issues<br />

between two fundamental values of democratic<br />

societies- – freedom and security<br />

(...) The way in which freedom relates to<br />

security has changed since 9/11 because,<br />

to guarantee our safety, which is a fundamental<br />

right of all citizens, to some extent<br />

we had to (...) make compromises, and<br />

rework some of the rights, guarantees, and<br />

freedoms that were also an integral part<br />

of our democratic society.”<br />

AFGHAnisTAn And irAq<br />

The third conference featured Carlos<br />

Gaspar from the Portuguese Institute for<br />

International Relations, General Loureiro<br />

dos Santos, and François Lafond from<br />

the German Marshall Fund. The thrust<br />

of the discussion was the present and<br />

future of Afghanistan and Iraq. The<br />

speakers focused on the important role<br />

the two countries play in international<br />

politics, as one of the most important<br />

items on the worldwide political agenda<br />

for achieving order and stability. They<br />

also explored changes that have occurred<br />

and their impact on the governance of<br />

the two countries. The speakers analyzed<br />

America’s justification for the military<br />

strategies it adopted, and for the invasion<br />

of Afghanistan and Iraq. François<br />

Lafond also discussed how difficult it<br />

was for democratic countries to develop<br />

and use democratic strategies in their<br />

attempts to halt terrorism.<br />

Carlos Gaspar stated that the United<br />

States “has focused on a somewhat secondary<br />

issue and been caught up in two<br />

peripheral wars – in Afghanistan and<br />

Iraq.” It has been “an atypical era in US<br />

Parallel no. 6 | FALL | WINTER 2011 15


RUI OChÔA<br />

foreign policy – an era that can be summarized<br />

in two words and an acronym:<br />

GWOT (Global War on Terrorism),<br />

Afghanistan, and Iraq.” On the subject<br />

of the Iraq conflict, Gaspar affirmed,<br />

“the Iraq invasion sparked the worst<br />

crisis in NATO history, and the hardships<br />

of the Atlantic Alliance’s mission in<br />

Afghanistan exacerbated tensions among<br />

the allies in the following years.”<br />

Gen. Loureiro dos Santos dealt basically<br />

with the progress of the two wars<br />

that followed 9/11, mentioning the<br />

“remarkable” military strategies designed<br />

by the Bush administration in both Mid-<br />

East theatres of war. The invasion of<br />

Afghanistan, where Al-Qaeda was hiding<br />

out, was an immediate response to the<br />

attacks and was sanctioned by the UN<br />

and NATO, which for the first time<br />

“declared that article 5 of the<br />

Organization’s founding treaty – the<br />

Washington Treaty – was applicable to<br />

this situation.”<br />

One of the main observations of<br />

François Lafond of the German Marshall<br />

Fund dealt with how resilient democracies<br />

are, and how hard it is for “democracies<br />

to find the right solutions to<br />

terrorism while still acting democratically.”<br />

This of course begs the question<br />

of how you “react to people who are<br />

using undemocratic tools if you wish to<br />

continue acting in democratic fashion.”<br />

16<br />

9/11<br />

A <strong>decade</strong> <strong>later</strong><br />

“making dialogue, reflection, and logical thought prevail over irrationality and violence,”<br />

was how maria de Lurdes rodrigues (second from the right) characterized the event. FLAd’s president<br />

is flanked by American journalist Walter dean on the left and portuguese journalist Adelino Gomes<br />

on the right. on the left is sara pina, coordinator of the conference series.<br />

civiLiZATions, ideoLoGies<br />

And reLiGions<br />

The next conference dealt with how religion<br />

and fundamentalist ideology tie in<br />

with the genesis of the 9/11 attacks. Rev.<br />

Kevin Madigan, the Catholic pastor of St.<br />

Peter’s Church near Ground Zero; António<br />

Dias Farinha, professor of Arab and Islamic<br />

Studies; and Esther Mucznik, vice-president<br />

of the Jewish Community of Lisbon<br />

also discussed how religious belief affects<br />

political issues and the role faith plays in<br />

Western societies and in the Arab and<br />

Islamic world.<br />

Father António Rego, who chaired the<br />

conference, adverted the audience to the<br />

fact that “Ten years after September 11 th ,<br />

the crushing heft of images and emotions<br />

still weigh heavily on us,” which is why<br />

“it is still hard to make sense of the event<br />

and reflect serenely on the role civilization,<br />

ideology, and religion play.”<br />

Kevin Madigan observed that the attack<br />

on the Twin Towers for the terrorists “was<br />

not just an attack on a symbol of American<br />

power, but also the smashing of a false<br />

idol, this blasphemous representation of<br />

a Mecca of commerce.” In a first-hand<br />

account of the events of September 11 th ,<br />

2001, Father Madigan related that after<br />

the initial shockwave that reverberated<br />

through the streets, he and others started<br />

“looking for the wounded and the dying<br />

in order to be of some assistance.”<br />

‘ it is hard for democracies<br />

to find the right solutions<br />

to terrorism while still<br />

acting democratically.<br />

This of course begs the<br />

question of how you react<br />

to people who are using<br />

undemocratic tools if you<br />

wish to continue acting<br />

in democratic fashion.<br />

’<br />

François Lafond, German Marshall Fund<br />

António Dias Farinha pointed out that<br />

9/11 demands “an analysis of Al-Qaeda<br />

ideology and a deeper understanding of<br />

the precepts that earned it widespread<br />

acceptance in so many different places and<br />

countries, and that led it to plan a number<br />

of attacks.” He also cautioned that it is<br />

essential that we do not overgeneralize<br />

the Arab world, thinking of it as one huge<br />

breeding ground for radical fundamentalists<br />

with a penchant for carrying out<br />

atrocities like the one perpetrated by bin<br />

Laden’s followers.<br />

Esther Mucznik believes that “ the<br />

Muslim world has been 9/11’s and bin<br />

Laden’s main victim,” because “the terrorism<br />

has also dramatically eroded the<br />

image of the Muslim world, causing it to<br />

become the frequent target of fear and<br />

rejection.”<br />

in THe puBLic opinion<br />

And in THe mediA<br />

The last conference of the series included<br />

talks by Abderrahim Foukara, bureau chief<br />

at Al Jazeera in Washington; Wally Dean<br />

from the Committee of Concerned<br />

Journalists; and reporter and professor<br />

Adelino Gomes, all of whom discussed<br />

the impact 9/11 had on public opinion.<br />

FLAD President Maria de Lurdes<br />

Rodrigues chaired the session, reiterating<br />

the Foundation’s hope that the con-<br />

Parallel no. 6 | FALL | WINTER 2011


RUI OChÔA<br />

ference series on the September 11 th<br />

attacks had contributed to “making dialogue,<br />

reflection and logical thought<br />

prevail over irrationality and violence.”<br />

Abderrahim Foukara hit a sensitive<br />

chord when he said he was not sure if<br />

he agreed with the frequently stated<br />

claim “that the 9/11 attacks have<br />

changed the world irrevocably,” seeing<br />

that “many of the world’s problems<br />

remain the same; that’s if they haven’t<br />

gotten even worse.”<br />

Wally Dean stated that.“Journalism has<br />

changed dramatically in the last <strong>decade</strong><br />

(…) But the change, I believe, is due to<br />

other, much stronger forces, and would<br />

have occurred whether the<br />

attacks of 9/11 had happened<br />

or not.”<br />

Adelino Gomes gave an<br />

overview of the extensive<br />

9/11 media coverage<br />

in Portugal. The daily<br />

paper Público kept 9/11<br />

on its front page<br />

from September 12 to<br />

December 30, while the<br />

weekly news magazine<br />

visão “put it on the cover<br />

week after week – for<br />

three straight months –<br />

14 weeks.” The daily<br />

9/11<br />

A <strong>decade</strong> <strong>later</strong><br />

paper Correio da Manhã “came out with a<br />

special 16-page special color edition<br />

right on the 11 th . Even the sports paper<br />

record contained an editorial pointing<br />

out the need for a “more just world<br />

where wealth might be distributed better”<br />

so that “despair” could be avoided.<br />

TV coverage was so intense that<br />

Portuguese National TV “prolonged<br />

its lunchtime news program to such<br />

an extent that it lasted until the<br />

7 p.m. news – 7 hours, 59 minutes and<br />

52 seconds.”<br />

*Undergraduate senior in the Communications Sciences Program<br />

at the Universidade Nova and FLAD communications intern<br />

‘ Al-qaeda and september 11th were engendered in a weird cultural<br />

brew, cooked up in kitchens where<br />

the ever-present ingredient was antiisraeli<br />

haranguing: the only real<br />

ingredient binding the tentative stew<br />

that unifies the Arab world.<br />

’<br />

seixas da costa, Ambassador<br />

during the talk “september 11 th : is the World Any different?” in the first row, the first two audience<br />

members are Ambassador António monteiro and Literary Guild president José macedo e cunha.<br />

9/11 Ten years Later<br />

– The Book<br />

The talks given during the lecture series<br />

will soon come out in a book printed by<br />

Almedina publishers. here is a preview of<br />

the contents:<br />

9/11 Ten yeArs LATer:<br />

is THe WorLd Any diFFerenT?<br />

• Mário Mesquita<br />

Fundamentalist Archaism<br />

and Technological Modernity<br />

• Allan J. Katz<br />

A Different World<br />

• Francisco Seixas da Costa<br />

September 11th in Contemporary History<br />

THe WAr AGAinsT Terrorism<br />

• Mitchell Cohen<br />

The War on Terror<br />

• Nuno Severiano Teixeira<br />

Transnational Terrorism<br />

AFGHAnisTAn And irAq<br />

• Carlos Gaspar<br />

Ten Years Later<br />

• José Loureiro dos Santos<br />

The United States and the Wars<br />

in Afghanistan and Iraq<br />

• François Lafond<br />

Democracy and Terrorism<br />

civiLiZATions, ideoLoGies,<br />

And reLiGions<br />

• António Rego<br />

Common Strains in the Search<br />

for the Transcendent<br />

• António Dias Farinha<br />

The Modern Political Development of Islam<br />

• Esther Mucznik<br />

9/11 and the “Clash of Civilizations”<br />

• Kevin Madigan<br />

A Voice from the Street<br />

9/11 in THe puBLic opinion<br />

And in THe mediA<br />

• Maria de Lurdes Rodrigues<br />

Making Dialogue Prevail<br />

• Abderrahim Foukara<br />

Believing in the Existence of a Common<br />

Civilizational Heritage<br />

• Adelino Gomes<br />

September 11th Revisited<br />

• Walter C. Dean<br />

Did 9/11 Change American Journalism?<br />

Parallel no. 6 | FALL | WINTER 2011 17


When US Ambassador to Portugal Allan<br />

Katz shared his opinion of the moment<br />

that changed the course of US history, he<br />

could never have imagined that little more<br />

than a month <strong>later</strong>, September 11 th would<br />

make the front pages again with the killing<br />

of Bin Laden.<br />

In Katz’s opinion, neither Al-Qaeda –<br />

nor much less its leader – were the biggest<br />

problems the Obama administration<br />

was grappling with that day. Ten years is<br />

a long time; and, as the ambassador<br />

pointed out, other pressing realities were<br />

besetting the world.<br />

It was the thread that ran through the<br />

presentations that the <strong>Luso</strong>-American<br />

Foundation sponsored at Lisbon’s Literary<br />

Guild on April 12 of 2011 in the first of<br />

a cycle of six conferences marking the<br />

10 th anniversary of the attack on the World<br />

Trade Center and the Pentagon.<br />

But if the world is a different place, it’s<br />

all because of the day in 2001 that took<br />

America by surprise. “We innocently<br />

believed that an event like this couldn’t<br />

happen to us,” recalled the ambassador,<br />

who views the attacks as a rude wake-up<br />

call as far as global security is concerned.<br />

“Today, there is no place left in the world<br />

that is safe from people determined to<br />

cause harm.”<br />

For Katz, it was a jarring wake-up call<br />

that led leaders to take a tortuous and –<br />

above all – misguided road. “Before, we<br />

used to go to the airport and we didn’t<br />

have to take off our shoes.” But now,<br />

everything is changed. “America has<br />

become “concerned with security in ways<br />

that are not in keeping with the kind of<br />

society that we used to enjoy.”<br />

However, the ambassador believes that<br />

18<br />

9/11<br />

A <strong>decade</strong> <strong>later</strong><br />

[ as told by Portuguese students of Journalism ]<br />

All the lectures commemorating the 10 th anniversary of 9/11 were attended by students from a variety of portuguese universities<br />

who sent in their accounts of the event. The best articles are featured on the next few pages.<br />

A different world<br />

“This was a day for the United States after which everything was different.”<br />

By FáBio rodriGues AND João mirAndA*<br />

the course the US has taken has had its<br />

greatest impact on the international front.<br />

The invasion of Afghanistan may have<br />

been “the only possible answer;” but the<br />

War in Iraq was posited on the flawed<br />

intelligence provided by the Republican<br />

administration. In Katz’s opinion, “If the<br />

Democrats had been in power, the Iraq<br />

War wouldn’t have happened, because<br />

Obama would have sought a multi<strong>later</strong>al<br />

solution.”<br />

‘ “We innocently believed that<br />

an event like this couldn’t happen<br />

to us,” recalled the ambassador,<br />

who views the attacks as a rude<br />

wake-up call as far as global<br />

security is concerned. “Today,<br />

there is no place left in the<br />

world that is safe from people<br />

determined to cause harm.”<br />

’<br />

During the debate, Seixas da Costa, at<br />

the time Portuguese representative to the<br />

UN General Assembly and currently the<br />

country’s ambassador to France, took the<br />

idea a step further. For Seixas da Costa,<br />

“the American administration had adopted<br />

a conservative, aggressive posture,” that<br />

was a complete break from the plan the<br />

West had previously established. Though<br />

events of September 11 th managed to<br />

bring Moscow and Washington closer<br />

together after 44 years of Cold War (Putin<br />

agreed to the presence of American ships<br />

in Russian waters) – they also fragmented<br />

European support. “The European Union<br />

was watchful, and there was still a lack of<br />

efficiency insofar as relations between<br />

Europe and the Arab countries were concerned,<br />

owing to the failure of the<br />

Barcelona Process,” the first serious<br />

attempt to create an institutional link<br />

between the European Union and the Arab<br />

countries.<br />

Seixas da Costa also believed<br />

that the repercussions have<br />

eventually detracted from the<br />

symbolic weight of the attacks<br />

on the World Trade Center. In a<br />

certain way, “the trauma of<br />

September 11 th has been countered<br />

by the huge number of<br />

Iraqi deaths and the human<br />

rights violations.” Moreover, the<br />

consequences of the conflict<br />

have been contradictory: “Iran<br />

has emerged out of the vacuum<br />

in Iraq,” the Portuguese ambassador<br />

asserted.<br />

For Seixas da Costa, Iran and<br />

Saudi Arabia are at the core of<br />

what now should be the international<br />

discussion on the Arab world.<br />

As Portugal’s current ambassador in Paris<br />

aptly commented, “No-one today breathes<br />

a word about the dictatorship in Saudi<br />

Arabia because of the oil.”<br />

Allan Katz, however, is more optimistic<br />

about the Muslim world. The events now<br />

taking place in the Maghreb countries<br />

and in Egypt and Syria are an issue of<br />

human values: “What we’re talking about<br />

is countries that have chosen democracy,”<br />

Katz says. Even so, he does caution about<br />

Parallel no. 6 | FALL | WINTER 2011


RUI OChÔA ‘<br />

the possibility of an increase in radical<br />

movements in the area since, after all,<br />

“America is primarily concerned with the<br />

issue of security.” Both Seixas da Costa<br />

and Allan Katz agree that the actions of<br />

9/11<br />

A <strong>decade</strong> <strong>later</strong><br />

these radical movements are posited on<br />

support for the Palestinian cause, aggression<br />

against Israel, and – in the long run<br />

– American complacency.<br />

One must not think, however, that the<br />

For Katz, America has become “concerned with security<br />

in ways that are not in keeping with the kind of society<br />

that we used to enjoy.”<br />

’<br />

Muslim faith on its own is responsible<br />

for Arab extremism. Katz made this point<br />

very clear. “The problem of the mosque<br />

to be built around Ground Zero has<br />

become an unfortunate issue. It wasn’t<br />

the Muslim world that provoked the<br />

attack,” the American Ambassador asserts<br />

while adding, “We believe in religious<br />

freedom and we’re tolerant, but not in<br />

all situations.”<br />

*Students of Communication and Journalism at Coimbra<br />

University<br />

For seixas da costa (currently portugal’s ambassador to France and in 2001, portuguese ambassador to the u.n.) “the repercussions of 9/11 have undermined the<br />

symbolic weight of the World Trade center attacks.” To the left of seixas da costa: FLAd Administrator mário mesquita and us Ambassador to portugal Allan J. Katz.<br />

Parallel no. 6 | FALL | WINTER 2011 19


Mitchell Cohen, a political scientist and former co-editor of the quarterly Dissent,<br />

and Nuno Severiano Teixeira, Portugal’s minister of the interior on 9/11 were asked<br />

to examine “the war on terror” ten years after the tragedy. Chaired by Mário Mesquita,<br />

member of FLAD’s executive Council, the session was moderated by Abigail Dressel,<br />

representing the US embassy in Portugal.<br />

Tuesday, September 11 th , 2001. That week<br />

thousands of Portuguese students had<br />

gone back to school and the country was<br />

bracing itself for another nail-biting<br />

match between the Benfica and Porto<br />

soccer teams in Benfica’s old stomping<br />

ground, the Estádio da Luz. The third<br />

season of “Big Brother” had begun on<br />

TV, and just a few months earlier, the<br />

Hintze Ribeiro Bridge in northern<br />

Portugal had collapsed, killing 59 and<br />

sending António Guterres’ government<br />

into a tailspin. In August, a plane departing<br />

from Canada ran out of fuel and<br />

made an emergency landing in Lajes, and<br />

the country was about to bid farewell to<br />

the old escudo and adopt the euro, the<br />

single currency of the European Union.<br />

‘ Terrorism is not an end in itself,<br />

but a means to achieving another aim,<br />

which is not always clear. (…) moreover,<br />

combating the means does not<br />

necessarily solve the problem posed<br />

by the terrorists’ final objectives.<br />

’<br />

2001 – A Space odyssey, Kenneth Clarke’s<br />

emblematic work and the 1968 movie<br />

of the same name, had forecast that this<br />

would be the year of tourist excursions<br />

into outer space. Wikipedia made its<br />

debut, as did the first Harry Potter movie,<br />

20<br />

9/11<br />

A <strong>decade</strong> <strong>later</strong><br />

[ as told by Portuguese students of Journalism ]<br />

A new concept of terrorism<br />

By cáTiA soAres AND JoAnA isABeL cArreTo*<br />

and Windows XP. In January, George W.<br />

Bush had become 43 rd president of the<br />

United States, after a disputed election<br />

that saw most of the popular votes going<br />

to Al Gore. The word “recession” was<br />

being bandied about in the news. The<br />

world was changing.<br />

In New York City, the day broke with<br />

clear skies. It was just another working<br />

day; but for the US and the rest of the<br />

world, nothing would ever be the same.<br />

Four planes, two towers, the Pentagon,<br />

more than three thousand deaths. The<br />

numbers reveal nothing about the horror<br />

of the images produced by the world’s<br />

biggest terrorist attack – an event reminiscent<br />

of the special effects you see in<br />

Hollywood movies. The impact was not<br />

only in the incalculable<br />

loss of life, but<br />

in the symbolism of<br />

the act. In just a few<br />

short hours, the economic,<br />

political, and<br />

military icons of the<br />

world’s most powerful<br />

nation were<br />

attacked, and seen to<br />

be vulnerable.<br />

Even before the day<br />

had ended, the strikes<br />

had been attributed<br />

to the Islamist terrorist organization,<br />

Al-Qaeda, whose figurehead was its elusive<br />

leader, Osama bin Laden. Bush<br />

declared a “war on terror,” a widespread,<br />

still ill-defined battle against a transnational<br />

enemy.<br />

A <strong>decade</strong> <strong>later</strong>, everything has changed.<br />

There is a before and an after that is<br />

marked in blood by the date of the fatal<br />

strikes- 9/11/2001. The leader of Al-Qaeda<br />

may be dead, but there is no end in sight<br />

to the war against terrorism.<br />

Since it came out of the blue, bin Laden’s<br />

death to some extent threw a wrench into<br />

the works. The Al-Qaeda leader and the<br />

organization he created were to become<br />

the key topics of the debate.<br />

Mitchell Cohen said that the concept of<br />

terrorism, like the concept of democracy,<br />

is used indiscriminately nowadays. What<br />

distinguishes it from other forms of violence<br />

(such as war or crime) is that any<br />

common citizen can become the target.<br />

Nuno Severiano Teixeira added that 21 st<br />

century terrorism aims to “maximize the<br />

capacity to cause suffering.” The tremendous<br />

impact of terrorist actions makes<br />

them symbolic, and assures that they are<br />

reported by the media worldwide, thus<br />

creating an atmosphere of terror.<br />

The issue can be viewed in the context<br />

of means and ends. Terrorism is not an<br />

end in itself, but a means to achieving<br />

another aim, which is not always clear.<br />

How far the terrorists are willing to go<br />

and how far we can legitimately go to stop<br />

them are issues that governments, countries,<br />

and common citizens have not agreed<br />

upon. Moreover, combating the means<br />

does not necessarily solve the problem<br />

posed by the terrorists’ final objectives.<br />

Nuno Severiano Teixeira believes that<br />

9/11 has changed both security and terrorism<br />

by globalizing them. What the new<br />

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RUI OChÔA<br />

concept of terrorism brings with it is not<br />

only the willingness to kill, but a willingness<br />

to die on the part of those who have<br />

given their lives to a cause, and will gladly<br />

take thousands of innocent victims along<br />

with them. Portugal’s former minister discussed<br />

what a shock the attacks had been<br />

for him and indeed for everyone. At first,<br />

when he had heard about the strike, he<br />

considered finishing lunch before honoring<br />

the prime minister’s request to go<br />

immediately to the presidential palace at<br />

Belém. Only after seeing the images on<br />

TV, did he realize the impact the event<br />

would have on the world.<br />

Teixeira added that terrorism, which is an<br />

age-old strategy in the history of humankind,<br />

is now carried out by networks, using<br />

a wide range of means and random targets.<br />

Essential values have been called into question,<br />

which has made it necessary to coordinate<br />

domestic with external security. In<br />

the name of these values, a number of freedoms<br />

have been forfeited in the attempt to<br />

halt a faceless enemy.<br />

For Teixeira, the recent killing of bin<br />

Laden is essentially symbolic, since the<br />

9/11<br />

A <strong>decade</strong> <strong>later</strong><br />

horizontal structure of Al-Qaeda will allow<br />

it to continue functioning autonomously.<br />

Mitchell Cohen agreed, while stating that<br />

the leaders left to fill the vacuum do not<br />

have bin Laden’s charisma. Now that he<br />

is dead, Cohen adds, he will be deemed<br />

a martyr, and a used as a symbol to inspire<br />

future followers.<br />

The American political essayist also<br />

warns of possible reprisals by Al-Qaeda,<br />

which has vowed to avenge its leader’s<br />

death. But he also acknowledges that we<br />

are unlikely to know what the future<br />

holds in store: “They (the terrorists) don’t<br />

care what I’m saying,” he wryly answered<br />

one of the participants in the debate,<br />

which was attended by students in<br />

Communications and Political Science<br />

from the Universidade Nova de Lisboa.<br />

But what conceptual model is to be used<br />

in dealing with terrorism: should it be<br />

considered a criminal act to be dealt with<br />

by the justice system or should a strategic<br />

model based on warfare be used? Since the<br />

war on terror will inevitably continue, such<br />

issues must be examined and discussed.<br />

Cohen also remarked that President<br />

political science professor mitchell cohen (left) and nuno severiano Teixeira, professor at universidade nova,<br />

exchange ideas at the conference on the War on Terrorism.<br />

Obama’s approach has distinguished<br />

between Al-Qaeda and the Arab and<br />

Islamic world to which he “extended his<br />

hand” in the now-famous speech he gave<br />

in Cairo. And the American President’s<br />

popularity soared during the days following<br />

the execution of bin Laden.<br />

However, the US political theorist also<br />

believes that domestic issues and the nature<br />

of the response to any retaliation can cloud<br />

the path to Obama’s reelection. Recent<br />

events and the way the administration deals<br />

with this new brand of global, network<br />

terrorism may end up being what determines<br />

Barack Obama’s political future.<br />

Bin Laden may be dead, but Al-Qaeda is<br />

not. The most recognizable face behind<br />

the war on terror has disappeared, but<br />

what form this shapeless, dark war -<br />

whose end is nowhere in sight – will take<br />

is now the main issue. A <strong>decade</strong> after 9/11<br />

the questions still outweigh the answers.<br />

And in New York, the barren ground left<br />

by the two towers is still as visible as on<br />

that fateful September morning.<br />

* Freshmen in Communications Science, at the Faculty of<br />

Social and Human Sciences, Universidade Nova de Lisboa.<br />

Parallel no. 6 | FALL | WINTER 2011 21


“September 11 th : Afghanistan and Iraq”<br />

was the topic of the discussion at the<br />

Literary Guild in Lisbon, in which the<br />

future of the two countries was discussed<br />

in the light of the fighting still taking<br />

place there.<br />

One of the speakers, retired General José<br />

Loureiro dos Santos, characterized the two<br />

successive wars as “a direct result of the<br />

September 11 th attacks,” and then discussed<br />

the different phases of how the<br />

two conflicts unfolded.<br />

The first phase began with the launch<br />

of the war in Afghanistan, which was<br />

sanctioned by NATO (involving article 5<br />

of the Washington Treaty), with 14 out<br />

of the 19 NATO allies sending armed<br />

troops. Though acknowledging America’s<br />

right to counter-attack after the strike<br />

on the US, the General admits that, “The<br />

will – and possibly the ability – weren’t<br />

there to mold the occupied country into<br />

something that conformed to the will<br />

and desires of the United States.”<br />

America also felt there was no need to<br />

send in more troops, since the affair has<br />

been resolved, and the Afghan army was<br />

already undergoing training. In 2003,<br />

the US invaded Iraq, claiming motives<br />

that <strong>later</strong> proved to be non-existent: the<br />

presence of weapons of mass destruction<br />

and alleged Iraqi ties to Al-Qaeda. The<br />

US’ main idea was to take up a more<br />

central position in the zone, thereby<br />

controlling the price of oil. The invasion<br />

ended up lacking political support, since<br />

it did not have serious NATO backing.<br />

22<br />

9/11<br />

A <strong>decade</strong> <strong>later</strong><br />

[ as told by Portuguese students of Journalism ]<br />

Afghanistan and iraq:<br />

a global war on terrorism<br />

The conference “September 11 th : Afghanistan and Iraq”<br />

showed how an American affair turned into a global war.<br />

By rAqueL uBAcH TrindAde*<br />

Three weeks <strong>later</strong>, Iraq’s regime toppled,<br />

and the insurrections began.<br />

The second phase began with the dispersion<br />

of the Taliban, primarily to Pakistan,<br />

and the establishment of a post-invasion<br />

political order. General Loureiro dos<br />

Santos stated that, “American forces got<br />

distracted by Iraq,” leaving no more forces<br />

to send to Afghanistan. The result was<br />

a return of the Taliban, who set a policy<br />

in motion to repossess territories and<br />

carry out terrorist strikes. Meanwhile, in<br />

Iraq, the newly-empowered Shiite militias<br />

gained formidable strength and, as<br />

Loureiro dos Santos explained, “The Iraqi<br />

security structure was totally ‘Shiite-ized’<br />

‘ General José Loureiro dos santos,<br />

characterized the two successive wars<br />

as “a direct result of the september<br />

11th attacks”.<br />

’<br />

with members of the militia.” The situation<br />

changed radically; yet President Bush<br />

had no way of reinforcing troops.<br />

The third and fourth phases involved US<br />

withdrawal from the occupied countries<br />

and the end of the war. Both conflicts<br />

naturally weakened the US both militarily<br />

and economically. As dos Santos stated,<br />

“Currently, the US is spending 10 billion<br />

dollars a month on the wars.” At the end<br />

of his talk, he added that the solution to<br />

the Afghan debacle necessarily involves<br />

Pakistan.<br />

Carlos Gaspar, from the Portuguese<br />

Institute of International Relations (IPRI),<br />

centered his talk on four words: the Global<br />

war on terrorism. This was at the heart of the<br />

American policy that “during the last ten<br />

years has focused on somewhat secondary<br />

issues.” The country has paid dearly for<br />

its policy choice, which led to a transatlantic<br />

crisis and a legitimacy crisis, with<br />

allied democracies opposing American<br />

policy, all of which left the field open for<br />

the emergence of<br />

new international<br />

powers.<br />

Citing Philip H.<br />

Gordon, Gaspar<br />

said that America’s<br />

ensuing intervent<br />

i o n s a f t e r<br />

September 11 th<br />

could be described<br />

as “the right war<br />

and the wrong<br />

war.” The right war<br />

would be its response to the attacks on<br />

the American targets: the war against<br />

Al-Qaeda terrorism. The wrong war was<br />

the Iraqi conflict: a move to democratize<br />

the Middle East.<br />

These somewhat atypical years ended<br />

with the election of Barack Obama in<br />

2008. Gaspar states that “Obama’s foreign<br />

Parallel no. 6 | FALL | WINTER 2011


RUI OChÔA ‘<br />

The political demise of Al-qaeda<br />

and its separation from the Taliban<br />

leaves the way open for direct<br />

negotiations between the us<br />

and the Taliban.<br />

’<br />

policy is aimed at undoing everything his<br />

predecessor did.” Again citing Philip H.<br />

Gordon, Gaspar said that the withdrawal<br />

would have to take place one step at a<br />

time: first Iraq, then Afghanistan.<br />

The death of bin Laden has enabled a<br />

three-pronged negotiation process to take<br />

9/11<br />

A <strong>decade</strong> <strong>later</strong><br />

place with Pakistan and<br />

Iran in talks with India<br />

(which has significant<br />

relations with the US and<br />

Iran), and then with China<br />

(Pakistan’s main ally). The<br />

political demise of<br />

Al-Qaeda and its separation<br />

from the Taliban<br />

leaves the way open for<br />

direct negotiations<br />

between the US and the<br />

Taliban.<br />

“It is always difficult<br />

for democracies to find democratic solutions<br />

for combating terrorism, which does<br />

not act democratically, “stated François<br />

Lafond, the third speaker of the day.<br />

LaFond stressed that what we are dealing<br />

with is neither a struggle between blocs,<br />

nor the attempt to conquer territories, but<br />

the implementation of the capitalist system.<br />

The responsibility for fighting terrorism<br />

does not belong to one country<br />

alone. He added that Sarkozy supports<br />

Obama, and follows the same line as the<br />

US president in the fight against international<br />

terrorism.<br />

Moderating the debate was FLAD deputy<br />

director Rui Vallera, who opened the floor<br />

to discussion after the talks, where issues<br />

were raised concerning the Israeli-<br />

Palestinian conflict. Former FLAD president<br />

Rui Machete, who chaired the session,<br />

capped off the debate saying that he was<br />

looking forward to the other upcoming<br />

conferences in the series. Both this session<br />

and the talks that followed certainly shed<br />

light on a global question that only now<br />

is slowly moving toward resolution.<br />

*Student in the undergraduate program in Social and Cultural<br />

Communications at the Catholic University of Portugal.<br />

(from left to right) carlos Gaspar of the portuguese institute for international relations, Gen. Loureiro dos santos, former FLAd president rui machete,<br />

François Lafond of the German marshall Fund, and rui vallêra from FLAd discuss the situation in Afghanistan and iraq.<br />

Parallel no. 6 | FALL | WINTER 2011 23


RUI OChÔA<br />

FLAD’s deputy director Miguel Vaz kicked<br />

off the session entitled “September 11 th :<br />

Civilizations, Ideologies, and Religions.”<br />

With the dim light of the rainy day coming<br />

through the room’s large windows,<br />

the speakers discussed the role fundamentalism<br />

and religion played in the attacks<br />

on the Twin Towers. The venue was a small<br />

room, surrounded by heavy cabinets<br />

24<br />

9/11<br />

A <strong>decade</strong> <strong>later</strong><br />

[ as told by Portuguese students of Journalism ]<br />

God does not meddle in religion<br />

By AnA curTinHAL*<br />

topped by busts of Eça de Queiroz and<br />

Camilo Castelo Branco.<br />

In the first address of the day, Esther<br />

Mucznik, vice president of the Jewish<br />

Community of Lisbon and founder of the<br />

Portuguese Association for Jewish Studies,<br />

stated that “the 21 st century began on<br />

September 11 th , 2001,” such was the<br />

importance of the date. Mucznik dis-<br />

cussed the instrumentalization of religion,<br />

the growth of fundamentalist<br />

forces, and religious extremism in which<br />

politics and religion – indistinguishable<br />

from each other – eventually lead to violence.<br />

Indeed “The Muslim world has<br />

been 9/11’s and bin Laden’s main victim,”<br />

since the extremist faction is not<br />

representative of all Arab or Muslim<br />

Kevin madigan, pastor of st. peter’s at Ground Zero who narrowly escaped death on 9/11, shares his moving account of the events with the audience.<br />

(from left to right) FLAd Administrator miguel vaz; esther mucznik, vice president of Lisbon’s Jewish community; canon António rego;<br />

Father madigan; and António dias Farinha, professor of Arab and islamic studies.<br />

Parallel no. 6 | FALL | WINTER 2011


peoples. Moreover, Islam is compatible<br />

with democracy, the speaker asserted,<br />

citing Turkey, which has been successful<br />

owing to the separation between the<br />

political sphere and religious practice.<br />

Turkey was also mentioned by Prof.<br />

António Dias Farinha, director of the<br />

Institute for Arab and Islamic Studies at<br />

the University of Lisbon. In his fascinating<br />

historical overview of Islamic history, the<br />

speaker discussed the factors that led up<br />

to the attacks of September 11 th .<br />

Pastor of St. Peter’s Church at Ground<br />

9/11<br />

A <strong>decade</strong> <strong>later</strong><br />

“The muslim world was 9/11’s main victim, since the extremist faction does not represent the people as a whole,”<br />

was one of the opinions voiced during the lecture.<br />

‘ islam is compatible with democracy, the speaker<br />

asserted, citing Turkey, which has been successful<br />

owing to the separation between the political sphere<br />

and religious practice.<br />

’<br />

esther mucznik, vice president of Lisbon’s Jewish community<br />

Zero, Father Kevin Madigan, moved the<br />

audience with a wrenching account of his<br />

experiences on that tragic day. Recalling<br />

several incidents, he told of how a Jewish<br />

physician had asked forgiveness for tearing<br />

up some of the altar cloths to use as tourniquets;<br />

the people who streamed out of<br />

their houses to aid the wounded and give<br />

them water; and the “financial spreadsheets<br />

and family photos” that flew through the<br />

air after the blast and fluttered down over<br />

the streets. Father Madigan suggested we<br />

look at the events in a different light, since<br />

he had discovered that in many of its architectural<br />

details, the World Trade Center had<br />

been designed to imitate sites in Mecca.<br />

He suggested that one of the possible motivations<br />

had been “the smashing of a false<br />

idol, this blasphemous representation of a<br />

Mecca of commerce.” The priest ended by<br />

stressing the kindness displayed by New<br />

Yorkers who that day “found strength in<br />

each other.”<br />

The next-to-the-last speech struck a<br />

positive chord – the hopeful prospect of<br />

peace and understanding – with Father<br />

António Rego asking “whether the distance<br />

that separates us serves any purpose.”<br />

Rego also ended on a light note<br />

with a joke about a man who asked God<br />

what the true religion was. The Supreme<br />

Being answered, “I don’t know. I don’t<br />

meddle in religion.”<br />

*Student in the undergraduate program in Communication and<br />

Cultural Sciences at Lusófona University.<br />

Parallel no. 6 | FALL | WINTER 2011 25<br />

RUI OChÔA


The first speaker was Adelino Gomes,<br />

who gave a brief outline of how the<br />

media has handled the myriad challenges<br />

the world has faced since September<br />

11 th . Gomes, a journalist himself, com-<br />

mented that in the media, “the beginning<br />

and end of this ten-year cycle has been<br />

marked by two symbolic milestones: the<br />

images on our TV screens throughout the<br />

whole of that fateful Tuesday, September<br />

11, and the social networks, particularly<br />

the 140 characters in the tweets sent out<br />

by an anonymous citizen of Abbotabad,<br />

in which the world learned of the strike<br />

that took out bin Laden.”<br />

According to Gomes, the traditional<br />

26<br />

FLAD President Maria de Lurdes rodrigues began the last of five conferences<br />

on September 11 th , stressing that the debate series had been a way<br />

for the Foundation to “affirm its desire and its will to foster dialogue, reflection,<br />

and logical thinking over senseless violence, while favoring ideas and rationality<br />

in political debate, thereby promoting democracy.”<br />

‘ The traditional media are going<br />

through “a dramatic crisis” not only<br />

owing to the attraction of the internet<br />

and breakthrough technology, but<br />

because a number of newspapers and<br />

journalists have lost their credibility.<br />

’<br />

Adelino Gomes<br />

9/11<br />

A <strong>decade</strong> <strong>later</strong><br />

[ as told by Portuguese students of Journalism ]<br />

september 11 th as seen by the press<br />

By cATArinA mArTins*<br />

media are going through “a dramatic<br />

crisis” not only owing to the attraction<br />

of the Internet and breakthrough technology,<br />

but because a number of newspapers<br />

and journalists have lost their<br />

credibility. Despite the<br />

trend, and commenting<br />

on the Portuguese<br />

media, Gomes praised<br />

the way a few print<br />

media outlets covered<br />

the events of<br />

September 11 th , 2001.<br />

According to the<br />

speaker, Portuguese<br />

publications like the<br />

newspaper Público and<br />

the magazine visão rallied<br />

a major portion<br />

of their resources and<br />

manpower to offer the<br />

public a wide range of<br />

viewpoints on the<br />

events of the day.<br />

Adelino Gomes perceived<br />

the same “journalistic<br />

drive” in the coverage of the<br />

revolts throughout the Arab world earlier<br />

this year. But, he hastens to add, “after the<br />

fall of Ben Ali, Mubarak’s resignation, and<br />

since Khadafi halted the advance of rebel<br />

forces, we have stopped having eyes and<br />

ears in the field.”<br />

At this moment the buzzword is the<br />

“next journalism,” and Adelino Gomes<br />

thinks it is essential for “users to have a<br />

critical perspective,” so that the potential<br />

of the Internet as a transformative force<br />

in journalism can be properly exploited.<br />

Users must have the wherewithal to<br />

demand “journalism that provides information<br />

that has been examined, researched,<br />

organized, corroborated, analyzed, and<br />

presented in a credible manner.”<br />

sepTemBer 11 TH cHAnGed AmericA,<br />

BuT noT AmericAn JournALism<br />

“But did the attacks or the reaction to<br />

them change the processes or content of<br />

the news media in any meaningful way,?”<br />

asked Wally Dean, American journalist and<br />

director of the Committee of Concerned<br />

Journalists. His answer was to the point:<br />

“not much.”<br />

Dean pointed out that the public often<br />

likens the impact of the 2001 terrorist<br />

attacks to that of Pearl Harbor or the<br />

Kennedy assassination. The Japanese strike<br />

on the US base in the Pacific rallied<br />

American families around the radio set.<br />

Kennedy’s death left the country glued to<br />

the TV, and turned legendary CBS anchor<br />

Walter Cronkite into the most trusted man<br />

in America. Yet the tragedy of September<br />

11 th has not sparked any similarly significant<br />

change in the way news is covered.<br />

“More powerful forces, including deeply<br />

ingrained opinions about the audience<br />

and the disruptive effects of new technologies,<br />

have simply been too strong.<br />

9/11 may have changed America. But it<br />

did little to change American journalism,”<br />

Dean observes.<br />

Parallel no. 6 | FALL | WINTER 2011


RUI OChÔA<br />

A sHAred civiLiZATionAL HeriTAGe<br />

Abderrahim Foukara, Aljazeera’s<br />

Washington, DC bureau chief, claimed that<br />

he was not entirely convinced that<br />

September 11 th had changed the world<br />

irrevocably. Encouraged by recent events<br />

in the Muslim world, the Moroccan<br />

reporter reminded his listeners that the<br />

region is going through a unique period<br />

in its history: a period in which both<br />

Arabs and non-Arabs are fighting for freedom<br />

and dignity: values – he stated – that<br />

Americans understand well.<br />

As Foukara stated, “The mostly peaceful<br />

and extremely creative manner in which<br />

millions of Egyptians have recently tried<br />

to claim back their political destiny and<br />

how millions of Americans received and<br />

celebrated that message cannot be glossed<br />

over as nothing more than a comma in<br />

the long text of history.”<br />

9/11<br />

A <strong>decade</strong> <strong>later</strong><br />

The Aljazeera reporter believed that in<br />

spite of September 11 th and the furor<br />

over its causes and consequences, “we,<br />

as human beings, have a rare historic<br />

opportunity here to pause, reflect on<br />

the future, and go back to believing in<br />

the existence of a common civilizational<br />

heritage, even at a time when the<br />

sound of gunfire and explosions lure us<br />

in the opposite direction.”<br />

The visiting journalist from Morocco<br />

then expressed his happiness over being<br />

in Portugal, and stated that he was convinced<br />

that the people in the Middle<br />

East and North Africa who were spearheading<br />

the “Arab Spring” would turn<br />

their attentions to the way Portugal and<br />

Spain had made their transitions to<br />

democracy.<br />

*Freshman in Journalism at the Lisbon Polytechnic Institute.<br />

‘ encouraged by recent<br />

events in the muslim<br />

world, the moroccan<br />

reporter [Abderrahim<br />

Foukara] reminded his<br />

listeners that the region<br />

is going through a unique<br />

period in its history:<br />

a period in which both<br />

Arabs and non-Arabs<br />

are fighting for freedom<br />

and dignity: values – he<br />

stated – that Americans<br />

understand well.<br />

’<br />

during the conference series, a photo exhibit was held of new york’s most iconic structures, loaned by the us embassy in Lisbon.<br />

Parallel no. 6 | FALL | WINTER 2011 27


RUI OChÔA<br />

exhibition: “Transitions: Honoring<br />

the past, moving Ahead”<br />

Works from FLAd’s art collection point the way toward the post-9/11 future<br />

28<br />

9/11<br />

A <strong>decade</strong> <strong>later</strong><br />

Inaugurated on September 11 th , 2011, the exhibition<br />

“Transitions: Honoring the Past, Moving Ahead” marked the passage of 10 years<br />

since the 9/11 tragedy.<br />

By AnA mAriA siLvA*<br />

The opening ceremony of the exhibition held by FLAd in cooperation with the us embassy.<br />

(from left to right) FLAd president maria de Lurdes rodrigues; Allan Katz, us Ambassador to portugal; portuguese Foreign minister paulo portas;<br />

and Luís santos Ferro, administrator of the Arpad szenes-vieira da silva Foundation.<br />

Parallel no. 6 | FALL | WINTER 2011


“Today we are marking the 10 th anniversary<br />

of the September 11 th tragedy.<br />

But with the inauguration of the exhibition<br />

“Transitions: Honoring the Past,<br />

Moving Ahead” we are not only honoring<br />

the victims of terrorism, but resolutely<br />

looking toward the future in the<br />

hope that the coming <strong>decade</strong> will be as<br />

vibrant and full of hope as the works<br />

you see displayed here today.”<br />

With these words, US Ambassador<br />

Allan Katz inaugurated the exhibition<br />

“Transitions: Honoring the Past, Moving<br />

Ahead,” an initiative the US Embassy<br />

sponsored in conjunction with the<br />

<strong>Luso</strong>-American Foundation and the<br />

Arpad Szenes-Vieira da Silva Foundation<br />

(FASVS).<br />

With the purpose of commemorating<br />

the 10 th anniversary of 9/11, the show<br />

exclusively featured works from the<br />

FLAD art collection and included works<br />

by Portuguese artists Álvaro Lapa,<br />

Fernando Calhau, Joaquim Bravo, and<br />

José Pedro Croft and American sculptor<br />

Joel Shapiro.<br />

With remembrance and transition as<br />

its central themes, the show invited<br />

viewers to reflect on the transformations<br />

that the world has undergone since<br />

September 11 th , 2001: how people have<br />

changed in the way they view the world<br />

and their future. Billed as a tribute to<br />

the past, the exhibition encouraged<br />

viewers to adopt a new way of looking<br />

at the future – an idea posed by FLAD’s<br />

president Maria de Lurdes Rodrigues<br />

when she told the audience, “Encouraging<br />

remembrance today is indispensable if<br />

we are to promote understanding of the<br />

tragic events we are recalling here. It is<br />

what we need to do if we are to move<br />

forward and build a future that is more<br />

than just our fate.”<br />

Given the motives behind the initiative<br />

and its highly symbolic nature, the<br />

opening session was also attended by<br />

Paulo Portas, the Portuguese foreign<br />

minister; Álvaro Pereira, the minister of<br />

the economy, and a number of other<br />

dignitaries who spoke about the relevance<br />

of the tribute and the impact that<br />

9/11 has had on world governance.<br />

Maria de Lurdes Rodrigues also asserted<br />

that today’s tribute was “a way of<br />

celebrating the values of freedom and<br />

universalism in the construction of a<br />

common world.” Luís dos Santos Ferro,<br />

administrator of the FASVS, highlighted<br />

the symbolic nature of the exhibition<br />

and the date it honored. “We are celebrating<br />

life and creation, against death,<br />

9/11<br />

A <strong>decade</strong> <strong>later</strong><br />

(from left to right) João silvério, curator of the FLAd art collection;<br />

Allan Katz, us Ambassador to portugal; and FLAd program officer paula vicente.<br />

‘ With remembrance and transition as its central<br />

themes, the show invited viewers to reflect on the<br />

transformations that the world has undergone since<br />

september 11th , 2001: how people have changed<br />

in the way they view the world and their future.<br />

’<br />

violence, and destruction,” Ferro stated.<br />

“The regenerative nature of art as<br />

opposed to the inert ashes of disaster.<br />

Comradeship and tolerance in an environment<br />

of freedom, instead of fanaticism<br />

and oppression. (…) The works<br />

chosen from the <strong>Luso</strong>-American<br />

Foundation collection confer upon this<br />

mournful date a bit of the clear, restorative,<br />

morning light that art bears.”<br />

Featured were a wide range of works<br />

from the FLAD art collection by Joaquim<br />

Bravo, Fernando Calhau, José Pedro<br />

Croft, Álvaro Lapa, and Joel Shapiro.<br />

The works were selected by João<br />

Silvério, curator of the <strong>Luso</strong>-American<br />

Foundation’s collection and commissioner<br />

of the exhibition.<br />

Parallel no. 6 | FALL | WINTER 2011 29<br />

* LPM<br />

RUI OChÔA


30<br />

poLicy<br />

Why can't we cross the line?<br />

Although Portugal and the US are historical allies, with an unshakable friendship<br />

that is displayed in ever-widening and increasingly diversified cooperation,<br />

we must realize we are a far cry from having reached our vast cooperative potential<br />

when it comes to public law enforcement policy.<br />

Over the last <strong>decade</strong>, the core issue in<br />

the United States has been defense and<br />

homeland security. The public authorities<br />

wish to maintain the nation’s status<br />

as a “protective state,” since they have<br />

seen their powers diminished, and since<br />

there are few alternatives left for affirmation<br />

as a guarantor of the public<br />

good, where security is one of the strongest<br />

institutional pillars.<br />

By rAqueL duque* AND eduArdo pereirA correiA**<br />

Security, as a common good, is brought<br />

to the public’s attention and guaranteed<br />

by means of a set of social conventions<br />

called “security measures.” Although<br />

there have been several changes in the<br />

security paradigm since the Peace of<br />

Westphalia, security policies cannot currently<br />

be considered repressive measures,<br />

but a system that has been<br />

integrated and optimized over the years,<br />

involving complex instruments of prevention,<br />

justice, and social inclusion.<br />

Therefore, if we admit that public order<br />

is based on peace and tranquility, in line<br />

with justice and the laws that govern<br />

the rule of law, then we arrive at the<br />

concept of public safety / security.<br />

In 1974, Portugal affirmed before the<br />

rest of the world that it was a state<br />

undergoing democratic consolidation.<br />

new concepts such as community policing and problem-oriented policing have been utilized to guarantee rapid first response.<br />

Parallel no. 6 | FALL | WINTER 2011<br />

D.R.


Yet many years would pass before a truly<br />

democratic spirit would be implemented<br />

within the country’s bureaucratic<br />

structure and its law enforcement institutions.<br />

When it joined the European<br />

Economic Community in 1986, the need<br />

arose for the country to adapt its security<br />

forces to current conditions, in<br />

accordance with the heightened demands<br />

and security requirements of the EEC.<br />

However, only in the 1990s did Portugal<br />

adopt security policies that truly changed<br />

law enforcement realities, with decisive<br />

organizational changes to what we today<br />

call our security force.<br />

Portugal’s law enforcement model was<br />

strongly influenced by the French dual<br />

system which had a Police Nationale and a<br />

Gendarmerie Nationale, which interacted on<br />

a permanent basis with other law enforcement<br />

bodies. Portugal established a civil<br />

security force (the PSP – the Public<br />

Security Police) and<br />

one of a military<br />

nature (the GNR –<br />

National Republican<br />

Guard). Although the<br />

topic has been wide-<br />

ly discussed, it is<br />

generally thought<br />

that this dual system,<br />

which is based on<br />

the principle of<br />

complementarity, can<br />

also produce a negative<br />

result: that of<br />

competition and<br />

duplication of functions,<br />

an outcome<br />

opposite from the<br />

one desired.<br />

Underlying the dual system was the<br />

belief, held for many years, that a single<br />

police force could acquire excessive powers<br />

and hamper the normal functioning<br />

of democratic institutions. However, to<br />

cite just one example, Austria kept the<br />

dual system until 2005, with a complex<br />

police network. The system inevitably<br />

displayed myriad and abundant dysfunctions<br />

until, to a large degree, the country<br />

adopted changes based on the American<br />

model, calling for a more concentrated<br />

approach to law enforcement.<br />

In Portugal, there has been some<br />

restructuring of security forces, namely<br />

an upgrading of security strategies. It is<br />

safe to say that law enforcement policy<br />

in Portugal has evolved along two lines:<br />

territorial policing (Welsh influence),<br />

and community policing (other Englishspeaking<br />

countries). However, function-<br />

poLicy<br />

ality issues such as the complexity of<br />

the computer systems required, incompatibility<br />

among the communications<br />

systems, nationwide duplication of noncomplementary<br />

security and investigative<br />

forces, continue to pose difficulties<br />

when it comes to the interaction of the<br />

two law-enforcement bodies in Portugal<br />

(PSP and GNR).<br />

The organization of police institutions<br />

underwent various restructuring efforts,<br />

primarily in the field of officer training<br />

and the training of police officials.<br />

However, our reality still contrasts<br />

sharply with that of the US, where periodic<br />

rounds of selecting applicants are<br />

rare, and a provenly effective hiring<br />

policy is used whereby hirees are taken<br />

from open, almost-ongoing programs<br />

(e.g. LAPD Hiring), and where the age<br />

cut-off is much <strong>later</strong> for non-police personnel<br />

than in Portugal.<br />

‘ While portugal was facing the<br />

understandable difficulties arising<br />

out of the revolutionary process of<br />

democratization, the us was putting<br />

into practice the results of studies<br />

dealing with security policy.<br />

’<br />

While Portugal was facing the understandable<br />

difficulties arising out of the<br />

revolutionary process of democratization,<br />

the US was putting into practice<br />

the results of studies dealing with security<br />

policy. To overcome certain limitations,<br />

new concepts arose such as<br />

community policing and problem-oriented<br />

policing, to cater to the need for<br />

rapid response, while a law enforcement<br />

approach aimed at dealing with social<br />

and community issues – instead of only<br />

criminal activity – was being enacted.<br />

Methods of investigation were diversified<br />

in an attempt to correct recurring<br />

problems; and most importantly, the<br />

active participation of the community<br />

was solicited in ongoing assessment initiatives<br />

to evaluate police performance.<br />

Since the 1980s, several countries such<br />

as the US, Canada, Australia, and some<br />

of the Scandinavian countries have come<br />

out with programs that have become an<br />

integral part of public law enforcement<br />

policies. These initiatives have been<br />

applied to a wide range of problems<br />

involving crime and disruptions in the<br />

public order, and have led to the transformation<br />

of organizations. These programs<br />

center on problem-solving, the<br />

importance of ongoing assessment, the<br />

creation of workable solutions, and the<br />

need to dovetail national strategies with<br />

those of other countries.<br />

The US uses a dynamic model of assessment<br />

to rigorously create and evaluate<br />

effective responses (SARA – Scanning,<br />

Analysis, Response, and Assessment). The<br />

model uses a complex system of identifying<br />

the consequences of a problem<br />

for the community and the police,<br />

determining how frequently the problem<br />

occurs, understanding the events<br />

and conditions that precede and accompany<br />

the problem, identifying relevant<br />

data to be collected, carrying out an<br />

assessment, and building qualitative and<br />

quantitative databases of specific objectives.<br />

The SARA model has so far been<br />

ignored by the police statistics bureaucracy<br />

of Southern Europe. This significant<br />

rebuff cannot be explained away as<br />

a situationist political or governmental<br />

problem; it is a structural issue involving<br />

the dynamics of influence and international<br />

cooperation.<br />

Although Portugal and the US are historical<br />

allies, with an unshakable friendship<br />

that is displayed in ever-widening<br />

and increasingly diversified cooperation,<br />

we must realize we are a far cry from<br />

having reached our vast cooperative<br />

potential when it comes to public law<br />

enforcement policy. It is important for<br />

us to cross the imaginary line that separates<br />

us, stepping up discussion and<br />

cooperation, based on the Cooperation<br />

and Defense Agreement the US and<br />

Portugal signed in 1995, which still<br />

stands as the institutional framework of<br />

our mutual relationship. Portugal must<br />

strengthen its ties with the other side of<br />

the Atlantic, adopting reinvigorated security<br />

policies that can efficiently respond<br />

to the challenges and threats faced by<br />

domestic security today. Yet with all the<br />

facts on the table, the question remains:<br />

Why can’t we cross the line?<br />

* Politologist and researcher at the Political observatory<br />

of the Universidade Nova de Lisboa.<br />

** Politologist and professor at the Higher Institute of<br />

Police Sciences and Domestic Security<br />

Parallel no. 6 | FALL | WINTER 2011 31


This year’s release of the results of<br />

Transatlantic Trends corresponded with commemorations<br />

of the 10 th anniversary of<br />

9/11, a topic included in the survey.<br />

Since 2002, the survey has included a<br />

series of questions about terrorism and<br />

world governance in order to obtain a<br />

better perspective of national defense and<br />

the fight against terrorism.<br />

This year’s survey outcomes were not<br />

especially controversial, however,<br />

Portugal’s responses in terms of numbers<br />

do shed light on some interesting issues<br />

(see insert). What is most noteworthy<br />

about the results of this year are a number<br />

of strong positions, taken by certain<br />

countries, which had not previously been<br />

this evident in other global and comparative<br />

contexts.<br />

AmericA’s LeAdersHip<br />

The results of the 2011 international<br />

survey, which is carried out in Turkey, 12<br />

member states of the European Union,<br />

and the United States, show that 54% of<br />

the respondents from the EU want the<br />

US to play a strong leadership role in<br />

major global issues. The strongest support<br />

for America’s global role came from the<br />

Americans themselves, with 85% of those<br />

queried clearly responding that they<br />

wanted their country to have a leadership<br />

position. And, in line with the results<br />

from 2010, America’s popularity remains<br />

high on both sides of the Atlantic. In the<br />

EU, 72% of those questioned view the<br />

US favorably, as do 83% of Americans<br />

themselves, and only 30% of the Turkish<br />

respondents.<br />

32<br />

poLicy<br />

Transatlantic Trends 2011<br />

Asia gains ground<br />

in us public opinion<br />

The <strong>Luso</strong>-American Foundation recently came out with the results of the 2011<br />

Transatlantic Trends survey, a multi-nation poll that reveals how europeans<br />

and Americans view the world. The initiative, led by the German Marshall Fund,<br />

covers 24 countries and has its finger on the pulse of public opinion when it comes<br />

to the most pressing issues in today’s world.<br />

By AnA mAriA siLvA*<br />

The US led by President Barack Obama<br />

continues to enjoy the support of the<br />

EU, seeing that 73% of those interviewed<br />

approve of the way the US president has<br />

handled the fight against international<br />

terrorism. This figure is complemented<br />

by the 68% approval rate from the pool<br />

of Americans questioned, which is a<br />

considerable increase in relation to<br />

2009. However, it is evident that there<br />

is a great divide between the two sides<br />

of the Atlantic when it comes to the<br />

issue of whether war is necessary to<br />

obtain justice, a concept 75% of the<br />

Americans agree with as opposed to<br />

33% of the Europeans.<br />

cHinA’s imAGe on THe rise<br />

AmonG AmericAn youTH<br />

The US is now displaying a new viewpoint<br />

with regard to the world scene:<br />

51% of those polled responded that Asia<br />

(particularly China and Japan) had been<br />

more relevant to their national interests<br />

than Europe. Albeit just slightly more<br />

than a majority, this figure signals a<br />

turn-about in American public opinion<br />

which in turn may spark changes in<br />

attitude or alterations in the strategic<br />

importance of the EU to the US.<br />

It should be stressed, however, that this<br />

favorable bent in relation to Asia was<br />

noted primarily among American youth:<br />

Parallel no. 6 | FALL | WINTER 2011


close to three out of five Americans (59%)<br />

aged 18 to 24 have a favorable opinion<br />

of China, a figure that is considerably<br />

lower among the other age groups (33%<br />

of 45 to 54 year-olds and 37% of 55 to<br />

64 year-olds). Age disparities are even<br />

more evident when it comes to issues of<br />

US national interest, where 66% of the<br />

young people polled (18 to 24 age group)<br />

recognized Asian countries such as China,<br />

Japan, and South Korea as more important<br />

than the EU countries (17%) in terms of<br />

US national interests.<br />

Still, Europeans show a greater tendency<br />

to believe that China is more of<br />

an economic opportunity than a threat<br />

– contrary to the opinion held in the US,<br />

where 63% of those questioned view<br />

China as an economic threat and where<br />

there is a greater propensity to view the<br />

Asian giant as a military threat than in<br />

Europe.<br />

nATo is sTiLL essenTiAL<br />

For TrAnsATLAnTic securiTy<br />

On security issues, Americans and<br />

Europeans have converging opinions:<br />

62% of those interviewed in the US and<br />

the EU feel that NATO is indispensable,<br />

and 66% believe that the troops in<br />

Afghanistan should either be reduced or<br />

withdrawn totally.<br />

Notably, this year, for the first time,<br />

Americans have displayed considerable pessimism<br />

about the prospect of stability in<br />

Afghanistan (56% are pessimistic). Sixtysix<br />

percent of Europeans are pessimistic,<br />

a figure that has remained constant for a<br />

few years.<br />

poLicy<br />

economic crisis:<br />

reducTion in spendinG<br />

And THe impAcT oF THe euro<br />

Opinions on the economic crisis on both<br />

sides of the Atlantic converge. With the austerity<br />

measures underway in a number of<br />

countries, close to 50% of Europeans polled<br />

prefer to see cuts in spending, as do 61%<br />

of Americans who prefer reductions in<br />

spending over other austerity options.<br />

At this point, it is worth noting that<br />

67% of the Europeans questioned believe<br />

that being an EU member is “good for<br />

the economy,” while only 40% of those<br />

polled in the Euro Zone believe that adoption<br />

of the single currency was good for<br />

their country’s economy. The spill-over<br />

from these results is reflected in the fact<br />

that 56% of those queried in the EU do<br />

not approve of the way the economy is<br />

being handled in their countries.<br />

The results of the poll are clear when it<br />

comes to the effects of the crisis: 82% of<br />

Americans say that they have been personally<br />

affected by the economic crisis, a 7%<br />

rise over last year. The figure is lower in<br />

the EU where 61% stated that their status<br />

has remained stable since last year.<br />

The Transatlantic Trends Survey, which annually<br />

taps into public opinion worldwide,<br />

has enabled experts to determine behavioral<br />

patterns and predict trends in strategy<br />

regarding the current political,<br />

economic, and social scene in the world<br />

today. And although, as Craig Kennedy of<br />

the German Marshall Fund asserted in a<br />

communiqué regarding the 2011 poll,<br />

“There is an awareness on both sides of<br />

the Atlantic that the US and the EU share<br />

common, fundamental values,” the results<br />

point to “a potential in-depth change in<br />

transatlantic relations.”<br />

*LPM<br />

Portuguese public opinion supports Obama<br />

Close to a thousand Portuguese were polled<br />

in the international survey, which was<br />

conducted with FLAD backing. The Portuguese<br />

results show that in a number of instances,<br />

Portuguese responses are in line with those<br />

culled in the rest of Europe.<br />

There are issues, however, where Portugal<br />

came out either higher or lower in<br />

relation to the country’s poll partners in<br />

the rest of the EU. When it comes to<br />

Obama’s approval rating in managing<br />

international policy, Portugal came out<br />

higher than all the other countries polled.<br />

Eighty‑two percent of Portuguese approve<br />

of the American president’s handing of<br />

international affairs. Noteworthy as well<br />

is Portugal’s response to Turkey’s joining<br />

the EU, in which 56% of Portuguese<br />

respondents answered that the idea was<br />

neither good nor bad – the highest<br />

percentage registered among all the<br />

countries polled and a figure that is in<br />

line with the 52% among Portuguese<br />

respondents who have a favorable<br />

opinion of Turkey (an 11‑point increase<br />

from 2010).<br />

With regard to new, emerging world powers,<br />

Portugal came out clearly favorable in its<br />

opinion of Brazil (85% favorability – the<br />

highest of all the countries polled). Opinions<br />

of China and India in Portugal yielded 37%<br />

and 26%, respectively when it came to<br />

unfavorable opinions of these emerging<br />

economic powers, figures lower than those<br />

registered for 2010.<br />

As far as the economy is concerned, 80%<br />

of Portuguese think that the Portuguese<br />

government should reduce spending in<br />

order to reduce the deficit, which once<br />

again, is the lowest percentage in this<br />

category among all the countries polled.<br />

Only 6% are of the opinion that the<br />

government ought to increase spending, and<br />

10% that the country should increase<br />

defense spending, although Portugal<br />

maintains the lowest percentage of support<br />

for defense spending – on a par with that<br />

of Spain and Slovakia.<br />

Parallel no. 6 | FALL | WINTER 2011 33


ChRIS GRAEME<br />

In the nationwide political arena, Dean<br />

again gained the spotlight as a fundraiser<br />

for President Obama, promoting the innovative<br />

use of the Internet and Facebook<br />

as campaign tools. He believes that the<br />

Obama administration’s seemingly shaky<br />

stance on defense and security has now<br />

become a reelection trump card because<br />

of the strike that killed the head of<br />

Al-Qaeda.<br />

[Parallel] Do you think the Democratic Party is<br />

prepared and organized to get President Obama<br />

re-elected?<br />

34<br />

poLicy<br />

Howard dean<br />

The president is the best campaign<br />

manager in the us<br />

“Bin Laden’s death helped obama,” stated Howard Dean,<br />

a prominent member of the Democratic Party, who left the medical profession to become<br />

governor of vermont. As governor, he implemented an innovative healthcare program<br />

and balanced the state’s budget.<br />

By sArA pinA AND cHArLes BucHAnAn*<br />

[Howard Dean] I think they’re very well<br />

prepared. As you know, we have a<br />

Democratic president, and it is the president<br />

who takes over the party organization.<br />

In this case, the President is the best<br />

campaign manager in the US today, and<br />

he is going be running the reelection network.<br />

So I think we are in very good shape<br />

in terms of the mechanics of winning an<br />

election.<br />

[P] How about the elements of the strategy?<br />

[HD] We are going be dealing with jobs<br />

and job creation. That’s what the American<br />

FLAd's charles Buchanan on the left with Howard dean at the luncheon venue of the American club of Lisbon.<br />

people want to hear about. Frankly, I<br />

think the American people have been<br />

scared by some of the experiments that<br />

they’ve seen in the Tea Party. They expected<br />

and voted for someone who’d turn<br />

the budget around, but they won’t accept<br />

attacks on working Americans, and you’ve<br />

seen that all across the country, in Ohio,<br />

Florida, and a lot of states, Pennsylvania<br />

is another one.<br />

‘ The election is going<br />

to be won among<br />

independents.<br />

’<br />

[P] So, would you say that the Tea Party will help<br />

the Democratic Party take votes away from the<br />

Republicans?<br />

[HD] They’re an advantage to the<br />

Republicans because they all mobilize<br />

the vote. But they scare the independents,<br />

and that’s where the election is<br />

going to be won, among the independents.<br />

[P] How will The 50 State Organization that you<br />

created help the Democrats win in conservative<br />

states?<br />

[HD] That will all depend on what the<br />

President wants to do. But basically, when<br />

I was in the Democratic National<br />

Committee, we had a strategy for every<br />

single state. We put money into every<br />

Parallel no. 6 | FALL | WINTER 2011


ChRIS GRAEME<br />

single state, to make sure that they were<br />

up-to-date, and had trained people on the<br />

ground. And I think that it helped expand<br />

the number of states in which the<br />

Democrats could compete.<br />

[P] What about the power of the Internet?<br />

[HD] The Internet works for both sides.<br />

The Republicans have been doing a good<br />

job duplicating what we’ll be doing on<br />

the Internet, just as I duplicated some<br />

things that the Republicans were doing<br />

well in 2004 when I became chairman.<br />

So both sides will use the Internet.<br />

[P] But you instituted intensive use of the Internet.<br />

Why did you choose this method?<br />

[HD] We learned from the young people<br />

who were doing it. Our ability to organize<br />

a campaign logically based on the Internet,<br />

was a result of our observing what young<br />

people were doing, and how they consulted<br />

the Internet.<br />

[P] The country’s youth and the ethnic minorities<br />

are very powerful (according to Obama). Don’t<br />

you think it will be a huge challenge to mobilize<br />

them again?<br />

[HD] That is the challenge! The President<br />

won because he had a huge outpouring,<br />

particularly among the young people, and<br />

that has to be duplicated. And it’s not<br />

going to be easy.<br />

[P] Portugal is in crisis because of its budget. You<br />

balanced Vermont’s state budget without increasing<br />

income taxes. What tips would you give our<br />

country?<br />

poLicy<br />

[HD] I think Prime Minister Sócrates<br />

began to address the problem long<br />

before some of the other countries. Early<br />

president obama won because of a huge wave of support,<br />

which Howard dean hopes is repeated.<br />

‘ The crisis: there was<br />

some very, very bad<br />

behavior on the part<br />

of international banks.<br />

on they made changes in the retirement<br />

age; they made changes in public wages,<br />

so Portugal is in much better shape than<br />

Ireland and Greece for example.<br />

Nevertheless, it’s a very small country,<br />

and of course, it is going to get buffeted.<br />

Portugal will have to do what all<br />

those other places have to do: cut down.<br />

But you can’t cut too much or too fast,<br />

because then you hurt the economy<br />

rather than help it. But there’s no question<br />

that in the West – both in Europe<br />

and US – there has been excessive spending;<br />

and, of course, there was some very,<br />

very bad behavior on the part of international<br />

banks. We’re not talking about<br />

Portuguese banks, we’re talking about<br />

big multinational banks. Some of these<br />

problems have nothing to do with<br />

Portugal. They have to do with big multinational<br />

banks speculating and betting<br />

on the stock markets. And then there’s<br />

the rating companies of course…<br />

*with André Sebastião<br />

Parallel no. 6 | FALL | WINTER 2011 35<br />

ChRIS GRAEME<br />

’<br />

DR


Paraded before our eyes is humanity’s best<br />

and worst: the colonization of America and<br />

the period of slavery; the country’s independence<br />

and the decimation of the native<br />

population; its scientific and technological<br />

achievements and the atom bomb. Since<br />

the US emerged as one of the world’s<br />

mightiest powers, it has been at the forefront<br />

of modern history’s main events.<br />

The exhibition – which has a wealth of<br />

artifacts and outsized collection pieces<br />

such as combat vehicles and a chunk of<br />

the Berlin Wall – is divided into four<br />

“movements.”<br />

The first of these recounts the history<br />

of “European America,” i.e. the era (1620-<br />

1783) when Europeans crossed the<br />

Atlantic en route to that huge, unknown<br />

and uncharted continent 20 times the size<br />

of Western Europe. Most of them left from<br />

England, France, and Spain. Yet there were<br />

Portuguese who left for America too,<br />

South America. It is estimated that between<br />

1600 and 1760, close to a million<br />

Portuguese left for Brazil.<br />

Gradually, the European powers conquered<br />

the vast continent with the British ending<br />

up with the lion’s share of the settlement<br />

mosaic. On the ideological front, European<br />

philosophers viewed this “brave new world”<br />

as a testing ground for their ideas. The same<br />

ideas were to take hold in the Old Continent<br />

as well, spawning the French Revolution<br />

(1789). “Although Locke and Montesquieu<br />

dictated- so to speak – the Constitution to<br />

the Americans, Jefferson helped the French<br />

write their own Declaration of the Rights<br />

of Man and of the Citizen,” the exhibition<br />

catalogue asserts.<br />

By the end of this first “movement,” the<br />

United States had gained its independence.<br />

36<br />

poLicy<br />

America: it’s also our history<br />

It’s a love story in four acts. As with all love stories, there has been passion, failed<br />

encounters, misunderstanding, scuffles, and outbreaks of fury, but most of all, intense<br />

mutual influence. That’s how the relationship between the US and europe has gone,<br />

and how it is portrayed in the exhibition America – It’s Also Our History,<br />

an initiative of the Belgian presidency of the european Union.<br />

By susAnA ALmeidA riBeiro<br />

PhOTOGRAPhy By TemporA<br />

With the 4 th of July, 1776, America had<br />

entered a new era dubbed “American<br />

America.” Act Two, which covers 1783 to<br />

1917, deals with the saga of those Europeans<br />

who left their hunger-plagued, socially<br />

static continent – where a cobbler could<br />

never aspire to becoming a member of the<br />

upper class – to figuratively embrace the<br />

Statue of Liberty, an 1886 gift of France to<br />

the American people. “Thus, a continentsized<br />

nation is born,” the catalogue states.<br />

As the colonists settled throughout<br />

America’s vast territory, the Native<br />

American population was decimated.<br />

When the first settlers arrived in what is<br />

now the United States, it is estimated that<br />

there were between 4 and 12 million<br />

Native Americans living there. By the year<br />

1900, there were a mere 250 thousand.<br />

The Third Movement begins with the First<br />

World War. It is the epoch of “American<br />

Europe,” when the Americans returned to<br />

Europe for the first time during the Great<br />

War, then again During World War II, to<br />

help the Europeans break free from the<br />

stranglehold of dictatorship.<br />

Meanwhile, the US was setting the Old<br />

Continent ablaze with its intoxicating jazz<br />

rhythms and the glamour of Hollywood’s<br />

star system. Even during the direst throes<br />

of the Great Depression, the US managed to<br />

make its mark in almost every field. The<br />

country became a safe haven for some of<br />

the greatest minds of our time such as Albert<br />

in Brussels: An exhibition on the united states in three movements.<br />

Parallel no. 6 | FALL | WINTER 2011


poLicy<br />

The period of 1989 to today marks the last movement in this extraordinarily evocative exhibition.<br />

Einstein and Claude Lèvi-Strauss. After<br />

Hitler’s defeat and the bombs over Hiroshima<br />

and Nagasaki, the United States would<br />

emerge, once and for all, as the greatest<br />

power in the world, a power that would<br />

continue to grow and become the nemesis<br />

of its arch-rival, the Soviet Union.<br />

Mirroring Germany, the world was divided<br />

into two blocs: East and West. We have<br />

now come to the Cold War era (symbolically<br />

portrayed in the exhibition by a chess<br />

table), and Post-War America. The US is<br />

now a prosperous nation with wealthy<br />

suburbs, TVs and electrical appliances, a car<br />

in every garage, and a juke box in every<br />

diner. It’s the golden age of rock n’roll,<br />

Elvis, and <strong>later</strong> Saturday Night Fever, and things<br />

that go better with Coke. A <strong>decade</strong> <strong>later</strong>,<br />

Madonna, Michael Jackson, microwaves,<br />

video games, eT, and the fall of the Berlin<br />

Wall would take the world by storm.<br />

It was no longer a bi-polar world. As it<br />

fell, the Iron Curtain buried the hammer<br />

and sickle. The period of 1989 until today<br />

marks the last “movement” of this extraordinary<br />

exhibition in which both Europe and<br />

America affirm their positions and attempt<br />

to redefine their relationship. The US is now<br />

enjoying its status as the world’s overarching<br />

superpower, a nation with military, economic,<br />

and cultural primacy in a post-September<br />

11 th world, but one that has begun<br />

to spy a new economic rival on the horizon:<br />

China. Europe, on the other hand, continues<br />

on its path towards reunification and union,<br />

while still licking the wounds it sustained<br />

during the Balkan War.<br />

Today the United States and Europe are<br />

both partners and allies. At the beginning,<br />

their destinies were intertwined. They still<br />

are. The proof is the grave financial crisis,<br />

which started on the other side of the<br />

Atlantic, and generated waves that crossed<br />

the Pond, producing effects that are still<br />

visible …especially in Portugal.<br />

The exhibition ends as the settlers’ great<br />

adventure began: with the sea. The last<br />

hall of the show has literally been turned<br />

into a beach to mark the Atlantic nature<br />

of the relationship between Europe and<br />

the US. It is a relationship that, like the<br />

‘ The period of 1989 until today<br />

marks the last “movement”<br />

of this extraordinary exhibition<br />

in which both europe and<br />

America affirm their positions<br />

and attempt to redefine<br />

their relationship.<br />

’<br />

tides, has ebbed and flowed over the centuries,<br />

a relationship of mutual influences,<br />

of rivalry, affection, and age-old<br />

fascination.<br />

mirroring Germany, the world was divided into two blocs: east and West.<br />

Parallel no. 6 | FALL | WINTER 2011 37


RUI OChÔA<br />

At a small, intimate session presided over<br />

by Maria de Lurdes Rodrigues and moderated<br />

by Mário Mesquita, historian José<br />

Medeiros Ferreira of the University of Lisbon<br />

unveiled FLAD’s newest publication, Parallel<br />

republics: Portugal and the United States of America.<br />

The book features presentations by<br />

Portuguese and American historians who<br />

participated in a colloquium of the same<br />

name that FLAD held to commemorate the<br />

centennial of the Portuguese Republic.<br />

Harvard University’s Alexander Keyssar,<br />

António Reis from the New University of<br />

Lisbon, Horst Mewes from the University<br />

38<br />

poLicy<br />

We need to talk about<br />

the republic without just dealing<br />

with the religious issue<br />

The relationship between church and state has been one of the central issues when<br />

analyzing Portugal’s 1 st republic. But, in the opinion of historian José Medeiros Ferreira,<br />

analysts should also examine the impact the institutionalization of an intentionally<br />

secular state has had on society. “We need to talk about the republic without just<br />

focusing on the religious issue,” he said, challenging his listeners at the launching<br />

of Parallel Republics: Portugal and the United States of America.<br />

By cArLA mArTins<br />

of Colorado, Fernando Catroga, professor<br />

at Coimbra University, and José Esteves<br />

Pereira from the New University of Lisbon,<br />

rose to the “innovative challenge” and took<br />

the “calculated risk” – in the worlds of<br />

Mário Mesquita in the book’s introduction<br />

– of carrying out a comparative analysis of<br />

the Portuguese and American Revolutions.<br />

The relations between church and state<br />

in the transition to republicanism was the<br />

focus of the first part of Ferreira’s observations.<br />

As the historian pointed out, America<br />

rejected the Cromwellian experience and<br />

embraced a set of ethics inspired by the<br />

“We need to talk about the republic without placing the religious issue at the center of the debate,”<br />

affirmed José medeiros Ferreira, who is flanked by FLAd Administrator mario mesquita and<br />

the president of the Foundation’s executive council, maria de Lurdes rodrigues.<br />

republican period of Roman civilization.<br />

The other pertinent influence was, of<br />

course, the principle of tolerance outlined<br />

by John Locke, a principle that was meant<br />

to act as a beacon to the secularization of<br />

the political sphere in relation to the religious.<br />

The drafters of the American constitution<br />

had indeed taken deep “draughts”<br />

from the fountain of the Enlightenment.<br />

As António Reis states, “ I like to say that<br />

the Portuguese republicans were the children<br />

of positivism and grandchildren of<br />

the Enlightenment, while the founders of<br />

the American Republic were first-generation<br />

offspring of the Enlightenment.”<br />

100 yeArs LATer:<br />

A more recepTive cHurcH<br />

The United States was the first country to<br />

set up a modern republic and the first<br />

system separating church from state,<br />

which was “very important because it<br />

contradicted the idea that there had to be<br />

a state religion.”<br />

“The process had its peculiarities,” Mário<br />

Mesquita observed at the book presentation.<br />

In the US, secularization was carried<br />

out “within a deist framework, though<br />

one that called upon a God devoid of any<br />

content that might form a link to a concrete<br />

religion.” As Fernando Catroga<br />

observed, “While all laicity is secularization,<br />

not all secularization is (or was)<br />

laicity or especially a laicism.”<br />

Portugal’s law separating church and state<br />

was different from that of the US and<br />

Parallel no. 6 | FALL | WINTER 2011


France. The period of the constitutional<br />

monarchy had demonstrated a degree of<br />

openness, with article 6 of the Constitutional<br />

Charter allowing foreigners to practice<br />

other religions as long as their places of<br />

worship did not resemble temples. The<br />

1910 Revolution, however, introduced the<br />

concept of the secular state and laicism, in<br />

effect putting an end to the confessional<br />

state and instituting religious freedom by<br />

means of the law separating church and<br />

state.<br />

In Portugal, the anti-clericalism of the<br />

republicans clashed with a Catholic Church<br />

– still shaken by the annexation of the<br />

Pontificate States and by the laicism of the<br />

3 rd French Republic – but dogmatic nonetheless<br />

and obdurate to republican ideals<br />

and institutions to a degree that <strong>later</strong> on,<br />

many Portuguese Catholics refused to take<br />

part in republican institutions (though this<br />

was not the way Salazar saw it).<br />

“After April 25, 1974 we find not only<br />

political protagonists who had learned the<br />

lessons of the 1 st Republic, but a Catholic<br />

Church that is totally different, a result of<br />

Vatican II, more receptive to understanding<br />

democratic principles and the separation of<br />

church and state.” As Prof. Medeiros Ferreira<br />

reminded the audience, Pope Benedict XVI<br />

praised the separation of church and state<br />

when he visited Portugal.<br />

‘ The united states was the first country<br />

to set up a modern republic and the<br />

first system separating church from<br />

state, which was “very important<br />

because it contradicted the idea that<br />

there had to be a state religion.”<br />

’<br />

A FronTrunner,<br />

LiKe THe 25 TH oF ApriL<br />

Yet even though the topic is important in<br />

the birth of the Portuguese Republic – it<br />

was, in modern terms a “divisive issue<br />

– Medeiros Ferreira believes we must “discuss<br />

the Republic without placing the<br />

religious issue at the center of the debate.”<br />

In Ferreira’s opinion, there are factors<br />

involved that have received little attention<br />

because historiographers and analysts have<br />

fixated on the relations between church<br />

and state and on the political instability<br />

of the times. “These two issues have totally<br />

monopolized the analytical agenda<br />

when it comes to the 1 st Republic.”<br />

poLicy<br />

“in reality, the portuguese republic would carry on – by itself – until 1917, on a continent that<br />

was markedly monarchic and even imperial,” stated medeiros Ferreira.<br />

“It would also be worthwhile to focus<br />

on other issues that have gotten buried,”<br />

Ferreira observes, such as “the pioneering<br />

nature of the Portuguese Republican<br />

Revolution in the context of Europe.” He<br />

explains his outlook in<br />

these terms: “We always<br />

like to say that the 25 th of<br />

April Revolution was the<br />

precursor to the demise of<br />

the other dictatorships in<br />

Europe and South America.<br />

This is true; but the<br />

Republic was also pioneering<br />

in that it fostered the<br />

dissemination of republican<br />

regimes in post-World<br />

War I Europe” at a time<br />

when only France and<br />

Switzerland were republics.<br />

“But even so, it is safe to say that the<br />

Portuguese Republic did not come about<br />

by induction or because of external forces.”<br />

Ferreira stresses that “in reality, the<br />

Portuguese Republic would carry on – by<br />

itself – until 1917, on a continent that was<br />

markedly monarchic and even imperial.”<br />

The second point the professor stresses<br />

is the modernization program of the<br />

Republic. “Once the Republic is in place<br />

we witness the growth of the functions of<br />

a liberal state. It’s the state operating on the<br />

ground.” New public services spring up<br />

such as the civil registry, public education,<br />

compulsory military service and a new<br />

philosophy centered on participation.<br />

Thirdly, Medeiros Ferreira stresses the singularity<br />

of the Portuguese Republican Party<br />

which was different and unique in that it<br />

favored electoral tactics over insurrectional<br />

tactics. “No party at the time (and I’m<br />

talking in European terms) took power like<br />

the PRP did, with weapons, by force.” It<br />

wasn’t exactly a Bolshevist party but it<br />

wasn’t a classical parliamentary party either<br />

like the parties of the 3 rd Republic. It was<br />

an electoralist party of the masses… but<br />

insurrectional at the same time.<br />

Parallel no. 6 | FALL | WINTER 2011 39<br />

RUI OChÔA


MARTA ROChA<br />

[Marta Rocha] How did your book come about<br />

and why did you choose to concentrate on the<br />

years 1974 to 1976?<br />

[Tiago Moreira de Sá] The idea came to mind<br />

when I was still working on the previous<br />

book I co-authored with Dr. Bernardino<br />

40<br />

poLicy<br />

Angola:<br />

America’s “inverted vietnam”<br />

The United States and the Decolonization of Angola,<br />

Tiago Moreira e Sá’s latest book, examines the US perspective of the power struggle<br />

in Angola after it became independent in 1974.<br />

By mArTA rocHA<br />

Gomes, Carlucci vs. Kissinger: os estados Unidos e<br />

a revolução Portuguesa (Carlucci vs. Kissinger: The<br />

US and the Portuguese revolution). I realized that<br />

it wasn’t possible to deal with the whole<br />

issue of the Portuguese revolution in a<br />

single book, so I decided that <strong>later</strong> on I<br />

would examine the decolonization process<br />

– particularly Angola, the jewel in the<br />

crown of Portugal’s colonial empire. I<br />

broached it from the American perspective,<br />

not only because it’s my particular<br />

area of research, but because the US has<br />

Tiago moreira de sá signing copies of his book at the launching of the united states and the decolonization of Angola.<br />

Parallel no. 6 | FALL | WINTER 2011


a document disclosure policy that gives<br />

you access to a huge number of primary<br />

sources. Basically, the book starts with<br />

Portugal’s April 25 th , 1974 Revolution and<br />

ends – as far as material about Angola is<br />

concerned – in February/March of 1976,<br />

when the Popular Movement for the<br />

Liberation of Angola (Portuguese acronym<br />

MPLA) won the first stage of the Angolan<br />

conflict.<br />

[MR] Why did the Cold War spread to the periphery<br />

of the international system – specifically<br />

Angola – during the period of Détente?<br />

[TMS] The Cold War had already spread<br />

to the periphery way before. Here we<br />

have it spreading to Southern Africa. In<br />

the case of Africa, in the first stages, the<br />

Cold War spread to the Congo during<br />

the Congolese civil war from 1960 to<br />

65, where the US came out victorious.<br />

Then, at the end of 1974, it spread to<br />

Southern Africa- Angola, which begs the<br />

question: why at a time of bi-polar<br />

Détente? The reason was twofold. In the<br />

case of the United States, it has to do<br />

with what I call in the book the “inverted<br />

Vietnam” effect, meaning that the US<br />

intervened in Angola not because Angola<br />

per se held such great geopolitical interest<br />

for the US, but because the Ford<br />

administration – particularly Henry<br />

Kissinger, secretary of state at the time<br />

– came to the conclusion that after losing<br />

in Vietnam they had to beat the<br />

Soviets in what they considered to be<br />

the periphery of the international system<br />

to show the world that though they<br />

lost in Vietnam, they still had the<br />

strength and the will to beat the Soviets<br />

in the so-called Third World.<br />

[MR] The US decided not to intervene in Angola<br />

for a long time. At your book launching,<br />

poLicy<br />

‘ Zaire was the us’s main informant with regard<br />

to Angola. in other words, the vision the us<br />

had of the Angolan conflict was, to a great degree,<br />

the vision mobutu transmitted.<br />

’<br />

Ambassador António Monteiro stated that, to<br />

some extent, Mobutu had “conducted American<br />

policy.”<br />

[TMS] For a long time the US in fact did<br />

not intervene in Angola. What we have<br />

is four phases in American policy. The<br />

first is a phase of virtual indifference,<br />

until January of 1975. It’s almost as if<br />

Angola didn’t even exist for Secretary of<br />

State Kissinger. Then in August of 1975<br />

the US started receiving intelligence that<br />

the Soviets were supporting the MPLA<br />

with weapons and money; and then there<br />

was the pressure from Zaire – Mobutu<br />

– regarding the issue. In the third phase<br />

the US finally adopted an offensive strategy.<br />

This phase started in July of 1975<br />

with the approval for a covert program<br />

for Angola called Operation IA Feature,<br />

in which the US gave massive support to<br />

the National Front for the Liberation of<br />

Angola (Portuguese acronym FNLA) and<br />

the National Union for the Total<br />

Independence of Angola (UNITA). Finally<br />

there was the last phase, which in real<br />

terms started in November of 1975,<br />

which was the American defeat. The role<br />

of Zaire was extremely important. Zaire<br />

had a tremendous influence on America’s<br />

Angola policy, not because Mobutu spearheaded<br />

America’s policy in Angola, but<br />

because Zaire was the US’s main informant<br />

with regard to Angola. In other<br />

words, the vision the US had of the<br />

Angolan conflict was, to a great degree,<br />

the vision Mobutu transmitted. Secondly,<br />

since the US publicly wanted to avoid the<br />

appearance of being involved in Angola<br />

– and that’s why it was a covert program<br />

– what they did was channel the program<br />

through Zaire. The money went through<br />

Zaire, the weapons that were earmarked<br />

went via Zaire, all with the concern of<br />

making it look as if the arms were Zairese<br />

and not American.<br />

[MR] Operation IA Feature marked a turnabout<br />

in America’s Angola policy. What exactly did it<br />

involve?<br />

[TMS] Essentially it involved three types<br />

of measures: first, financial support of 32<br />

million dollars for the FNLA and UNITA.<br />

Some say the amount was even greater.<br />

Second, weapons concessions to the FNLA<br />

and UNITA via Zaire – a large amount of<br />

heavy weaponry. The third measure<br />

involved the recruitment of mercenaries<br />

from Portugal, the UK, France, and a few<br />

African countries. Plus, despite the instructions<br />

that the US government gave the CIA,<br />

which had the responsibility of running<br />

the covert program, – that there weren’t<br />

Parallel no. 6 | FALL | WINTER 2011 41


42<br />

poLicy<br />

‘ The FnLA was – to use their expression – a “puppet<br />

of mobutu’s.” so the mpLA was the movement<br />

in the best position to guarantee the viability<br />

of an Angolan state after independence. it was also<br />

the one most in line with portuguese interests.<br />

’<br />

to be any American military or leaders<br />

involved in the Angolan conflict – the CIA<br />

would disobey the order and send paramilitary<br />

forces into the theater. This fact<br />

has been corroborated in the memoires<br />

of John Stockwell, who was CIA chief of<br />

the US-led Angola Task Force.<br />

[MR] The US only acknowledged very late that<br />

the Soviets’ activities were incompatible with<br />

Détente.<br />

[TMS] That’s true. And it’s a key factor. In<br />

my opinion, they only did it in November<br />

of 1975. The conclusion I’ve reached is<br />

that the US was convinced – until very<br />

late – that they were going to win, that<br />

the FNLA was going to win. It was only<br />

when they realized that the FNLA was losing<br />

that they brought up the Soviets<br />

action’s incompatibility with Détente.<br />

Oddly, until quite late, the Soviets were<br />

willing to negotiate, even though they<br />

were on the offensive. We can’t forget that<br />

Détente was also one of Brezhnev’s priorities.<br />

When the US brought up the<br />

incompatibility issue, the USSR, throughout<br />

part of December, even suspended the<br />

Soviet airlift of Cuban soldiers into Angola.<br />

It was only when the Tunney Amendment<br />

passed – when the Soviets realized that<br />

the US no longer had the means to back<br />

the FNLA and UNITA – that they resumed<br />

the airlift and thereafter, refused to negotiate<br />

Angola with the United States.<br />

porTuGuese inTervenTion<br />

And meLo AnTunes’ supporT<br />

[MR] What about Portugal? What were diplomatic<br />

relations like among the United States,<br />

Portugal, and Angola?<br />

Parallel no. 6 | FALL | WINTER 2011


[TMS] As a player, Portugal was relevant.<br />

The notion that Portugal had no relevance<br />

as a player is fallacious. Once the<br />

superpowers came onto the stage, all the<br />

other actors were left very little room<br />

to maneuver, which does not necessarily<br />

mean that they had no relevance as<br />

actors. As far as Portugal is concerned,<br />

there were three or four issues involving<br />

Angola that were very important. First,<br />

according to American information<br />

we have, the lions’<br />

share of the weapons belonging<br />

to the Portuguese armed<br />

forces was left to the MPLA.<br />

Kissinger even tried to blackmail<br />

the Portuguese government<br />

– and “blackmail” was<br />

his term, not mine – saying<br />

that the Portuguese government<br />

should either guarantee<br />

that no weapons are left<br />

to the MPLA or the US would<br />

cease all the aid it was lending<br />

to airlift Portuguese<br />

colonists in Angola to<br />

Portugal. We also have to<br />

realize that Portugal was<br />

deeply divided. There were<br />

a number of policies and a<br />

number of centers of power.<br />

The second issue, which is<br />

also really important but<br />

hard to corroborate because<br />

of the lack of reliable primary<br />

sources, is the issue of<br />

the famous Battle of Luanda<br />

in July of ’75, when the FNLA tried to<br />

reenter Luanda after it had been expelled<br />

by the MPLA. According to information<br />

particularly from the American Secret<br />

Service – information denied by the<br />

Portuguese officers I spoke to – there<br />

were Portuguese troops fighting beside<br />

the MPLA to keep the FNLA out of<br />

Luanda. The third issue has to do with<br />

poLicy<br />

Portugal’s negotiating efforts at two particular<br />

points in time: during the Alvor<br />

Agreement in January, 1975 and when<br />

the MPLA and UNITA were attempting to<br />

forge an alliance against the FNLA in<br />

August of ’75. In both cases, the superpowers,<br />

particularly the superpower I<br />

deal with in my book – the United States<br />

– would try its best to destroy these<br />

diplomatic efforts – and succeed.<br />

‘ As a player, portugal was relevant.<br />

The notion that portugal had no<br />

relevance as a player is fallacious.<br />

once the superpowers came onto the<br />

stage, all the other actors were left<br />

very little room to maneuver, which<br />

does not necessarily mean that they<br />

had no relevance as actors.<br />

’<br />

[MR] Even the US considered the MPLA the<br />

only representative movement in Angola, the<br />

only one that truly represented the Angolan<br />

people.<br />

[TMS] North American operatives in<br />

Angola who understood the reality of<br />

Angola did. The ones who weren’t in<br />

Angola – like Kissinger – did not exactly<br />

share that view. They knew very little,<br />

but the ones who were there, the operatives<br />

on the ground, believed exactly<br />

that. The FNLA was – to use their expression<br />

– a “puppet of Mobutu’s.” So the<br />

MPLA was the movement in the best<br />

position to guarantee the viability of an<br />

Angolan state after independence. It was<br />

also the one most in line with Portuguese<br />

interests. Then there were other issues.<br />

There was the group in Angola represented<br />

by Admiral Rosa Coutinho.<br />

In my opinion, there were other<br />

motives – even ideological and<br />

geopolitical ones – but even so,<br />

he always favored the Soviet<br />

Union. In my book I reveal – I<br />

think for the first time – that at<br />

one point, Melo Antunes began to<br />

support Jonas Savimbi and UNITA,<br />

though in the context of a project<br />

to forge an alliance between the<br />

MPLA and UNITA. The idea was to<br />

achieve an independent Angola<br />

governed by an MPLA/UNITA alliance,<br />

in which the MPLA predominated,<br />

since it was by far the<br />

strongest movement, but offsetting<br />

the MPLA and Agostinho<br />

Neto’s power with UNITA and<br />

Jonas Savimbi. On the other hand,<br />

the idea was to lessen the MPLA’s<br />

dependence – or what was construed<br />

to be its dependence – on<br />

the USSR, by helping it to establish<br />

other diplomatic channels with,<br />

for example, Algeria and Yugoslavia.<br />

Melo Antunes tried to convince<br />

the Americans to maintain at least a<br />

threshold of good relations with the<br />

MPLA, or even support the MPLA, to<br />

reduce its dependence on Moscow. In<br />

the book I also reveal, for the first time,<br />

that Agostinho Neto “did not close the<br />

door” on good relations with the United<br />

States; actually, his stance was quite the<br />

opposite.<br />

Parallel no. 6 | FALL | WINTER 2011 43


By mAriA de Lurdes<br />

rodriGues*<br />

44<br />

Why studying at<br />

a Portuguese university<br />

is a great idea<br />

Nowadays one of the criteria to assess how international<br />

a university has become is to see how<br />

many foreign students and teachers take part in the<br />

activities it carries out.<br />

In this respect, Portuguese universities have progressed<br />

a lot: first, because the country has participated<br />

in the Erasmus Program for over 20 years, and<br />

second, because direct measures have been taken to<br />

back research exchange programs and international<br />

cooperation. As far as the international projection of<br />

Portuguese science is concerned, the results have<br />

been remarkable: 48% of Portugal’s scientific output<br />

is done in collaboration with foreign institutions.<br />

However, when it comes to the internationalization<br />

of education at the college level, the numbers show<br />

that only 5% of the students attending Portuguese<br />

universities are foreigners. It is clear that there is<br />

huge potential for growth here.<br />

Portugal’s college-level infrastructure is top quality,<br />

and has the capacity to take in many more<br />

students than it currently does. The increase in<br />

national enrollment has depended greatly on the<br />

improvement in students’ high school performance<br />

and a reduction in the number of drop-outs, as<br />

well as the system’s capacity to attract adults wishing<br />

to complete their high school and middle<br />

school education. Yet the socio-demographic characteristics<br />

of both of these segments – though for<br />

different reasons – will only translate into limited<br />

growth in enrollment at the college level.<br />

One possible, unlimited source of increased<br />

enrollment is other Portuguese-speaking countries<br />

and countries of the Portuguese Diaspora such as<br />

the United States. Neighboring Spain annually<br />

attracts more than 20,000 students for its study<br />

abroad programs. The same goes for the other<br />

countries in Europe. The cooperative ties they have<br />

established with US universities to promote summer<br />

courses, study abroad programs, and student<br />

and teacher exchange initiatives have enabled these<br />

other European universities to attract thousands<br />

of foreign students who add immeasurably to their<br />

international profile. And although Portugal can<br />

WWW.IDEIA.PT<br />

boast of having hosted countless students from<br />

the Erasmus Program, it has currently only been<br />

able to attract 150 students per year from the<br />

United States.<br />

Looking at it from the other side of the Atlantic, it<br />

would be easy to see why our country and its system<br />

of higher education offer a number of competitive<br />

advantages over other European schools. And these<br />

advantages can be publicized in more vigorous campaigns<br />

to promote Portuguese universities abroad.<br />

The first lies in the quality and innovative nature<br />

of Portuguese schools: the quality of the installations,<br />

the scientific research being done there, and<br />

the various resources that give students access to a<br />

broad range of knowledge and information. All<br />

Parallel no. 6 | FALL | WINTER 2011


these resources have placed many of our<br />

institutions high on the ladder of international<br />

rankings. In addition, the indicators<br />

show that Portugal is one of the<br />

European countries that has made the<br />

greatest strides in terms of innovation in<br />

the last few years.<br />

Second is the cost of tuition and the<br />

standard of living. In our country, the<br />

financial outlay parents make to put their<br />

kids through college is very different from<br />

the financial burden the average American<br />

family must shoulder to put them through<br />

a program of the same quality. This gives<br />

Portugal a huge advantage, and makes our<br />

universities a truly attractive option.<br />

Third, Portugal is an integral part of<br />

Europe. Under the Bologna Process, our<br />

certificates and diplomas are automatically<br />

recognized throughout Europe, allowing<br />

graduates to go elsewhere in the EU for<br />

other degree or non-degree programs. This<br />

by itself brings untold benefits.<br />

Finally, there’s the opportunity to learn<br />

Portuguese, a language that opens doors<br />

to Brazil and the Portuguese-speaking<br />

African countries, and to the possibility<br />

for career enrichment.<br />

These compelling arguments are what<br />

led FLAD to inaugurate a program to pro-<br />

mote Portuguese universities in the US.<br />

Our main idea is to attract American students<br />

of Portuguese heritage. Aside from<br />

FLAD, the initiative, which we call the<br />

Study In Portugal Program, has received<br />

the sponsorship of the Portuguese Tourist<br />

Board, the Council of University<br />

Chancellors, the Fulbright Commission,<br />

and the Portuguese Agency for Investment<br />

and Foreign Trade, who have all signed<br />

a cooperation protocol to launch further<br />

initiatives to promote our country as a<br />

student destination.<br />

* President of FLAD’s executive Council<br />

Parallel no. 6 | FALL | WINTER 2011 45<br />

WWW.IDEIA.PT


By ALLAn J. KATZ*<br />

46<br />

Another way to strengthen<br />

Portuguese‑American<br />

relations<br />

As US Ambassador to Portugal, I have often had the<br />

pleasure of meeting Portuguese students and academics<br />

who have studied in the United States. These<br />

people – through joint research, personal ties, and<br />

exchange programs involving teachers and students<br />

– have helped to further strengthen the already strong<br />

ties between our two countries. I am hopeful that<br />

new initiatives like the one backed by the Fulbright<br />

Commission, the <strong>Luso</strong>-American Foundation, the<br />

Portuguese Agency for Investment and Foreign Trade<br />

(AICEP), the Portuguese Tourist Board, and the Council<br />

of University Chancellors will lead to an increase in<br />

the number of American students in Portugal. Recent<br />

data show that a total of 260,327 Americans studied<br />

abroad in the 2008-2009 academic year. This figure<br />

continues to mark a <strong>decade</strong> of unprecedented growth<br />

in the number of American students receiving college<br />

credits from their experience abroad. If we look at<br />

the last two <strong>decade</strong>s, we see that the participation of<br />

American students in study abroad programs has<br />

more than tripled.<br />

In that same academic year, 240 Americans chose<br />

Portugal as a study destination, which represents<br />

a 61% increase over the previous year. Once again,<br />

these numbers show that academic ties between<br />

the United States and Portugal are on the rise; and<br />

naturally, I am very pleased that growing numbers<br />

of students from the United States are deciding to<br />

study in this country.<br />

As honorary president of the Fulbright Commission<br />

in Portugal, I have had the privilege of witnessing<br />

first-hand the close cooperation that exists between<br />

the American government and the government of<br />

Portugal through the Fulbright Program, which supports<br />

academic exchange between our two countries.<br />

Particularly in the last few years, the Fulbright<br />

Commission has increased the number of grants for<br />

placing American students in Portuguese universities<br />

as English-speaking teaching assistants, and for MA<br />

and PhD research done by Americans in Portugal.<br />

A recent partnership between Fulbright and the<br />

<strong>Luso</strong>-American Foundation has also laid the groundwork<br />

for increasing the number of American<br />

research fellows in the near future.<br />

The Fulbright initiatives are part of a wider goal<br />

of the US government and American institutions<br />

to expose increasing numbers of students to the<br />

study abroad experience, either by participating in<br />

summer programs, carrying out research, or by<br />

attending degree programs where they will develop<br />

the valuable skills to cooperate with partners<br />

from other countries in a multicultural atmosphere<br />

fraught with global challenges.<br />

Now is the time to seize the opportunity of<br />

recruiting even more American students for<br />

Portuguese universities and research centers, which<br />

have all the conditions available to host these students<br />

in the best way possible.<br />

The Fulbright Commission believes that by supporting<br />

the Study In Portugal Program, which is<br />

directed at promoting Portuguese institutions of<br />

higher education in the US, it will contribute to<br />

increasing the number of students choosing<br />

Portugal as an educational destination.<br />

The Fulbright Commission is glad to take part in<br />

the Program’s activities, in particular the initiative<br />

slated for 2012 in which representatives from a<br />

group of Portuguese universities will be participating<br />

in the NAFSA (Association of International<br />

Educators) annual conference and exhibition. As a<br />

pioneering institution worldwide in international<br />

education and exchange programs, NAFSA annually<br />

holds a conference that brings in thousands of<br />

professionals from around the globe to promote<br />

programs involving their countries. The event is an<br />

ideal place to show the representatives from US<br />

schools and international educational professionals<br />

how much Portuguese universities and research<br />

facilities have to offer American students.<br />

STUDY IN PorTUGAL is a way of bringing the United<br />

States and Portugal even closer together. That is why<br />

I am proud that the Fulbright Commission has lent<br />

its support to this invaluable program, in collaboration<br />

with our other distinguished partners.<br />

* US Ambassador to Portugal. Honorary president of the Fulbright<br />

Commission.<br />

Parallel no. 6 | FALL | WINTER 2011


By rui BoAvisTA<br />

mArques*<br />

‘ The bi<strong>later</strong>al relationship<br />

between portugal and the united<br />

states is not only one of the<br />

oldest bonds for both countries,<br />

but it is also a link marked<br />

by achievement.<br />

’<br />

WWW.IDEIA.PT<br />

A step toward doing<br />

business in Portuguese<br />

A country’s image is actually a complex puzzle made<br />

up of a number of components that are as real and<br />

valid as the sovereign debt, the country’s brand recognition,<br />

its global and regional market share, its<br />

tourist potential, its art and culture, plus myriad<br />

additional factors.<br />

Yet in the case of Portugal, the language makes up<br />

a large piece of the puzzle<br />

as well. It not only links<br />

the nation with its history,<br />

but with its current<br />

partners and its future.<br />

Focusing on the<br />

Portuguese language as an<br />

assert to the international<br />

business world (and other<br />

areas as well) has been a<br />

plan especially dear to<br />

our heart at AICEP (the<br />

Portuguese Agency for<br />

Investment and Foreign<br />

Trade), which is why it<br />

has been gratifying to<br />

learn that the number of<br />

students of Portuguese<br />

in the US has grown by<br />

two digit figures.<br />

We have been witness<br />

to how important<br />

American/Portuguese<br />

student exchange programs<br />

have become at<br />

every academic level, as<br />

the result of partnerships<br />

between the Portuguese<br />

government and four of<br />

the most distinguished<br />

institutions for applied<br />

science in the US: the<br />

Massachusetts Institute<br />

of Technology, Carnegie-<br />

Mellon University, the<br />

University of Texas at<br />

Austin and Harvard<br />

Medical School.<br />

Another type of exchange program that has warranted<br />

AICEP support is the INOV-CONTACTO<br />

Program, which every year sends 550 young people<br />

to do internships at corporations throughout the<br />

world. In 2010, 65 young hopefuls had the opportunity<br />

of completing internship programs in the<br />

United States.<br />

The bi<strong>later</strong>al relationship between Portugal and the<br />

United States is not only one of the oldest bonds<br />

for both countries, but it is also a link marked by<br />

achievement. Indicative of the success of the link is<br />

the fact that the Portuguese company Efacec has<br />

brought dozens of trainees over from the US to train<br />

in the company’s state-of-the-art technology at its<br />

headquarters in Lisbon.<br />

Also relevant is the fact that Portugal’s credibility<br />

as a US direct investment destination has been<br />

on the rise, as the following cases show. In May,<br />

Xerox’s Global Delivery Center was inaugurated<br />

in Lisbon, the first non-USA based Microsoft R&D<br />

Center for Speech Recognition was set up as were<br />

the Microsoft Language Development Center for<br />

Brazil and Portugal, IBM’s BPO Center, and five<br />

CISCO skill-building centers. All involved either<br />

outsourcing operations or the development of new<br />

software applications, which goes to show the<br />

level of competitiveness and the undeniable quality<br />

of the work being done in Portugal.<br />

The time has now come for us to invest in<br />

increasing the number of American students who<br />

come to study in Portugal. The positive impact<br />

such a study abroad initiative stands to have on<br />

the global projection of the Portuguese economy<br />

is highly significant. AICEP is gratified to see that<br />

several partners have joined the Study in Portugal<br />

drive and it is committed to the initiative’s success,<br />

mainly through stepped up, more engaging<br />

participation in NAFSA 2012.<br />

Having more Americans learning Portuguese in<br />

Portugal is one of the best ways of promoting the<br />

concept of “Doing Business in the Portuguese<br />

Language,” which in turn acknowledges that Portugal<br />

has strong ties with all the continents, and a potential<br />

that has just begun to be tapped.<br />

*Coordinating Director for North America, AICeP Portugal Global, New York<br />

Parallel no. 6 | FALL | WINTER 2011 47


By Luís pATrão*<br />

48<br />

Portugal:<br />

A place to live<br />

and a place to learn<br />

‘ The study in portugal program gives us a<br />

unique opportunity to promote portugal both<br />

as a tourist destination and as a place that<br />

hopefully more and more American students<br />

and researchers will choose to achieve their<br />

academic goals.<br />

’<br />

RUI OChÔA<br />

When young people select a country to study<br />

abroad, their choice is not solely based on academic<br />

criteria. In addition to quality education, it<br />

is often the lure and attractiveness of the country<br />

itself that influence their decision.<br />

Several factors enter into the equation: the climate,<br />

the country’s history and heritage, its natural beauty<br />

and lifestyle, the people, how safe it is, and the recreational<br />

and cultural events that are available. What<br />

students are choosing is a place to live, not just a<br />

place to study.<br />

In this respect, Portugal has a lot to offer and is<br />

in a position to compete with any other international<br />

study destination. Especially when it comes<br />

to students from the US, Portugal can provide a<br />

host of different and unique experiences to enhance<br />

the top-quality academic programs that Portuguese<br />

universities offer.<br />

The decision to target this new, young and demanding<br />

public brings with it additional responsibility<br />

and the need to form a clear vision of the future. It<br />

is an additional responsibility because it means the<br />

country will have to tailor its services to meet the<br />

needs and interests of this new type of consumer. It<br />

involves looking ahead because these young people<br />

stand to act – not only as a driving force within<br />

our country – but as spokespersons par excellence<br />

in promoting Portugal abroad.<br />

Their ability to spread the word and promote<br />

Portugal and its outstanding features as a tourist<br />

destination to their families and communities back<br />

home will contribute immeasurably to our achieving<br />

more and better influxes of tourists in the future.<br />

But investing in Portugal as a study destination<br />

also means creating emotional ties. The students<br />

who come here are all potential consumers, who<br />

will likely want to return from time to time to<br />

show family and friends the places where they spent<br />

some of the happiest times of their lives.<br />

The Study in Portugal Program gives us a unique<br />

opportunity to promote Portugal both as a tourist<br />

destination and as a place that hopefully more and<br />

more American students and researchers will<br />

choose to achieve their academic goals.<br />

* President of the Portuguese Tourist Board<br />

Parallel no. 6 | FALL | WINTER 2011


By AnTónio rendAs*<br />

A groundbreaking program<br />

‘ Academic exchange programs of varying duration<br />

and with a number of different objectives,<br />

designed to step up the flow of professors,<br />

scholars and researchers, definitely spell progress,<br />

broaden horizons, cut across borders, and have<br />

led to the criss-crossing of cultural identities, and<br />

opportunities to share values and experiences.<br />

’<br />

Portugal has a network of 16 public universities<br />

that offer educational opportunities at every level<br />

of higher education, including post-doctoral and<br />

research programs in every field of science. The<br />

country has responded to the need to internationalize<br />

and, as a consequence, Portugal’s universities<br />

have a wide range of programs and curricula in<br />

the various fields of science and at every degree<br />

level, which are taught in English in order to cater<br />

to the international learner.<br />

The country is particularly well-suited for the<br />

study of a broad selection of subjects such as history,<br />

marine biology and oceanography, economics<br />

and law, comparative literature, medicine,<br />

engineering, architecture, and a host of other topics.<br />

International experience plays an extremely<br />

important role in the exchange of learning and<br />

knowledge among institutions, while acting as a<br />

significant contribution to the growth of universities<br />

themselves. This is precisely why the Study<br />

in Portugal Program, which was set in motion by<br />

a protocol signed by the Council of Portuguese<br />

University Chancellors (Portuguese acronym<br />

CRUP), the <strong>Luso</strong>-American Foundation, the<br />

Portuguese Tourist Board, AICEP- Portugal’s Agency<br />

for Investment and Foreign Trade, and the Fulbright<br />

Commission, will likely become a valuable contribution<br />

to making American universities and<br />

research centers more aware of the activities of<br />

their Portuguese counterparts.<br />

This groundbreaking program will be a concrete<br />

step forward in publicizing Portuguese institutions<br />

of higher learning in the United States. Another of<br />

the initiative’s important targets is to spark an<br />

increase in the number of US students choosing<br />

Portugal as a study destination. That is why a number<br />

of strategic partnerships between Portuguese<br />

universities and prestigious schools in the United<br />

Sates have increasingly been forged over the last<br />

few years. Academic exchange programs of varying<br />

duration and with a number of different objectives,<br />

designed to step up the flow of professors, scholars<br />

and researchers, definitely spell progress, broaden<br />

horizons, cut across borders, and have led to<br />

the criss-crossing of cultural identities, and opportunities<br />

to share values and experiences.<br />

The Council of Portuguese University Chancellors,<br />

established in 1979, has invested its efforts in academic<br />

exchange and post-graduate education in the<br />

partnerships it has formed with leading institutions<br />

around the world. Promoting mobility among scholars<br />

ultimately means sharing knowledge and broadening<br />

people’s outlook on multi<strong>later</strong>al cooperation<br />

among nations. But it especially means highlighting<br />

the value of education, scientific research, and the<br />

growth and scope of universities.<br />

* President of the Council of Portuguese University Chancellors<br />

Parallel no. 6 | FALL | WINTER 2011 49<br />

RUI OChÔA


[Parallel] Some people think that entrepreneurship<br />

can’t be taught. Either you have it or you don’t.<br />

So how can you teach it?<br />

[Paul Jerde] Can you teach someone to<br />

be an entrepreneur, and can you teach<br />

entrepreneurship? I differentiate, I distinguish<br />

between the two. I don’t believe<br />

you can teach someone to be an entrepreneur.<br />

That comes from inside. But I<br />

strongly believe you can teach the skills<br />

and the knowledge, and the methodologies<br />

for critical thinking, so that<br />

people can recognize challenges and<br />

identify opportunities, and then act on<br />

their ideas. That’s what entrepreneurship<br />

education is all about.<br />

[P] What are the personal characteristics that<br />

enable people to become successful entrepreneurs?<br />

[PJ] There are several things. For someone<br />

to actually take the step and say, “I’m<br />

going to start something new” is always<br />

a very personal action. But as I tell our<br />

students, some people can do that, they’re<br />

good at it. Others can’t. And those people<br />

need others to help them. They need<br />

entrepreneurial people on their team to<br />

help them build whatever they have in<br />

mind. And these have to be people with<br />

complementary skills. They have to be<br />

people who are not only experts in<br />

finance, or marketing, or operations, or<br />

strategy, or management, but individuals<br />

who can manage within very challenging<br />

environments. Half of all environments are<br />

under-capitalized and change rapidly. So,<br />

people have to be very flexible, accept the<br />

change, and be able to move in a very<br />

ambiguous environment. For me, that’s<br />

the skillset of someone who can be an<br />

entrepreneur, or act within an entrepreneurial<br />

environment.<br />

50<br />

socieTy<br />

no risk, no glory<br />

entrepreneurship can and should be taught. And Paul Jerde has made teaching it his<br />

livelihood at the University of Colorado and at the aptly-named Unreasonable Institute,<br />

where overstepping the boundaries of reason is par for the course. In this interview with<br />

FLAD administrators Charles Buchanan and Mário Mesquita, the American professor<br />

discusses what it takes to be a successful entrepreneur.<br />

TEXT AND PhOTOGRAPhy By sArA pinA<br />

“For someone to actually take the step and say, ‘i’m going to start something new’ is always<br />

a very personal action,” affirms entrepreneurship expert paul Jerde.<br />

[P] Can one be an entrepreneur without taking<br />

risks?<br />

[PJ] I don’t think so. But surprisingly,<br />

there should be a lot more discussion<br />

about this in the US. Interestingly, the<br />

moment someone looks at an entrepreneurial<br />

idea, the thing that he or she<br />

does is try to reduce risks. So they do<br />

accept risk, but after that, all their efforts<br />

are directed toward reducing them. And<br />

this means technology risk, market risk,<br />

leadership risk … all of the risks that<br />

businesses are exposed to. Entrepreneurs<br />

are always relentlessly trying to reduce<br />

risk. But they do take a risk when they<br />

first get started.<br />

[P] Can you share a story involving student<br />

entrepreneurship with us?<br />

[PJ] I’ll tell you my favorite story. A young<br />

woman named Sara Shude was an undergraduate<br />

student in our entrepreneurship<br />

program about five years ago. She identified<br />

an idea, and it dealt with the fact that<br />

universities struggle to be effective in<br />

communicating with the parents of their<br />

students.<br />

Parallel no. 6 | FALL | WINTER 2011


They publish materials, but they don’t do<br />

a very good job of communicating. So, she<br />

identified this area and said, “What if I<br />

were to become the publisher of the material<br />

you want to publish, and I will put out<br />

a publication called University Parents?”<br />

The idea was so successful that she took<br />

it beyond the universities. I think today<br />

she has about a 160 contracts with universities.<br />

And she did it with very little<br />

capital.<br />

[P] How do you conciliate entrepreneurship with<br />

sustainability?<br />

[PJ] The way we got there is by having<br />

several years of being acknowledged as a<br />

leading entrepreneurship education program.<br />

So we we really needed to think<br />

about the direction the future is moving<br />

in. What we discovered was that increasingly,<br />

consumers were changing the way<br />

they did business in order to become<br />

more sustainable. And as entrepreneurs<br />

always do, we looked at fundamental<br />

changes. When corporations change direction<br />

– even slightly – it creates opportunities<br />

for entrepreneurs, because the large<br />

companies will need new solutions.<br />

[P] Are there differences in teaching Portuguese<br />

and Americans to take risks?<br />

[PJ] I think there are many differences. As<br />

I think of Portugal’s history, it’s one of the<br />

most risk-oriented, entrepreneurial cases<br />

of how to take advantage of new opportunities.<br />

It’s in the water; it’s in your DNA<br />

here in Portugal. It seems to be an anomaly<br />

to me, actually, as I learn more about<br />

the country.<br />

I would say several things are very different,<br />

and I’m not an economist, and I’m<br />

not a government politician, so I’m<br />

observing some of this from a distance.<br />

Because most entrepreneurs tend to be<br />

very apolitical. We’re on the ground creating<br />

businesses. And we have an environ-<br />

socieTy<br />

ment that enables us to adapt, that<br />

changes when you go into regulated<br />

industries. So energy, and many other<br />

things increasingly help you innovate, and<br />

the answers you find are becoming more<br />

important for coming generations in the<br />

US. So it is all very dynamic.<br />

What are the differences then? The first<br />

thing I always say is that one should never<br />

think of the US as lockstep. There are areas<br />

in the US that are very entrepreneurial.<br />

We happened to be in one of those areas,<br />

so it was part of our culture. However,<br />

there are many areas of the US that are<br />

not entrepreneurial at all.<br />

But the similarities happen at the state<br />

level. We all know what California has<br />

done. You must have leadership with a<br />

plan, a leadership that sets the stage so<br />

that businesses can operate with confidence.<br />

This makes all the difference in the<br />

world. We have that in Colorado. So the<br />

differences are that we can’t do it at the<br />

federal level. I think Portugal has a chance<br />

to be much more effective in setting<br />

policies at the federal level.<br />

[P] Do you have to be out of your mind or have<br />

a screw loose to be a leader? Or be emotional<br />

and impulsive? And what about the Unreasonable<br />

Institute?<br />

[PJ] Absolutely, yeah. [laughs]. Human<br />

nature tends to resist change. There’s a<br />

defining characteristic in entrepreneurs,<br />

it’s that they seek; they live within the<br />

threshold of the unreasonable. I know I<br />

do. I believe that if you are not changing,<br />

you are falling behind, because the world<br />

is changing. It’s changing (tapping on the<br />

table) every single second. Anybody who<br />

wants to maintain the status quo is falling<br />

behind, because the world is moving fast.<br />

There’s always a better way; there’s always<br />

a different way; always a new opportunity.<br />

There’s always a change that can be<br />

identified, embraced, and somehow taken<br />

advantage of.<br />

Entrepreneurs take risks that most people<br />

won’t take, and then immediately set to<br />

work on reducing those risks. They don’t<br />

like to live in a constant state of risk, but<br />

they have the skills. And this brings us to<br />

education. If you can teach someone to<br />

understand how to evaluate a risk and<br />

what things need to be considered to<br />

reduce that risk, then you can put them<br />

in a position where they can feel comfortable<br />

and say, “This is a reasonable risk to<br />

take, I guess. I’m not being unreasonable<br />

in taking it, because there’s a reasonable<br />

chance I can overcome the remaining<br />

risks. And if I can do that, then I will learn<br />

from it.”<br />

*with André Sebastião<br />

About the center<br />

for entrepreneurship<br />

education in portugal<br />

The Center for Entrepreneurship Education<br />

in Portugal (CEEP) is a not‑for‑profit asso‑<br />

ciation of individuals, educational organi‑<br />

zations, companies, government entities<br />

and civil society organizations. The mis‑<br />

sion of CEEP is to help in the development<br />

and implementation of national programs<br />

in entrepreneurship education and training<br />

through research projects, education,<br />

training, and public policy development.<br />

CEEP was created in 2010 through agree‑<br />

ments with various national entities<br />

including: Universidade de Lisboa,<br />

Universidade Católica Portuguesa, Centro<br />

Regional do Porto, Universidade do<br />

Algarve and ISCTE‑Audax – Centro de<br />

Investigação e Apoio ao Empreendedorismo<br />

e Empresas Familiares.<br />

Parallel no. 6 | FALL | WINTER 2011 51


[Parallel] What is innovation?<br />

[Michael Fernandez] My perspective is that<br />

innovation means coming up with new<br />

ideas. And doing that isn’t very easy,<br />

because everyone is very comfortable<br />

with what they’re doing. Being innovative<br />

is really a mindset. So to be innovative<br />

is to take some risk, risk failure,<br />

and then also to be able to potentially<br />

risk how other people perceive you.<br />

[P] If innovation is a mindset, how can it be<br />

learned?<br />

[MF] I firmly believe that you can’t teach<br />

somebody to be an entrepreneur. But<br />

part of it is actually helping that person<br />

to realize they can take the risk, and the<br />

first thing they might say is, “Hey, these<br />

perceptions that I keep getting are not<br />

letting me fail. And I’m able to make<br />

decisions even though people disagree<br />

with me.”<br />

The next part is to teach them a set of<br />

different skills. The first one is to understand<br />

their own self-image, in fact their<br />

decisions in life. If you perceive that<br />

you can’t do something, or in your<br />

mind you talk to yourself negatively,<br />

then you sort of limit your ability.<br />

[P] What is different about starting a new business<br />

in Europe and starting one in America?<br />

[MF] In that respect, the US is the diametrical<br />

opposite of Europe, or at least<br />

in San Francisco it is. In San Francisco<br />

you can’t say that failure is considered a<br />

good thing, but it is very accepted.<br />

Although it’s still not easy to come out<br />

of it, and it takes a process to realize<br />

“I did this and I failed,” when you do<br />

fail, people are still more comfortable<br />

about it. In Europe there’s this idea that<br />

people don’t fail.<br />

52<br />

socieTy<br />

Losing in order to win<br />

Michael Fernandez runs a company out of San Francisco – JMF & Co – that helps people<br />

and companies invest in innovative new areas. He is also the founder of one of America’s<br />

largest not-for-profit organizations, Little Kids rock, which promotes music education<br />

in schools throughout the US. In this interview with Parallel, Fernandez explains that<br />

to win, you often have to start off by losing, which is why Californians take more risks.<br />

By sArA pinA AND cLAudiA coLLA*<br />

michael Fernandez asserts that “The us is the diametrical opposite of europe” when it comes<br />

to starting a new business.<br />

SARA PINA<br />

Parallel no. 6 | FALL | WINTER 2011


As far as entrepreneurship is concerned,<br />

it is accepted by investors that<br />

you learn the most if you reflect on why<br />

you were at fault. This is the extreme<br />

opposite of Europe, and it is Europe’s<br />

biggest challenge.<br />

It’s Europe’s biggest challenge because<br />

I think that for Europe’s market to be<br />

innovative, or try new things, there must<br />

be some appetite for risk, and some<br />

appetite for failure. It can’t be that if<br />

you try something and fail, your life is<br />

over. Even more so because the chances<br />

of being successful on your first attempt<br />

are so remote. Sometimes the greatest<br />

stories are the ones in which people fail<br />

many times.<br />

‘ in europe there’s this<br />

idea that people<br />

don’t fail.<br />

’<br />

[P] Would you say Americans are more innovative<br />

than Europeans?<br />

[MF] I think that Americans are willing<br />

to take risks that allow them to be more<br />

innovative. I don’t think they are any<br />

smarter or any more creative, or any<br />

more innovative. I think there’s a culture<br />

allowing them to take risks, a culture<br />

that says it’s okay to leave and start<br />

somethig new.<br />

[P] How about Little Kids Rock?<br />

[MF] Little Kids Rock is a non-profit<br />

company that we started in late 1999-<br />

2000. There was a school teacher who<br />

had an actual music school program.<br />

Then she and I partnered up. She knew<br />

how to teach kids to play music, and I<br />

knew how to bring people together. We<br />

brought in the accounting skills, managing<br />

skills, legal skills, and formed a<br />

board, and then together we started to<br />

raise money. We started with only 25<br />

kids in the US, and now we reach over<br />

a hundred thousand kids. We have over<br />

a thousand schools in the country, in<br />

20 different states.<br />

*with André Sebastião<br />

socieTy<br />

opportunities rather<br />

than money<br />

Professor of Strategy and Innovation<br />

Management at the Polytechnic Institute of<br />

Turin in Italy, and a member of the board<br />

of Italy’s National Agency for Innovation,<br />

Mario Calderini believes that governments<br />

must not focus exclusively on funding<br />

research to spark innovation.<br />

[Parallel] How can public policies enable countries<br />

to become more innovative?<br />

[Mario Calderini] National policy should<br />

stop giving direct money and finance<br />

to companies, and be more directed<br />

toward creating new business opportunities<br />

and new markets, using public<br />

demand. We should give customers and<br />

market opportunities to companies,<br />

rather than money. It’s something that<br />

makes a company take more risks, and<br />

become more innovative. If you give<br />

them money, they become lazy.<br />

[P] You said that too often, innovation is generated<br />

from the top down. Can you explain<br />

this?<br />

[MC] If the model were big companies<br />

with big research labs, or big universities<br />

doing a lot of research, then the<br />

innovation would just come out of these<br />

research activities. But nowadays, I think<br />

that the end-users/customers are very<br />

important sources of innovation. A lot<br />

of innovations that we have, for example,<br />

in the car industry and in the sports<br />

industry, come from customers not from<br />

research. They come from the demand.<br />

So I believe that we should consider<br />

research just one of the many sources<br />

of innovation; and why neglect all the<br />

others?<br />

[P] Is Italy investing too much in universities<br />

and research?<br />

[MC] I would say that research money<br />

shouldn’t be given to companies that<br />

do not do research. We could probably<br />

make better use of this money by giving<br />

it to universities and a few companies<br />

that really do research.<br />

By sArA pinA*<br />

The problem is that we have 77 universities,<br />

but probably only ten of them<br />

are able to generate state-of-the-art<br />

knowledge and new businesses. The<br />

choice is very clear. You either concentrate<br />

your funding on those ten universities,<br />

or you spread the money<br />

throughout the 77 universities. If you<br />

spread the money around, you have a<br />

more socially-oriented model of education<br />

and research, and every university<br />

would be able to do a little bit of<br />

research. But nobody will ever reach the<br />

critical mass needed to produce a high<br />

degree of knowledge.<br />

[P] Is it important to learn entreperneurship<br />

when you’re little? In primary or secondary<br />

school?<br />

[MC] Well, my personal view is that you<br />

shouldn’t start too early with entrepreneurship.<br />

You need to create young students<br />

with very flexible mindsets; and<br />

they need to be passionate about subjects<br />

like engineering and science. The<br />

important thing is for the educational<br />

system to help them be more openminded<br />

rather than entrepreneurial. The<br />

entrepreneurship comes <strong>later</strong>.<br />

[P] Wouldn’t you say that the educational system<br />

in Europe goes somewhat against this kind<br />

of open mindset?<br />

[MC] I absolutely agree. In general, if<br />

you take European undergraduate students,<br />

and then fund them to do PhDs<br />

or post-graduate programs in the US,<br />

they perform very well, because their<br />

educational background is very good.<br />

But of course the downside is that if<br />

they have been taught very strictly and<br />

are from very rigid programs, they’re<br />

often not used to being flexible. If you<br />

take an English student or – even moreso<br />

– an American student, they’ll probably<br />

spend less time studying out of<br />

books and more time enjoying themselves<br />

and becoming creative. So there<br />

are upsides and downsides.<br />

*with André Sebastião<br />

Parallel no. 6 | FALL | WINTER 2011 53


54<br />

socieTy<br />

interview with Anita catlin<br />

“palliative care can be a midwife<br />

to the dying process”<br />

“This is Anita Catlin. We invited her here to speak but we do not believe anything<br />

she says.” This is how American researcher Anita Catlin was introduced in 1996<br />

to an audience of doctors from a large perinatal unit in a major US hospital.<br />

On that occasion, Catlin, a doctor of<br />

maternal-infant nursing and specialist in<br />

perinatal ethics, had been invited to talk<br />

about end of life in newborn infants, a<br />

subject that was more or less taboo among<br />

health professionals in the field. “People<br />

did not want to talk about it. They did not<br />

believe there was any other way to treat<br />

a newborn, even a newborn who was<br />

dying.” Anita Catlin was in Portugal<br />

recently to give a course to doctoral students<br />

of bioethics at the Universidade Católica<br />

Portuguesa [Portuguese Catholic University],<br />

where she talked to us about her work.<br />

In the early 1990s, Catlin became interested<br />

in the rights of mothers and children<br />

when she observed that when<br />

pregnant mothers were treated, the focus<br />

was more on the fetus than on the pregnant<br />

mother. She tells the story of a<br />

Native American woman who developed<br />

gestational diabetes and was seen at the<br />

health care unit where she worked. The<br />

woman was advised to begin taking insulin,<br />

which she refused to do. Unable to<br />

convince her to take insulin, the doctors<br />

threatened to report her to the authorities<br />

for abuse of her future child. “No one<br />

bothered to ask the woman what insulin<br />

meant to her. Was she afraid of the injection?<br />

Did she know someone who died<br />

because of insulin? They were so focused<br />

on the fetus and on the needs of the<br />

fetus, that it seemed to me they did not<br />

think about the mother.”<br />

In addition to mothers’ and children’s<br />

rights, Catlin also began to study the<br />

ethics of neonatal palliative care. She<br />

was one of the pioneers in the field<br />

in her country. In fact, in the US in the<br />

By mónicA cArvALHo*<br />

mid-1990s, debates on neonatal palliative<br />

care were not exactly embraced by<br />

the medical community. “I had some<br />

doctors very angry because I was saying<br />

we must look at the context of the family.<br />

What will happen to this family and<br />

this child if we continue to use high<br />

technology – ventilator, artificial nutrition<br />

– if it does not change the child’s<br />

prognosis? If what we’re doing is not<br />

changing the condition of the child,<br />

then why are we doing it?”<br />

For Catlin, technology<br />

is typically called<br />

into play very extensively<br />

without giving<br />

due thought to the<br />

ethics of its use. She<br />

gives the example of<br />

artificial nutrition<br />

through feeding tubes.<br />

In the beginning, this<br />

t e c h n i q u e w a s<br />

designed for patients<br />

who were recovering<br />

from lesions caused by<br />

ingesting poison or<br />

those who had esophageal cancer.<br />

Currently it is being used in any patient<br />

who does not have an appetite. She goes<br />

on to explain: “In my country, many<br />

times you put in a feeding tube and you<br />

begin to feed the patient artificially – and<br />

you can keep the body alive for a very<br />

long time. But you do not change the<br />

underlying prognosis in any way. People<br />

in bioethics worry about these things.<br />

Just because we know how to do something,<br />

does that mean we should do it?<br />

Is the benefit greater than the burden?”<br />

deATH in HeALTH cAre<br />

Catlin points out that the difficulty in<br />

dealing with death in pediatric and neonatal<br />

units is largely due to the education<br />

and training that health care professionals<br />

receive, particularly in the case of physicians.<br />

She says that in the neonatal nursing<br />

textbooks used in nursing schools there<br />

is usually a chapter on end of life. However,<br />

the same cannot be said for medical textbooks,<br />

even though children often die in<br />

neonatal and pediatric intensive care units.<br />

‘ There is nothing in the book to teach<br />

a physician how to withdraw care,<br />

how to withhold technology, or how<br />

to make a dignified end of life.<br />

not one word.<br />

’<br />

“If you open any book used to train physicians<br />

– and I know all these books, they<br />

are used in Portugal as well – the word<br />

‘dying’ is not in the book. There is nothing<br />

in the book to teach a physician how<br />

to withdraw care, how to withhold technology,<br />

or how to make a dignified end<br />

of life. Not one word.”<br />

She goes on to say, however, that this is<br />

changing, in Portugal as well, where she<br />

believes significant changes are being<br />

made. An example of this is Hospital de São<br />

João in Oporto, which is in the process of<br />

Parallel no. 6 | FALL | WINTER 2011


the first of its kind in the country. Despite<br />

this important step, it is disturbing to see<br />

in Portugal that there are still so many<br />

cases of children living in the Azores, in<br />

the interior of the country, or in Angola<br />

who are transferred to central hospitals in<br />

the hope of a cure or an improvement in<br />

their status. Many of these children have<br />

a poor prognosis and end up dying far<br />

from their communities and sometimes<br />

far from their families as well. Catlin says:<br />

“I think if you do good palliative care,<br />

and if you begin offering hospice [care],<br />

maybe this won’t happen so much.”<br />

THinK Less ABouT euTHAnAsiA<br />

Although euthanasia is not allowed in the<br />

US, in the states of Oregon, Washington,<br />

DR creating a pediatric palliative care unit,<br />

socieTy<br />

and Montana assisted suicide – Physician<br />

Aid-in-Dying (PAD) – is possible. In assisted<br />

suicide, the doctor, at the patient’s<br />

request, prescribes medications that the<br />

patient can use to end his/her life.<br />

However, of those who ask their doctors<br />

to prescribe this medication, most do not<br />

actually take it. Therefore, Catlin concludes<br />

that assisted suicide appears to have<br />

more to do with having control over one’s<br />

own destiny, “control over how they<br />

would die.”<br />

Catlin believes that people think less<br />

about euthanasia or assisted suicide when<br />

they can treat the uncomfortable symptoms<br />

of death and have a good end of life.<br />

Her belief is based on the increased use<br />

of palliative care in the state of Oregon<br />

since assisted suicide became legal. A reaction,<br />

according to her.<br />

Anita catlin, who was in portugal to lecture on palliative care.<br />

According to the researcher, palliative care<br />

involves a massive team effort, where each<br />

health professional plays a role. For those<br />

who study or work in the area, providing<br />

palliative care relies on people coming<br />

together and working well together, so<br />

that everyone can feel good about their<br />

own work. “I once heard someone say:<br />

palliative care is like being a midwife. You<br />

know, the midwife and the team bring a<br />

person into life. There’s the midwife and<br />

the doctor, the social worker, the nutritionist,<br />

and the pharmacist – many people<br />

are involved in bringing a person into life.<br />

I think that palliative care can also be a<br />

midwife – to the dying process.”.<br />

* Psychologist and Journalist. Doctor of Communication and<br />

Culture. researcher at the Universidade Católica Portuguesa<br />

Institute of Bioethics.<br />

Parallel no. 6 | FALL | WINTER 2011 55


When Donald Richard Finberg asked his<br />

secretary Luisa Gomes to “tome assento,”<br />

which is intentionally fractured Portuguese<br />

for “take a seat,” he was not only displaying<br />

his courteousness, but his penchant<br />

for humor. Gomes, currently the head of<br />

FLAD’s administrative services, recalls the<br />

first president of the Foundation’s<br />

Executive Council vividly: “He was very<br />

competent, self-assured, and organized.<br />

He was also very stubborn and to-thepoint;<br />

a man with no skeletons in the<br />

closet. And he appreciated it when people<br />

acted the same way toward him.” Gomes’<br />

three short sentences basically summarize<br />

the opinion of many others who were<br />

close to the diplomat, who died on April<br />

25 th in McLean, Virginia.<br />

The personality, upbringing, and experience<br />

of the man – born on November 23,<br />

1931 in Baltimore – contributed in heaping<br />

doses to molding a free-spirited, fiercely<br />

independent person who was highly<br />

principled. A Princeton graduate in public<br />

administration and public relations, Finberg<br />

joined the Agency for International<br />

Development, part of the US State<br />

Department, in 1960. As the member of<br />

an agency to promote economic cooperation<br />

with developing countries, Finberg<br />

was posted to Brazil, Paraguay, and Peru<br />

until finally obtaining a position with the<br />

US Embassy in Portugal, where he remained<br />

until 1985. With the rank of minister-<br />

56<br />

proFiLe<br />

donald Finberg: FLAd’s first president<br />

An independent spirit<br />

with a sense of purpose<br />

“Finberg had all the qualities I associate with the United States: simplicity, merit,<br />

and solidarity,” stated a former employee of the US embassy, who worked closely<br />

with FLAD’s first president. Diplomat and administrator Donald Finberg carried out<br />

his professional activities according to the highest ethical standards, which left<br />

an indelible mark on the <strong>Luso</strong>-American Foundation. His sense of fellowship,<br />

humor, and courteousness also left a lasting impression on friends and co-workers,<br />

who miss him and remember him fondly.<br />

By isABeL mArques dA siLvA<br />

Former portuguese president mário soares (left) with donald Finberg in the 80s.<br />

Parallel no. 6 | FALL | WINTER 2011<br />

DR


counselor, he retired from the diplomatic<br />

corps, returning to Lisbon shortly after to<br />

set up the <strong>Luso</strong>-American Development<br />

Foundation and act as the first president of<br />

its Executive Council. He came to lay the<br />

groundwork for an institution that would<br />

signal a new brand of cooperation in a<br />

country that had been marked by Europe’s<br />

longest-lasting dictatorship. Charles<br />

Buchanan, still an administrator at FLAD,<br />

worked closely with Finberg and remains<br />

an unconditional admirer of the former<br />

president’s sense of purpose. “He had a lot<br />

of conviction in his ideas and was very<br />

persistent,” Buchanan recalls. “That’s<br />

because he was hard-working and based<br />

all of his decisions on painstaking work.<br />

Some people thought he was a workaholic,<br />

because he didn’t rest until he had<br />

completed a task or the research he was<br />

doing. He consulted with the experts quite<br />

a lot, and visited dozens of institutions in<br />

an effort to design the best plan for the<br />

Foundation, and to come up with the best<br />

system for managing it.”<br />

To those who were closest to him, his<br />

integrity and precision always stood out.<br />

José Luís Almeida Pinheiro, an advisor who<br />

worked with Finberg at the US Embassy in<br />

Lisbon and helped design the Foundation’s<br />

organizational structure, remembered that<br />

“He would go unwaveringly ahead, say<br />

what he had to say, and follow his established<br />

criteria. It was his belief that the<br />

allocation of positions of power in Portugal<br />

was based on cronyism and party affiliation,<br />

which boggled his mind. Finberg was<br />

a true pedagogue in the way he applied<br />

ethics to how you plan a project. Issues<br />

like there not being conflict of interest and<br />

effective management of public funds were<br />

sacred to him. He used to say that Portugal<br />

was more in need of a meritocracy than a<br />

democracy, and he translated that idea into<br />

the project he laid out for FLAD.”<br />

Em 1986, Portugal had little more than a<br />

<strong>decade</strong> of experience with democracy and<br />

was just embarking on the adventure of<br />

being a member of the European Community.<br />

But the country was still seriously behind<br />

in terms of the skills that were needed to<br />

develop into a more open, competitive society.<br />

Education, science, technology, regional<br />

development, and support for civil society<br />

and the private sector had become the priorities.<br />

Finberg wanted the more than 100<br />

million dollar endowment to be used very<br />

scrupulously within the space of 10 years<br />

to accelerate the process. But the Foundation<br />

ended up gaining a perpetual status. Though<br />

his ideas on FLAD’s longevity were not borne<br />

out, the functional concept he was instru-<br />

proFiLe<br />

mental in designing<br />

took root. Fernando<br />

Durão, FLAD director of<br />

education at the time<br />

recalls, “He placed a lot<br />

of importance on evaluating<br />

the results. He<br />

designed a lot of very<br />

clear timetables and<br />

made a point of informing<br />

the media of the<br />

projects that were<br />

already underway, and the results of what<br />

had already been done.”<br />

António Correia de Campos, FLAD director<br />

of science and technology at the time,<br />

also fondly remembers “the polished diplomat,<br />

well-versed in European culture, a<br />

person of honor, with a broad vision of<br />

life and the world; very intelligent and<br />

‘ Finberg was a true pedagogue in the<br />

way he applied ethics to how you<br />

plan a project. issues like there not<br />

being conflict of interest and effective<br />

management of public funds were<br />

sacred to him.<br />

democratic, and a man of enormous integrity.”<br />

Like his counterpart from FLAD’s<br />

education department, Campos, currently<br />

a Socialist deputy in the European<br />

Parliament, stresses the crucial role Finberg<br />

played in designing the mechanisms that<br />

gave FLAD’s activities such credibility. “He<br />

believed in cutting down on red tape and<br />

donald Finberg, who laid the foundations for an institution (FLAd) that would signal<br />

a new brand of cooperation.<br />

Parallel no. 6 | FALL | WINTER 2011 57<br />

’ José<br />

Luís Almeida pinheiro, consultant<br />

DR


independent peer evaluation. He designed<br />

a small paper, kind of a brochure that<br />

contained all the information on grant<br />

applications; then, after a first weeding<br />

out, the applications would go to the<br />

experts who would write a report of no<br />

more than 20 pages. Only after this did<br />

the directors get hold of the proposals and<br />

organize the allocation of grants. After a<br />

year, the projects would be assessed by<br />

outside people who did site visits to confirm<br />

how things were progressing.”<br />

HeAdsTronG BuT democrATic<br />

Charles Buchanan recently returned from<br />

a trip to the US where he was invited to<br />

talk about how FLAD was conceived and<br />

set up – testimony to the innovative nature<br />

and success of the endeavor. A large portion<br />

of this success is the result of Finberg’s<br />

staunch sense of purpose; but his fierce<br />

determination sometimes needed to be<br />

checked. As Fernando Durão says, “He was<br />

very controlling, and right at the beginning,<br />

I had to have a talk with him, because<br />

he didn’t like delegating responsibility, and<br />

I demanded more freedom. He understood<br />

my point and accepted it.” Durão recognizes<br />

that his stubbornness was the feature<br />

that was hardest to deal with. Almeida<br />

Pinheiro adds, “Finberg had all the qualities<br />

I associate with the United States: simplicity,<br />

merit, and solidarity. But he was<br />

extremely stubborn, and you had to stand<br />

up to him. But even when you did, it was<br />

hard to make him change his mind, because<br />

he was very impatient and headstrong.”<br />

Finberg didn’t always get his way. As the<br />

dyed-in-the-wool, democratically-minded<br />

man that he was, he usually ended up<br />

accepting the will of the majority, and<br />

recognizing the merit of ideas that he had<br />

initially disagreed with. Charles Buchanan’s<br />

recollections are clear, “Because of his<br />

convictions, he didn’t always get approval<br />

from the members of the executive<br />

council. He was stubborn, but in some<br />

cases, he ended up rethinking his position.<br />

A lot of discussing went on over certain<br />

topics such as cooperation with<br />

Portuguese-speaking Africa, which he<br />

thought was not one of FLAD’s missions.<br />

But <strong>later</strong> on, he admitted that the results<br />

of the tri<strong>later</strong>al initiatives I defended so<br />

staunchly were good.” Correia de Campos<br />

remembers another instance in which<br />

Finberg’s notorious stubbornness did not<br />

end up winning the day; “He voted against<br />

buying our building, and had huge reservations<br />

about FLAD’s art collection. But<br />

he was very democratic and respected the<br />

58<br />

proFiLe<br />

administrative board’s<br />

decisions.”<br />

In José Luís Almeida<br />

Pinheiro’s opinion,<br />

Finberg’s honorable<br />

character and stubbornness<br />

did not jibe too<br />

well with the Portuguese<br />

traditions of political<br />

correctness that formed<br />

the backdrop for decision-making<br />

and power<br />

relationships in Portugal.<br />

“He called a spade a<br />

spade, and ended up<br />

leaving Portugal partly<br />

for political reasons. He<br />

said no to some of the<br />

most powerful figures in the country. The<br />

first three mandates were to be presided<br />

over by Americans to untangle some of the<br />

more complicated situations among the<br />

Portuguese administrators from the two<br />

main parties (the Socialist Party and the<br />

Social Democrats), and he ended up breaking<br />

the stalemate on several occasions. But<br />

when he left FLAD, the principle of not<br />

linking the presidency to any party stopped<br />

being honored.” Correia de Campos<br />

acknowledges that Finberg was never concerned<br />

with leaving an ideological legacy<br />

or “going down in history,” because he<br />

“thought about the mission he had been<br />

entrusted with in operational terms.”<br />

‘ He placed a lot of importance on<br />

evaluating the results. He designed a<br />

lot of very clear timetables and made<br />

a point of informing the media of the<br />

projects that were already underway,<br />

and the results of what had already<br />

been done.<br />

However, FLAD’s former administrator does<br />

regret that Finberg was never officially<br />

honored for the contribution he made to<br />

Portugal’s development: “One of the things<br />

that hurt me most was that he was never<br />

decorated by our government, especially<br />

since the work he did was so important.<br />

But at the time, nobody was too fond of<br />

the fact that FLAD’s first president was<br />

American and not Portuguese. That was a<br />

real sticking point. But he deserved to be<br />

recognized. His three years of work shaped<br />

the Foundation into a non-partisan organization<br />

with a culture of independence<br />

that functioned without being put through<br />

an ideological filter.”<br />

donald Finberg (left) and charles Buchanan: two of FLAd’s American administrators in the 1980s.<br />

’ Fernando<br />

durão<br />

Parallel no. 6 | FALL | WINTER 2011<br />

DR


cAusTic Humor<br />

And Kind GesTures<br />

But Portugal definitely won Finberg over.<br />

At the end of his mandate, he returned to<br />

the States to work in Latin-American relations<br />

again at the Pan American<br />

Development Foundation and Partners of<br />

the Americas, but not without first buying<br />

an apartment in Praia Maria Luísa in the<br />

Algarve, where he continued to entertain<br />

Portuguese friends during his vacations.<br />

When he was there, he spent time discussing<br />

some of the country’s most pressing<br />

problems, because he continued to subscribe<br />

to the Portuguese weekly paper<br />

expresso, and always enquired about the<br />

quality of the Gulbenkian Foundation’s<br />

current concert season. “He didn’t miss a<br />

concert, and he would organize trips and<br />

distribute the programs. He was also very<br />

funny, though it was a biting sense of<br />

humor. I miss the days when we worked<br />

really hard in those confined spaces in a<br />

way that was both professional and familial.<br />

Sometimes he’d bring in a cake that<br />

his wife baked,” recalls Luisa Gomes, who<br />

became Finberg’s friend.<br />

Almeida Pinheiro feels that continuing to<br />

work alongside his boss at the US Embassy<br />

proFiLe<br />

donald and Hela Finberg on a visit to portugal in June of 2010.<br />

was a privilege. He has fond memories of<br />

the frequent outings they made to Lisbon’s<br />

hole-in-the-wall eateries because “he<br />

adored our food.” He also recalls the conversations<br />

that were tempered with fine<br />

wine and Finberg’s “striking sense of<br />

humor, with a sarcasm reminiscent of Eça<br />

de Queroz. But under all that sarcasm was<br />

a touching tenderness.”<br />

‘ i miss the days when we worked<br />

really hard in those confined spaces<br />

in a way that was both professional<br />

and familial. sometimes he’d bring<br />

in a cake that his wife baked.<br />

’<br />

Luísa Gomes<br />

“Our house is your house,” Finberg<br />

would say, “and you could tell the statement<br />

was genuine. Every year he would<br />

send Christmas cards with a detailed rundown<br />

of the events in his life that year. It<br />

was a kind of family newsletter,” explains<br />

Paula Vicente, who worked as Finberg’s<br />

secretary from the first days of the<br />

Foundation. Though he was professionally<br />

demanding, the well-being and professional<br />

growth of employees and<br />

associates were his badge of pride. “I got<br />

pregnant right after the Foundation got<br />

going,” says Paula Vicente, currently FLAD<br />

program officer. “But Mr. Finberg made a<br />

point of me coming<br />

back to my Job after my<br />

leave was over. I learned<br />

a lot from him, because<br />

he helped people<br />

improve themselves; he<br />

didn’t want anybody to<br />

stagnate.” She also still<br />

remembers when<br />

Finberg came to visit<br />

her newborn, the smile<br />

on his face when he<br />

enquired about everyone’s<br />

families, and how<br />

he strolled down the corridors with headphones<br />

on, listening to classical music.<br />

“Sometimes he would ask: ‘Any news?<br />

Y’know, when the cat’s away …’ And I<br />

would unfailingly answer, ‘the mice will<br />

play…’”<br />

Parallel no. 6 | FALL | WINTER 2011 59<br />

PAULA VICENTE


DR<br />

60<br />

socieTy<br />

mothering behind bars<br />

one of the few existing studies on mothers in prison was published by an American<br />

woman whose grandparents were Portuguese immigrants. I had the pleasure of meeting<br />

Sandra enos, 61, in her typically American home in Providence, rhode Island, the place<br />

where so many Portuguese immigrants settled in the early 20 th century.<br />

By isABeL nery<br />

sandra enos outside the rhode island women’s correctional facility.<br />

But aside from her Portuguese roots, Enos<br />

and I share another bond: an interest in<br />

mothers behind bars, a subject that inspired<br />

her book Mothering from the inside – Parenting in<br />

a Women’s Prison.<br />

The prison where Sandra Enos did her<br />

interviews is less than 40 kilometers away.<br />

We leave the sociologist’s house and take<br />

I-95 to a cluster of brick buildings, enlarged<br />

and converted over the years to house<br />

3,400 inmates, only 181 of whom are<br />

women. The women’s wing opened in<br />

1936 as a psychiatric hospital. Today it has<br />

two buildings for female prisoners.<br />

As soon as we arrive I am introduced to<br />

Roberta Richman, Assistant Director of<br />

Rehabilitative Services for the R. I.<br />

Department of Corrections, who is waiting<br />

for us. Though not a maximum security<br />

prison, the facility houses inmates who have<br />

been sentenced from three months to life.<br />

The typically humid heat of the east coast<br />

had driven the thermometer to 90º. Behind<br />

the old building’s walls, it often tops 100.<br />

As we leave the administrative area and<br />

head toward the cells, the temperature rises<br />

to sweltering. Maybe because of the heat<br />

or because there isn’t work for many of<br />

the inmates, several of them lie in bed conveying<br />

a mood that is either one of two<br />

things: lethargy and depression or depression<br />

and aggressiveness.<br />

The prisoners that walk by project more<br />

of an air of defeat than of fearsomeness.<br />

They wear ill-fitting orange or khaki scrubs<br />

depending on whether they have been sentenced<br />

or are awaiting trial. Some use a<br />

white T-shirt under their uniform, which<br />

consists of only two pieces: stretch pants<br />

and a V-neck shirt.<br />

Alleging security reasons, even underwear<br />

from outside the jail has been banned. As<br />

Guard Miller, 50, recalls, “One inmate managed<br />

to sneak drugs in the waistband of<br />

her panties. From then on, they haven’t<br />

Parallel no. 6 | FALL | WINTER 2011


een allowed to bring their own clothes.”<br />

And the thing most prisoners consider<br />

their only legal refuge – cigarettes – is<br />

totally banned both inside and outside the<br />

penitentiary grounds.<br />

The only rule that is not followed strictly<br />

by the book is the ban on physical contact.<br />

However, in the US, in this case, not going<br />

by the book means, “If it’s a short hug, we<br />

look the other way. But if it goes on too<br />

long, they get punished. Because there’s no<br />

touching allowed!”<br />

The same feeling of “off-limits” pervades<br />

visitation. The women can only hug their<br />

kids if they are seated. For two hours they<br />

remain in their chairs and are not allowed<br />

to get up and play with the children who<br />

are often enticed with candy so that they<br />

will stay on their mothers’ laps, prolonging<br />

the rare moment of physical bonding<br />

between mother and child.<br />

To keep the prison drug-free, the women<br />

have to strip when they first arrive and<br />

when they reenter the prison. Sometimes<br />

the examination involves a cavity search.<br />

The act, which is always accompanied by<br />

crying and complaining, has come about<br />

because of the bizarre stratagems the jailed<br />

drug-user will resort to. “The weirdest<br />

thing I’ve ever found, says Miller the guard<br />

who accompanied us on our visit, “was a<br />

crack pipe in somebody’s vagina.”<br />

In practical terms, the war on drugs, which<br />

has escalated since the Reagan administration,<br />

has had no effect on reducing crime<br />

and the brutal effects it has on women. It<br />

is a reality particularly felt within the prison<br />

system. In 2008, there were 2,821 inmates<br />

in New York State prisons and one in three<br />

had been jailed for drug-related crimes.<br />

We’ve already gone down several cell<br />

blocks when I notice that all the cells are<br />

alike. Unlike the women’s prison in Tires,<br />

there are no cut-out hearts or pictures<br />

adorning the partitions. That’s the way it<br />

is, they explain to me – tidy and impersonal<br />

– to prevent fires. The only things<br />

hanging from the cell walls are the surveillance<br />

cameras, which are there to keep<br />

track of the prison population, though they<br />

still do head-counts six times a day.<br />

By the next inmate tally, all the women<br />

have to be back in their quarters, so I have<br />

to use this chance to interview the women<br />

who have agreed to talk to me. They’ve<br />

given us an air-conditioned room which<br />

provokes smiles of relief when we walk in.<br />

The statistics show that 54% of all female<br />

prisoners in the US are black, but I’m sitting<br />

at a table with women who are not only<br />

white – but blond. The number of inmates<br />

has grown by 138% in the last 10 years<br />

because of the war on drugs and – in line<br />

socieTy<br />

children’s clothes on a prison clothesline show that children have also make this their home.<br />

‘ Alleging security reasons, even<br />

underwear from outside the jail<br />

has been banned. As Guard miller,<br />

50, recalls, “one inmate managed<br />

to sneak drugs in the waistband<br />

of her panties. From then on,<br />

they haven’t been allowed to bring<br />

their own clothes.”<br />

’<br />

with the statistics – most of the women<br />

seated around me are in for selling drugs.<br />

But let’s start with the exception. If you<br />

saw Petra on the street your last guess would<br />

be that she committed any crime. It would<br />

have been her last guess too. At 27, Petra<br />

has beautiful blond hair neatly rolled into a<br />

bun, and narrow Ben Franklin glasses adorning<br />

a pair of deep blue eyes. She has the air<br />

of a scholar.<br />

Nothing in her background fits the stereotypes<br />

or jibes with the statistics. The<br />

majority of prison inmates are black. She is<br />

blond and light-eyed. In the democratic<br />

West, prisons are the places that house the<br />

greatest number of illiterates per square foot.<br />

Fifty-eight percent of the female prison<br />

populations on this side of the Atlantic are<br />

high school drop-outs. Petra has a degree<br />

in Marketing. A large portion of the prison<br />

population complains of not having a regular<br />

Job: 74% of female American convicts<br />

were unemployed at the time of their conviction.<br />

Petra had a good job where she was<br />

earning 15 dollars an hour<br />

and had hopes of getting a<br />

promotion. She owned a<br />

house and a car and was, in<br />

short, financially several cuts<br />

above society’s customary<br />

outcasts.<br />

Though Petra’s case may<br />

seem less obvious, her emotional<br />

profile matches up<br />

perfectly with studies on<br />

criminality. A lot of research<br />

has shown that over 50% of<br />

all female prisoners were<br />

victims of physical or sexual abuse before<br />

being incarcerated. The figure is around<br />

15% for men. In other words, before victimizing<br />

someone else, Petra was herself a<br />

victim. Her boyfriend sexually abused her,<br />

took away her self-esteem and bludgeoned<br />

her with insults.<br />

As with the other women, she has a<br />

harder time talking about interrupted<br />

motherhood than she does about discussing<br />

her crimes. When you ask her about<br />

whom she left her 4 and 7 year-old children<br />

with she responds weeping, “When<br />

I was arrested my youngest was three. He<br />

was so upset, all his hair fell out.”<br />

Her other child is on the verge of being<br />

given into to the exclusive custody of the<br />

father. Once the legal battle begins, the<br />

system in the US is relentless. The father<br />

will have no trouble proving that he is a<br />

better guardian than the child’s delinquent<br />

mother. Petra has not seen the child for a<br />

year because the ex-boyfriend has boycotted<br />

every type of visitation.<br />

Parallel no. 6 | FALL | WINTER 2011 61<br />

JOSé CARLOS CARVALhO


After our interviews in the penitentiary,<br />

Sandra Enos remarked that when you are a<br />

woman who’s committed a crime, you’re<br />

penalized twice. In addition to the legal punishment,<br />

these women often lose custody of<br />

their children. “In most US correctional<br />

facilities mothers and their children are not<br />

allowed to be together,” she says. “Some<br />

women are incapable of putting motherhood<br />

first, but I’ve met good mothers and stable<br />

families among the inmates.”<br />

According to the Prison Activist Resource<br />

Center, on any given day there are 90 thousand<br />

women in detention in the US and, as<br />

a result, 167 thousand children are forced<br />

to grow up without their mothers.<br />

When Sophie, 24, who is sitting next to<br />

Petra, launches into her story, you realize<br />

that she’s lived as fast as she talks. From<br />

her rapid-fire sentences we find out that<br />

her 11 month-old son was born hooked<br />

on the same addictive white powder that<br />

drove his mother to prostitution. Convicted<br />

for selling drugs, Sophie comes from a long<br />

line of marginalized family members who<br />

are no strangers to the correctional system.<br />

62<br />

socieTy<br />

‘ “in most us correctional facilities mothers and their<br />

children are not allowed to be together,” she says.<br />

“some women are incapable of putting motherhood first,<br />

but i’ve met good mothers and stable families among<br />

the inmates.”<br />

’<br />

A victim of child abuse, Sophie was turning<br />

20-dollar tricks before she was picked<br />

up by police. She freely admits that she<br />

needed the help she found in jail. “Being<br />

here saved my life,” she admits. “If it wasn’t<br />

for the doctor’s appointments they made<br />

me go to after I was arrested, my son<br />

would have been born blind.”<br />

Trisha has been sentenced to 18 months.<br />

Less insecure than Sophie, she is a perfect<br />

illustration of the role poverty and crossgenerational<br />

delinquency play in the lives<br />

of these inmates. At 13 she was already an<br />

addict with a mother hooked on heroine<br />

and an alcoholic father. Two fleeting experiences<br />

with motherhood are the closest she<br />

came to having a family relationship.<br />

An inmate and her child in the corridor of the women’s prison in Tires, portugal.<br />

She is tough when she talks and her<br />

words smack of intentional self-flagellation,<br />

as if she thought she deserved all her suffering<br />

and didn’t need anyone to tell her<br />

she’d screwed up. “I’m a 22 year-old junky<br />

and a convict,” she says. “I’m not fit to be<br />

a mother. I’m really sorry about it, but that<br />

doesn’t change anything. Before, if I was<br />

given a choice between coke and my baby,<br />

I would have handed him over in a heartbeat<br />

for a few lines.”<br />

According to the US Department of Justice,<br />

close to two million minors have a parent<br />

in prison. The miles that separate female<br />

inmates from their progeny is one of the<br />

most painful consequences of incarceration,<br />

and one that is attributable to gender. Today,<br />

Parallel no. 6 | FALL | WINTER 2011<br />

JOSé CARLOS CARVALhO


as in the past, female criminality is much<br />

lower than delinquency among males.<br />

While 58 women out of 100 thousand are<br />

doing time, the figure for men is 896 out<br />

of 100 thousand. Therefore, fewer prisons<br />

are built to house females, and there is<br />

much less likelihood that an inmate will be<br />

incarcerated close to home.<br />

New York was the first state to open a<br />

prison nursery for the inmates’ children in<br />

1902. It would take nearly a century for the<br />

other states to follow suit. Repeating New<br />

York’s former groundbreaking initiative –<br />

but in 1994 – Nebraska opened its first<br />

prison nursery. Since the late 90s, an additional<br />

seven child-care facilities have opened<br />

throughout America’s correctional system.<br />

The Tires correctional establishment for<br />

women in Portugal, inaugurated in 1953,<br />

has always allowed children on the premises.<br />

However, though the country has<br />

considerable experience with children<br />

being raised inside the penitentiary, no<br />

studies have been done to assess the effectiveness<br />

of the measure.<br />

The National Women’s Law Center in<br />

Washington DC notes that between 1980<br />

and 1993 women made up the fastest<br />

growing prison population with a 313%,<br />

growth rate as opposed to the 182%<br />

growth rate for men during the same<br />

period. If we go as far back as the 70s,<br />

we see that the growth rate for female<br />

inmates has ballooned 800 percent.<br />

Besides all the other social constraints<br />

linked to motherhood behind bars, the<br />

American inmates must grapple with another<br />

issue that has been widely overlooked<br />

by the US correctional system which is predominantly<br />

male-directed – distance. Sandra<br />

Enos cites research from 1993 stating that<br />

“more than half the women in prison have<br />

never been visited by their children while<br />

incarcerated.” The distance between their<br />

homes and where they are detained weighs<br />

heavily in the visitation issue: “over 60 percent<br />

of female inmates are over 150 kilometers<br />

away from their families.”<br />

Augustine is another among the countless<br />

women who have forfeited their lives to the<br />

justice system. With a tight black braid<br />

wound as a hairband across her head and a<br />

smoldering look of anger from having spent<br />

the lion’s share of her life in and out of<br />

prison, the 54-year-old is in jail because of<br />

“an accident with drugs.” Her checkered<br />

past includes a 12-year-old son who has<br />

been in and out of foster care since he was<br />

18 months old – all because of cocaine.<br />

They deal to feed their own habits, to<br />

support their families, or cater to their<br />

partner’s addiction. Drug dealing is the<br />

socieTy<br />

“more than half the inmates have never been visited by their children,”<br />

sandra enos states in her study.<br />

common thread that runs through these<br />

women’s lives both in Portugal and in the<br />

United States – in one of the poorest countries<br />

of the European Union and one of<br />

the richest nations in the world.<br />

Augustine is getting out again in four<br />

months. Waiting for her on the outside are<br />

five children and twelve grandchildren. One<br />

of the girls already has a rap sheet; one of<br />

the boys received two death sentences.<br />

After so many years of cumulative prison<br />

time, she knows her script and has her lines<br />

down pat: “I raised my kids the best I<br />

could. If they do what they do, that’s their<br />

responsibility. I only ask the Lord to forgive<br />

me while I try to move forward. But I’ve<br />

been in and out of jail since I was a kid.”<br />

Her narrative is so stark that it reminds<br />

me of one of the ironies that goes along<br />

with this type of life: the more brutal the<br />

memories, the more urgent it is to summarize<br />

them. Most of the women sitting<br />

around me in this room in a Rhode Island<br />

prison portray their pasts as Augustine<br />

does – spewing out their life stories with<br />

such jarring harshness that it seems they<br />

want to stun the listener and divest him<br />

of the urge to judge.<br />

When they open the huge front gate for<br />

me to leave I almost run into a large, smiling<br />

black woman. She reminds me of Adilia,<br />

the Portuguese inmate I spoke to when she<br />

went into labor in the Tires women’s facility<br />

before I left for the States. I can see her<br />

panting with pain in an unbreathably hot<br />

cell. That’s when I decided to learn more<br />

about giving birth in prison.<br />

In Rhode Island the women get their handcuffs<br />

taken off during labor, but are chained<br />

to the bed by the ankle as soon as the baby<br />

is born. That’s the way it’s done in this<br />

prison. In other states, female convicts still<br />

have to give birth with their handcuffs on.<br />

It was as late as 2008 when the Federal<br />

Bureau of Prisons ruled that the shackles<br />

could be removed during labor in state<br />

prisons. According to the National Women’s<br />

Law Center, there is now a more widespread<br />

consensus on the issue, since shackling<br />

made it harder for the obstetrician to<br />

get to the mother and the newborn. But<br />

there is still no national legislation on the<br />

issue, which means that each district can<br />

basically make up its own rules.<br />

The United States and Russia are the counties<br />

with the world’s largest female prisons.<br />

In this Rhode Island correctional facility<br />

there are 6 to 8 women per cell. They are<br />

cramped together in the same space 17<br />

hours a day. Each minute is monitored by<br />

the authorities. They cannot touch each<br />

other or have a cigarette or put on a speck<br />

of make-up. The heat is suffocating. It’s easy<br />

to go crazy in a place like this.<br />

1. To safeguard their privacy, the names of the inmates and<br />

prison guards have been changed.<br />

2. This article has been excerpted from a book on mothers<br />

in the prison system, to be published by Livros de Seda,<br />

Plátano Editora publishers, and a feature article to be published<br />

in the weekly magazine Visão.<br />

Parallel no. 6 | FALL | WINTER 2011 63<br />

DR


64<br />

cuLTure<br />

The seeds that sailed the seas<br />

As Portuguese, we were amazed at the towering height of the virginia tulip tree<br />

and euphoric over being able to grow two “super-trees,” the catalpa and the black locust.<br />

But these American-born beauties never settled here on a large scale as the europeans did<br />

in America. Planted in Portugal over a century ago, these beautiful specimens hark back<br />

to the days of the “plant hunters” whose overseas correspondence was made up of seeds.<br />

TEXT AND PhOTOGRAPhy By susAnA neves*<br />

A virginia tulip tree in monserrate park, sintra, portugal, 2009.<br />

Parallel no. 6 | FALL | WINTER 2011


‘ catalpa-planting fever<br />

first hit the us in 1870<br />

[…] it was described<br />

in portugal’s Journal of<br />

practical Horticulture in<br />

the late 1800s, but there<br />

is no mention of any<br />

large-scale use anywhere<br />

in the country.<br />

’<br />

40 meters tall, the Virginia tulip trees<br />

George Washington planted at Mount<br />

Vernon in 1755 posed an insurmountable<br />

challenge to the most audacious of bees;<br />

so much so, that the grounds keepers had<br />

to resort to the use of a crane to pollinate<br />

the blossoms. “With TV cameras trained<br />

on them, broadcasting the scene live to<br />

millions of viewers, the crane hoisted a<br />

human ‘bee’ to the treetops to pollinate<br />

the flowers by hand.” 1<br />

Basking in all the media attention, the giant<br />

tulip trees – a species that originated in the<br />

Cretaceous period – proved indeed that they<br />

were the “great divas” of the American forest.<br />

Such was their beauty, that in the mid-<br />

19 th century, the horticultural publications<br />

of the time would wax lyrical, calling it “a<br />

celestial tree,” with a trunk that was “beautifully<br />

proportioned and as smooth as a<br />

Greek column,” and “artistic” leaves that<br />

were “shaped like the arabesques of a<br />

Moorish palace,” and with blossoms that<br />

were “like lilies, pleasant to behold (…)<br />

golden and shaded.” Defending their propagation<br />

as an ornamental tree, despite the<br />

notorious difficulties that stood in the way<br />

of their being transplanted, a writer would<br />

add, “Indeed it is easier to walk than it is<br />

to dance, but as all those who wish to display<br />

grace in their movements learn to dance<br />

(...) likewise, all planters who desire to own<br />

a particularly elegant tree, must learn how<br />

to plant the liriodendron (tulip tree).” 2<br />

In Portugal, the specialty papers of the<br />

1800s shared their American counterparts’<br />

enthusiasm for the tulip tree, which was<br />

still uncommon in this country, and<br />

expressed “admiration” for the huge size<br />

and quality of the wood. At the Second<br />

Agricultural Exhibition Porto on November<br />

20, 1860, “a huge plank from a Virginia<br />

tulip tree belonging to the Viscount of<br />

Samodães” stopped visitors in their tracks,<br />

and inspired a reporter from the rural Archive<br />

to write, “this broad plank is notable for the<br />

quality of its wood, which is devoid of knots<br />

cuLTure<br />

A tulip tree in pena national park in sintra.<br />

Parallel no. 6 | FALL | WINTER 2011 65


‘ The existence of these trees in portugal<br />

is linked to the botanical bent of<br />

the upper crust english who lived<br />

in portugal at the time. The members<br />

of the privileged set were determined<br />

to design gardens containing species<br />

that had been discovered under the<br />

patronage of the British aristocracy.<br />

’<br />

and grooves; with the wood being extremely<br />

similar to that of the acacia, but without<br />

its striations and hardness (…) It is a species<br />

worth propagating on a large scale.” 3<br />

Despite the obvious merits of the tulip tree<br />

(which is native to Indiana, Kentucky, and<br />

Tennessee, and was used by the Indians to<br />

make dug-out canoes) and other American<br />

species like the white magnolia, the black<br />

locust, and the catalpa, which were brought<br />

to Portugal throughout the 17 th , 18 th , and<br />

19 th centuries, they were never used on a<br />

66<br />

cuLTure<br />

wide scale or planted<br />

intensively.<br />

Catalpa-planting fever<br />

first hit the US in 1870,<br />

as the species was both<br />

fast-growing and highly-resistant.<br />

Used by<br />

the Muskogee Indians<br />

(also known as the<br />

Creeks), the catalpa<br />

turned out to be a valuable<br />

resource in making<br />

railroad ties for<br />

America’s expanding<br />

railway network. It was<br />

described in Portugal’s Journal of Practical<br />

Horticulture in the late 1800s, but there is<br />

no mention of any large-scale use anywhere<br />

in the country. Even though<br />

Portugal’s inaugural train trip had taken<br />

place on October 28, 1856, the rural<br />

nature of the country led writers to propose<br />

that the northern catalpa be planted<br />

“together with the eucalyptus,” since this<br />

would “clear up humid terrain, lend variety<br />

to the landscape, and contribute greatly<br />

to the country’s material wealth.” 4<br />

detail of a catalpa blossom, 2006.<br />

To some extent, though unconsciously,<br />

they were becoming tacit accomplices to<br />

the destruction of America’s landscape,<br />

which had fallen prey to burgeoning<br />

industrial growth. Dazzled by the prospective<br />

profitability of these “supertrees,”<br />

these writers never once considered<br />

the impact they would have on the country’s<br />

environment.<br />

In an article from the Journal of Practical<br />

Horticulture of 1896, writer M. de Freitas<br />

starts off by praising the ornamental qualities<br />

of the black locust, a native of the<br />

Appalachian Mountains whose leaves have<br />

an “enchanting effect,” and whose flowers<br />

give off a “mild scent” reminiscent of<br />

“orange blossoms.” He concluded that the<br />

black locust tree warranted planting in the<br />

nation’s “woods,” “avenues,” and “public<br />

parks,” as he had seen done in Paris. After<br />

pondering the issue a bit more, he excitedly<br />

proselytizes that they be planted everywhere:<br />

“Landowners, spurred on by the<br />

guarantee of making a profit, should not<br />

disdain this useful advice, but make it their<br />

business to disseminate everywhere this<br />

tree, which today is the most precious one<br />

Parallel no. 6 | FALL | WINTER 2011


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Blossoms of the black locust tree, 2009.<br />

Parallel no. 6 | FALL | WINTER 2011 67


68<br />

cuLTure<br />

‘ As Jefferson […] and John Adams […] found out<br />

on a visit to several of London’s most famous gardens<br />

in the late 18 th century, ironically, “the english garden is,<br />

in fact, American.<br />

’<br />

of all.” 5 In this case, it was owing to a<br />

general lack of initiative that the black<br />

locust, which is today considered an invasive<br />

species (prohibited by Decree-Law<br />

565/99), did not spread like a plague<br />

throughout Portugal, but remained confined<br />

– as did the tulip trees and catalpas<br />

– to public and private parks, gardens, and<br />

avenues as ornamental trees.<br />

The existence of these trees in Portugal<br />

is linked to the botanical bent of the upper<br />

crust English who lived in Portugal at the<br />

time. The members of the privileged set<br />

were determined to design gardens containing<br />

species that had been discovered<br />

under the patronage of the British aristocracy.<br />

Indeed, the monied classes, along<br />

with British botanists, and even the British<br />

monarchy had been long-time investors<br />

and sponsors of countless botanical expeditions,<br />

which included the journeys of<br />

discovery carried out by two of the world’s<br />

most tireless plant-hunters: the American<br />

John Bartram, who brought the white<br />

magnolia to Europe, and Mark Catesby,<br />

British naturalist, illustrator and author of<br />

the Natural History of Carolina, Florida and the<br />

Bahama Islands (1731-1743), the first book<br />

to contain colored plates of North<br />

American flora and fauna, and the man<br />

who “discovered” the catalpa while roaming<br />

the wilds of Georgia and Alabama.<br />

So, it is no surprise that one of the regular<br />

contributors to the Journal of Practical<br />

Horticulture, with a number of essays on the<br />

trees of America, was the Englishman<br />

William C. Tait, whose garden in Porto<br />

was nothing short of a botany collection,<br />

and today is home to one of the oldest<br />

tulip trees in Portugal – 250 years old to<br />

be precise. The Monserrate Park in Sintra,<br />

formerly owned by Sir Francis Cook<br />

(1817-1901), can also boast a giant tulip<br />

tree, magnolias, and species from a number<br />

of other continents. This imposing<br />

park was designed with the help of landscape<br />

painter William Stockdale, botanist<br />

William Nevill, and James Burt, the master<br />

gardener of Kew Gardens.<br />

It is also strikes no one as odd that there<br />

are American species in Pena National Park<br />

in Sintra, where a majestic tulip tree holds<br />

court along with a sequoia, and a giant<br />

American arbor vitae. The Park’s main men-<br />

tors, Fernando II, the royal consort and his<br />

second wife, the Countess of Elda, both<br />

cultivated an interest in botany to the extent<br />

that they symbolically planted a eucalyptus<br />

in Pena Park on the day of their wedding<br />

– June 10, 1869. And they had the good<br />

fortune of having as a friend the American<br />

forestry specialist John Slade, the brotherin-law<br />

of the monarch’s young wife.<br />

As Jefferson, at the time America’s minister<br />

to France, and John Adams, US minister<br />

to the Court of St. James found out<br />

on a visit to several of London’s most<br />

famous gardens in the late 18th century,<br />

ironically, “the English garden is, in fact,<br />

American.” 6 Many of the shrubs and trees<br />

had been sent from North America as<br />

seeds by John Bartram, in what came to<br />

be known as “Bartram’s boxes,” which<br />

bore scores of American specimens to<br />

both the European mainland and England.<br />

In 1765 King George III granted the<br />

American-born botanist an annual pension<br />

of £50, to serve as “the King’s Botanist in<br />

North America,” a post he would hold<br />

until his death in 1777.<br />

From his home in Philadelphia, Bartram<br />

corresponded with Mark Catesby as he<br />

trekked through America’s colonial heartland<br />

discovering trees that no-one but the native<br />

Americans had ever laid eyes on, like the<br />

catalpa, which in Creek means “winged<br />

head,” owing to the shape of its blossoms.<br />

Catesby was known as a man of few words,<br />

which must have been a great relief to the<br />

Native Americans whose agricultural and<br />

botanical acumen he was wise enough to<br />

tap. However, several commentators have<br />

noted that Catesby also expresses discouragement<br />

in his writings. The reason is that the<br />

naturalist had come to realize that the<br />

European settlers had grown indifferent to<br />

America’s natural wonders, which even<br />

before the Catesby death in 1749, they had<br />

relentlessly begun to destroy.<br />

1. PAKENHAM, Thomas, “Le Tour du Monde en 80 Arbres”,<br />

Éditions du Chêne, 2002, pg. 100.<br />

2. “Shade-Trees in Cities”, Rural Essays, DOWNING, A. J.,<br />

Geo. A. Leavitt, New York, 1869, pgs. 316-318 [Google<br />

Livros].<br />

3. “Impressões da Exposição Agrícola Portuense”, LAPA,<br />

J. L. Ferreira, Archivo Rural, 1860, vol. 3, pg. 373 [Google<br />

Livros].<br />

4. “As Catalpas”, KNOTT, Edmond, Jornal de Horticultura<br />

Prática, vol. X, 1879, pgs. 66, 67 and 68. Another interesting<br />

article is: “A Catalpa Bignonioides como Árvore<br />

Económica”, TAIT, William C., Jornal de Horticultura Prática,<br />

vol. XVIII, 1887, pg. 153. [online: FUNDO ANTIGO,<br />

Faculdade de Ciências Universidade do Porto].<br />

5. “Robinia Pseudo-Acacia,” FREITAS, M. de, Jornal de<br />

Horticultura Prática, vol. XVII, 1886, pgs. 198-200 [online:<br />

FUNDO ANTIGO, Faculdade de Ciências Universidade<br />

do Porto].<br />

Parallel no. 6 | FALL | WINTER 2011


cuLTure<br />

The catalpa with its heart-shaped leaves and suspended fruits and flowers, adorning a street in Lisbon, 2009.<br />

6. “The Founding Fathers and Their Gardens,” DEITZ, Paula, Sunday<br />

Book review, NYTimes.com, May 6, 2011, in a review of<br />

the book Founding Gardeners - The revolutionary Generation, Nature,<br />

and the Shaping of the American Nation,” WULF, Andrea, Alfred<br />

A. Knopf, New York, 2011.<br />

The following are the scientific names and respective<br />

families of the three main trees discussed in this article:<br />

the tulip tree (Liriodendron Tulipifera L., Magnoliaceae), the<br />

catalpa (Catalpa Speciosa and Bignonioides, Bignoniaceae) and the<br />

black locust tree (robinia Pseudoacacia L. Fabaceae).<br />

* Since 2007, Susana Neves has written a monthly chronicle on<br />

the history of trees in Portugal for the magazine Tempo Livre,<br />

published by the <strong>Fundação</strong> Inatel. Since 2010, she has been designing<br />

a project for the Douro Museum called The Trees that Ate Paper,<br />

an ethno-botanical, photographic initiative involving the Douro<br />

region’s arboreal heritage. Neves represented Portugal at the<br />

“Kulturnatten” (Culture Night) in Copenhagen with her “Trip<br />

To the South Pollen – Photographic Work, 2007-<br />

2009”. She has displayed over 100 photographs at solo shows<br />

in Lisbon and at the first edition of Land Art in Cascais.<br />

susanaseven@gmail.com<br />

Parallel no. 6 | FALL | WINTER 2011 69


DR<br />

70<br />

cuLTure<br />

Today’s dabneys get a fresh look<br />

at the family history<br />

Fred Dabney leafs through the pages where line after line and chapter after chapter run<br />

on in Portuguese. Although his ancestors spent eight <strong>decade</strong>s in the Azores, the 65-year-old<br />

American can’t make out the words, but he does recognize the most important word<br />

on the cover: Dabney. Cradling the book as if it were a baby, he smiles and says,<br />

“What a marvelous thing this book is! We hope it gets translated into english.”<br />

By mArinA ALmeidA<br />

Fred and Kate dabney holding the portuguese edition of the Dabney Family Annals. They are anxiously<br />

awaiting publication of the english version, which is slated for launching in the us in 2012.<br />

It’s March and Fred and his wife Kate are<br />

in the Azores Room at the New Bedford<br />

Whaling Museum at an event to launch the<br />

Portuguese anthology of the Dabney Family<br />

Annals. Dominating the room is an enormous<br />

model of the Lagoda, the world’s<br />

largest model of a whaling ship. All around<br />

are accounts of life at sea and the whaling<br />

industry, which for <strong>decade</strong>s joined both<br />

sides of the Atlantic. Showcases contain<br />

objects that bear witness to the bonds that<br />

connected America to Portugal in the past.<br />

Fred is the distant nephew of Charles<br />

William Dabney, the second of three consuls<br />

who represented American interests in Faial<br />

from 1806 to 1892. Neatly placed on the<br />

showcases’ shelves are bits and pieces of<br />

his family’s history and the history of the<br />

Azores, a wave from the past that swept<br />

across the Atlantic.<br />

The anthology collected by this American<br />

family was put out by Tinta da China publishers<br />

with FLAD funding the research. This<br />

latest edition is an abridged version of the<br />

three-volume collection of documents compiled<br />

by Roxana Dabney. The long-deceased<br />

cousin of Fred’s set about putting together<br />

the huge collection of sundry correspondence<br />

in 1892 after the family had returned<br />

to the US. By the time she was done, she<br />

had 1,797 pages that filled three volumes.<br />

Fred recognizes that it’s a lot of information<br />

to digest, but he is more than willing to<br />

reconnect with a past that time constraints<br />

and the pressures of modern life have kept<br />

at a distance. “We have a copy of the original<br />

Annals at home,” he says “but I’ve had<br />

a hard time persuading my daughters to<br />

read it; there’s too much to read! It’s interesting<br />

but hard to read. I’m really looking<br />

forward to the abridged version,” he says,<br />

Parallel no. 6 | FALL | WINTER 2011


‘ one thing is to learn about<br />

your family history, another<br />

thing is to visit the places<br />

themselves. i was really<br />

touched by the way my<br />

family was treated in the<br />

Azores. We felt honored,<br />

as if we hadn’t paid enough<br />

attention to our past. We<br />

have to give our younger<br />

family members a good<br />

shake so that they go and<br />

see it for themselves.<br />

’<br />

Fred dabney<br />

his blue eyes sparkling with enthusiasm,<br />

an emotion that Kate, who is standing by<br />

him, shares.<br />

Across the Atlantic at the same hour,<br />

researchers Maria Filomena Mónica and<br />

Paulo Silveira e Sousa are probably poring<br />

over the reams of pages in the original<br />

Annals. They are working on a new abridged<br />

edition of the letters that family, friends,<br />

and acquaintances exchanged with the<br />

Dabneys over the 86-year period the family<br />

was in the Azores. The outcome will be<br />

an English edition that is reader-friendly.<br />

The documents going into the anthology<br />

will also be different from those in the<br />

Portuguese version because, in this case,<br />

“the target readership” will be different.<br />

Apparently, the preface, written by Maria<br />

Filomena Mónica, is done and is being<br />

translated. The correspondence that will go<br />

into the book has also been selected. “I’ve<br />

already reviewed the translation of my preface<br />

for the English-language edition, and<br />

the translator is finishing up the notes. Paulo<br />

has already cut what he had to. Naturally,<br />

we’ve selected different passages to put more<br />

emphasis on the letters that deal with the<br />

Civil War ... and the notes are being inserted,”<br />

the researcher told us.<br />

So a version that Fred Dabney will be<br />

able to read, and one that may pique his<br />

daughters’ interest in the family’s past is<br />

now taking shape. The book will most<br />

likely be called The Dabney’s – a Bostonian<br />

Family in Portugal. The new edition’s intended<br />

readership, according to FLAD admin-<br />

cuLTure<br />

The Azores room of the new Bedford Whaling museum houses items belonging to the Faial dabneys<br />

such the cap and braid of the second us consul in Faial, charles William dabney (1794-1871),<br />

Fred’s distant uncle.<br />

istrator Mario Mesquita, will be Portuguese<br />

descendants and anybody else interested<br />

in the topic. The new volume, containing<br />

close to 400 pages, is slated to be launched<br />

in 2012.<br />

The new book has created some excitement<br />

among the family, who seem to be<br />

taking a greater interest in their ancestors’<br />

sojourn in Faial. Fred and Kate made their<br />

first visit to the Azores in 2007, and will<br />

probably be returning next year on a trip<br />

sponsored by the New Bedford Whaling<br />

Museum. As Fred remarked, “One thing is<br />

to learn about your family history, another<br />

thing is to visit the places themselves. I was<br />

really touched by the way my family was<br />

treated in the Azores. We felt honored, as<br />

if we hadn’t paid enough attention to our<br />

past. We have to give our younger family<br />

members a good shake so that they go and<br />

see it for themselves.” That’s why he hopes<br />

to organize a trip with his children and<br />

cousins next summer.<br />

Fred has a hot house a few miles from<br />

New Bedford where he devotes his time to<br />

horticulture. That’s why his family’s experience<br />

in the islands holds additional fascination.<br />

“The Azores is a great place to visit<br />

because there are plants from virtually every<br />

continent brought in by the sea captains<br />

who stopped there over the years,” he tells<br />

us. This modern-day Dabney recently discovered<br />

his island-dwelling cousins’ penchant<br />

for botany and the new plant life they<br />

brought to Faial. At one of the family estates<br />

in Horta, the Bagatelle, he was captivated by<br />

the gardens, “I was amazed that many of<br />

the original plants are still there, despite the<br />

years of neglect,” he said. It probably<br />

wouldn’t have been hard for him to envision<br />

a scenario like the one described by American<br />

writer Thomas Wentworth Higginson, who<br />

spent a year in Faial in the mid-1850s: “It<br />

would be hard to exaggerate the singular<br />

beauty of the Dabneys’ gardens; each step<br />

is a new foray into the tropics – a palm, a<br />

magnolia, a camphor, and a dragon tree...”<br />

As a horticulturist, Fred longs to link the<br />

past with the present in his own special way.<br />

“I would love to re-establish a link with<br />

those original seeds and plant them here,”<br />

he muses, particularly the recently-christened<br />

Veronica Dabney, an endemic species<br />

currently housed in the rare seed bank of<br />

the Faial Botanical Gardens.<br />

Without suspecting it, Fred was the center<br />

of attention at the dinner with Portuguese<br />

and Americans in the Azores Room of the<br />

New Bedford Whaling Museum, a place that,<br />

in the words of Portuguese Consul Graça<br />

Fonseca, “celebrates the Portuguese-speaking<br />

world.” Fred heard the speakers assert that<br />

the Dabneys had been “a driving force in<br />

the Azores of that era,” and that the Annals<br />

were “a work of myriad voices.” The dinner<br />

was preceded by a visit through the museum<br />

with its director, James Russell, acting<br />

as guide. No doubt Fred went home full of<br />

pride in his family and anxious to return to<br />

the Azores, because at one point he commented,<br />

“There’s just so much history we<br />

still don’t know about.”<br />

Parallel no. 6 | FALL | WINTER 2011 71<br />

DR


‘ in the attic in massachusetts<br />

there were “mysterious crates<br />

containing the consul’s ceremonial cap<br />

and sword, a model of a portuguese<br />

whaling ship, and lots of packets of<br />

letters that had been sent by boat”.<br />

’<br />

sally dabney parker<br />

mysTery Boxes<br />

And memorABiLiA<br />

Ceaseless curiosity is something Sally<br />

Dabney Parker has had all her life. She<br />

has researched the family history for<br />

years, and was glad to receive this writer’s<br />

question-filled e-mail. “It’s good<br />

news to know someone is interested in<br />

the Dabneys and their descendants,” she<br />

says. She has spent “years” examining the<br />

items she inherited and entrusting the<br />

documents and objects she owns to the<br />

in 1862, the Horta Town council donated a burial plot<br />

to the family. Two of the fourteen graves belong to the first two<br />

us consuls, John Bass and charles William dabney. This year<br />

the local authorities rehabilitated the spot and published<br />

a small brochure on the dabneys, focusing on the plot<br />

in the carmo cemetery.<br />

72<br />

cuLTure<br />

“right museums.” At 72,<br />

Sally is currently finishing<br />

up a biography of her<br />

great grandfather, Frank<br />

Dabney (1873-1934).<br />

Sally’s childhood was<br />

like something out of C.<br />

S. Lewis, replete with<br />

attics full of strange, dusty<br />

boxes that, when opened<br />

by the children, revealed<br />

wondrously mysterious<br />

objects from far away<br />

times and places. Like<br />

Sally, many of the other Dabneys of her<br />

generation grew up hearing about the<br />

enchanting lives of their ancestors on<br />

Faial. “Many of our homes had a photograph<br />

of the Bagatelle, or a portrait. In<br />

our case, it was a picture of Francis Oliver<br />

Dabney, Roxanna’s brother. There were<br />

other unusual objects like a replica of the<br />

Bagatelle in porcelain, half of an ivory<br />

chessboard, a complete sewing box that<br />

came from the Fredonia, and linen cloths<br />

in “sieve” embroidery (a complex embroidery<br />

technique developed in<br />

northern Portugal). In the attic<br />

in Massachusetts there were<br />

“mysterious crates containing<br />

the consul’s ceremonial cap<br />

and sword, a model of a<br />

Portuguese whaling ship, and<br />

lots of packets of letters that<br />

had been sent by boat.” When<br />

Sally was a little girl, her great<br />

aunt Edith Dabney Ford gave<br />

her scores of objects that had<br />

come to the US from the family’s<br />

estates in Faial. Many of<br />

them had once belonged to<br />

Sariha Dabney, a sister of<br />

Edith’s who had died at 16,<br />

and whose initials – S. D. –<br />

Sally shared.<br />

From a childhood spent<br />

among mysterious objects,<br />

crates in the attic, and a collection<br />

of memorabilia from<br />

a long-dead relative who<br />

shared her initials, grew a passionate<br />

curiosity about the<br />

past that Sally has nurtured<br />

throughout her life. After her<br />

children had grown, she started<br />

working in an architect’s<br />

studio where she began to<br />

uncover the family’s history.<br />

Apparently, when they<br />

returned to the US in 1892,<br />

the Dabneys settled in<br />

California where, as Sally<br />

recounts, “The climate<br />

sally dabney, 72, has spent years researching<br />

the family’s history and heritage. every year she<br />

and her cousins meet to reminisce and exchange<br />

old family photos. sally is currently finishing a<br />

biography of her great-grandfather Frank dabney.<br />

reminded them of the Azores.” There, one<br />

of the recent arrivals built the Fayal Ranch.<br />

The following generations (Frank, Bert,<br />

and John) also fared well: one built a winery<br />

and <strong>later</strong> a railway line in California;<br />

while another one devoted himself to the<br />

import-export business and the third to<br />

architecture. “All of the boys got a college<br />

education, most from Harvard and two<br />

from MIT.”<br />

Sally Dabney has donated most of the<br />

objects and letters to the Peabody Essex<br />

Museum in Salem. She refuses to let such<br />

a fascinating past fall into oblivion. Every<br />

year, she and two cousins get together<br />

to bridge the time warp by remembering<br />

stories, and exchanging photos and family<br />

treasures. And like Fred, Sally also<br />

made the pilgrimage to Faial, but in<br />

1974. “I went with my mother, brother,<br />

and cousin – all Dabneys. We had a beautiful<br />

tour inside the Bagatelle and the<br />

Cedars. But then there was a kind of<br />

Communist take-over that week, and we<br />

were advised to leave immediately. What<br />

an adventure!” she writes from her summer<br />

home in Maine, many miles away,<br />

and many years removed from the treasures<br />

in the attic.<br />

DR<br />

one of sally’s treasures: an 1862 medal won<br />

by c.W. dabney & sons of Faial at a wine<br />

competition in London.<br />

Parallel no. 6 | FALL | WINTER 2011<br />

DR


cuLTure<br />

The Bagatelle:<br />

a possible public landmark<br />

The Bagatelle, the famed Dabney home<br />

in Horta, was the first family dwelling<br />

built. Between 1812 and 1814, master<br />

carpenters travelled from America to erect<br />

the estate, the permanent residence of a<br />

successful, cosmopolitan American family<br />

that would change the face of the<br />

island. It also marked a change in style<br />

in the Azores, with its New England<br />

architectural features. With three stories,<br />

an ample balcony hanging over the<br />

porch, and sash and bay windows, the<br />

home commanded a breathtaking view<br />

of the channel and Pico Island. Obscured<br />

by unchecked vegetation, it still exists as<br />

#19, Rua de São Paulo; but the huge pink<br />

fairy-tale mansion is slowly crumbling,<br />

althoug its current owners put it to sale<br />

as did the owners of the erstwhile Dabney<br />

residence, the Fredonia, which is now a<br />

playschool. Another former residence, the<br />

Cedars, is currently the official residence<br />

of the president of the Azores Legislative<br />

Assembly, and the family’s vacation home<br />

in Porto Pim has gone from being a ruin<br />

to what will likely become a museum<br />

about the archipelago, thanks to the<br />

regional environmental and maritime<br />

authorities.<br />

Horta’s town council explains that the<br />

Bagatelle occupies a city block in the<br />

parish of Mártires, has not been classified<br />

as a public landmark, but that “the Horta<br />

urban development plan approved last<br />

year has allowed for the possibility of its<br />

being classified.”<br />

Questioned about the dilapidated state<br />

of the building and the neglect suffered<br />

by the whole city lock on which the oncecharming<br />

grounds are located – 500 m 2<br />

of building space and 1,500 m 2 of gardens<br />

- the city authorities claim they are “naturally<br />

worried about the state of this and<br />

other historical buildings in<br />

Horta. Over the years we have<br />

been working – not only to<br />

define the boundaries of the<br />

historical quarter of the city –<br />

but to design a recovery strategy<br />

for it.”<br />

The Horta Town Council also<br />

seems to have recognized the<br />

diamond in the rough sitting<br />

squarely within the city: one<br />

that can encourage more cultural<br />

tourism once the link<br />

between the Dabneys and the<br />

whaling culture that joined<br />

Faial and New Bedford has<br />

been explored. In September of<br />

2009, we brought the public’s<br />

attention to the dilapidated<br />

state of the Dabney family plot<br />

in the Carmo Municipal<br />

Cemetery. Since then, the mayor’s<br />

office has informed us that<br />

it has not only repaired and<br />

recovered the plot, but “published<br />

a small brochure about<br />

the historical spot. The brochure<br />

was distributed to a<br />

group representing the New<br />

Bedford Whaling Museum that<br />

visited Faial recently to promote<br />

cultural tourism.”<br />

The American family now reposes<br />

in the memory and in the deep<br />

black earth of Faial. Fourteen<br />

graves lie in the most tuckedaway<br />

corner of the cemetery. To<br />

reach it you must climb to the<br />

top of the cemetery and look for<br />

the marker – a stately palm tree<br />

– that over the years has thrived<br />

on the family’s history in order<br />

to touch the sky.<br />

‘ Bagatelle [...] marked a change in<br />

style in the Azores, with its new<br />

england architectural features. With<br />

three stories, an ample balcony<br />

hanging over the porch, and<br />

sash and bay windows, the home<br />

commanded a breathtaking view<br />

of the channel and pico island.<br />

’<br />

Today in ruins, the Bagatelle was the dabney’s legendary<br />

home in Horta. The Town council admits to being worried<br />

about its condition, and states that it may be classified<br />

as a local landmark in the future.<br />

Parallel no. 6 | FALL | WINTER 2011 73<br />

DR


DR<br />

It’s been nine years, so José Luís Peixoto’s<br />

memory is not standing up to my third<br />

degree. In 2002, he was the first Portuguese<br />

writer to take advantage of the Ledig House’s<br />

residency program, as part of an initiative<br />

sponsored by the General Directorate for<br />

Books and Libraries (Portuguese acronym<br />

DGLB). He’s a man with a full plate, but I<br />

persisted and he took the time to answer<br />

via e-mail: “I remember a house surrounded<br />

by beautiful scenery with all the colors<br />

74<br />

cuLTure<br />

The writing retreat<br />

Since 1992, Ledig House writers-in-residence program has hosted hundreds<br />

of creative writers from around the world. At this idyllic colony in the Hudson valley,<br />

authors and translators find the ideal setting and the time<br />

to put their brightest ideas on paper.<br />

By cArLA mAiA de ALmeidA<br />

of autumn.” The memories return. “And I<br />

remember the dinners, the times we were<br />

all together and how we ended up sharing<br />

a bit of what we were doing. And then there<br />

was my room, where I spent most of the<br />

time writing.”<br />

The house, the long stretches of time,<br />

the interpersonal experiences. Nine years<br />

after Ledig House, José Luís Peixoto talks<br />

about the three most important things he<br />

recalls, like the other writers, as we will<br />

Ledig House with its lush lawn, overlooking the Hudson valley.<br />

soon see. “Mainly I remember the people<br />

I got to meet,” he adds. “Ali Smith, the<br />

Scottish writer, who I’m still in touch<br />

with, and Ellen Miller from the US who<br />

passed away at such a young age.” He<br />

doesn’t remember the routine or the<br />

methodical passing of the eight weeks he<br />

worked on the draft of Cemitério de Pianos<br />

(The Piano Cemetery), the novel he would<br />

finish four years <strong>later</strong>. “I can’t even<br />

remember what the most productive phase<br />

Parallel no. 6 | FALL | WINTER 2011


was,” he admits. Prior to his stay at Ledig<br />

House, he had published two books of<br />

poetry and his popular debut novel Nenhum<br />

olhar, which was printed in the US as The<br />

Implacable order of Things.<br />

Like José Luís Peixoto, Rui Zink and Inês<br />

Pedrosa also had books published in English<br />

after being at Ledig House. “The idea<br />

behind these programs, is to gain a foothold<br />

in the American market, because of<br />

the importance of the English language,”<br />

the head of the DGLB, Ana Castro, explains.<br />

Though it is not the main feature of the<br />

writers-in-residence programs – at least as<br />

far as the personal experiences of the writers<br />

themselves is concerned – the DGLB’s<br />

programs promoting translation of<br />

Portuguese works is also part of the organization’s<br />

drive to disseminate Portuguese<br />

authors abroad. Or at least it used to be.<br />

By October, 2010, the DGLB’s functions<br />

were already severely curtailed after a year<br />

of drastic budget cuts. Things only got<br />

worse in 2011, after the government fell<br />

and the country ground to a standstill.<br />

DGLB programs such as its landmark<br />

“itinerant” program for local libraries,<br />

aimed at encouraging reading, were suspended,<br />

as were the literary residency programs,<br />

despite the increase in applications.<br />

“There was a real upswing in the last two<br />

years,” explains Assunção Mendonça, a<br />

member of the DGLB, who helps process<br />

the applications. “That’s word-of-mouth<br />

in action.”<br />

The year José Luís Peixoto was attending<br />

the Ledig House’s inaugural program, Paulo<br />

Moreiras was coming out with his historical<br />

novel A Demanda de D. Fuas Bragatela, the<br />

precursor to his novel os Dias de Saturno.<br />

Moreiras would be one of the last writers<br />

to receive DGLB backing, like João Tordo,<br />

last year’s Ledig fellow. At the time Moreiras<br />

was working on his still-unpublished third<br />

historical novel set in Portugal during the<br />

Liberal Wars. His stay at Ledig House was<br />

the tipping point for the book. “When I<br />

left, I already had an idea about how the<br />

whole book would go. I’d done the research<br />

and sketched out a bit of the text. At Ledig,<br />

I managed to write several chapters and<br />

flesh them out, which would have been<br />

harder and taken longer otherwise. The fact<br />

that I had so much time to work allowed<br />

me to hone the text I was writing. I’d write,<br />

then always review it. You had time to do<br />

everything. What a blessing!”<br />

Even the writers who put their trust in<br />

that incorporeal entity commonly known<br />

as “inspiration,” know that no book rises<br />

from the dark depths of the drawer to the<br />

heights of public notice without grueling,<br />

cuLTure<br />

“i remember a house, surrounded by beautiful scenery with all the colors of autumn,”<br />

recalls writer José Luís peixoto.<br />

‘ The idea behind these programs,<br />

is to gain a foothold in the American<br />

market, because of the importance<br />

of the english language.<br />

’<br />

Ana castro, DGLB<br />

tiring, exhausting and – let’s admit it –<br />

plodding work. It may not be as stultifying<br />

as a postal worker’s routine but, most<br />

of the time, it’s also not the romantic life<br />

of Lord Byron. But can you get back into<br />

the swing of things when you’re jetlagged,<br />

and in a different room, house,<br />

and, country? It depends on a number of<br />

factors, including the organizational mindset<br />

of the writer and at what stage he is<br />

in the work. Paulo Moreiras had no trouble<br />

getting up at 6 a.m. again, as he always<br />

had in Portugal. “I was always the first<br />

one up; I’d watch the deer walking in the<br />

garden, have breakfast, and watch the sun<br />

rise. At about 7, I’d start to write.<br />

Dinnertime, when we’d all get together<br />

to socialize, was our only commitment.<br />

So I had hours upon hours to work and<br />

polish the text.”<br />

As a writer, David Machado is also persistent<br />

and methodical. “I took the first<br />

chapter of Deixem Falar as<br />

Pedras with me and had a<br />

very concrete idea about<br />

how the rest of the book<br />

would go. I’d get up<br />

between 7 and 8 and<br />

work 8 hours straight<br />

with a short break for<br />

lunch. Every once in a<br />

while I’d take a long walk<br />

over the grounds and in<br />

the surrounding woods.<br />

I didn’t work at night because I don’t like<br />

to.” He was at Ledig House for a month<br />

– the usual time – and it was only around<br />

the fourth week that his enthusiasm started<br />

to wane. “I was most productive at the<br />

beginning. When I got there, I luxuriated<br />

in all the silence; everything was so peaceful<br />

and calm. I felt it and started to work<br />

non-stop. I’m the kind of person who<br />

makes plans like ‘if I write four pages a<br />

day, I’ll have X number of pages a month<br />

from now.’ But it didn’t turn out that way<br />

because the pace changed.”<br />

With the exception of José Luís Peixoto,<br />

who doesn’t believe that writing away<br />

from home is “particularly advantageous,”<br />

all the writers interviewed by Parallel found<br />

that the creative process was enhanced by<br />

the unfamiliarity of their new surroundings.<br />

David Machado was already far into<br />

the creative phase for Deixem Falar as Pedras,<br />

and it was in the house on the Hudson<br />

Parallel no. 6 | FALL | WINTER 2011 75<br />

DR


DR<br />

that he got the idea for his children’s book<br />

A Mala Assombrada, which was published<br />

almost simultaneously. “Being so far away<br />

helped a lot, especially before the writing<br />

stage when I’m putting my ideas together<br />

and thinking things over, because it<br />

provides you with a mindset different<br />

from the one you’d have ordinarily,”<br />

Machado explains.<br />

Pedro Almeida Vieira’s case was also<br />

unusual. He arrived at Ledig in May, 2006,<br />

six months after publishing o Profeta do<br />

Castigo Divino and completing work on o<br />

vermelho e o Negro. “Most of the times I write<br />

at a fever pitch and finish a novel in six<br />

months. Maybe I felt weird for being such<br />

a long time in a strange place. During the<br />

four weeks I was there I devoted my time<br />

mostly to reading and jotting down ideas<br />

for the novel I was preparing [A Mão<br />

76<br />

paulo moreiras in the Ledig House kitchen,<br />

taking a break from work.<br />

cuLTure<br />

esquerda de Deus, 2009].<br />

There were obvious benefits<br />

to being in another<br />

environment – but it was<br />

more on a mental and<br />

emotional level – than<br />

where the writing per se<br />

was concerned.” He<br />

remembers the premises,<br />

“which are gorgeous,” and<br />

nighttime “when the writers<br />

would gather around<br />

the table, chat and eat the<br />

amazing fare put together<br />

by the Portuguese cook.”<br />

Did he get homesick? “Not<br />

in the least. What I miss<br />

sometimes is not being there again.”<br />

From 2002 to 2004, in a joint initiative,<br />

the DGLB and Ledig House granted an<br />

annual residency fellowship. José Luís<br />

Peixoto received the first grant followed<br />

by Rui Zink in 2003 and José Riço<br />

Direitinho in 2004. After that, two residencies<br />

were granted per year – one in<br />

the spring and the other in the fall. In<br />

2005, the Portuguese writers-in-residence<br />

were Jacinto Lucas Pires and Pedro Rosa<br />

Mendes and in 2006, Pedro Almeida Vieira<br />

and Ondjaki. In 2007, Inês Pedrosa and<br />

Filipa Melo were given the chance to stay<br />

at the Omi, New York writer’s colony.<br />

“Sometimes it was hard for people to<br />

organize their lives so they could stay away<br />

for a whole month; but there was never<br />

a year when we didn’t attribute the residency,”<br />

Ana Castro explains. One of the<br />

‘ i was always the first one up; i’d watch the<br />

deer walking in the garden, have breakfast,<br />

and watch the sun rise. At about 7, i’d start<br />

to write. […] so i had hours upon hours<br />

to work and polish the text.<br />

moreiras<br />

’ paulo<br />

‘ mainly i remember the people i got<br />

to meet. Luís peixoto<br />

’ José<br />

reasons the program is so successful,<br />

Maria Carlos Loureiro a DGLB administrator<br />

adds, is that “there’s very little red tape<br />

involved in the application process and<br />

the requirements.” Unlike other creative<br />

writing grants, where money is disbursed<br />

for a given work, this one works along<br />

lines that are not so rigid and institutional.<br />

“The program came about because<br />

writers need their own space. There were<br />

never throngs of people applying like a<br />

school of sharks circling a minnow. We<br />

really only had to make a choice two or<br />

three times when more than one person<br />

applied the same season.” But the relaxed<br />

atmosphere has not kept the writers from<br />

honoring their commitments. “Everyone<br />

produced work and everyone wrote out<br />

a report when they arrived,” Maria Carlos<br />

Loureiro adds. And when the book is published,<br />

the DGLB’s support is mentioned<br />

in the acknowledgments.<br />

David Machado was at Ledig House for<br />

a month in the spring of 2009, the year<br />

Luísa Costa Gomes was there. “I was there<br />

for only 15 days in September,” Gomes<br />

recounts. In her suitcase was the translation<br />

of a short story and the play o Príncipe<br />

de Hamburgo. “The second week was my<br />

most productive. I finished everything I<br />

brought with me and still had time to get<br />

started on something else.” Fifteen days<br />

may sound like too little; but 15 days with<br />

few distractions, interruptions, phone<br />

calls, and e-mails – and the other niggling<br />

duties that to the writer seem as if he were<br />

the manager of a small, solitary empire<br />

“Fifteen days may sound like too little; but fifteen days without<br />

distractions (…) can ultimately be worth three or four times that,”<br />

says writer Luísa costa Gomes, recalling Ledig House.<br />

Parallel no. 6 | FALL | WINTER 2011<br />

DR


The simple, spartan dinner table, where the Ledig House guests<br />

enjoyed meals cooked by their portuguese chef.<br />

‘ There was a critic from the Wine spectator<br />

in our group, so the stakes were high,<br />

but the portuguese wines got two<br />

thumbs up.<br />

moreiras<br />

’ paulo<br />

– can ultimately be worth three or four<br />

times that. “A blessing,” as Paulo Moreiras<br />

would say. Luísa Costa Gomes adds, “For<br />

me it was moving to hear someone say,<br />

‘tell us what you need and we’ll get it for<br />

you; your job is to write.’ A woman<br />

doesn’t get to hear that very often. At one<br />

point, I was craving fresh blueberries, and<br />

I always had a stock of them in the fridge!<br />

It was ‘Old Jim’ and his son who did the<br />

shopping. There was a day when a bunch<br />

of us – women writers and poets – had<br />

to go off to the mall, because we missed<br />

going to the supermarket.”<br />

In addition to all the free time, which<br />

she dubbed “extremely beneficial,” Luísa<br />

Costa Gomes recalls how the management<br />

of the Ledig House always made themselves<br />

available: D.W. Gibson (“Young, cultured,<br />

cheerful, happy, committed, and affectionate”),<br />

who organized the activities and was<br />

the intermediary between the institution<br />

and the residents; and the cook who had<br />

a Portuguese background, Rita Soares-Kern.<br />

She was also taken by the “austere comfort”<br />

of the house, the “old, bare-bones furni-<br />

cuLTure<br />

ture, lots of windows, lots of trees, and lots<br />

of wild critters. You almost feel like a real<br />

American author.”<br />

Paulo Moreiras also won’t forget Rita<br />

Soares-Kern. The author’s penchant for fine<br />

food (a redeeming quality rather than a<br />

fault) is no secret. “I learned a lot of tricks<br />

and exchanged loads of recipes with Rita,”<br />

the author of elogio da Ginja tells us. D.W.<br />

Gibson confirms the fact: “He would help<br />

her out a lot and we got used to seeing him<br />

in the kitchen. He’s a great example of community<br />

spirit at work in Ledig House.” The<br />

crowning glory, Paulo Moreiras tells us, was<br />

a collectively cooked dinner of fava beans<br />

with smoked sausage, pork-belly, and bottles<br />

of Portuguese wine they serendipitously<br />

came across in a nearby store. “There was<br />

a critic from the Wine Spectator in our group,<br />

so the stakes were high, but the Portuguese<br />

wines got two thumbs up.”<br />

Aside from the group dinners, a diplomatic<br />

obligation that soon turned into a<br />

source of pleasure and even an informal<br />

kind of group therapy (at the end of a day<br />

of routine, the writers and translators were<br />

‘ Being so far away helped a lot, especially<br />

before the writing stage when i’m putting<br />

my ideas together and thinking things over,<br />

because it provides you with a mindset<br />

different from the one you’d have ordinarily.<br />

’<br />

david machado<br />

“An awesome experience,” is how paulo moreiras (left)<br />

describes his stay at the writer’s retreat.<br />

able to share their doubts and dilemmas),<br />

on the weekends the Ledig House held<br />

informal get-togethers with guests from<br />

the New York publishing world. It was<br />

this spirit of literary give-and-take that<br />

led to the founding of the House, which<br />

was based on the efforts of German publisher<br />

Heinrich Maria Ledig-Rowohlt, who<br />

lent his name to the retreat. The resident<br />

writers and translators –never more than<br />

ten at a time – also have to present work<br />

before the local community. “When I took<br />

part in a public reading, I realized how<br />

much curiosity and interest there was in<br />

the Portuguese language,” Paulo Moreiras<br />

says. The hardest part may be going home,<br />

despite how much the writers miss their<br />

families and the taste of delicious plate of<br />

salt cod. The author of Os Dias Saturno had<br />

a harder time with the jet lag coming<br />

back. “But after two weeks, I started working<br />

again full throttle, but I missed that<br />

magnificent experience.” On this score,<br />

all the writers agree. After all, without<br />

experiencing life, there’s really nothing to<br />

write.<br />

Parallel no. 6 | FALL | WINTER 2011 77<br />

DR<br />

DR


Seated in his regal chair, King Luis I of Portugal listens rapt to<br />

the adventures of the inveterate seductress Laureana, who was<br />

in turn seduced by Giovellino, the lyrical persona of the Count<br />

of Florence.<br />

The plot of the opera by Augusto Machado (1845-1924) unfolds<br />

in four acts and six scenes. The libretto, by Jean-Jacques Magne<br />

and A. Guiou is taken from the novel Les Beaux Messieurs de Bois-Doré<br />

by Georges Sand and Paul Maurice. Dedicated to His Majesty Luis<br />

I, the opera debuted on March 1, 1884 at the São Carlos National<br />

Theater and today warrants a place of honor in the history books<br />

as a milestone in... Portuguese telecommunications.<br />

‘ His majesty was able to happily hear the whole opera,<br />

in the comfort of his own home, without the customary<br />

courtly etiquette and gris perle gloves of the royal<br />

box, seated on his throne draped in his ermine mantle,<br />

or tucked in bed with a woolen cap on his head,<br />

depending on his wishes and bodily needs.<br />

’<br />

António Maria magazine, March 6<br />

Still in mourning for his sister, Maria Ana de Bragança, Princess<br />

of Saxony, and unable to leave the palace, the king decided to<br />

commission an audition of the opera live via the theaterphone, a<br />

recent invention by Clément Ader, first tested in Paris in 1881.<br />

Placed in a semi-circle downstage on pedestals with rubber<br />

feet to absorb vibration, six microphones – powered by three<br />

sets of serial-connected batteries, alternating every 20 minutes<br />

to guarantee power input stability – performed the miracle of<br />

capturing and transmitting the performance. Thus, the king and<br />

queen were able to accompany the opera from start to finish,<br />

despite intermittent distortions, soundbursts, and the odd clunker<br />

produced by the orchestra, singers, and chorus.<br />

In the March 6th edition of the almanac António Maria, Rafael<br />

Bordalo Pinheiro published a caricature that was to immortalize<br />

the event. The caption, by Alfredo de Morais Pinto, whose pen<br />

name was Pan, quipped: “His Majesty was able to happily hear<br />

the whole opera, in the comfort of his own home, without the<br />

customary courtly etiquette and gris perle gloves of the royal box,<br />

78<br />

riGHT To WriTe D.R.<br />

“Laureana,” the theaterphone,<br />

and a king’s pioneering spirit<br />

mAnueL siLvA pereirA*<br />

seated on his throne draped in his ermine mantle, or tucked in<br />

bed with a woolen cap on his head, depending on his wishes<br />

and bodily needs.”<br />

Spurred on by success, the Teatro São Carlos promoted its 1885<br />

opera season with opera lovers being able to subscribe to the<br />

theaterphone. For 180 thousand reis, the listener got 90 recitals.<br />

It didn’t matter whether the subscriber lived in Palhavã, Olivais,<br />

or Braço de Prata, because the soundwaves generated by the Ader<br />

device arrived in perfect condition.<br />

According to the Le Times, for this huge achievement, the director<br />

of the Edison Gower Bell Company, who installed the dedicated<br />

phone line between Teatro de São Carlos and<br />

the royal palace in Ajuda would <strong>later</strong> be dec-<br />

orated with the Military Order of Christ!<br />

The system was only commercialized in<br />

France in 1890, five years <strong>later</strong>, and though<br />

the monarch’s other deeds may have been<br />

relegated to the dustbin of history, this<br />

delightful caprice of music-lover Luis the<br />

First is mentioned in a number of sources.<br />

Less widely publicized though was the interest<br />

and admiration the Metropolitan Opera<br />

House in New York displayed toward this<br />

breakthrough Lusitanian invention.<br />

For almost eight <strong>decade</strong>s now opera has<br />

been broadcast live over the radio, allowing millions of listeners<br />

to enjoy the best productions around. And in 2002, some of the<br />

world’s major opera productions, staged in countless theaters<br />

and concert halls, began to be televised in HD-TV from and to<br />

nearly 40 countries around the world.<br />

Interested in tracing the history of this new cycle of globalization,<br />

which has sparked the interest of opera lovers and captured<br />

new audiences worldwide, the MET – and particularly the people<br />

responsible for their Live in HD program- once again resuscitated the<br />

story of Adler’s theaterphone and the Portuguese king’s daring<br />

initiative. When I personally contacted our only opera house to<br />

obtain some names and addresses, and to ask for their help in<br />

doing some in-depth research into their files, I was dumbfounded<br />

by their off-putting response, “Don’t tell me we’re going to<br />

have to write down the whole history for you!,” they grumbled.<br />

So much for the pioneering spirit!<br />

* Former aide to the Portuguese embassy in Washington DC and to the Portuguese UN Mission<br />

in New York.<br />

Parallel no. 6 | FALL | WINTER 2011


cuLTure<br />

Writers<br />

sylvia plath and<br />

the Falsity of the suicide myth<br />

My image of Sylvia Plath (n. 1932), is<br />

draped in a false suicide myth – like<br />

Marilyn Monroe and James Dean – relentlessly<br />

repeated by the voracious literary<br />

and media machines. It is true that she<br />

killed herself, in 1963, at the age of 30,<br />

in a frigid February in Primrose Hill,<br />

London, in the place she dreamed of living<br />

– a flat formerly inhabited by the poet<br />

Yeats. But she didn’t only die; she lived<br />

and wrote. She had just divorced Ted<br />

Hughes, a poet enthralled by astrology<br />

and the occult, who was <strong>later</strong> accused of<br />

thwarting her literary attempts, even<br />

though he did publish her poems, a diary,<br />

stories and correspondence. Like Dylan<br />

Thomas, another author she admired,<br />

Sylvia was born on October 27, in Boston.<br />

She was young and tulip-skinned with<br />

quick, restless hands that could not disguise<br />

a tracery of delicate blue veins.<br />

I envision her speeding on a bicycle over<br />

a mantle of dry leaves or leaping over stones<br />

as one bestriding a fish. I hear her obsessively<br />

laughing in metallic bursts with the<br />

water at her waist, when love, overwhelmingly<br />

material, comes too late in “bits of<br />

sweetened blood.” I see the shadow and<br />

light that made her depart, not only because<br />

lovers are not bonded forever, but because<br />

her feet were veiled by the shroud of a<br />

hollow world and her eyes were hollowedout<br />

orbs. She is there studying and reading,<br />

turned in on her writing and the words<br />

and gestures of others who were absent and<br />

fated not to return.<br />

Sylvia in her negative narcissism and<br />

overwhelming talent did not deem herself<br />

sufficient. Yet she believed she was a<br />

genius and said so in a letter to her mother.<br />

She rationalized her need to escape and<br />

yearned to write with “more inventiveness<br />

than God.” She sought the comforting crib<br />

By AnA mArques GAsTão<br />

Sylvia Plath<br />

of long-lost paternal warmth, and believed<br />

that the world was driven by hard work<br />

and dreams; she heard footsteps and voices<br />

and was inhabited by lunar cries: “If I<br />

sit still and don’t do anything, the world<br />

goes on beating like a slack drum, without<br />

meaning.” (Journal, 2/25/1956).<br />

Like Faust, she knew that there was a<br />

“quagmire at the foot of the mountain,”<br />

yet she could not bear the draining toil her<br />

work demanded. She left her life behind<br />

with no soothing balms or purges; the<br />

white lily of her sublimely ferocious pencil<br />

describing a wounded body with biletinged<br />

tears and words from a bottomless<br />

abyss. As in the Bell Jar, her seeming selfrevelations<br />

were, in reality symbolic, colloquial<br />

and pregnant with metaphors and<br />

transformed her mal-adjustment and<br />

strangeness into something that did not<br />

belong to her. And that is why she allowed<br />

herself to depart and chose to write “in<br />

line with the Poundian legacy between<br />

emotion and intellect” (Mário Avelar, Sylvia<br />

Plath, o rosto oculto do Poeta com uma antologia<br />

poética bilingue, Edições Cosmos, 1997), and<br />

then die: “O my God, what am I. That these<br />

late mouths should cry open. In a forest of<br />

frost, in a dawn of cornflowers.” (“Poppies<br />

in October” 1962)<br />

If anyone can actually be a poem, Sylvia<br />

Plath was Lady Lazarus, the title of a poetic<br />

monologue written eleven days after Daddy<br />

in October of 1962, that talks about once<br />

again being begrudgingly brought back<br />

from the brink of death: “Dying/Is an art,<br />

like everything else, I do it exceptionally<br />

well.” The verses are pervaded by pain,<br />

wit, and irony and pierced through and<br />

through by a kind of morbid joy, a sulphuric<br />

clamor, and haughtiness that the<br />

spoken word brings out: it is a work that<br />

must be heard – not merely read. As Maria<br />

Filomena Molder points out in A Imperfeição<br />

da Filosofia (Relógio d’Água, 2003), in a<br />

reference to a text by Paul Valéry, Lazarus<br />

“only comes back to life because he is<br />

still alive.” He is not a dying figure but a<br />

Christ figure.<br />

Lady Lazarus is the account of a crucifixion.<br />

After death, there is a revival. Skin, bones,<br />

knees, hands, scars, and the crown of gold<br />

are the symbolic elements that populate<br />

the spiritual path the fictional account<br />

details. In an archetypal approximation of<br />

the language of the depths, but with<br />

irresolute duality, the poem ends in a<br />

labyrinthine web of red hair. Sylvia rises<br />

from the ashes like the Phoenix – from<br />

the quagmire of nausea to a kind of occult<br />

eschatology. She has let herself be dragged<br />

to a better place perchance, where time<br />

no longer exists.<br />

Parallel no. 6 | FALL | WINTER 2011 79<br />

CORBIS/ VMI


George Steiner<br />

at The New yorker<br />

George steiner<br />

(edited and with an introduction<br />

by Robert Boyers)<br />

Gradiva, Lisbon, 2010. 1<br />

80<br />

The Horn<br />

of Plenty<br />

By cArLos Leone<br />

Though it has been bandied about, the<br />

“death of the intellectual” remains to be<br />

proved. A bit like the previously also widely-discussed<br />

“treason,” the public figure<br />

known as the “intellectual,” so typical of<br />

modernity, has persisted amid the general<br />

decline of the conditions that brought him<br />

to the fore and gave him the chance to exist.<br />

With the demise of Enlightenment optimism,<br />

the end of widespread belief in the<br />

neutrality of science, the death of literate<br />

culture of a universal bent, and at a time<br />

when even the civilizational principles that<br />

the West has taken for granted are being<br />

placed in jeopardy (e.g., human rights), the<br />

time-honored, ambiguous, polymorphic<br />

figure of the intellectual persists. It has generally<br />

been a tough row to hoe, but quite a<br />

few have become veritable darlings of the<br />

media such as Umberto Eco, Fernando<br />

Savater, Jürgen Habermas, Allan Bloom, and,<br />

cutting the list short (thus preventing some<br />

thinkers from getting their due), George<br />

Steiner. Not unexpectedly, there has been<br />

criticism that Steiner has been “over-exposed,”<br />

given the plethora of publications he<br />

has in print – many of which have been<br />

translated for distribution in smaller markets<br />

such as Portugal: from the occasional lecture<br />

(“The Idea of Europe”), to the scholarly<br />

essay (Antígones), and collections such as the<br />

one put together by Robert Boyers, which<br />

taps material that Steiner wrote during his<br />

<strong>decade</strong>s-long collaboration with America’s<br />

distinguished magazine, the New Yorker.<br />

Interestingly, the editor himself broaches the<br />

criticism that has often been leveled at<br />

BooK revieWs<br />

Steiner (and others like him): that he dabbles<br />

in fields he has no mastery of, especially<br />

when it comes to his alleged over-exposure<br />

in publishing and media circles. But when<br />

you read him, even if you are at odds with<br />

his ideas (which would not be surprising,<br />

given their striking singularity), the sensation<br />

you get is one that can be described in<br />

totally different terms: over-abundance.<br />

Steiner was born in Paris in 1929 and was<br />

educated in the United States (a fact he discusses<br />

in the book, in the final essay, which<br />

is not autobiographical). He is currently a<br />

professor in Oxbridge, literally dividing his<br />

time between Oxford and Cambridge. He<br />

‘ it seemed to exemplify<br />

nietzsche’s insight that there is<br />

in men and women a motivation<br />

stronger even than love<br />

or hatred or fear. it is that of<br />

being interested – in a body<br />

of knowledge, in a problem,<br />

in a hobby, in tomorrow’s<br />

news-paper.”<br />

steiner<br />

’ George<br />

has both studied and taught at a host of<br />

prestigious US and European universities<br />

and, in addition to the books he has published,<br />

has written for a number of distinguished<br />

English-language publications. This<br />

particular anthology of New Yorker essays is<br />

illustrative of how editorial choices can<br />

effectively be based on quality and the<br />

strengths of the readership, rather than character<br />

counts and the attempt to reduce<br />

everything to the level of the “average reader,”<br />

who, by the way, does not exist. That<br />

is why this collection is eye-opening for the<br />

Portuguese reader in that it leads one to<br />

think about what Portuguese magazine or<br />

newspaper could possibly be the source of<br />

a treasure trove like this one. The fact that<br />

there is, in Portugal, no match for the New<br />

Yorker is symptomatic of deep-seated cultural<br />

differences that go deeper than the dichotomy<br />

posed by “American speed” and<br />

“European lenteur;” that is, even if we take<br />

for granted our “Europeanness” which, judging<br />

by the Steiner’s lack of reference to<br />

Portugal and Portuguese authors, is also<br />

questionable (when he spoke at FLAD in<br />

2002 in Lisbon, he was loud and clear on<br />

his views regarding this issue). What Steiner’s<br />

unrestrained writing produces is a diversity<br />

of subject matters and a prodigality of viewpoints<br />

that go into creating an over-exposure<br />

– or over-abundance – that Steiner<br />

himself powerfully addresses when he writes<br />

about Koestler who, he states, “seemed<br />

to exemplify Nietzsche’s insight that there<br />

is in men and women a motivation stronger<br />

even than love or hatred or fear. It is that of<br />

being interested – in a body of knowledge,<br />

in a problem, in a hobby, in tomorrow’s<br />

news paper.” This partial quote from one of<br />

the best essays in the book, “La Morte<br />

d’Arthur,” not only describes Steiner at his<br />

best, but the matrix of his texts: that constantly<br />

renewed link between the philosophical,<br />

the literary, the political and the<br />

historical, always graced by a personal perspective<br />

that (as in Koestler’s case) is often<br />

anchored in the personal relationship he has<br />

with the topic of each essay.<br />

However, there are limitations to be<br />

found in most of his essays: the fact that<br />

he focuses primarily on the West and reduces<br />

the contemporary to haute culture (television<br />

and advertising are the subjects of<br />

Parallel no. 6 | FALL | WINTER 2011


elentless – yet funny – barbs, and rock<br />

music and the Internet simply don’t exist).<br />

But this approach is more of an idiosyncrasy<br />

than a major fault. And the tone of<br />

the writing is much more balanced than<br />

in many of the author’s other pieces. In<br />

these essays, Steiner, never displays a modicum<br />

of paternalism or pretentiousness,<br />

even when he resorts to the old professorial<br />

saws about the decline of education.<br />

Divided into four sections, you can<br />

almost read this book of 400-odd pages<br />

straight through without stopping. His<br />

affection for such different authors as<br />

Cioran, Orwell, Céline and Brecht; his<br />

BooK revieWs<br />

painstaking examination of topics such as<br />

the Nuremberg Trials (see “From the<br />

House of the Dead,” a remarkable critique<br />

of the prison diaries of Nazi Minister<br />

Albert Speer); his sensitivity to the cultural<br />

import of non-literary works (such as<br />

the significance of Webern’s musical compositions<br />

to Central European culture and<br />

<strong>later</strong> the West in general), in sum, the<br />

unifying thread, created by the author, that<br />

runs through this vast array of themes,<br />

will impress even Steiner’s most faithful<br />

readers. The sections in the book, “History<br />

and Politics,” “Writers and Writing,”<br />

“Thinkers,” and “Life Studies,” are well-<br />

apportioned but are far from being decisive<br />

or even necessary. The chief merit of<br />

the way the essays is divided is that it does<br />

not detract from the richness of the texts,<br />

which, as any interested reader will soon<br />

find out, is almost impossible to do.<br />

1. The two-person translation was done by Joana Pedroso<br />

Correia and Miguel Serras Pereira. There are a few typos<br />

here and there and some clunkiness in the attempt to<br />

transpose Steiner’s expressiveness into Portuguese, but<br />

these do not ruin the end result. It is a pity though that<br />

the publication dates of the original texts have not been<br />

included. However, it doesn’t prevent them from being<br />

read, and the omission may have come from the Englishlanguage<br />

edition.<br />

Parallel no. 6 | FALL | WINTER 2011 81<br />

SUSANA BRITO


The Scarlet Letter<br />

nathaniel Hawthorne<br />

Portuguese edition‑Dom Quixote,<br />

Biblioteca Lobo Antunes, 2009<br />

America’s most<br />

unpopular writer<br />

82<br />

By cLArA pinTo cALdeirA<br />

The Scarlet Letter is one of the books António<br />

Lobo Antunes chose to include in a collection<br />

aimed at giving the general Portuguese<br />

public access to the world’s most timeless<br />

classics. The work, which was translated by<br />

Portuguese poet Fernando Pessoa, contains<br />

a preface by Lobo Antunes and an introduction<br />

by Georges Monteiro.<br />

Originally published in 1850, The Scarlet<br />

Letter is considered Nathaniel Hawthorne’s<br />

masterpiece. Erratic and indecisive,<br />

Hawthorne wrote obsessively throughout<br />

prolonged periods of his life, and then<br />

abandoned the activity for long stretches<br />

of time. He is known for having commented,<br />

“Who would publish anything for<br />

me, the most unpopular writer in America?”<br />

The self-effacing quote was recounted by<br />

James T. Fields, who encouraged Hawthorne<br />

to write the book. A partner in the publishing<br />

company that printed the novel, Fields<br />

had resolved to invest in the still-unfinished<br />

work, which he erroneously announced<br />

would be a collection of short stories like<br />

the popular Twice Told Tales Hawthorne had<br />

previously written. When The Scarlet Letter<br />

debuted in the fortunate form of a novel,<br />

the first 2,500 copies sold out in ten days.<br />

The novel is a story within a story, or a tale<br />

beyond a story. Hawthorne starts out with<br />

a semi-autobiographical sketch entitled<br />

“The Custom House,” in which he details<br />

his stultifying stint at Salem’s port authority<br />

at a time in his life when creative writ-<br />

BooK revieWs<br />

‘ When The scarlet Letter debuted<br />

in the fortunate form of a novel,<br />

the first 2,500 copies sold out<br />

in ten days. The novel is a story<br />

within a story, or a tale beyond<br />

a story. Hawthorne starts out with<br />

a semi-autobiographical sketch<br />

entitled “The custom House,”<br />

in which he details his stultifying<br />

stint at salem’s port authority<br />

at a time in his life when<br />

creative writing seemed beyond<br />

his reach.<br />

’<br />

ing seemed beyond his reach. But it is in<br />

this stand-alone account of the old Salem<br />

port that so eerily evokes colonial New<br />

England, while being a portrait of contemporary<br />

civil service that the writer reveals<br />

how The Scarlet Letter was born. He discovers<br />

an embroidered red letter on a tattered<br />

piece of cloth and an account of the scarlet<br />

letter written by a 17 th century customs<br />

surveyor.<br />

The bulk of the story takes place in<br />

Puritan New England during the 1600s.<br />

Hawthorne has now enticed us into<br />

believing that the main characters were<br />

really of flesh and blood. There is woman<br />

condemned to wear the infamous letter<br />

“A” for adulteress on her bosom, which<br />

she herself has ostentatiously and masterfully<br />

embroidered – almost with pride<br />

– and must always wear when she walks<br />

through the small town that has stigmatized<br />

her, as she bears the humiliation<br />

with resignation and dignity. There is a<br />

child, graced with physical beauty and a<br />

transcendent spirit, both devilish and<br />

angelic, a living, blatant testimony to the<br />

transgression of her mother who maintains<br />

a majestic silence about the man who<br />

led her to sin. There is a kindly preacher,<br />

of exemplary behavior, who is adored by<br />

a cruel, hypocritical population and tormented<br />

by abysmal suffering; and an<br />

enigmatic stranger who, in obscurity, harbors<br />

a story, an epoch, and a pain bred in<br />

innate darkness.<br />

The Scarlet Letter can be read simply as a<br />

tale of crime and punishment, good and<br />

evil, sin and redemption. But Hawthorne<br />

has crafted it into a portrait of human<br />

nature, a paean to subtle dignity, a stunning<br />

love story, and a reflection on symbolism<br />

and the relationship between the individual<br />

and the society in which he lives.<br />

Yet the book is also a painstaking, almost<br />

stifling reconstruction of a social reality<br />

that went into founding America and its<br />

national identity. “It is curious that a novel<br />

which is so American in its essential plot<br />

could touch people of such different cultures<br />

with its interplay of emotions and<br />

intrigues,” comments Lobo Antunes in the<br />

preface. It is also curious that Nathaniel<br />

Hawthorne, born a short 40 years after the<br />

Declaration of Independence, was the<br />

descendant of a judge at the infamous<br />

Salem Witch Trials. Henry James stated that<br />

the Scarlet Letter was “the finest piece of<br />

imaginative writing yet put forth in the<br />

country.” Although it deals with a setting<br />

that is long gone, The Scarlet Letter is timeless<br />

and universal.<br />

Parallel no. 6 | FALL | WINTER 2011


Cem Poemas<br />

emily dickinson (A Hundred poems)<br />

Translated into Portuguese, prefaced<br />

and organized by Ana Luisa Amaral<br />

Relógio d’Água, 2010<br />

Her business<br />

was silence<br />

By AnA mArques GAsTão<br />

A circumference is the outer contour of<br />

a circle, the geometrical location of all<br />

the points in a plane that are at a given<br />

distance (the radius) from a given point<br />

called the center. The definition is oblique<br />

when trying to probe the poetry of<br />

Emily Dickinson (1830-1886), as is the<br />

discourse she uses in both her poetry<br />

and correspondence: a veil of silence is<br />

drawn over what is said because it cannot<br />

be stated. When Dickinson wrote in a<br />

letter to Thomas Higginson in July, 1862,<br />

“My Business is circumference,” she was<br />

restating Nicolau de Cusa’s idea “Christ<br />

is the center and the circumference of<br />

intellectual nature; and since the intellect<br />

encompasses all things, Christ is above<br />

all things.” (De docta ignorantia) Dickinson<br />

was aware of what Pascal had stated<br />

when he cited Hermes Trismegisto: “God<br />

is a sphere whose center is everywhere<br />

and whose circumference is nowhere.”<br />

This divine presence-absence, because it<br />

is limitless, can only be at the invisible<br />

center of one’s being, which would justify<br />

the life of silence the poet led. The<br />

“element of blank” in her esoteric poetry<br />

speaks of one thing while meaning<br />

another.<br />

Influenced by the legacy of negative<br />

theology – in the somewhat neo-Platonic<br />

sense – Dickinson built an internal tension<br />

into her disfiguredly stripped-down, dis-<br />

BooK revieWs<br />

tilled verses in which the relentlessly<br />

monotonous meter concealed breaches of<br />

syntax and startling turns of phrase. They<br />

are poems pervaded by a frostiness that<br />

transforms the fiery into the figurative.<br />

The punctuation is erratic and the dashes<br />

become lines, invisible beings, when seen<br />

in the light of sacred geometry: the tracings<br />

of erstwhile static periods on the<br />

move, immaterial and akin to a zero- the<br />

link between silence and speech.<br />

‘ This divine presence-absence,<br />

because it is limitless,<br />

can only be at the invisible<br />

center of one’s being, which<br />

would justify the life of silence<br />

the poet led. The “element<br />

of blank” in her esoteric poetry<br />

speaks of one thing while<br />

meaning another.<br />

In Cem Poemas (Relógio d’Água, 2010),<br />

Ana Luisa Amaral translates one hundred<br />

of Dickenson’s poems. In her preface,<br />

Amaral explains, “By using the figure of<br />

the circumference to define her poetry,<br />

Emily Dickinson stylistically favors the<br />

ellipsis.” She adds that the poet doubly<br />

undermines the figure of the circle “by<br />

replacing it with the distortion of the<br />

center from the lowering and de-centering<br />

found in the geometry of the ellipsis,<br />

and what is absent at the center.” In<br />

both cases allusion is used, as is paradox<br />

in defining “excess through the actual<br />

presence of boundaries” both in the way<br />

the poem appears on the page, and in its<br />

meaning.<br />

Even today, Emily Dickinson’s forays<br />

into the experimental are surprising.<br />

Only ten of her poems were actually<br />

published during her lifetime; and if her<br />

sister Lavinia had obeyed her wish to<br />

destroy all of her writing (Max Brod also<br />

disregarded Kafka’s request), we would<br />

have known next to nothing about this<br />

cloistered woman whose life was spent<br />

between the four walls of her Amherst<br />

home and a garden no one ever visited.<br />

Why didn’t these authors who purportedly<br />

wished to leave no legacy destroy<br />

their own papers? The ambiguity remains,<br />

as does the ethical issue: had their wishes<br />

been respected, works of genius would<br />

have been consigned to the flames.<br />

Ana Luísa Amaral’s work (which does<br />

justice to Sena and Cesariny, and translators<br />

like Hatherly, Llansol, and Júdice) is<br />

not only a rigorous and poetic rendering<br />

of the untranslatable Dickinson (based on<br />

the Johnson edition); it is also the longest<br />

anthology of the poet’s work in translation<br />

to be published in Portugal. The reader is<br />

also regaled with an enlightening and<br />

information-packed preface about the<br />

quasi indefinable and much misinterpreted<br />

poet; a carefully laid-out time line that<br />

is less like a list and more like a biographical<br />

record, since it makes use of letters<br />

and memoirs; and a list of recommended<br />

reading with books on Dickinson that have<br />

been published in Portugal.<br />

Parallel no. 6 | FALL | WINTER 2011 83<br />


Carlucci versus Kissinger<br />

The US and the Portuguese<br />

revolution<br />

Bernardino Gomes<br />

and Tiago moreira de sá<br />

Dom Quixote, 2008<br />

84<br />

The Portuguese<br />

viewed by<br />

the Americans<br />

By e. muJAL-Leon<br />

The Department of Government and the<br />

BMW Center for German and European<br />

Studies at Georgetown University had the<br />

pleasure of hosting a presentation of the<br />

book Carlucci versus Kissinger written by<br />

Bernardino Gomes and Tiago Moreira de<br />

Sá. Also in attendance at the book party<br />

were former US ambassador to Portugal,<br />

Elizabeth Bagley and the current ambassador<br />

of Portugal to the United States<br />

Nuno Brito, as well as a representative<br />

from the <strong>Luso</strong>-American Development<br />

Foundation, Miguel Vaz. It was our very<br />

special privilege on this occasion also to<br />

count with the presence of one of the<br />

protagonists of this book, Ambassador<br />

Frank Carlucci.<br />

Carlucci versus Kissinger is an important,<br />

original, and timely book. Not only does<br />

it remind us of how much was at stake<br />

in those crucial years in Portugal, it also<br />

provides the reader with a perceptive<br />

and thorough account of the Revolution,<br />

the actions of the leading actors and<br />

groups, and the extraordinary transition<br />

to democracy that followed from it.<br />

Other histories have been written about<br />

this period. Two things are unique about<br />

the contribution Carlucci versus Kissinger<br />

makes. First, the book offers a compel-<br />

BooK revieWs<br />

‘ nearly forty years <strong>later</strong>,<br />

this book casts a bright light<br />

on the significance of the<br />

portuguese revolution<br />

and it tells the powerful story<br />

of a nation’s struggle<br />

for democracy.<br />

’<br />

ling analysis of the Portuguese Revolution<br />

as viewed from Washington by US foreign-policy<br />

makers. Second, it provides<br />

us with an intimate account of the<br />

debates that took place within the US<br />

government and of the differences that<br />

developed between Henry Kissinger and<br />

Frank Carlucci over how to respond to<br />

Portuguese events.<br />

Nearly forty years <strong>later</strong>, this book casts<br />

a bright light on the significance of the<br />

Portuguese Revolution and it tells the<br />

powerful story of a nation’s struggle for<br />

democracy. Who could have imagined<br />

that a small country on the European<br />

periphery would awaken from the slumber<br />

of a nearly fifty-year dictatorship,<br />

fend off the efforts of radicals within<br />

the Armed Forces Movement and in the<br />

Communist Party to install a “popular”<br />

democracy, and, then, in a few short<br />

years assume its democratic destiny? This<br />

historic process led one of the major<br />

figures in American political science, the<br />

late Samuel Huntington, to identify the<br />

Portuguese Revolution as the birthplace<br />

for the Third Wave which would in the<br />

space of two <strong>decade</strong>s sweep aside dictatorships<br />

in Southern and Eastern<br />

Europe as well as Latin America.<br />

Carlucci versus Kissinger helps us understand<br />

why Portugal was at epicenter of<br />

world politics during the mid- and late<br />

1970s. The future configuration of<br />

European security and the role of the<br />

Atlantic Alliance hung in the balance<br />

during the Portuguese Revolution. So<br />

did the shape of decolonization in<br />

Southern Africa. Even the Cold War and<br />

the balance of power between the United<br />

States and the Soviet Union would be<br />

deeply influenced by the successful<br />

struggle for democracy in this small<br />

country.<br />

This book offers a penetrating analysis<br />

of US foreign policy during a tumultuous<br />

period, and it underscores the importance<br />

of leadership in political processes.<br />

Too often historians and political<br />

scientists focus on broad and structural<br />

processes. This book reminds us that it<br />

is individuals who make history. Any one<br />

interested in how US foreign policy is<br />

made should read this book. Its documents<br />

and interviews provide a gold<br />

mine of information. The book presents<br />

the riveting story of two major figures<br />

in the US foreign policy establishment<br />

(Henry Kissinger and Frank Carlucci),<br />

their clashes and differences of opinion<br />

toward events in Portugal.<br />

Parallel no. 6 | FALL | WINTER 2011


california presentation<br />

of Landmarks<br />

in Transatlantic Strategy<br />

and the roosevelt Forum<br />

In a drive to reconnect with the Portuguese<br />

communities in California, FLAD held a<br />

number of sessions to present its recentlypublished<br />

book Transatlantic Strategies: From<br />

roosevelt to obama and discuss the Roosevelt<br />

Forum, a FLAD conference held in the<br />

Azores every two years.<br />

Tony Goulart, publisher and noted business<br />

leader of the West Coast’s Portuguese<br />

community, planned the 12 sessions,<br />

which were held at the Portuguese<br />

FLAd signs a protocol<br />

for cultural cooperation<br />

with the regional<br />

Government of the Azores<br />

As part of a cultural project called “The<br />

Archipelago: A Center for Contemporary<br />

Art,” centered on Ribeira Grande in the<br />

Azores, a protocol was signed last July<br />

whereby a number of works from FLAD’s<br />

art collection will go on display in the<br />

archipelago.<br />

Jorge Paulus Bruno, Azores Regional<br />

Director for Culture and FLAD representative<br />

Mário Mesquita stressed the<br />

importance of the newly-established<br />

partnership, which will allow works<br />

from FLAD’s collection to be loaned out<br />

to several shows and exhibitions scheduled<br />

to be held throughout the<br />

region.<br />

In planning each exhibition, the Regional<br />

Director for Culture will present FLAD<br />

with a project detailing the type of show<br />

and the artists he would like to see featured.<br />

FLAD, in turn, has agreed to honor<br />

neWs BrieFs<br />

departments of a number of universities<br />

and community heritage centers from San<br />

Francisco to San Diego.<br />

FLAD administrator Mário Mesquita;<br />

António Vicente, FLAD’s former head of<br />

Portuguese language education in the<br />

US; and Sara Pina, who coordinated the<br />

Portuguese and English language editions<br />

of the book, participated in presentations<br />

and meetings held at<br />

California State University, the J.A.<br />

Freitas Library, San Jose High School,<br />

California State University, the Portuguese<br />

Athletic Club, the San Diego Portuguese<br />

Hall, and at a conference of the <strong>Luso</strong>-<br />

American Education Foundation, among<br />

other venues.<br />

the requests tendered, offering suggestions<br />

whenever possible.<br />

The agreement allows FLAD and the<br />

Azores Regional Government to relaunch<br />

a 2007/2008 initiative in which three<br />

shows – Signs, Intermittent Body, and<br />

Passages – were held in Ponta Delgada,<br />

Angra do Heroísmo and Faial.<br />

Parallel no. 6 | FALL | WINTER 2011 85<br />

D.R.


At times alone. At times accompanied. Was the world already there<br />

before there was reflection? The small scenes explore, to the saturation<br />

point, the enigmatic relationship between a double that is<br />

either opposing or facing his double; they isolate the figures by<br />

replicating them; they make us query the paradoxal originality of<br />

the other, the one that reproduces by replicating itself infinitely,<br />

conveying subtlety, tension, and deceptive fragility in seductive<br />

but potentially aggressive body moves. We draw closer. The images<br />

are fairly opaque, thick, dense, shadowy, obscure, faded almost<br />

unfocused – can clarity be destroyed by clarity? – ill-defined,<br />

precarious, somewhere between “fainting, falling, fading and<br />

faking” (the title of a text by Delfim Sardo in Luxury Bound). Jorge<br />

Molder, whose essentially photographic work is, according to a<br />

number of critics, about “duplicity,” fences with an impressive<br />

dearth of resources, with arguments that duel over the inevitable,<br />

uncanny division of the self. What we see are small Polaroid images<br />

taken from a number of video-recordings Molder made on<br />

the movements of the body during a fencing match. Two bodies<br />

– or figures (or maybe a duplicated body) are wearing the usual<br />

white suits and protective masks that both conceal and reveal the<br />

face. The naked hands relate to each other at different moments<br />

though different poses/gestures, in an arena whose hazy background<br />

is lit by a circular focus-light, expressively delineating a<br />

here and now – hic et nunc – that is almost archaic, germinal,<br />

seminal and symbolic, but one that immediately transports us to<br />

a timeless before and after: “still not a not-any-more.” A past that<br />

is the future perhaps. For João Miguel Fernandes Jorge, “the<br />

Polaroids strengthen the potential reach of that living past.” As he<br />

writes about Molder, he stresses the importance of “being ‘en<br />

garde.’ The Duelers are his domain. In this work, the photographs<br />

are his thoughts exactly. The on-target thrusts constantly lead us<br />

to turn back to the photograph. They create a need for time – and<br />

more time – to examine the consistency of a face that recoils in<br />

flight (and fusion) at every instance into the blackness of the<br />

background.” (text by João Miguel Fernandes<br />

Jorge in the catalogue “Algum Tempo Antes/<br />

Algun Tiempo Antes”, 2006). Discreetly revealed<br />

is a paradoxical dialectic involving mirroring<br />

and a seductive interplay of closing and disclosing<br />

using two perspectives in each one of us,<br />

without time and objective space: Il faut que je sois<br />

mon extérieur, et que le corps d’autrui soit lui-même” (M.<br />

Merleau-Ponty, Phénoménologie de la Perception).<br />

The Polaroid series esgrimitas (the Fencers) is<br />

cited over and over again in texts on Molder’s<br />

career, but the texts rarely explore more than<br />

the basics. The 1986 series with 8 x 8 cm photos<br />

is complemented by two small black-andwhites<br />

(the Polaroids are taken from<br />

video-recordings and the photos are direct<br />

shots) is a quasi-distillation of a number of<br />

86<br />

FLAd ArT coLLecTion<br />

Jorge molder<br />

en garde<br />

features, topics, and pivotal points of the types of discourse<br />

Molder has produced since 1977. The concept of “series” has<br />

been essential since the beginning, as the artist has asserted. Its<br />

meaning is rooted in a “well-known philosophical concept,”<br />

having temporal allusions, and references to belonging and other<br />

attributes that are difficult to clarify. “I know very well where it<br />

begins and eventually discover when it ends, I can manage to<br />

understand the elements that it comprises but what escapes me<br />

completely is the way it works and how it comes about.” (from<br />

the artist’s website) Unfinished – with an alpha but no omega<br />

– this series dealing with the world of fencing is a window into<br />

a few of Molder’s obsessions: primarily topics related to personal<br />

doubles or doppelgangers: an offshoot creature or a replica of<br />

ourselves wandering around out there somewhere.<br />

The fencers in these works “are beings that are a bit special,”<br />

according to Jorge Molder. The clothes, gestures, and anatomy<br />

of a routine that borders on the ritualistic bespeak ideas and<br />

memories of a fundamental archetype that faces the impossible<br />

challenge of the master stroke, the perfect rapier thrust, the<br />

unstoppable, the purest creation illuminated by human talent.<br />

It is a model of inspiration and efficiency which, because of<br />

its nature, discloses a spirit of agony, in a silent duel with its<br />

own image whose reflection seems to escape the boundaries<br />

imposed by the artist, between rejection and retention, obsolescence<br />

and ritual, in constantly imprisoned flux. As George<br />

Kubler has said, “the replications that fill the story effectively<br />

prolong the stability of many past moments, allowing meaning<br />

and model to emerge whenever we turn our attention to these<br />

moments. However, it’s an imperfect instability. Any replica<br />

made by man differs from the model owing to minimal, unpremeditated<br />

differences. The cumulative effects of these differences<br />

act as a slow drift in relation to the archetype.” (A Forma do<br />

Tempo). Perhaps like making a hit while avoiding being touched<br />

by the foil. pedro Faro<br />

A graduate in Philosophy, Jorge Mol‑<br />

der (Lisbon, 1947) began his artistic<br />

career in 1977 with a solo show<br />

entitled “Vilarinho das Furnas (Uma<br />

Encenação), Paisagens com Água,<br />

Casas e Um Trailer.” In 1980, he<br />

collaborated with poets João Miguel<br />

Fernandes Jorge, and Joaquim Manuel<br />

Magalhães on “Uma Exposição”. his<br />

self‑depictions, coupled with strong<br />

references to literature, movies, and<br />

day‑to‑day life start to take shape in<br />

1987 with several series of works.<br />

In 1999, Molder is invited by Delfim<br />

Sardo to represent Portugal at the<br />

48th Venice Biennale, thus confirming<br />

him as one of Portugal’s most impor‑<br />

tant contemporary artists. he was the<br />

director of the Calouste Gulbenkian<br />

Foundation’s Modern Art Center from<br />

1993 to 2009. Jorge Molder’s work<br />

can be found in a number of distin‑<br />

guished Portuguese and international<br />

art collections.<br />

Parallel no. 6 | FALL | WINTER 2011


FLAd ArT coLLecTion<br />

“Don’t move. You won’t move. Someone else, a perfect likeness,<br />

a meticulous phantom-like double will perhaps perform for you, one by one,<br />

the gestures you don’t make.”<br />

Georges perec, The Man Who Sleeps<br />

Untitled (from the series “The Fencers”) 1986, Polaroid snapshots on Canson paper, 8 x 8 cm<br />

Parallel no. 6 | FALL | WINTER 2011 87<br />

LAURA CASTRO CALDAS E PAULO CINTRA


moon over pico<br />

Lucina Ellis, 1996, 48"×54", oil on canvas<br />

88<br />

“I grew up listening to stories about my<br />

grandfather. He was a painter, a strict man.<br />

He left Faial headed to Brazil, leaving behind<br />

a wife expecting a baby, an older daughter,<br />

a son ready for the army, and my father at<br />

the age of thirteen. They travelled to Terceira,<br />

dressed in their best attire, where they<br />

would see my grandfather off on a ship.<br />

The family was to wait for him to settle in<br />

Brazil, and they would go to meet him.<br />

Years passed, waiting, maybe grandfather<br />

had fallen ill, had a new family, or perhaps<br />

had been killed! He never knew how much<br />

a part of me he is, and in my heart I too<br />

waited for him.<br />

Today, a photo of Pico is pinned to my<br />

studio wall. One day my father walked up<br />

my driveway carrying a dark and grey<br />

photo. He wanted a painting of the photo.<br />

My father was longing for a life once lived<br />

with his father while a young boy painting<br />

churches in Faial and Pico.<br />

I painted an ever lasting bright day, chunks<br />

of yellow, textures, and visible brush strokes,<br />

and Pico ornamented with clouds of soft<br />

hue, remembering a boat ride from Pico<br />

to Faial, the ocean water dancing around<br />

my fingers.”<br />

Lucina ramos ellis, artist<br />

Parallel no. 6 | FALL | WINTER 2011<br />

D.R.

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