downtown (Granollers, V. Oriental) |
Yesterday, 11th September (the Diada), walking around Granollers with a friend I spotted a building hosting the
offices of 2 "pretty opposite" political parties: Ciutadans and SI. How
might be their daily life sharing that building? I think the elites are much
less democratic than citizens and small representations and delegations of
parties. It's people who are rather moved by feelings, by belongingness to a
collective or a society and it's people who really deal with real problems in
any country. And thus it should be citizens who, empowered, manage to change
things. It was on the occasion of La Diada that people displayed a shared
feeling of belongingness to a collective, to a society and to an identity. I
did like the romantic side of such a collective action as was the Catalan Way (I found it beautiful and awe inspiring),
even though I can't be any kind of nationalist (I rather focus on non-attachment
and becoming a bit more selfless and less linked to any identity).
Internationalism has also a romantic side but it's somehow less compatible (I'd
say) with human nature and nowadays proneness to focus on the self and
personalization of whatever might be customizable. Well, I'm talking about
western culture countries in general.
Ah...but there's a
nuance of internationalism within any nationalism in the sense that people from
any place are prone to feel attached to a sense of belongingness to a culture,
to a nation. We're all social creatures and need to some extent some kind of
approval and "haven" from our peers. I know I can't deny I belong to
a society and a culture, but I can't go beyond that and have nationalist or
belongingness feelings. Facts on the one hand and subjectivity on the other
hand.
No comments:
Post a Comment