VIENNA: FIRE IN THE PALACE OF JUSTICE

90 years ago, in 1927, the Palace Of Justice, seat of the Supreme Court, was set on fire. Rightwing supporters of the Front Fighters’ Union, which counted later war criminal Adolf Eichmann among its members, clashed with members of the Schutzbund, the paramilitary organization of the social democratic party. The day before, a district court had unjustly acquitted members of the Front Fighters’ Union from shooting and killing two innocent bystanders, a 40 year old and a 8 year old, in another confrontation with the Schutzbund.

These were the days of the Civil War, which led the young Republic of Austria into its demise: Austria was swallowed by fascism, integrated into Hitler’s Third Reich and buried under ashes in the WWII.

84 people vanished in the fire. 60 millions in WWII and the holocaust.

In 2017 the Palace of Justice sparkles with gold again. Trust in law and justice seems undisturbed.
The eyes of Justitia are blind as she sits enthroned, holding on to her sword, and clutching a book.
What book is she reading, blindly?

Istanbul: Lesson in Sufism

He serves tea. As he balances the tray with the bulbous tea glasses, he spills the tea. His left leg is shorter, arched like a sickle, so when he walks he sways like a boat on choppy sea. I notice his crooked left leg only now. His grey suit is a few sizes too big, crumpled, and wrinkles around his ankles. It looks even older than himself. Threadbare at the elbows and knees, it shrouds his body rather than dresses it. It blurs the details of his physique. As he sets the tray on the table in front of me, I smell tobacco and terpentine, and the dusty scent of old age. His hair is grey, his face wrinkled, his moustache white. But his lopsided smile is boyish, his blue eyes are fresh, sparkling almost. I cannot remember how to say “Thank you” in Turkish. So I bow and mumble “Moteshakkaram”.  I speak a little Persian and hope that people in Istanbul, or at least he, Avni, will understand me.

He takes a seat next to me on a shaky chair. It’s a jumbled ensemble of a table and three chairs. Maybe these are valuable antiques, were they restored. But they are splintered and skew like Avni’s leg, and spotted with colors from his atelier, his painter’s workshop in steep, cobbled Siraselviler Street. The sun is baking the city, but here, in front of Avni’s open workshop door, it’s shady and cool. A soft breeze tousles his hair as I feel strands of my hair lift off my head and dance in the air.

I gaze through the open door inside at the painting I want to buy. It’s just a tiny canvas, hardly bigger than a the tray he had carried the tea with, suspended high up on the wall. It is dwarfed by the big frames hanging next to it, or leaning against the wall below. The little painting could be just a coral white stain on an ocean-blue backdrop. Or it could be the shape of a dancing Dervish.

Mavlana. “ Avni says.

Mavlana!” I repeat and put my hand on my chest. Mavlana, the whirling Sufi poet. “I love.” Avni must have understood the word “love”, for he nods his head enthusiastically and starts reciting. I don’t understand Turkish, but it must be a poem by Rumi, the Master, Mavlana, as the Turkish call him.

It’s a rhythmic singsong that reflects the mountainous streets of Istanbul, this dizzying web of narrow lanes, uphill, downhill, jammed with cars and buses, crowded with bearded men, high heeled women, and children, with cats and dogs, and filled with laughter and calls for prayer, and with the scents of cumin, of Shisha, and of cat piss. I do not understand the words as Avni proclaims the poem, lifting his arms as if dancing in trance, as if painting on an imaginary canvas, but my heart is filled with peace, enriched. I don’t understand the words, but I understand Avni.  And as I look into his wild blue eyes, strangely, I know he understands me.

 

 

ROOMS WITHOUT A VIEW

 

On this side of Johannesburg, the streets are lined with giant trees, chestnuts, oaks and jacarandas, that shelter from the late summer showers. Instead, their leaves and petals rain down on to the asphalt.

In the silence of Houghton and Saxon Wold, the streets are lined with walls that hide the villas and palaces behind, crowned with electric wire. Their sliding gates, made from steal or iron, open like mouths to swallow the shiny BMWs and Jaguars, and close right behind, affording but a glimpse of the meticulous lawns inside, the pools, the children’s swings and bicycles.

Tall and insurmountable, they barricade the view on those who wander outside, in silence: The domestics in white shirts and blue aprons, and the men from security who sit and wait outside, 24/7.

 

Tendani Mukololi lives on the other side of Johannesburg, in the crowded, squatted Vodacom-tower, without electricity or garbage collection. But every day for the past twelve years he has been sitting in his little hut in Houghton, guarding, surveilling, protecting what he cannot see.

“Aren’t you afraid of me? I am a black man!” He asks, as I stop to for a chat.

“No,” I answer. “You are from security.”