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Quote by Antonio Muñoz Molina

“Celui qui voyage peut garder un silence qui sera mystérieux pour les inconnus qui le remarquent, ou céder sans danger à la tentation de parler et de devenir un menteur, d'enjoliver un épisode de sa vie en la racontant à quelqu'un qu'il ne verra plus jamais. Je crois qu'il n'est pas vrai, comme on le dit, qu'en voyageant on pourrait devenir un autre : ce qui se passe, c'est qu'on se trouve allégé de soi-même, de ses obligations et de son passé, tout comme on réduit tout ce qu'on possède aux quelques choses nécessaires à son bagage. La partie la plus pesante de notre identité s'appuie sur ce que les autres savent ou pensent de nous. Ils nous regardent et nous savons qu'ils savent, et en silence ils nous obligent à être ce qu'ils attendent que nous soyons, à agir conformément à certaines habitudes que nos actions antérieures ont établies, ou aux soupçons que nous n'avons pas conscience d'avoir éveillés. Ils nous regardent et nous ne savons pas qui ils peuvent bien voir en nous, ni ce qu'ils inventent ou décident que nous sommes.”

Quote by Antonio Muñoz Molina

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Antonio Muñoz Molina

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“One of the most famous enemies of Soviet communism is Vladimir Bukovsky. He was tortured by Soviet authorities and spent many years in Soviet prisons. He was even declared “insane” and sent to a psychiatric prison. When Bukovsky was exiled to the West, people paid lip service to his courage; but few heeded his warnings about Gorbachev’s Perestroika. Bukovsky reminded everyone that all Soviet leaders were liars. Gorbachev, he said, was no exception—and was certainly no democrat. Like Lenin, Stalin, Khrushchev, and Brezhnev, Gorbachev was a liar and a hangman. But hardly anyone listened. Everyone wanted to believe the Cold War was over.”

“Bukovsky reminded everyone that all Soviet leaders were liars. Gorbachev, he said, was no exception—and was certainly no democrat. Like Lenin, Stalin, Khrushchev, and Brezhnev, Gorbachev was a liar and a hangman. But hardly anyone listened. Everyone wanted to believe the Cold War was over. But how could we have won the Cold War? This was the inconvenient question Bukovsky asked. Random House senior editor Jason Epstein rejected Bukovsky’s question altogether. And so, Bukovsky’s book on the equivocal “fall of communism” was not published in English—until now.”

“Gorbachev’s injunctions to go ‘back to Lenin’, to ‘socialism with a human face’, his yearning to uncover some constitutive humanism in the origins of Communist ideology, elicited no response except insofar as they offered a convenient form of protest, and then only so long as people feared and believed in the durability of Communism, and remained afraid to express themselves openly. In order to implement his plan to democratize the Soviet state while preserving its ideological heritage, Gorbachev needed a certain number of people who understood his calls not as mere rhetoric, but as literal and sincere. These people never appeared.”