| INTERVIEW >
Fedor Gál: "I have helped a lot of
people"
Written by: René Jakl
Photo by: René Jakl
The former leader of People Against
Violence (VPN) lost a struggle with Vladimír Mečiar for a united
Czechoslovakia. Now his G plus G publishing house prints books as
interesting and provocative as his life.
In your publishing house, you often publish books about xenophobia,
violence and minorities. Why are you so interested in this?
The motivation is personal. I have experienced myself what it means
to be a member of a minority. It is a lifetime theme for me. The
first book that I published was about nationalism, and eighty percent
of the other books are about the holocaust, the Romany, transsexuals,
children with Down's syndrome - simply various minorities.
And what is your personal experience?
I experienced what it means to be a Jew in an intolerant society,
a cosmopolitan among nationalists, an advocate of a united Czechoslovakia
among its adversaries, etc. My friends have similar experiences.
It is an especially terrible situation for the Romany.
How do you perceive your Jewishness?
I am not a religious Jew, but I definitely know I'm a Jew and I
am indebted to that for many things. It is an important part of
my personality. Just as I'm a Slovak, a sociologist, a man. I realized
my Jewishness while confronting anti-semitism. In an ideal liberal
world, it wouldn't even enter my mind to consider my Jewishness
as something that deserves attention.
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In the past, the lack of information and knowledge certainly
contributed to the intolerance towards minorities. What is this
based on today, in this age of information and dissolving cultures?
Information technology and globalization have certainly not resulted
in a reduction of simpletons, that would be an incorrect assumption.
In addition, more and more of us are in this small space, and certain
types of aggression are growing. It is a war for territory, for
a piece of land in which you feel secure, and where other people
are similar to you. It is useless, but most people fear those who
are different from them. Another reason is that if I wanted to punch
someone it would be better if he was weaker than I am. And this
is how it is for minorities.
You said that the number of "simpletons" has not declined.
But you can see an inclination towards tolerating xenophobia in
intelligent people too. Is this maybe a modern relativist attitude?
This a dangerous trend. When I was tolerant of everything, I was
also tolerant of evil and nonsensical values. Liberalism from minus
infinity to plus infinity is the resignation of character, values
and principles.
Before the last parliamentary elections, MF Dnes asked who you
would vote for. Your answer wasn't clear, but it seemed as if you
were thinking of ODS, which based its campaign on the defense of
national interests. How is this possible?
I am glad you asked me. I really wanted to vote for ODS. I had the
feeling that Czech society needs conservative policies for the next
four years, mainly in the economy. But then Klaus made a statement
against multiculturism and waved the flag for national interests.
I felt in it something similar to why I left Slovakia. So I said
to myself, no. For the newspaper, I said ODS, but in the end I voted
for the Green Party based on Jakub Patočka's appeals.
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So what do you think of the Czech government today?
It seems like the government doesn't even suspect that entrepreneurs
are the people who create job opportunities and wealth in the country.
Who should help the economy to get stronger, if not them? To expect
positive financial input from steel works and mining is nonsense.
I am really a little bit afraid of it. Every healthy country devotes
its times of prosperity to creating supplies for times of crisis.
The last four years of the social democratic government was a time
of relative prosperity and economic growth, and they saved nothing
at all. They just put us into debt.
And what about the new political leaders in Slovakia? What do
you think about Mečiar's comeback?
He will not be the same as when he left. In fact, he was thrown
out of the top post three times and always came back, each time
a little different. However, he is still the same crook he always
was. Now his comeback is aggravated by many things. His Movement
for a Democratic Slovakia disintegrated, and there is also the big
Lexa case. In general, the situation in Slovakia is worse than in
the Czech Republic, because the most powerful parties in Slovakia
are not standard - the television party of Rusko, owner of Markíza,
the ethnic party of Slovak-Hungarians, the populist party of Slovak
Heider Robert Fico, and others such as this.
What do you think of the Czech media today?
I was almost moved by what the media did with the dramatic situation
of the floods. I have in mind public television and radio, which
fulfilled their function one hundred and ten percent. I am informed
without having the wool pulled over my eyes. When I don't take this
into account, then the media market is underdeveloped in the same
way as the economy and many other things. And I was there when one
medium was born.
| A
life in numbers |
| 1945 |
born in the Terezín
concentration camp where his mother and brother were deported
from Slovakia. His father was shot at the end of the war
during the march of death. |
| 1972 |
graduated
as a part-time student from the chemical technology department
at the Slovak University of Technology, started to work
in research and, until 1989, focused on prognostics |
| 1989 |
co-founded the political
party People Against Violence, which he, as chairman,
brought to victory in parliamentary elections |
| 1992 |
received
a doctorate of economics, obtained Czech citizenship and
gave up his Slovak citizenship |
| 1993 |
as a shareholder in
CET 21, co-founded the first commercial television station,
Nova |
| 1995 |
after
selling his share in Nova, founded the G plus G publishing
house |
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How did Nova originate at the time?
Our team got together spontaneously. The fact that it was us who
won the tender can be attributed to the fact that we were able to
prove the good capital background of our American partner and had
good lobbyists. Železný was a truly great negotiator, as was Mark
Palmer. Nevertheless, in the end the license was granted to a group
of people who had no experience with broadcasting commercial television.
We entered the business unprepared and naive, and that is how it
turned out.
When and why did you leave?
I realized that my mentality does not like being part of something
in which I have zero influence. I was a super-minority owner. And
why shouldn't I say it - when I left I unshackled my hands and so
was able to do what I wanted. I established the publishing house.
It took me six years to learn how to produce books. We were amateurs
at everything. When I realized that I was one of the most powerful
politicians in Czechoslovakia without any preparation or experience,
a shiver ran down my spine.
How much did you get for selling your share?
I won't tell you how much I got from Nova. I can only tell you that
thanks to the Nova deal, I was able to shoot an animated series
for children, publish seventy-five books and resolve my private
financial situation. Which means having a good home, driving a fine
car and not having to think of getting up at six o'clock in the
morning because I had to be at work at seven in order to make a
living.
Did it later bother you that you participated in the Nova project?
I have started many projects in my life and many of them ended very
badly. When you don't do anything, you can't do anything wrong.
Sure, I had a different vision, but what else can I say today?
Where do you see yourself in ten years?
I would like to write the book of my life, called "The Human
Lot". It is an attempt to interpret life through the lens of
our culture and civilization. For now, I am researching it and making
notes. It shouldn't be about me, but about something in which I
live.
How would you describe yourself in three words?
Hectic, absent-minded, naive...but honest.
How would you like people to remember you?
I have helped a lot of people. It sounds egocentric, but why shouldn't
I say it? If I am proud of one thing, it is that there are particular
people in this world whom I have helped in the difficult periods
of their lives. I have hurt some people too, but not consciously.
When you ask someone who doesn't like me what the worst moments
in my life are, he will quickly knock off: 'Gál? He was chairman
of VPN when Mečiar became Prime Minister of the Slovak government.
He was the top politician when Czechoslovakia began to dissolve.
And then when he left politics, he established that damn TV Nova".
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