On September 11, 2001, I was sitting on the floor of my sister’s living room [in Gothenburg, Sweden], babysitting her one-year-old daughter
recalls
Annika Hernroth-Rothstein in National Review (tack så mycket till
Instapundit).
I had just gotten back from a year in France. A few months earlier,
I’d been standing in a crowded bar on Place de Clichy, celebrating my
20th birthday. I remember that night, although several bottles of bad
white wine say I shouldn’t. I was surrounded by my peers, other
upper-middle-class liberals who had fled to Paris to fulfill their
fantasy. We had come to this historical city to live the life of songs
and books and Technicolor movies. We were radicals. We were heroes. We
were going to change the world.
The people with me in that bar were a random sample of the political
atmosphere of Europe at the time. Militant feminists, pro-Palestinians,
members of the autonomic environmentalist movement, and your run-of
the-mill anti-government thugs. Having a friend who had been jailed for
rioting was as necessary as a Malcolm X T-shirt and a back-pocket
paperback of Catcher in the Rye. I gladly picked up that uniform, just as I picked up rocks and banners knowing that this was the ticket to ride.
Raised in a family of academics, this was a natural evolution on my
part and a result of a serious political interest. I identified as an
intellectual and as a political thinker with a critical mind. What I
failed to acknowledge at the time was that my country was a controlled
environment and that the spectrum on which political analysis took place
was limited. Not unlike The Truman Show, where the choices you
think you are making were already made for you long ago, and any dreams
of a different fate are swiftly corrected.
I left my one-bedroom apartment in the chic slum of the 19th
Arrondissement in June 2001. I was headed back to Gothenburg, Sweden,
and the mass protest against the EU summit and George W. Bush. I planned
to be back in time to see the first leaves fall on the Champs Elysées.
Turns out, that didn’t happen.
Night fell and morning broke before I managed to get off that floor
to answer my phone. On the other end I heard my boyfriend’s voice,
chanting frantically:
Two more towers! Two more towers! Two more towers!
He and his friends were having a party, celebrating the attack on
America. He called to invite me, and to this day I have never felt such
intense shame.
During his speech on September 14, 2001, President Bush said that
adversity introduces us to ourselves. Well, on that day I was introduced
to who I had been and who I truly was. I saw my own place in the
context of history, and how the ideas that I helped promote, the
accusations I had met with silence, all had a part in shaping the world I
now saw burning before me.
It wasn’t a game. I had played it, but it was never a game.
In the weeks that followed, I watched the American news with one eye,
and its European counterpart with the other. It was like seeing the
slow shifting of the tectonic plates, dividing the world through op-eds
and analysis. On September 12, 2001, the headline of the largest Swedish
newspaper read, “We Are All Americans.” A few weeks later, that
beautiful creed had already been forgotten. The one time my country
could side with the U.S. was when America was on its knees, but when it
refused to stay down it quickly went back to the smug relativism of
World War II, the icy efficiency of a country never having to fight for
either ethics or its existence.
Soon enough, the narrative was clear. The end of the story had
already been written: The U.S. was unjustly acting as the world police,
once again. Bush was a moron and a puppet. America was killing innocent
people for oil. It went on and on, and all I could think was that if I
know that these things are not true, then what other lies have I
accepted as truth throughout my life?
So I pulled at the thread of my ideology, and it all unraveled before me.
On September 20, I watched Bush’s address to Congress. I had heard
him speak before, but on this night, I listened — and one sentence
jumped out and grabbed me:
“Freedom and fear, justice and cruelty, have always been at war, and we know that God is not neutral between them.”
So I asked myself if I was free. Not free in movement or by law, but
free in thought and intellect. I was not, nor had I ever been. The
politics I had held and protected so violently were a version of the
norm, and for all my intellect and breeding I had done nothing more than
tout the company line.
I left everything that year; it was like walking away from the scene
of a crime. I remember thinking that it would have been easier leaving a
cult — at least then there would be a welcoming, sane majority on the
other side. Or if there had been a physical wall to climb and a dictator
to topple, instead of the silent oppression of the consensus.
My country did not change that day, but I had to; the tectonic plates where shifting, and I decided to jump.
When I stood in that bar toasting myself, I thought I was a radical. Today, as a neocon in Sweden, I know I was wrong.
I was raised in a country where that neutrality — that indifference
before right and wrong — is a badge of honor. I was taught that morality
is weakness, faith is ignorance, and the concept of good and evil is
cause for ridicule.
On September 11, 2001, I saw, for the first time, the difference
between fear and freedom, and I vowed not to be neutral between them,
ever again.
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