Iasi, Romania Photo by Valyt |
A little while ago, a Lithuanian reader of
this blog commented on a post I’d written about Vilnius . He suggested that historians
(including, I think, me) should be wary of nostalgia for the Central European
past. That comment came back to me this spring in Poznań , when I was eating dinner in a
‘Jewish’ restaurant (Jewish recipes, non-kosher, apparently cooked by
non-Jewish Poles), which advertised itself as offering fine food and
‘nostalgia’. This week, I finished reading Georgina Harding’s Orange Prize
short-listed novel The Painter of Silence,
set in Romania
in the 1930s to 1950s. It is about an aristocratic girl and her deaf childhood
companion, as they make the transition from rural pre-war idyll, to a country
devastated by war and totalitarianism. The most memorable sections of this
deeply humane novel describe the estate at Poiana. I was struck by how well
this British writer has captured the way in which Central Europeans from
privileged pre-war backgrounds talk about their family homes – the modest but
perfectly formed manor house, orchards with an impossible abundance of fruit,
enchanted lakes, the warm and devoted servants. Painter of Silence deals very much in the currency of nostalgia,
that of the protagonist Safta and her class, and our own romanticised image of
a timeless, Chekovian Central European countryside.
Nostalgia, for individuals and
societies, is surely a (superficial?) way of processing profound loss; loss of family
pasts and houses, of entire peoples and cultures. Nonetheless, I can see my
Lithuanian reader’s point, that some of its manifestations are intellectually
problematic and morally uncomfortable. It can lead to a saccharine reading of Central Europe ’s extraordinarily violent 20C past,
casting it (especially pre 1939) as a innocent land of fairy tale. The Poznań
restaurant’s whistful recreation of spiced Jewish pancakes, the idealisation of
pre-war Romanian aristocratic life, and perhaps even my grandmother’s magical
realist stories about 1920s Vilnius are a way of keeping real history at bay – perhaps
to make it easier to cope with, but also perhaps to avoid engaging with the
dark reality of what lies beneath. So nostalgia is probably a gremlin that
historians – not least historians of Central Europe
- should keep a keen eye on.