The slogan
the PL has chosen for its electoral campaign is Malta Tagħna Lkoll. The rationale
behind such a slogan, as has been explained numerous times by the PL exponents
and Joseph Muscat himself, is to give a sense of unity rather than of division.
In their bid
towards national unity, the PL have been continuously criticising the PN for
mentioning parts of our recent, and not so recent, political history, because
this fosters division not unity.
Are the PL
right or wrong? Is the PN fostering division, when its exponents remind us of
the not so glorious past of the PL?
Quite
honestly, there is no clear cut answer.
Admittingly,
the mentioning of such instances can foster division in our nation, especially
when more than half the Maltese population has a vivid experience of those
turbulent times. Due to this many, I included, tend to recount them with a lot
of passion. In this sense, the spirit which Joseph Muscat is trying to instill
in his party, and beyond, (even if 25 years late) is commendable.
One however
has to be cautious, because the arguments put forward by the PL seem to be
based on the premise that in order to foster unity we need to forget the past
and focus on the future.
Frankly, I
disagree with this reasoning. In my opinion, such a rationale is not only wrong
but, more importantly, does not lead to national unity.
But before
continuing further, we need to stop and reflect on the notion of national
unity. What do we understand by national unity? This is one question I would
like some intelligent journalist to ask the leaders of the political parties.
Some, seem to equate it with the way all fairy-tales end "....and they
lived happily ever after." Or to the one described by Ġuże' Ellul Mercer
in his writing Malta Ġenna tal-art.
The notion
of national unity is a very complex issue. I will tackle it in another post. For the
sake of this post, it is sufficient to realise that such a notion needs to be
problematized. Now, back to importance of history.
Everyone
will agree with me that our future needs to be built on solid ground. Well, in
my view (and many others who are more intelligent than I can ever aspire to
be), a crucial component of that solid ground is our past. The study of our
history helps us to better understand ourselves - from where have our present
values originated? Why segments of Maltese behave the way they do? Moreover, by
critically reflecting on the mistakes our ancestors, or we, have done we may be
able to avoid making similar mistakes.
It therefore follows that if we really do
not want history to repeat itself, one way to do it is by remembering it.
Good blog and very valid arguments brought forward ... looking forward to see your blogon the notion of national unity
ReplyDeleteOne thing people have to understand is the fact that it will not only be Joseph Muscat who will be elected to parliament/government. Politicians who were active at the time when Malta was divided under the Mintoff government are still active in the MLP today. So its great that Muscat is trying to mend the rift which was opened by Mintoff and his divisive politics - but people like Debono Grech, Karmenu Vella, Lino Spiteri, among other relics who defend Mintoffian politics till this very day - these people are not to be trusted in running our country. You have other MLP politicians who have been very clear in the past that they are labour candidates and once elected they will be a labour government for a labour supporters. I doubt how much Muscat will change their mentality.
ReplyDeleteHaving said this - fostering unity is always important. The PN always did this in every campaign - this is why we live in a less divisive country. I would be more inclined to believe Muscat's quest for unity if it weren't so copy-pasted from Obama's 2008 presidential campaign (speeches, photo-shoots, song, logo, book launch - you name it).