Tuesday, October 17, 2006

The birth of a copycat

On Friday 13th October, Jone Nikula and Ari Halttunen published the first edition of their brand new free magazine that will be distributed across Finnish cities and we hope that it will bring them bad luck. The familiar name of this new magazine is 'Ovi'.

Yes, they have stolen our name, a name we have built a reputation upon for three years and has become intrinsically connected with everything we do here at www.ovimagazine.com as the Ovi team.

We categorically state that the copycat has nothing to do with us and we ask for your continuing support,

The Ovi Team

Below is a copy of the mail we sent to the staff of the copycat magazine:

The Ovi magazine and the Ovi team feels obliged to say that the name of your magazine is simply splendid – we bet you gave great thought to its selection, after dismissing names like the New York Times, Newsweek, The Economist, you decided to send your creativity sky high using our magazine’s three-year-old name. Your graphic designer also did a splendid job as well; we bet their portfolio features other names like Leevi's Jeans, Colpa Cabana, Roleks and others.

Just as we have done over the last four months, we promise to answer all the mails coming to Ovi magazine and Ovi lehti, both names that are registered to us, but we suppose you already know that.

Actually, in a telephone call a few months ago with Ari Halttunen, he gave the rather entertaining answer, "We didn’t know you existed; we checked the internet!" You definitely knew about us since then and you know that we are the only true Ovi magazine and are one of the very few daily magazines in the world.

We wish you luck in the harsh world of free Finland newspapers, although we are confident you will find a niche among City, Voima, SixDegrees, V, Metro, Uutis 100, Nöjesguiden, Sue and Spektr. We're sure we missed four or five – oddly, we are so organized that we have carried out research into the future of free magazines and it doesn't look good.

We are certain you will finish on top of the pile…just before they are sent away for recycling. We're joking, although you are printing your magazine on recycled paper, aren't you? It is only coming out ten times a year, so you could always pass the cost onto your advertisers - let's hope the Green Party use you to promote their candidates in the coming elections. Ahhh, irony!

Luckily, you have the web edition of your magazine to champion yourselves online at the catchy URL of www.ovi-lehti-fi. Nice. Don't most of your competitors just have their title and dot fi? Oh well, we are sure it will work out through the search engines and your readers will not stumble upon any original titled online magazines…hmm.

Seriously, we wish you the best and if a copy happens to blow down the street and strike a leg then we may scrape it off the ground and have a read.

The Ovi Team

P.S. Despite the warnings, even from Roman Schatz, that you act as a copycat and our warnings that you shouldn’t base your future on somebody else’s work, you ignored everything. It's natural that we are going to publish the truth, warn advertisers and readers at every single chance.

Wednesday, October 11, 2006

"Minä elän" Finnish literature

This is an article published in the last issue of the Ovi magazine - Ovi lehti - TheOviMagazine

To write an article about Finnish literature, especially about Alexis Kivi, is something I found very difficult. I think the main reason was not that there is a lack of rich Finnish literature, on the contrary, but mainly because there is so little Finnish literature translated into other languages and even less translated well into English.

I use the English translation because, except for one book that I read in Greek, the majority of Finnish literature I’ve read it is from English translations and I have to say that, aside from some bright exceptions, most of them were very badly translated. This gets worse when you feel how poorly some books are translated, which not only fails the reputation of the Finnish original but also the English translation.

Language has been the main barrier for Finnish literature to expand worldwide and I would have agreed until I read a fantastic book by Väinö Linna called Under the North Star, translated into English by Richard Impola. I have said it often before, but the work Mr. Impola did for that work is simply excellent.

What made the main difference between Mr. Impola’s translation and the others? I think it was his excellent knowledge in both languages and English-thinking countries. There is again a difference between English-speaking and English-thinking, Singapore is an English-speaking country, but you would never say that it is an English-thinking country. The same applies to many countries, especially due to British colonization.

Coming back to Finnish literature, often the translators are Finns who competently speak the language they translate, but they have grown-up in a country where her own people believe that there are certain words that you cannot translate and you must be a Finn to understand them. Therefore, reading some of these translations you find them full of un-translated Finnish words which are very important for the plot, but without knowing them spoils the whole thing.

For example, I have often found in Finnish books the word 'sisu' as it is. No, there is not an exact word to translate it, since it is more of a feeling and state of physique and mind. However, how do you translate the English phrase, 'I feel blue' or the Americanism, 'I got the blues'? 'I feel blue' and 'I got the blues', even though in the same language, they have a whole ocean of experiences and semantics to separate them. Oddly enough, there is a word in Greek that means exactly the same thing: 'sisu' – and I have often read articles from translators complaining on how difficult it was to translate words using the very same word as an example.

As I mentioned before, Mr. Impola obviously performed a miracle and translated Linna’s trilogy giving shape and meaning to all these impossible to translate Finnish words. I know that I have gone on for a long time talking about translations and translators, but that mainly explains why there aren’t many Finnish books translated well into other languages.

A second issue with Finnish literature is its very unique style. Finns, in general, think that everybody is born in the forest, next to a lake, used to temperatures of -20 Celsius and are people of silence, few words and a very practical life and this becomes an important part of their literature. You find yourself while reading a novel often not understanding that the winter is not a case of a few hours, but more like a few months. You find out that in a land where forest covers over 70% of the land, humans have built special ties with the trees. These very ideas and thoughts expressed in dry words must be able to transport you from a noisy Mediterranean seaside to the quiet Finnish lakeside.

For centuries there was no Finnish literature other than some religious books, but in the mid-19th century one book was published that marks the real beginning of Finnish literature. The book was Alexis Kivi’s The Seven Brothers. In other articles I have often written about the rich Finnish literature, but Alexis Kivi is a very special chapter in this story. Even he was a character; a unique individual whose life could easily become a dramatic novel.

Alexis Kivi (1834-1872), originally Alexis Stenvall, is the Finnish national writer, poet, playwright, novelist and the creator of modern Finnish literature. He was the first Finn to become a professional writer and published all his works in Finnish. According to everybody who has read his work, his masterpiece is the aforementioned novel Seitsemän Verjestä (Seven Brothers) published two years before his death in 1870.

Alexis Kivi came from a very poor family - his father was a tailor - and was educated, which means he spoke and wrote in Swedish, the language of the intellectuals at that time in Finland. The Finnish awakening found Alexis Stenvall early and he changed his name from the Swedish 'Stenvall', meaning 'stone bar', into the Finnish 'Kivi', meaning 'stone'. I’m not planning to go through his life, since it is easy to that information elsewhere online.

Seven Brothers, in its English translation, is a difficult book to read; actually, it is a dull and boring book that you often feel like ignoring pages, if not whole chapters. That was my reaction the first time I read it and that was the first year I arrived in Finland. Four years later, I read it again. Actually, I read it twice in the same year and, in the end, I found Alexis Kivi. I found a book with very clever dark humor.

Seven orphan brothers, before their confirmation into the Finnish Lutheran Church where they will have to learn reading and writing, escape into the wilderness and experience all sorts of disasters. Kivi, in his book, challenges the very inner of the Finnish psyche. He challenges ideas and taboos. He even challenges the ideas that Finns have for themselves and are idealized with words like 'sisu'. The seven brothers show the face of brutality, laziness, ignorance and sometime stupidity, but the same seven brothers find the power to overcome the difficulties and return to society stronger than they were before they left.

After the third reading I had come to love the book. Here came another issue: when I showed my enthusiasm to my Finnish friends I had to deal with their skepticism and often sarcasm. You see, the Finnish school system managed to do exactly the same as most schools around the world and made the book a must-read and a daily lesson, thereby turning it into a most hateful book and never read by Finns after leaving school.

Later, after becoming more aware of the Finnish psyche and environment, I read Kivi’s plays. I just loved them. There is one where Kivi describes civil servants. I think I was laughing all the through his cynical way of describing lazy bureaucrats and the barriers they put for their comfort, including their effort to avoid responsibilities, which places them within a labyrinth of obligations and stupidity.

Last were Kivi’s poems: Sydämeni laulu (Grove of Tuoni, grove of night / Song of my Heart), a poem that inspired Sibelius to compose a song (Op 18 No 6):

Tell me, my child,
My summer bright, tell me:
wouldst thou not sail away from here to a haven of everlasting peace
while the white pennant of childhood still flies clean?
On the shore of a misty, tideless lake stands the dark manor of Tuoni;
there in the heart of a shadowy grove,
in the bosom of a dewy thicket a cradle is prepared for thee
with snowy linen and wrappings.
Hear therefore my song; it wafts thee to the land of the Prince of Tuoni.

Grove of Tuoni could be translated as the 'Grove of death'. Kivi is Edgar Alan Poe in Finnish. This was the first Kivi poem I ever read and it was the one that made me love his poetry. Kivi’s dark humour is here as well.

During the last years of his life, Alexis Kivi suffered from health and financial problems ending in a hospital for schizophrenia treatment, where psychiatry was still in embryonic condition and experimental treatment in the early second half of the 19th century. In the spring of 1872, his brother brought him to Tuusula, where he lived in a small cottage, to be precise, inside the sauna of the small cottage. He died on December 31st, 1872, and, as the legend has it, his last words were: "Minä elän! (I am alive!)

Now dig my grave
Beneath the bay willows' boughs
And with blackness cover it over again,
The for evermore
Go from my domain:
I wish to slumber in peace.

- From the poem Weariness

Wednesday, October 04, 2006

Angry with God

This is an article published in the last issue of the Ovi magazine - Ovi lehti - TheOviMagazine

There is no way to understand what was going on in that man’s mind while he killed three girls of ages between three and six in cold blood and seriously wounded another six of the same age in an Amish community, Pennsylvania, USA. Actually, I’m not sure if I want to know, but a conversation I had earlier triggered my thoughts.

The conversation ended with: Why are you thinking to write about it? It happens so often nowadays! So it does, and that makes us ignore it, thinking of it as less tragic, accepting it and trying to adopt a new way of protecting our kids? And how can we do that? How do we dare do that?

I never lived in an Amish society and I have only seen the Amish a few times, only once live, the rest in a Hollywood film with most popular Witness starring Harrison Ford. From what I have read and seen, including all these films, the Amish people are the most peaceful people on this planet, many keeping away from technology and social events, however big these might be and however much these events might influence their lives.

For most of my life I lived in big capitals. I used to live in average middle class places near the centre of the cities. After a while, I came to recognise the faces of the local dealers and the pushers. When they robbed a neighbour’s house we all somehow knew who did it. Still, we all thought that it was a fine neighbourhood, there were worse, much worse in the same town. And then came Finland, no Amish around, but it is a quiet place to have kids and that’s something we often mention with my friends, a nice place to have kids.

But then, which place is nice to have kids? A thirty-two-year old man calls his wife to tell her that he molested two young members of his family twenty years ago and then, after putting the phone down, he enters an Amish community school filled with kids aged between six and twelve. After keeping only the girls in one classroom, he starts shooting with a gun he had legally bought.

Three girls are dead, another five in critical condition and for what? He even left a suicide note saying that the over the last few years he had been haunted by dreams reminding him of the crime he committed in his youth. His wife said also that he had changed after the death of their premature infant daughter who had survived only twenty minutes nine years ago.

Does all that make a reason to kill innocent kids? Even more, do his actions make us think of it as one more event in an already rotten society? When I started thinking about the incident in USA my mind was on the three dead girls, few hours later my mind is on how we have become accepting of something like that as part of the news. Have we become monsters eating pizza while watching live from Lebanon kids dying? Have we turned so cold-blooded to consider the Pennsylvania incident as just news and be more bothered with the weather and the latest sports results?

In his suicide note, the man added that he was too angry with God. What God? His wife added that he was a good husband, very good and a quiet family man and father, a real believer. I feel as though my head is ready for an explosion. A believer? The man could sense good and evil? He was going to church? And we, everyday people with every day lives, with kids and families, believers and non-believers, we deal with it as another accident, as another incident in a life that goes wrong anyway? The man was so angry with the god he believed so he punished the children?

for theovimagazine Thanos Kalamidas