Yes, the entire opera is uncomfortable (laughs). So the director is taking the audience at its word, as if he is saying: »If you take this opera seriously, then you have to be consistent. Face up to its provocation.« We ourselves are potential alternative versions of the people we are facing and they, the criminals, are potential alternative versions of us. Nevertheless, as members of the audience we have privileges: we have the option of being able to leave at any time. And we can reflect on it on a meta-level – the ability to do that alone is a privilege. A violent offender and drug user from a troubled environment cannot do any of that. In jail, more than anything else, he is at his own mercy. In prison you can’t say: »I’m claustrophobic, please leave the door open.« Prison is superb behavioural training for that. You can give that up right away in there. Our entire human lives exist in a tension between uncomfortable experiences and sublime ones. This opera demonstrates that – and perhaps it is where all art comes from.
There is no moment of redemption, no heart-breaking aria that breaks through the misery, good does not triumph over evil, and there is no tragic heroine to cry over. There are no women at all in this male world except for an emaciated prostitute on the fringes of the action. Another moment when women are present – actually men dressed as women, so these are male projections of women – is the pantomime in Act Two. This theatre performance by prisoners for prisoners marks a sharp break in the usual drudgery of the camp, but it has many levels even though it is pure slapstick for entertainment. Theatre is still performed in prisons today. Do you have any experience of this?
Good experiences! I ran the Clinic for Forensic Psychiatry in Lippstadt-Eickelborn for almost 14 years. It is not a prison but it is a high-security clinic that holds offenders who are mentally ill. There was a theatre group – called “The Unshackled” – that performed classic plays. The majority of the actors were people with severe personality disorders or sexual abnormalities. Under the guidance of a professional director, they tackled Goethe, Beckett and Dürrenmatt, frequently including musical numbers and developed something like their own style. My aim at the time was to encourage the local population to visit the clinic: to come into the institution, a place they were actually afraid of, and experience an atmosphere that was relaxed and unafraid – of course, there were security precautions – but the first impression should be a pleasant one. And once a year we would do a whole series of up to nine performances. It gave the patients who took part the feeling that they had achieved something, they were able to do more than they thought they could and receive positive social feedback, with strangers telling them: Wow, you did a good job there, I really enjoyed it! First you actually have to accomplish that. And some of these productions were genuinely successful performances that the audiences enjoyed. For those patients, who had done a lot of destructive things – sex offences, child abuse etc. – who were fundamentally aware that they had done things for which society despised them, this was a chance to do something constructive. It was also a chance to learn a level of discipline and reliability: when it’s time for rehearsal, it’s time for rehearsal. You have to be there and know your lines because the outcome for the whole group depends on each individual. That was a valuable experience for the participants – and for the other patients it was an event, a change from the routine.
In the sort of prison that Dostoyevsky describes, where there is no private life and nowhere to withdraw to, even the most intimate things become public. In The House of the Dead for example, he describes how at night the inmates often scream, talk or cry in their sleep, if they are capable of sleeping. The beginning of Act Three of Janáček’s From the House of the Dead is set in the infirmary at night. Here we hear complaints, confessions, suffering and death. Janáček depicts this whole atmosphere as a soundscape of sighing, heaving and heavy breathing. The presence of death in the room grounds the scene and everything takes place against this backdrop. It even smells of death. But when death does arrive, it is simply accepted. How is it in prisons now? Can a foreseeable or looming death produce a conscious change in a prison inmate?
It is a very particular imposition to be confronted inevitably every day with other people’s behaviour. »Hell is other people,« said Jean-Paul Sartre. But as far as death is concerned: it is the greatest teacher that we have in our lives and that is what is remarkable about it. As a rule, inmates who are severely ill are released into care homes or a hospice because their severe illness means they are no longer a danger. But there are also people who die in prison, essentially because the institution has become a real surrogate family for them. But when long-term inmates get older, their perspective often changes because most of them say they don’t want to die in prison. Everyone knows that death will come at some point. But that knowledge only has an effect after their first true confrontation with their own decline.
A subtle glimmer of hope in this sombre opera is provided by the character of Aljeja (Dostoyevsky calls him Alej), a young Tartar who was implicated in a crime by his older brothers and arrives in the camp as an entirely unassuming person. When the educated nobleman Alexander Gorjančikov, who befriends Aljeja as a father figure, teaches him to read and write using the New Testament, this opens up a whole world of perfect ethics for him, which he endorses completely. He is incapable of any kind of malice or hatred and seems to be a sign of hope, keeping faith in human goodness alive. Similiar rays of light appear later on in Dostoyevsky’s novels: Prince Myshkin in The Idiot for example, or Alyosha in the Brothers Karamazov. In order to set him apart from the others, Janáček gives Aljeja a very high vocal register, that can also be cast with a female voice. He seems to be elevated above this rough world of men.
When I was reading, I saw him as a Christ-like figure.
There are people who are somehow immune to everything evil. They do not seem at all self-interested and are keenly aware of the needs of others. How would you explain this?
I think that these people are somehow free from feeling a lack of love. They are unaware of lacking it themselves and therefore feel no need to compensate for anything. The question: »Who do I want to be?« is not one that occurs to them, because they do not experience any sort of deficit. At the same time, they are full of love themselves, an all-encompassing love that is not dualistic in nature.
How does someone like that end up in prison?
In The House of the Dead Alej was simply brought along by his older brothers. That does happen: as a result of a complex group dynamic and extreme loyalty someone will be taken advantage of. Or if you think of totalitarian regimes, where people are denounced who have done nothing wrong.
Have you ever encountered any rays of light like Aljeja in your reporting work?
No, I have not. But I have spoken to someone who had a deep spiritual experience in prison. You can’t fake that. But at present he still cannot be released yet because his severe personality disorder makes him very fragile in encounters with other people and his offences were related to this. You have to separate one from the other quite clearly, otherwise you would be unprofessional and it would be dangerous.