I fight to embrace the entire circle of human activity to the full extent of my ability, to divine which wind is urging all these waves of mankind upward. I bend over the age in which I live, that tiny, imperceptible arc of the vast circle, and struggle to attain a clear view of today’s duty. Perhaps this is the only way man can carry out something immortal within the ephemeral moment of his life: immortal because he collaborates with an immortal rhythm.
Report to Greco
The name of Nikos Kazantzakis continues to arouse controversy. Much of it, especially in Greece, is political in nature and revolves around the confusion concerning Kazantzakis’ relation to Marxism. The confusion arises because of the ways Kazantzakis’ activities and writings have been interpreted. For example, even before the latest military regime in Greece and while he was still alive, Kazantzakis was anathema to the royalists. Consecutive right wing governments, both before and after World War II, waged war against him and his books; he was called immoral, red, and a Bolshevik troublemaker. In the fall of 1924, in his native Crete, he was actually arrested. In the spring of 1928, in Athens, he was accused of being a Russian agent. Yet his books were banned in Russia—particularly those he wrote about that country—and the Greek Communist party refused to include him in its ranks, labelling him bourgeois, decadent and even fascist. In fact, his offer to join the communist controlled resistance in the 1940s was rejected. Such responses neidier prevented the International Peace Committee from offering him the Peace Award in Vienna in 1956 nor did it bar the Chinese communists from inviting him to the Peoples’ Republic of China as one of their ‘chosen Foreigners’ and, upon the occasion of his death in 1957, from praising him: ‘Kazantzakis was not only a great writer. He was actively interested in social and political issues. He was also a devotee of peace’. More recently, views about him have ranged from those in which he is considered an egomaniac, oblivious to the fate of others, a man whom ‘the really important things—political tyranny, social injustice, economic exploitation—interested … the least’, to those in which he is seen as an advocate of equality, peace and the cooperation of the world’s people, one who to the end of his career sided with the ‘ideas of genuine Democracy and Socialism’.