Wednesday, September 30, 2009

Will Roman Polanski get a fair trial?

Evidence has been growing during the last 48 hours that the accusations on which Roman Polanski's prosecution are based on are more severe than what could be assumed earlier. While the mediatic fog over the quality of the crime he is indicted for is passing away, a lot of questions arise: was it sex with a minor or was it rape? Under what circumstances did it occur? what was the role of the girl's mother in the process? Was she conscious of the danger she put her child in? Was her risk management sufficient? Was the act premeditated? What was his mental state before and during the crime? It will be extremely difficult to reconstruct the facts after such a long time, and it will be even more difficult to get back to where everything started: with the traumatic childhood and adolescence of a Jewish child during and after World War II, which has to be seen in direct connection with Nazi Germany's aggression of Poland.
Read Jerzy Kosinsky's (1933-1991) book "The Painted Bird" (L'oiseau bariolé, der bemalte Vogel) and you will understand the horrors that must have haunted the survivors of the Holocaust and of the life in occupied Poland, a country full of
open antisemitism not only during the war but even afterwards, during the communist regime. Or go to see Polanski's film "Repulsion of 1965...
The central question is:
If Roman Polanski is extradited to the United States, how fair will the trial be?
Finally, his trial will be the trial of the United States Judicial system, and if it ends in bringing not only justice but peace of mind to a man who suffered probably more than anyone of us can imagine throughout his life while putting on a mask of clown, then and only then this trial will be a success...

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