Want us to respect national anthems? Give us better songs!
Yonden Lhatoo is willing to toe the line when it comes to showing respect in public for national anthems, but asks why they have to be so warlike instead of relevant and likeable
Sorry if it sounds sacrilegious in these rather sensitive times, increasingly ruled by gratuitous patriotism, but if we must make such a big deal about national anthems, can we at least update and improve them?
Well, if we must conform to state-mandated constraints in considering certain songs to be sacred, how about making them a little more likeable to start with?
Explainer: how do countries around the world foster respect for their national anthem?
I get the whole thing about the revolutionary roots of March of the Volunteers, exclamation marks and all, but it would be nice if our schoolkids don’t sound like they’re going to war every morning to demonstrate their allegiance to the motherland:
With our flesh and blood, let us build a new Great Wall!
We are many but our hearts beat as one!
Selflessly braving the enemy’s gunfire!
March on! March on! March on!”
Hongkongers are not much into walking, let alone marching – they’ll line up for the lift to take them to the first floor rather than hoof it up a single flight of stairs – and I just don’t see them shedding blood to build any wall, even if it means shutting out their pesky mainland compatriots.
They may want to keep in mind that its sacred strains are borrowed from a bawdy 18th century English drinking song that Congress resisted endorsing for more than 100 years.
It’s also notoriously difficult to sing, a musical booby trap even for professional singers, as evidenced by some stunningly awful performances at major public events in the US.
I like how Australians find their anthem so insipid and uninspiring, they would rather salute Waltzing Matilda, the ubiquitous folk song about a sheep rustler who drowns himself rather than be captured by police. They should totally make it their anthem; it’s so ... Australian.
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Have you noticed that every country talks about peace, but national anthems are all about “don’t mess with us or else”?
Vietnam is still sticking it to America: “The path to glory is built by the bodies of our foes”; Algeria’s resentment runs deep: “When we spoke, none listened to us, so we have taken the noise of gunpowder as our rhythm/And the sound of machine guns as our melody”; and Israel’s enemies had better not unleash “the volcano of my vendetta”.
Watch: five reasons China’s national anthem is the saddest ever
Oh, for a genuinely beautiful national anthem. I have one in mind, and it’s not even a song:
Where the mind is without fear and the head is held high
Where knowledge is free
Where the world has not been broken up into fragments
By narrow domestic walls
Where words come out from the depth of truth ... Into that heaven of freedom, let my country awake.”
Yonden Lhatoo is the chief news editor at the Post