Wednesday, November 26, 2014
On the red eye flight to Tahiti, I did indeed watch parts of The Wolf of Wall Street, but I did not finish it. It was, after all, the red eye, and I fell asleep. When I awoke from my slumber the movie was over. Being unable to resume my sleep, I then cast my attention to some of the informational videos about Tahiti itself. As chance would have it, one of the videos was about the Mutiny on the Bounty and I proceeded to watch it.
For those who do not recall the details about the Mutiny on the Bounty, please see
In reading the Wikipedia article, one will find the following two sentences:
The part of the informational video that was shown on the plane actually focused on these two sentences. However, the perspective presented was from the Tahitian perspective and was not quite as straightforward as the second sentence implies. As depicted in the informational video, the mutineers who sailed for the island of Tubuai were a rowdy, lazy, and undisciplined bunch. They were overly aggressive in pursuing the Tahitian women for sexual favors; they were ignorant of and insensitive to Tahitian customs; and they lacked integrity in their words and deeds. These failings in the character of the mutineers led to a tumultuous existence on Tubuai. Blood was spilled and a long term existence on the island was destined for continued hostility and ultimate failure.
Also as depicted in the movie, Fletcher Christian, the leader of the mutineers is a weak and compromised leader. His desire to return to England to present the case against Bligh ran counter to the belief held by the other mutineers that a return to England meant only certain imprisonment and possible death. So slowly, but surely, the authority assumed by Christian began to be undermined.
Being on the red eye, I again fell asleep before the video ended. However, by the time I did fall asleep, the notion that Fletcher Christian was a hero had begun to wane. In the end, it seemed that by leading the mutiny, Christian had lost legitimacy. And, in later reading about the fate of the Bounty on Pitcairn Island, it seemed to me that Fletcher Christian not only lost his ship, his country, and his life but, to a certain extent, he also lost his soul.
I suppose the moral for me in learning this latest bit about the Bounty is that we can never be fully certain about those we consider to be our heroes. There is often a hidden history and a hidden persona that does not make the history books and is not publicly portrayed. Ultimately, the safest route is not to idolize others as our heroes but rather to make ourselves our own heroes and to our selves -- to our own inner heroes -- be true.
Peace.