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Fonda Jane
by Karen Pittman
08 April 2005
Despite
her faults, Jane Fonda brings one sterling quality to the table which your typical
Hollywood socialite does not, and that is substance.
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Hey, guys, quick,
before you miss it -- look up: I'm about to step out onto the ledge here
and say something terribly controversial. I'm about to break ranks with my
conservative brethren.
Yes, Jane Fonda did some horrible things in Hanoi. Yes, she was a wild child,
an hysterical 60’s flower-power flouter of the first order. But that doesn't
change the fact that she herself may have changed. Whoever the girl
was, the grown woman is now someone else entirely -- a mature, thoroughly
mellowed 67-year-old grandmother in need of artificial hips.
Try as I might, for the sake of the cause, I cannot dislike her. For despite
her faults, she brings one sterling quality to the table which your typical
Hollywood socialite does not, and that is substance. Jane Fonda herself is
silver-minted. And let's face it: No airhead would have dared perch
her derriere atop an enemy gunship just for the sake of publicity.
Whatever we may think of Ms. Fonda's activism in Vietnam, we cannot seriously
think she did all of that for attention. If nothing else, we must at least
be intellectually and morally honest enough to admit that Jane Fonda, the
girl, did the things she did for the same reasons we do -- because she truly,
acutely, radically believed. To assert anything less is to do ourselves and
our cause a disservice, to say nothing of her and hers.
And if we, some thirty-five years later, still can’t get over it, that’s
our problem. If more of us would do what I'm trying to do in making the effort
to look past this woman's tempestuous past -- if we would all just chill
out long enough to suspend judgment for five whole minutes and actually listen
to what she has to say -- we would happily discover, I believe, that much
of what she says has merit. Her words are, at times, even profound. Agree
or disagree with her political ideology, embrace or disavow her evolving
brand of Christianity, at least Jane Fonda is herself evolving, and is committed
to some cause larger than her own. At least she is earnestly searching.
I mean, my God, if the Pope could forgive Mehmet Ali Agca, can't we forgive Jane Fonda?
That said, let me be crystal clear on one point: I do not expect veterans
of her crazed, callow crusade to be so magnanimous. I do not expect that
all those valiant Vietnam POWs, who were so brutally and viscerally betrayed,
can or will or even should forgive her. For them, the injury was and is too
deeply personal; for me, it was, and remains to this day, mostly a black
and white photograph in a history book.
I was all of nine or ten years old when Ms. Fonda cozied up to the Viet Cong,
and being a kid, I was riddled with the same ambivalent impressions of that
conflict that all the kids were back then. That did not mean, however, that
I expressly condoned what she doing; truthfully, I knew too little about
the whole affair to know how I felt. But it did mean that part of me understood
and even empathized with what she was trying to do, because -- in the context
of that turbulent era, our turbulent era -- she was merely aggressively following
the dictates of her conscience, misleading as they were.
What a rabid disciple and proselytizer this woman would make!
And as far as I can see, that’s all she’s doing now -- following her heart.
At the end of the day, this is what we most need to take away from all this.
If we are to achieve any kind of clarity in the midst of this hullabaloo,
the one maypole around which we must wrap ourselves is the mortal recognition
that people can and do change, especially as they age. They evolve. Only
God and truth are unchanging, but we mercurial human beings tend either to
develop or regress in terms of our ability to recognize and interpret them.
At least give the lady credit for developing! Okay, so she hasn’t fully renounced
her stance on Vietnam. But she is clearly inching ever closer toward some
sort of healthy, heartfelt finality on the matter. I mean, it’s not like
she’s going backwards, for Christ’s sake. For Ms. Fonda to even embrace Christianity
at all, in any capacity, given her starting point, is itself a miracle of
beatific proportions.
Certainly I would never have believed such a thing could happen when I was
nine. But then again, statues of the Blessed Virgin have been known to weep
actual tears and drip real drops of bilious blood.
When I lean back and let myself luxury-cruise right through Jane Fonda’s
life so far as recounted in countless TV interviews, a remarkable thing occurs.
I find I’m not on auto-pilot at all, for then I begin to remember why I bought
into this feisty, spunky, energetic lady's charisma in the first place. This
is the same allure that led me to buy her leg warmers and workout tapes by
the armfuls in the late eighties. I remember why I was drawn to her -- because
for one thing, she admitted to having daddy problems (read: authority problems),
and for another, she had the good sense to realize that the real reason she
was binging and purging was to sate a higher hunger, and, more importantly,
the courage to acknowledge it.
Now she says that hunger is being fed, wholly and completely, by the body
and blood of Christ. Who are we to say otherwise? It seems to me only
Christ Himself can make that call.
In this week of Pope John Paul the Great's passing, we must at least try
to give Jane Fonda the benefit of the doubt. Her newly professed faith and
our desire to believe in its redemptive power encourage us to take her at
her word. For those of us who aren’t veterans and weren’t mortally wounded
by the cavalier acts of her youthful folly, it’s time to contemplate letting
go.
And besides, I just can't help myself -- I identify with her. Would that I would glide so gracefully into my sunset . . . .
Sorry, guys, but I just jumped. For me this story isn't about politics.
It's about redemption and rapprochement. No matter what the girl did then,
the grown woman, the grandmother, has me in her corner rooting for her now.
Call me crazy, but I'm kinda Fonda Jane.
Karen Hathaway Pittman, a freelance writer and poet, is regularly featured on Opinion Editorials, ChronWatch, Men’s News Daily, Renew America, and Bush Country.
Email Karen Pittman
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