Popular Culture Review Vol. 11, No. 2, Summer 2000 | Page 119

The ‘‘Great White” of Lambarene 115 The film depicts Albert Schweitzer as the ultimate figurehead of white supremacy, which masqueraded as "benevolent” and "great” within the colonialist system. Here, we observe the "great white” imperial man as paternalistic, disrespectful, egotistical and ultimately blind to his own failure to connect with the very people he claims to love. His failure is tragic. His depiction is not at all one-sided, however. Schweitzer conforms to African perceptions of whiteness: he is sometimes a caricature, theatrical, obsequious, affected, ruled by time and by his own inability to view life through a decolonized gaze, but he is nevertheless portrayed as a human being who is multi-faceted and beyond white stereotype. To some degree. The ''Great White ” leads us to the conclusion that Albert Schweitzer was unable to define himself and unable to move beyond the boundaries of whiteness and a white imperial mentality. His paternalistic attitude towards his employees, and especially Koumba, the young boy who announces his intention to become a doctor, is a critique of whiteness. There is a strong subtext in this film that suggests that white blindness made it impossible for Schweitzer to truly respect cultural difference. For example, Schweitzer’s arrogance and paternalism is displayed by his lack of desire to learn the languages of Africa, or to learn from African medicine men. In addition, Schweitzer is limited by his white imperialist understanding of sexuality and kinship systems. Early in the film, for example, Schweitzer treats an African woman who has gonorrhea. He lectures her on sexuality, "It’s not like food! You can do without.” What he totally misses is that he has shown her a lack of respect, and asked her to disobey her husband. At another point in the film, Schweitzer visits a respected griot, or storyteller, out of desperation, seeking the secret of the iboga. Schweitzer’s attempt to purchase the secret is summarily refused. The griot explains that he cannot sell Schweitzer the information, and besides, the medicine is owned by the people and he must have the pennission of the chief Though seemingly in control of his hospital compound, Schweitzer expresses in this scene his own fear of that which he cannot comprehend, of the forces he calls the "darker powers.” In a subsequent scene, Schweitzer’s wife Helene is teased by one of her servants for being afraid of the cries of the forest animals in the night. "They eat men,” the servant teases Helene, who seems very ill at ease throughout the film, confined by her position as Schweitzer’s silent wife, a witness to events that she cannot control or predict. Schweitzer is not only trapped by his whiteness but he is defined by it in ways that mean he must continue the upkeep and maintenance of being the "Great White Man.” This is remarkably demonstrated by the sequences involving Schweitzer playing the organ and tiying to drown out the sounds of African drums outside his window. It is both pathetic and telling that Schweitzer literally tries to erase the sound of African culture, either with European music, particularly Bach, or the sound of his own voice, lecturing on the "greatness” of the Bible. As an