Raised in Central Europe and presently based in Asia and Africa , Andre Vltchek is a naturalized US citizen and novelist, filmmaker, journalist, photographer and playwright.
Vltchek is the author of several novels, non-fiction books and plays. A few of the recently published books are as follows:
- A novel Nalezeny was published in Czech;- Point of No Return is his first major work of fiction written in English (to be published in French by Editions Yago in September 2010);- A book of political nonfiction Western Terror: From Potosi to Baghdad in English and in Turkish);- Plays Ghosts of Valparaiso and Conversations with James, translated into several languages including Spanish;- With Rossie Indira, a book of conversations with the foremost Southeast Asian writer Pramoedya Ananta Toer, Exile (translated into Korean, Spanish and Bahasa Indonesia);- Non-fiction book Oceania is a result of his five years work in Micronesia, Polynesia and Melanesia and a damning attack against neo-colonialism in the Pacific, published in collaboration with Expathos.
Currently, he is finishing writing his second novel in English, Winter Journey and non-fiction book about the political situation in post New Order Indonesia.
He is a co-founder and co-editor of Mainstay Press and Liberation Lit.
Filmmaker, Journalist, Photographer and Political Analystmoreless
As a filmmaker, he produced in 2004 the feature length documentary film about the Indonesian massacres in 1965 — Terlena — Breaking of The Nation. Right after a devastating earthquake that shook Chile in February 2010, Vltchek travelled to Chile and throughout the country and produced a video titled Chile Between Two Earthquakes. He is in the process of directing and producing several new documentaries in Asia, Africa, and Oceania.
During the 1980s and 1990s, Vltchek worked as war correspondent and photographer and covered a dozens of war zones from Bosnia and Peru to Sri Lanka, DR Congo and East Timor. He writes and photographs for several publications worldwide, corporate and progressive, including Z Magazine, Newsweek, Asia Times, China Daily, Irish Times, A2 and Asia-Pacific Journal (Japan Focus). His photographs have been published by many publications and institutions all over the world, the most recent of which was at The British Museum in 2009.
A frequent guest speaker at major universities around the world, Vltchek has delivered a number of lectures based on his experiences in Indonesia and Oceania, including "Columbia University", "Cornell University", University of Cambridge, Hong Kong Univerisity, and University of Melbourne. Vltchek has collaborated with UNESCO in Vietnam, Africa and Oceania through various publications.
Since 2004, Vltchek has served as a Senior Fellow at The Oakland Institute and regularly contributes political, socio-econimic and cultural analyses on Africa, Asia, Latin America and Oceania. He also works with The Atoll Institute as one of its Governors on the Board of Governors.
On Vltchek's latest book Oceania, Noam Chomsky comments:
Andre Vltchek has compiled a stunning record in evoking the reality of the contemporary world, not as perceived through the distorting prisms of power and privilege, but as lived by the myriad victims. He has also not failed to trace the painful — and particularly for the West, shameful — realities to their historical roots. The remarkable scope of his inquiries is illustrated even by the titles of some of his major books: “Western Terror: From Potosi to Baghdad,” a vast range of topics that he explores with rare insight and understanding; and “Exile,” his interviews with Indonesia’s great novelist Pramoedya, who spent a large part of his life in internal exile, imprisoned by the murderous and vicious Suharto government in Indonesia, which was greatly admired by the West, and enthusiastically supported in its shocking crimes, after it won approval by carrying out a mass slaughter that the CIA compared to the crimes of Hitler, Stalin, and Mao, and opened up the rich resources of the country to Western exploitation.
In the present work, Vltchek extends his penetrating gaze to a lovely, desecrated, almost forgotten vast area of the world, Oceania, which he shows to be “a microcosm of almost all major problems faced by our planet.” Again, he tears away the scabs and reveals the festering sores below with the insight, acuity, and sympathetic understanding he has shown in his earlier work. At the same time, once again, he brings to light the strength and courage of the people, and their achievements, and explores the hopes for decent recovery and survival if the powerful can allow themselves to comprehend what they have done, and to accept the responsibility of actually protecting their victims instead of mouthing comforting and self-serving slogans.
According to Michael Parenti:
Andre Vltchek brings a highly informed and incisive intelligence to the politico-economic realities of whole countries and regions. His work on Micronesia alone has opened oureyes to the iniquities of the free market in that part of the world. He writes with objectivity and investigative honesty but also with a heartfelt concern for social justice. His efforts deserve our keen attention.