The Price of Resistance
By Chris Hedges
April 18, 2017 "Information
Clearing House"
- In the conflicts I covered
as a reporter in Latin America,
Africa, the Middle East and the
Balkans, I encountered singular
individuals of varying creeds,
religions, races and nationalities
who majestically rose up to defy the
oppressor on behalf of the
oppressed. Some of them are dead.
Some of them are forgotten. Most of
them are unknown.
These individuals, despite their
vast cultural differences, had
common traits—a profound commitment
to the truth, incorruptibility,
courage, a distrust of power, a
hatred of violence and a deep
empathy that was extended to people
who were different from them, even
to people defined by the dominant
culture as the enemy. They are the
most remarkable men and women I met
in my 20 years as a foreign
correspondent. And to this day I set
my life by the standards they set.
You
have heard of some, such as
Vaclav Havel,
whom I and other foreign reporters
met most evenings, during the 1989
Velvet Revolution
in Czechoslovakia, in the Magic
Lantern Theatre in Prague. Others,
no less great, you probably do not
know, such as the Jesuit priest
Ignacio Ellacuria,
who was assassinated in El Salvador
in 1989. And then there are those
“ordinary” people, although, as the
writer V.S. Pritchett said, no
people are ordinary, who risked
their lives in wartime to shelter
and protect those of an opposing
religion or ethnicity being
persecuted and hunted. And to some
of these “ordinary” people I owe my
own life.
To
resist radical evil is to endure a
life that by the standards of the
wider society is a failure. It is to
defy injustice at the cost of your
career, your reputation, your
financial solvency and at times your
life. It is to be a lifelong
heretic. And, perhaps this is the
most important point, it is to
accept that the dominant culture,
even the liberal elites, will push
you to the margins and attempt to
discredit not only what you do, but
your character. When I returned to
the newsroom at The New York Times
after being
booed off a commencement stage
in 2003 for denouncing the invasion
of Iraq and being publicly
reprimanded by the paper for my
stance against the war, reporters
and editors I had known and worked
with for 15 years lowered their
heads or turned away when I was
nearby. They did not want to be
contaminated by the same
career-killing contagion.
Ruling
institutions—the state, the press,
the church, the courts,
academia—mouth the language of
morality, but they serve the
structures of power, no matter how
venal, which provide them with
money, status and authority. In
times of national distress—one has
only to look at Nazi Germany—all of
these institutions, including the
academy, are complicit through their
silence or their active
collaboration with radical evil. And
our own institutions, which have
surrendered to corporate power and
the utopian ideology of
neoliberalism,
are no different. The lonely
individuals who defy tyrannical
power within these institutions, as
we saw with the thousands of
academics who were fired from their
jobs and blacklisted during
the McCarthy era,
are purged and turned into pariahs.
All
institutions, including the church,
Paul Tillich
once wrote, are inherently demonic.
And a life dedicated to resistance
has to accept that a relationship
with any institution is often
temporary, because sooner or later
that institution is going to demand
acts of silence or obedience your
conscience will not allow you to
make. To be a rebel is to reject
what it means to succeed in a
capitalist, consumer culture,
especially the idea that we should
always come first.
The
theologian
James H. Cone
in his book “The Cross and the
Lynching Tree” writes that for
oppressed blacks the cross was a
“paradoxical religious symbol
because it inverts the
world’s value system with the news
that hope comes by way of defeat,
that suffering and death do not have
the last word, that the last shall
be first and the first last.”
Cone continues: “That God could
‘make a way out of no way’ in Jesus’
cross was truly absurd to the
intellect, yet profoundly real in
the souls of black folk. Enslaved
blacks who first heard the gospel
message seized on the power of the
cross. Christ crucified manifested
God’s loving and liberating presence
in the contradictions of
black life—that transcendent
presence in the lives of black
Christians that empowered them to
believe that ultimately, in
God’s eschatological future, they
would not be defeated by the
‘troubles of this world,’ no matter
how great and painful their
suffering. Believing this paradox,
this absurd claim of faith, was only
possible in humility and repentance.
There was no place for the proud and
the mighty, for people who think
that God called them to rule over
others. The cross was God’s critique
of power—white power—with powerless
love, snatching victory out of
defeat.”
Reinhold Niebuhr
labeled this capacity to defy the
forces of repression “a sublime
madness in the soul.” Niebuhr wrote
that “nothing but madness will do
battle with malignant power and
‘spiritual wickedness in high
places.’ ” This sublime madness, as
Niebuhr understood, is dangerous,
but it is vital. Without it, “truth
is obscured.” And Niebuhr also knew
that traditional liberalism was a
useless force in moments of
extremity. Liberalism, Niebuhr said,
“lacks the spirit of enthusiasm, not
to say fanaticism, which is so
necessary to move the world out of
its beaten tracks. It is too
intellectual and too little
emotional to be an efficient force
in history.”
The
prophets in the Hebrew Bible had
this sublime madness. The words of
the Hebrew prophets, as
Abraham Heschel
wrote, were “a scream in the night.
While the world is at ease and
asleep, the prophet feels the blast
from heaven.” The prophet, because
he saw and faced an unpleasant
reality, was, as Heschel wrote,
“compelled to proclaim the very
opposite of what his heart
expected.”
This sublime madness is the
essential quality for a life of
resistance. It is the acceptance
that when you stand with the
oppressed you get treated like the
oppressed. It is the acceptance
that, although empirically all that
we struggled to achieve during our
lifetime may be worse, our struggle
validates itself.
Daniel Berrigan
told me that faith is the belief
that the good draws to it the good.
The Buddhists call this karma. But
he said for us as Christians we did
not know where it went. We trusted
that it went somewhere. But we did
not know where. We are called to do
the good, or at least the good so
far as we can determinate it, and
then let it go.
As
Hannah Arendt
wrote in “The Origins of
Totalitarianism,” the only morally
reliable people are not those who
say “this is wrong” or “this should
not be done,” but those who say “I
can’t.” They know that as Immanuel
Kant wrote: “If justice perishes,
human life on earth has lost its
meaning.” And this means that, like
Socrates, we must come to a place
where it is better to suffer wrong
than to do wrong. We must at once
see and act, and given what it means
to see, this will require the
surmounting of despair, not by
reason, but by faith.
I saw in the conflicts I covered the
power of this faith, which lies
outside any religious or
philosophical creed. This faith is
what Havel called in his great essay
“The Power of the Powerless” living
in truth. Living in truth exposes
the corruption, lies and deceit of
the state. It is a refusal to be a
part of the charade.
“You do not become a ‘dissident’
just because you decide one day to
take up this most unusual career,”
Havel wrote. “You are thrown into it
by your personal sense of
responsibility, combined with a
complex set of external
circumstances. You are cast out of
the existing structures and placed
in a position of conflict with them.
It begins as an attempt to do your
work well, and ends with being
branded an enemy of society. ... The
dissident does not operate in the
realm of genuine power at all. He is
not seeking power. He has no desire
for office and does not gather
votes. He does not attempt to charm
the public. He offers nothing and
promises nothing. He can offer, if
anything, only his own skin—and he
offers it solely because he has no
other way of affirming the truth he
stands for. His actions simply
articulate his dignity as a citizen,
regardless of the cost.”
The long, long road of sacrifice and
suffering that led to the collapse
of the communist regimes stretched
back decades. Those who made change
possible were those who had
discarded all notions of the
practical. They did not try to
reform the Communist Party. They did
not attempt to work within the
system. They did not even know what,
if anything, their tiny protests,
ignored by the state-controlled
media, would accomplish. But through
it all they held fast to moral
imperatives. They did so because
these values were right and just.
They expected no reward for their
virtue; indeed they got none. They
were marginalized and persecuted.
And yet these poets, playwrights,
actors, singers and writers finally
triumphed over state and military
power. They drew the good to the
good. They triumphed because,
however cowed and broken the masses
around them appeared, their message
of defiance did not go unheard. It
did not go unseen. The steady
drumbeat of rebellion constantly
exposed the dead hand of authority
and the rot of the state.
I stood
with hundreds of thousands of
rebellious Czechoslovakians in 1989
on a cold winter night in Prague’s
Wenceslas Square
as the singer
Marta Kubisova
approached the balcony of the
Melantrich building.
Kubisova had been banished from the
airwaves in 1968 after the Soviet
invasion for her anthem of defiance
“Prayer for Marta.” Her entire
catalog, including more than 200
singles, had been confiscated and
destroyed by the state. She had
disappeared from public view. Her
voice that night suddenly flooded
the square. Pressing around me were
throngs of students, most of whom
had not been born when she vanished.
They began to sing the words of the
anthem. There were tears running
down their faces. It was then that I
understood the power of rebellion.
It was then that I knew that no act
of rebellion, however futile it
appears in the moment, is wasted. It
was then that I knew that the
communist regime was finished.
“The
people will once again decide their
own fate,” the crowd sang in unison
with Kubisova. [Editor’s note: To
see YouTube photographs of the 1989
revolution and hear Kubisova sing
the song in a studio recording,
click here.]
The walls of Prague were covered
that chilly winter with posters
depicting Jan Palach. Palach, a
university student, set himself on
fire in Wenceslas Square on Jan. 16,
1969, in the middle of the day to
protest the crushing of the
country’s democracy movement. He
died of his burns three days later.
The state swiftly attempted to erase
his act from national memory. There
was no mention of it on state media.
A funeral march by university
students was broken up by police.
Palach’s gravesite, which became a
shrine, saw the communist
authorities exhume his body, cremate
his remains and ship them to his
mother with the provision that his
ashes could not be placed in a
cemetery. But it did not work. His
defiance remained a rallying cry.
His sacrifice spurred the students
in the winter of 1989 to act.
Prague’s Red Army Square, shortly
after I left for Bucharest to cover
the uprising in Romania, was renamed
Palach Square. Ten thousand people
went to the dedication.
We, like those who opposed the long
night of communism, no longer have
any mechanisms within the formal
structures of power that will
protect or advance our rights. We
too have undergone a coup d’état
carried out not by the stone-faced
leaders of a monolithic Communist
Party but by the corporate state.
We may feel, in the face of the
ruthless corporate destruction of
our nation, our culture and our
ecosystem, powerless and weak. But
we are not. We have a power that
terrifies the corporate state. Any
act of rebellion, no matter how few
people show up or how heavily it is
censored, chips away at corporate
power. Any act of rebellion keeps
alive the embers for larger
movements that follow us. It passes
on another narrative. It will, as
the state consumes itself, attract
wider and wider numbers. Perhaps
this will not happen in our
lifetimes. But if we persist, we
will keep this possibility alive. If
we do not, it will die.
Dr.
Rieux in Albert Camus’ novel “The
Plague” is not driven by ideology.
He is driven by empathy, the duty to
minister to suffering, no matter the
cost. Empathy, or what the Russian
novelist
Vasily Grossman
called “simple human kindness,”
becomes in all despotisms a
subversive act. To act on this
empathy—the empathy for human beings
locked in cages less than an hour
from us [here in Princeton], the
empathy for undocumented mothers and
fathers being torn from their
children on the streets of our
cities, the empathy for Muslims who
are demonized and banned from our
shores, fleeing the wars we created,
the empathy for poor people of color
gunned down by police in our
streets, the empathy for girls and
women trafficked into prostitution,
the empathy for all those who suffer
at the hands of a state intent on
militarization and imposing a harsh
cruelty on the vulnerable, the
empathy for the earth that gives us
life and that is being contaminated
and pillaged for profit—becomes
political and even dangerous.
Evil is
real. But so is love. And in
war—especially when the heavy shells
landed on crowds
in Sarajevo,
sights so gruesome that to this day
I cannot eat a piece of meat—you
could feel, as frantic family
members desperately sought out loved
ones among the wounded and dead, the
concentric circles of death and
love, death and love, like rings
from the blast of a cosmic furnace.
Flannery O’Connor
recognized that a life of faith is a
life of confrontation: “St. Cyril of
Jerusalem, in instructing
catechumens, wrote: ‘The dragon sits
by the side of the road, watching
those who pass. Beware lest he
devour you. We go to the Father of
Souls, but it is necessary to pass
by the dragon.’ No matter what form
the dragon may take, it is of this
mysterious passage past him, or into
his jaws, that stories of any depth
will always be concerned to tell,
and this being the case, it requires
considerable courage at any time, in
any country, not to turn away from
the storyteller.”
Accept sorrow—for who cannot be
profoundly sorrowful at the state of
our nation, the world and our
ecosystem—but know that in
resistance there is a balm that
leads to wisdom and, if not joy, a
strange, transcendent happiness.
Know that if we resist we keep hope
alive.
“My faith has been tempered in
Hell,” wrote Vasily Grossman in his
masterpiece “Life and Fate.” “My
faith has emerged from the flames of
the crematoria, from the concrete of
the gas chamber. I have seen that it
is not man who is impotent in the
struggle against evil, but the power
of evil that is impotent in the
struggle against man. The
powerlessness of kindness, of
senseless kindness, is the secret of
its immortality. It can never be
conquered. The more stupid, the more
senseless, the more helpless it may
seem, the vaster it is. Evil is
impotent before it. The prophets,
religious leaders, reformers, social
and political leaders are impotent
before it. This dumb, blind love is
man’s meaning. Human history is not
the battle of good struggling to
overcome evil. It is a battle fought
by a great evil struggling to crush
a small kernel of human kindness.
But if what is human in human beings
has not been destroyed even now,
then evil will never conquer.”
Chris Hedges, spent nearly two
decades as a foreign correspondent
in Central America, the Middle East,
Africa and the Balkans. He has
reported from more than 50 countries
and has worked for The Christian
Science Monitor, National Public
Radio, The Dallas Morning News and
The New York Times, for which he was
a foreign correspondent for 15
years.
This article was first published at
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