Monday, 13 October 2014

Fields of Blood


Imagine an impassioned debate at the Oxford Union, “That this House finds Religion to Have Been the Cause of All the Major Wars in History.” Arguing for the motion, suggests Karen Armstrong, would be “American commentators and psychiatrists, London taxi drivers and Oxford academics.” Arguing against, at unnecessary length, is Karen Armstrong’s new book, Fields of Blood: Religion and the History of Violence. Unnecessary length because she instantly refutes the proposition by mentioning the two world wars. Nevertheless, against the background of the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL), declared three months ago, it’s timely enough to have attracted much media attention. Not that I suspect her of jumping on a bandwagon. She doesn’t mention Islamic State at all. She’s merely following up a polemical agenda she set up years ago & expounded in earlier books. I’ve mentioned her works in a couple of earlier posts but a comment made here is especially relevant:

The one aspect of religion she does fasten on, and is intent to bring to the attention of all the world, is that of compassion, as expressed in words attributed to Rabbi Hillel and echoed in words attributed to Jesus:

“That which is hateful to you, do not do to your fellow. That is the whole Torah; the rest is the explanation.”


She takes it as a given that any criticism of Islam would be hateful to Muslims. She therefore refrains, and exonerates them at every turn, not excluding suicide bombers, and offers sympathetic explanations for the thinking of Al-Qaeda. It’s simply asymmetric warfare, she says, directed against the “systemic violence” of governments. On the other hand, criticism of Christianity, atheism, secularism, colonialism, capitalism & US foreign policy is not literally hateful to its respective apologists, so they’re all fair targets, and as a bonus, won’t issue a personal fatwa against the critic. But then, if you exonerate one, you must lay the burden on another. For the avoidance of any doubt, she comes straight to the point in the opening paragraph of her Introduction. She retells the ritual of the Scapegoat. On the Day of Atonement, the high priest used to transfer all the sins of the people on to the head of a goat, “and sent the sin-laden animal out of the city, literally placing the blame elsewhere”. The point of her parable is that it’s convenient for most of the world to blame Islam.

Familiar with her sympathies from other books, lectures on YouTube and interviews, I was immediately keen to find out who would be her scapegoat for the “fields of blood”; who would be found responsible for the extreme violence we’re currently hearing about. I have no intention to belittle the complexity and depth of her analysis. She’s written a work of immense scholarship and impassioned personal activism. One can only be respectful and even awed by her painstaking effort. But this is not meant to be a review of her book, only a simplistic summary of her intent; so I’ll jump to the end of her Afterword to see who or what actually is her chosen scapegoat. Her verdict is nuanced, so I’ll avoid quoting out of context and give the last paragraph in full:

When we confront the violence of our time, it is natural to harden our hearts to the global pain and deprivation that make us feel uncomfortable, depressed and frustrated. But we must find ways of contemplating these distressing facts of modern life or we will lose the best part of our humanity. Somehow we have to find ways of doing what religion—at its best—has done for centuries: build a sense of global community, cultivate a sense of reverence and ‘equanimity’ for all, and take responsibility for the suffering we see in the world. No state in history, however great its achievements, has not incurred the taint of the warrior. We are all, religious and secularist alike, responsible for the current state of the world. It is a stain on the international community that Mamana Bibi's son can say: ‘Quite simply, nobody seems to care.’ The scapegoat ritual was an attempt to sever the community’s relationship with its misdeeds; it cannot be a solution for us today.

The mention of Mamana Bibi relates to an incident she describes at the end of her previous chapter, “Global Jihad”:

On 24th October 2012, Mamana Bibi, a sixty-eight-year old woman picking vegetables in her family’s large open land in Waziristan, Pakistan, was killed by a United States drone aircraft.
. . .
‘Bombs create only hatred in the hearts of people. And that hatred and anger breed more terrorism,’said Bibi’s son. ‘No one ever asked us who was killed or injured that day. Not the United States or my own government. No one has come to investigate nor has anyone been held accountable. Quite simply, nobody seems to care.’


The point is well made, but I think that her book argues the wrong case. We are no wiser from finding we must not blame religion; especially as she needs more than one chapter to argue the proper meaning of the word, and why we have misunderstood it for centuries. She being the scholar and we the ignorant, she naturally wins her case. ’Tis pity it’s the wrong case.

What then is the right case? What book needs to be written, to explain how we in 2014 ended up in the current mess? I’ll try to summarize what I think is “the right case” in my next, to follow shortly. With particular attention to that little phrase she throws in: “the taint of the warrior”.

11 Comments:

At 13 October 2014 at 14:32 , Anonymous Tom said...

I find myself in a kind of semi-retirement at present, pursuing my own inner path with all that that entails - and more. If I may, but just for a few moments, resurface I would like to say that I have not read this particular book by Karen Armstrong. If she is exonerating religion from the instigating and perpetuating violence, then I must agree with her. Human beings are masters (and mistresses) at blaming something and someone else for their shortcomings. It is called psychological denial.

It is human beings who instigate and perpetuate violence, not religion or some other 'sacrificial goat'. It is like blaming a computer for giving the 'wrong' answers rather than the computer programmer. Violent behaviour was a chosen activity long before religion and politics arrived on the scene. Violence probably has its roots in the need to survive, and in particular for ego-survival. Just a short time observing children's behaviour (usually boys' behaviour) in a school playground can be very educational, or even watching soccer players on a football pitch.

I shall now return to my state of semi-retirement.

 
At 13 October 2014 at 19:00 , Anonymous Nelson said...

Yes, Tom, you and I know that, but Armstrong has led a cloistered life, literally, till she left the convent traumatized, and she hasn't quite lived in the same world as most of us ever since. I think she feels that the suffering she’s endured is justified by this, her late-found vocation to help the world. I confess to having had a similar thought, once or twice, on my own account.

Yes we can expect there will always be young men ready to sacrifice their lives for a noble cause, presented as the survival and well-being of their nearest and dearest. This is our biological heritage, the selfish gene. But will there always be old men ready to recruit the young men for causes which turn out to be something much less noble? This is an issue that bears examination.

 
At 13 October 2014 at 19:16 , Anonymous Nelson said...

ZACL, your comment is valuable nonetheless, and I admire your steadfast refusal to decide on mere hearsay. Not everyone will take an interest in the post, nor look at reviews of the book, let alone read it for themselves. I haven't finished it myself and got it on loan from the library. But it generated strong feelings and I have not expressed them all, as they are still in flux. I hope to fulfil the promise in my last para and express my own newly-discovered views on extreme violence, with due acknowledgement to the influence of certain other authors including Armstrong herself, Harari, author of Sapiens & the young Winston Churchill, for “The Story of the Malakand Field Force - An Episode of the Frontier War”.

 
At 14 October 2014 at 04:22 , Anonymous Nelson said...

A correspondent has pointed out a review by David Aaronovitch in the Times which echoes many of the points in my piece above. You can download it as .pdf here or as .jpg here.

 
At 14 October 2014 at 06:35 , Anonymous Bryan White said...

As someone who is, at the very least, sympathetic towards atheists, I can say that this argument that "religion has caused all major wars" is definitely one of their weaker arguments. Not only because, as you guys have pointed out, it's inaccurate and grossly oversimplified, but also because from a historical standpoint it's kind of like complaining that all alchemy ever did was give people lead poisoning. Sure, alchemists made plenty of blunders in their ignorance, but the goals and mindsets and motivations were crude forms of the same drives which eventually gave rise to legitimate chemistry. It's not like alchemy was ever meant to be a deliberate practice of causing harm to people. Likewise, religion throughout a good portion of human history was a sincere desire to understand the truth of our existence. It wasn't meant to be a deliberate institution of fear and and conflict and superstition.

The problem is when you encounter someone still practicing alchemy in the 21st century. Now their blunders aren't nearly so innocent, and yeah, maybe their not TRYING to cause lead poisoning, but there's no real excuse for it if they are. And this is kind of how I see where we're at with religion. Religion is not longer a pursuit of truth in any meaningful sense. It's become a means of trying to willfully hide from the truth and calling it "faith." I believe that when the Hebrews set down to write the scriptures, I think they were honestly and even rationally trying to come to an understanding of things that was the MOST grounded in fact and reality. Compared to most mythologies of the time, the Bible actually has a very down to earth way about it. But you skip ahead a few thousand years to the fundamentalist Christian clinging to most literal of possible interpretations of the Bible in the face of everything we now know about evolution and cosmology and so forth, and this is NOT someone who'd looking to reach that same understanding. The mindset of those Hebrew writers and those fundamentalist readers could not be more diametrically opposed.

 
At 14 October 2014 at 12:41 , Anonymous ellie Clayton said...

I wonder if what goes on under the label of religion deserves the name at all. Isn't it more tribalism, nationalism, or self-interest masquerading as religion. Religion is not a set of doctrines, or a code of law. It is not a group of practices that sets one apart from other cultural groups. It is the way of thinking and living that acknowledges the dimension of spirit which manifests as the "highest wisdom and the most radiant beauty which our dull faculties can comprehend."

I quote brother Albert Einstein:
"The most beautiful and profound emotion we can experience is the sensation of the mystical. It is the sower of all true science. He to whom this emotion is a stranger, who can no longer wonder and stand rapt in awe, is as good as dead. To know that what is impenetrable to us really exists, manifesting itself as the highest wisdom and the most radiant beauty which our dull faculties can comprehend only in their primitive forms, this knowledge, this feeling, is at the centre of true religiousness."

The term 'gnosis' can be used for this knowledge which is beyond reason, emotion or sensation.

 
At 14 October 2014 at 15:13 , Anonymous Nelson said...

Bryan you have seized on one of the main things I was intending to highlight in my next (a project now possibly to be abandoned, of which more later). That is, things change over time. When there was not instant global communication, when there was no solid physics or science of evolution, when behaviour was everywhere as brutish as it is only in some places now, there was a point to scriptures, and teachings on all kinds of subjects by wise seers & prophets for the improvement of life. But the wisdom has been overthrown and the inheritors are motivated differently. We see the results.

The other thing I was going to tackle in my next was to try and distinguish violence from extreme violence, but I'm on the point of giving up. One was war by the rules and the other was horrific slaughter incomprehensible terrorism. But everything is too complex to make distinctions.

 
At 14 October 2014 at 15:20 , Anonymous Nelson said...

Ellie I agree with you. Perhaps like Tom I should leave this quest alone, and remain "in a kind of semi-retirement at present, pursuing my own inner path with all that that entails - and more". But sometimes I'm drawn into deep waters, imagining I can offer some insight not otherwise available. It's not the case, but discovering the extent of one's own ignorance through reading and writing is perhaps worthwhile.

 
At 15 October 2014 at 20:32 , Anonymous ellie Clayton said...

Please don't abandon writing on 'the right case.' Your thoughts keep us exploring.

 
At 16 October 2014 at 09:57 , Anonymous Michael Peverett said...

I agree with ellie!

 
At 17 October 2014 at 09:54 , Anonymous Nelson said...

Thanx for the encouragement! Meanwhile the waste-paper basket is getting full of crumpled drafts.

 

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