“They hold life cheap”
Winston Churchill in Bangalore, 1897
Some weeks ago, discussing the ghastly bombardments on Gaza over breakfast, I exclaimed that “they hold life cheap!”—“they” referring to both sides. Israel was using excessive force to defend itself against attack by Hamas. Hamas was continuing its own ineffectual rocket attacks on Israel, knowingly and culpably triggering further slaughter against its own people, the very ones it should have striven to protect. Who was left to hold civilian lives dear? They were treated as expendable pawns for the West to agonize over. As in Syria, Iraq, etc. For here in the West we hold life dear, so dear that you wonder if we are going way beyond reason, eliminating ever more causes of death, as if physical immortality is to be the atheists’ rival version of Heaven. (Or Hell.)
I have a memory at nine years old of gazing at a big wall-map of the world whilst the schoolmaster gave his opinion that the peoples “out East” didn’t value human life as we do. The boundary seemed to begin just beyond the countries of Europe. I’ve been wondering whether this opinion still has its followers today, so I asked Google, and found nothing of significance. But my attention was drawn to a book by the young Winston Churchill about his sojourn in 1897 among the Pathan tribes (now called Pashtuns) in the North-West Frontier of India. He says “This state of continual tumult has produced a habit of mind which recks little of injuries, holds life cheap and embarks on war with careless levity . . .” There are many who think his perceptive account, and his contemptuous references to the Talib-ul-ilms (Taliban), have relevance to Afghanistan today. His writing was not restrained by today’s multi-cultural caution. When Stanley McChrystal was in command of Coalition Forces in Afghanistan, he read the book eagerly, as this news story relates. I’ve published an extract, here. After much reflection, I concluded that his fascinating description threw the scent of red herring across my quest, and could have helped derail General McChrystal’s own assessment, because he later got sacked from his role as Commander. And Churchill, for all his achievements as a young and old man, is hardly our guide, hardly the one to accuse others of holding life cheap, when he begged to be sent to the dangerous places, deliberately sought out battle; and in later life calmly ran the British side of World War II. What you do see in his book is the clash of culture, where neither Pathan warlord nor Imperial peacemaker could understand the other. When we can’t understand others, it is hard to see them as fully human in our terms. We shall come back to this point.
It was different in the First World War, both sides were akin, playing to similar rules, even their sovereign leaders having close family ties. And we cannot set war at a distance from ourselves, as if it has no place in our world. War is an inseparable part of history, with no sign of being eliminated. Territorial war is as old as owned territory. Armstrong in her latest book and Harari in his latest book Sapiens both make much of the Agrarian Revolution and its effect on human behaviour. In brief, it goes like this. Nomad hunter-gatherers mind their own business and live peaceably in their tribes, pretty much. When homo sapiens started to grow wheat and other crops, along came kings who did no work but ran protection rackets, taxing the peasants and keeping armies to control them and defend the rich farmland against other kings. When one war ended, another would invariably start. The strong conquered the weak, empires rose and fell. Over time, protocols would emerge for the conduct of war, to minimize its devastation. They would generally hold good for wars within a given civilization, buttressed by a shared concept of the sacred. So for example we have the mediaeval rules of chivalry, and the notion of sanctuary as protection for fugitives.
When we look at the traditions of the soldier, we see in every culture a shared sense of honour, a mutual trust and support, for the members of an army hold their lives in one others’ hands. It is a basic motivating principle that they hold dear their own lives, and those of their own people. Against this, they are prepared to make the ultimate sacrifice. Each knowingly risks his own life to protect a greater cause, such as the defence of his people’s land by a foreign aggressor. But in all civilizations based on the European model, there is only one correct response to overwhelming force: surrender. The slaughter in World War I trenches simply continued until one side ran out of bullets, or men, or something else, and had to submit to the other’s humiliating terms. By contrast, in World War II, Allied troops on the ground surrendered en masse to the Japanese, who happened to have a different sense of honour, despised their surrender-monkey prisoners, and intended to go on fighting till they ran out of kamikaze pilots and till no jungle-soldier was still standing. The atomic bombs forced a change of mind, but even after the formal Japanese surrender a few isolated soldiers continued hostilities till nearly 30 years later.
The Japanese soldier, you might say, held the Samurai code of honour above all else, and found it impossible to respect an enemy who behaved differently. In the West, our inherited European values make it possible to understand the Samurai code only by analogy with the mediaeval code of chivalry. That code wouldn’t stand scrutiny by today’s liberal eyes, but we judge these things by sentiment and ignorance, rather than knowledge of the small print. And it’s worth considering how dear the West holds civilian lives. Armstrong, as quoted near the end of my last piece, reports that when innocent lives were lost in a drone attack on Waziristan, US and Pakistani governments showed no sign that they cared. It’s a region not far from the one written up by Churchill. One wonders if the tribesmen still hold life cheap, taking potshots at one another for sport?
As it happens, in 1974 I did meet a couple of brothers whose father was a tribal chieftain from a part of Pakistan, near the border with Afghanistan. They’d been sent to school in England, and told me how feuds were carried out almost as a way of life, with old rifles mainly, and of course there were often casualties, but that was part of the game. At least the shooting took place in the mountains, where women and children wouldn’t have been hurt. They were only left widowed and fatherless. One remembers the trenches of WWI, where parents and siblings were left bereft, and a whole generation of women remained life-long spinsters, for lack of eligible men. I suppose if it’s a traditional way of life, it’s always a possibility, and a subject of sad folk-songs: the fisherman who was lost in a storm, the bridegroom seized by the press-gang into the navy.
So far we have looked at warfare between militias, where civilians may get caught in the crossfire. Armstrong wants to defend asymmetric warfare, in which a suicide bomber, say, takes arms on behalf of the poor and deprived against the overpowering force of the oppressor. Before I knew better, I too had a certain sympathy for the plight of the weaker side, and the methods used. With no government, no army present to represent and protect them, they were lone heroes, ready like the Tommy in World War I to sacrifice their lives for their people. Horrible but perhaps by some reckoning the lesser evil. Anyhow, that is what Armstrong thinks. Unfortunately for this case, there is a darker side. The sacrifice is done by proxy, instigated by shadowy figures with bunkers to stay safe in, whose motives are political rather than the protection of their own people. The suicide bombers, or ISIL fighters, are trained to think that what they are doing is for some higher cause than mere human life.
But then when I say this I imagine how many soldiers have been trained in similar ways to fight and die in bloody wars for their generals and their political masters. I think not just of shadowy figures who train al Qaeda, ISIL and suicide bombers, but dictators like Saddam Hussein, Gaddafi and Assad. Cruel as their reigns have been, might it be the case that their people would have flourished more had they not been overthrown? They would have had more electricity, the streets would have been safer. Are there territories unready for democracy? Is it only cruel autocracy that can keep them from killing one another? Would it have been better to keep Yugoslavia together, under Communist rule? Would it have been better if Western Powers had never created protectorates in the Middle East & North Africa? Where do you stop asking questions? You have to stick to what you know.
I’ve been reading about the First World War, via the scrapbook of my great-aunt Olwen Sanger-Davies. I knew her as Auntie Ollie. My sister and I are publishing it online, you can see the work in progress here. It’s very striking how eager everyone seems to have been, to support the war effort. There was no sense of war as a terrible thing. On the contrary, it gave everyone an opportunity to perform selfless action, to do the honourable thing, to work together for a higher cause. The ISIL fighters who have left this town to go and fight doubtless feel the same way. I see from the local paper that one was a security guard at a local supermarket. Another attended the grammar school where my younger son was educated. I see groups of young Muslims chattering excitedly in the old school playground at the end of our street, and wonder if they are teasing one another as to who would have the guts to go and fight. Meanwhile Philip Hammond, our Foreign Secretary, affirms that the Government might try jihadists for treason. About time. This country shelters you, makes sure you don’t starve, you owe it your loyalty.
So now I’ve forgotten what case I want to argue, if any. Perhaps I want to agree with Armstrong in all sorts of ways, except two. First, in her chosen field of religion, she appears to lack a critical sense. In her book Muhammad: a Biography of the Prophet, for example, she depends on the available material, disregarding the fact that it’s entirely hagiography, that is to say written by those who believe in their prophet’s heaven-sent destiny, believe in the whole paraphernalia of Islam. So I instantly felt that to Islam, Karen Armstrong is a “useful idiot”, to use Lenin’s alleged epithet: “a term for people perceived as propagandists for a cause whose goals they are not fully aware of, and who are used cynically by the leaders of the cause.” I was so disgusted I took it back to the library, same day. It seemed to taint the space it took up in my house. The only time I previously felt that way about a book was after buying Ayn Rand’s book We the Living, second-hand via Amazon. Lacking the means to burn it and thus prevent it falling into other hands, I dumped it in the land-fill bin as opposed to the recycling one.
I don’t want to argue any case. What it comes down to is this, that religion in general and of itself is not to be blamed for wars, or anything else. But on the other hand, religion is not to occupy any privileged place. Fear of terrorism and fear of the penalty for apostasy (look it up in Wikipedia) has stifled criticism of Islam, a religion or movement, whatever you want to call it, that’s desperately in need of criticism, from without but especially from within.
And this brings me to Martin Amis, whom I’ve elsewhere called my alter ego, a representation of my ideal self as it might have been had I not lived the life I’ve actually lived, if that makes sense. He has famously spoken out on Islam, claiming back the freedom of speech that most of us have cravenly relinquished. Here is an example googled at random. He’s just brought out a new novel, The Zone of Interest, an intimate tale of Auschwitz, entirely from the viewpoint of three narrators: the Commandant; a nephew of Martin Bormann who’s got an easy job liaising with the pharmaceutical company I G Farben, which uses prisoners to test its products; and a Jew who’s in charge of the gas-chambers—selection for, and removal of corpses from. As the blurb says, “a brilliant, celestially upsetting novel inspired by no less than a profound moral curiosity about human beings.” And in his novel he shows the limit of human understanding, quoting Primo Levi’s remark:
Perhaps one cannot, what is more one must not, understand what happened, because to understand is almost to justify . . .
Enough. If I had made a case, I would rest it here; but I manifestly haven’t. I prefer to maintain a “profound moral curiosity about human beings”.
26 Comments:
THANKS!
I can't add much to this besides my agreement. The most appalling thing about war, all wars, is how cheaply life is disposed of, often for such little cause and with even less to gain. There have been wars, I suppose, that have been necessary to fight (stopping the atrocities of the holocaust, for example), but all too often war has seemed to be a first resort rather than a last.
Also, on a side note, We the Living is an excruciatingly boring book, but it's probably the mildest represenation of Rand's views. If you felt inclined to burn that one, I can only imagine what your impulse would be if you got your hands on a copy of Atlas Shrugged . Maybe dismatled it one atom at a time and the scatter the atoms to the four corners of time and space. I almost want to recommend just to see your reaction. It's quite a thing to behold. As literature, it's god awful. As psychology, it's eye brow raising to say the least. As philosophy, it lands some blows in some places, and goes completely off the rails in others (that's almost a pun.)
I happened to like The Fountainhead (which is not without some serious, serious, flaws as well) .... kind of. It is, at least, an entertaining story to some degree. I can appreciate it on the basic level of someone struggling creatively to do their own thing and to follow their own vision and their own sincere passions without regard for vanity and conformity.
Sorry, kind of went off on a tangent there.
Tangents 'R' Us.
I have read and re-read this post, but find that I am unable to see the wood for the trees. This is not a judgement of your writing but of the problem you speak about. Each time I mull over a point that you make I find that I am presented with a 'yes but'. Each time I address my reaction to a point I find myself asking why it is that I cannot say this or that. Who are the nameless ones who initiate the rules that dictate how we are supposed to live and conduct ourselves? In short, who is enslaving our minds for their own self-righteous purposes? Each time I look at a point you raise I find myself asking, "Why?" and "Why kill in that particular manner?" For there is a depravity about the way ISIL behaves that echoes the way nazi concentration camp guards and administrators behaved. And there have been others! And let us never forget that simply because we are who we are (British, American, western, christian or whatever grouping we choose to identify with) does not exempt us from similar behaviours.
It is as if there is an instinct amongst those who carry out these unacceptable (to us) acts to shock people beyond their ability, or desire, to confront what they see as the world's wrongs. And that 'in your face, touch us if you dare' attitude pervades even what are accepted as 'civil' societies. We don't talk about those lesser problems very much, but simply blame governments (whom we elect, if we still have a vote) rather than our refusals to face reality. [That is not to say that governments are always non-blameworthy and squeaky clean.]
But it takes time, commitment, courage and wisdom to even begin the process of raising ourselves out of our spiritual quagmire, that slough in which we can perceive an actual joy in killing, a satisfaction in causing the maximum pain and degradation to our fellow inhabitants of this planet. I fear that we as a species have not yet experienced enough to persuade us to change our ways. Hope is something which I struggle daily to raise inside myself.
Without encouragement from Ellie & one or two others, the piece would not have got this far. Endless tinkering would still be possible, and in some cases desirable. For instance, I mentioned agreeing with Armstrong in all sorts of ways, except two. I described the first as her failure to view religion, specifically Islam, with a critical eye. Now I can’t remember the second. Perhaps it was covered anyway.
The whole piece wanted to go off at different tangents, like a dog-walker in Central Park with seven animals straining at the leash.
The geometry of tangents has been much studied, from Apollonius to Monge.
Thanks, Tom. My last comment was written before seeing yours. Your words echo my own feelings about the topic in many ways, and that is part of the reason it was so hard to write.
In the end, I felt that you and I and everyone else has to follow our own best conscience in the matter, knowing that others may or may not follow their best conscience, but if they do it may dictate different rules from ours.
But we have to be very careful about our attempts to understand. I'm not speaking now about deliberate killing but all sorts of behaviours that for example we may deplore as civilized Westerners, but which may be acceptable to those of other cultures living in our own country or elsewhere. If we cannot understand it, we should not pretend that we do. As Primo Levi, Auschwitz survivor, indicated in the quote above, some actions don't deserve any attempt to understand them.
Where I disagree with you, I think, is the burden you seem to be taking on yourself (unless I misunderstand your words) when you say
our spiritual quagmire, that slough in which we can perceive an actual joy in killing, a satisfaction in causing the maximum pain and degradation to our fellow inhabitants of this planet
Some behaviours that we observe in the world may mirror dark impulses that we conceal even from ourselves. But if that is the case, we do understand them, & can say "There, but for the grace of God, go I." Others go beyond altogether. Thus in the case of Amis' book, I feel that he was able to understand his principal characters well enough to portray them convincingly as possible human beings, I mean fictional characters with life breathed into them by a novelist's art.
He draws the line at Hitler, by not naming him at all, only referring to him via various epithets (The Deliverer, Reichskanzler, etc); & explicitly says in an Afterword delivered in his own voice that neither he nor any historian can explain Hitler.
The closest he gets to a partial explanation is this, that ever since Pearl Harbour in December '41 when Hitler "boldly, gratuitously and suicidally declared war on the USA" he was "now coveting defeat; and he wanted that defeat to be as complete and disastrous as possible. Thereafter his aggression veered in on a new target: Germans." Amis attributes this view to Sebastian Haffner.
We still don't understand such nihilism, such embracing of death for self and others. But it helps us categorize the crime, and group it with that of the ISIL fighters. For I read that when they sign up and declare allegiance to that cause, they sign up to their own imminent violent death as well, a death that takes all with it.
But it’s in the novel itself that Amis shows us how, by seeing through their eyes, the principal characters can perform their evil tasks day to day. They are human; but employ myriad stratagems to blind themselves to the horror and suffering, to dissociate their own consciences from the horror.As a reader of course, you don’t step into their shoes. You merely squirm, grateful to the author for sparing you the details, only hinting them.
This is getting too long for a comment . . .
Although I find the idea of killing abhorrent, and even more so the activity of imposing suffering (because that extends the evil to its limit), I must recognise that there could be circumstances when I too could descend into that particular pit. One point that was triggered by your in-depth response to me comment was the apparent need for some kind of balance, if that is the right word, for example in the personality of Herr Hitler. Setting out to be the deliverer of the Germanic peoples, he was prepared to take on the whole world. But the price of defeat had to be the total defeat of Germany, because they were not good enough for the task he had set them. That seems to me to be a projection of his own needs onto his adopted Fatherland. Perhaps, again, there is an element of this self-defeating nihilism in everyone. To recognise it, if it is there, is to be freed from its power to destroy us. And that perhaps lies at the root of all violent behaviour, that the urge to conflict is hidden and unrecognised.
Responding to Tom: Yes, this is such an interesting thought and I wonder if it is linked to Freud's idea of Thanatos, or the death instinct, which I have not researched at all.
I responded more fully but much too hastily, and deleted the additional remarks.
We were up to 15 comments, having gone off at several tangents, too hastily for our better judgement. Woodsybit deleted hers, BMW some of his, & I've removed my responses to them, & some very hasty additional thoughts of my own. The remaining 9 hold together OK, I think.
Martin Amis seems to me more like your shadow side than your alter ego. Perhaps you like the idea that you could have received his acclaim if you had chosen to tear down rather than building up, to drive wedges rather than bringing together. Uncovering problems without offering solutions harms rather than heals. You have yourself carefully stated the issue without inflaming reaction.
I appreciate you the way you are. It would be hard for me to say that to Martin Amis.
I'm grateful for your point, Ellie. My link to the views of Martin Amis was unfortunate and ill-chosen. This one is better, less random, one which doesn’t irresponsibly include some words he said in 2006 without mentioning that he has spent the last eight years recanting them at every opportunity.
I’m delighted to be me and not him, with all his acclaim and controversy. The (Jungian?) notion of a “shadow side” is not one I recognize, not any more. I see Amis as a brilliant writer and a scrupulously honest person driven by a passionate concern for the world, like his late atheist friend Christopher Hitchens (whose own concern and writings I admire very much less). I don’t see how Amis has driven a wedge at all or damaged peaceful coexistence by his words. He uses freedom of speech responsibly and properly, that is to say without constant fear of saying the wrong thing, as if he were a politician or head of a central bank.
I’m not so sure about Armstrong, though. She happily criticizes any connection between Christian societies and violence, without saying a word against Islam. Nor does she acknowledge that most of her critique of Christian societies goes back hundreds of years. We (those who live in such societies, secular as they may now appear to be) have evolved. What upsets Muslims and politically correct Liberals is Amis’ point that their societies have not evolved; but desperately need to. Is this something that should not be boldly spoken?
"This one is better"
"The requested URL /books/Martin Amis.pdf.html was not found on this server."
Hmmm.......
OK, sorry this is the article http://online.wsj.com/news/articles/SB10001424127887324556304578120983667458270?mg=reno64-wsj&url=http%3A%2F%2Fonline.wsj.com%2Farticle%2FSB10001424127887324556304578120983667458270.html Failing that (if it demands a subscription) this copy I made http://www.ian.mulder.clara.net/books/Martin%20Amis.pdf
Style is nice if you have substance, without it you are a phony. Substance comes from your inner integrity. I don't know if either Armstrong or Amis has it but what they write is not what I choose to read. The only book I felt compelled to burn was an insulting biography of Clinton given to me by a conservative friend.
http://www.theguardian.com/books/2014/aug/15/love-to-hate-martin-amis
I am a mediocre writer but I write about a great writer whose merit comes from his profound, substantial ideas.
http://woeandjoy.blogspot.com/2011/09/mental-traveller-7-9.html
I feel like I should read something else by Amis, just so that I don't have to keep mentioning that I read Time's Arrow every time you bring him up.
I don't know if I quite see the fascination, though. I liked Time's Arrow as an exercise in high concept, but it didn't exactly compel me to seek out more by that author (as, say, the first John Irving novel I read did.) Not that that's meant as a slight on Amis. I just don't know what his other books are about, what kind of tone, style, etc, and whether it would be something I'd be interested in.
Tastes differ, obviously. De gustibus non est disputandum. One cannot make an argument out of the differences.
True dat.
. . . and what you have achieved with Blake, dear Ellie, stands as a shining monument of exegesis unto the generations.
And a further and . . .
. . . and in the context of this post and previous, & comments appended thereto, I've just rediscovered an essay by John Myste”, his “Conversation with Emerson”, which seems relevant here, at least in this unearthly hour: for what it says about the motivation of terrorists, and the quote from Emerson which starts, “In every work of genius we recognize our own rejected thoughts; they come back to us with a certain alienated majesty.”
And I know, I completely side-stepped the issue of terrorism, which is why you shared the piece in the first place. What can I tell you? I'm not always big on discussing politics and world affairs, which I suppose should be counted as one of my own excessive failings.
Also "commiseration" was not the right world at all. I can't think of what the word I wanted was. It's right on the tip of my tongue.
Anyway, I'll shut up now.
I suggest the word was "consideration".
Actually the thing which most struck me, more than the issue of terrorism, was the quote John offers from R. W. Emerson, which I understood in a particular way, perhaps not the one RWE intended, & not the one you meant
“In every work of genius we recognize our own rejected thoughts; they come back to us with a certain alienated majesty. etc etc ”
I see in Amis my own rejected thoughts, and bask in their alienated majesty. I realize that there was a time when I would have resembled “the Amis who hogs the attention and draws the fire”. If only I’d had the ability & the breaks, I would have been insufferable, & perhaps matured in old age. But Fortune dealt another hand & crushed me at every turn, as well as depriving me of the mirror of self-knowledge. Now I’ve renounced the very idea of acclaim & accepted the quiet life as meeting my every need. So that part of me, the counterfactual me that strutted the world’s stage as dashing author, dandy & intellectual, takes vicarious existence in the alienated majesty of Amis the novelist, interviewee and easy bait for Guardian journalists.
If that is the “shadow side”, Ellie, I apologize, for you were right.
Oh, I agree. It's a good quote. But I think you see more worthy thoughts reflected in those particular words of genius than Mr. Myste does. As far as I can tell, he mostly sees his own preoccupation with his intellectual vanity. That doesn't seem to be a very rich lesson to walk away with.
And what of this opinion of his that he feels "forced to take with shame ... from another"? When you really look at it, his five point breakdown, as well as his friend's subsequent remark, both boil down to pretty standard attitudes of liberal tolerance, natural conclusions drawn from a long habit of such outlooks. I don't see anything all that interesting or original about that. Is it really that earth-shattering to basically say that terrorists do the things they do because they believe in the cause they're doing them in service of? Is this really an insight that needs to be coveted so jealously? Does he really think this hasn't occurred to the rest of us? Does he really think that there are intelligent adults walking around out there that think that people like that commit "evil acts" simply and solely and deliberately for the sake of being evil people? I've never met anyone with half a lick of sense that thinks like that. Most of us understand that even our enemies have their own perspectives and reasons for doing things. .
Am I being too hard on him? I guess I'm not a big John Myste fan.
I shall address my response to John Myste, in case he finds his way here, though he has not visited for a while.
"John, I am apparently a bigger John Myste fan than BMW. Is this because you compared my writing to that of your hero Emerson? Am I to be forgiven for taking this this as evidence of your perspicacity and intelligence? By you, obviously yes.
I shall let these questions hang in the air. Those of us who have spent decades of our lives hiding under stones through low self-esteem must be forgiven, I humbly propose, for emerging shyly when they receive favourable attention, and starting to live more adventurously."
I like the game of mutual enlightenment. As for the "chess match featuring rooks of smugness, bishops of condescension, and queens of semantic technicalities", it sounds like a recognizable game, but wouldn't it fall apart swiftly without two players agreeing to play by the same rules? I guess it did!
"... but wouldn't it fall apart swiftly without two players agreeing to play by the same rules?"
Fair enough.
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