November 28, 2018
MY CORNER by Boyd
Cathey
Remembering Who We
Are—How Memory and Hope Will Give Us Eventual Victory
Friends,
The late
Southern scholar Mel Bradford once used the wording “remembering who we are” as
a title to a book of finely-honed essays about his beloved Southland. It seems
to me, as Bradford so artfully and gracefully suggested in his writings, it is
memory, both individual and collective, which is essential not just to the passed-on
heritage of any culture, but to the very existence of that culture, itself. We
remember the deeds, the sayings, the handed-down lore, the usages, and the
faith of our fathers and grandfathers (and mothers and grandmothers). Their
lessons, their admonitions, their successes (and failures), their examples,
even their everyday customs inform us and our actions, and, indeed, help shape
our lives and view of life. Historically, these are in many respects the very
same accoutrements that give definition and offer the earliest structure to our
existence, that define us, and that also provide an inheritance which we, in
turn, impart to our offspring and descendants.
It is
thus memory that is integral to the continuation of a culture and a people. We
inherit the wealth and the richness of the remembered past, and we are impelled
to both add to it in our own way and also pass it on. To quote the 12th
century theologian, John of Salisbury (a quote often favored by my mentor, the
late Russell Kirk): "We are like dwarfs sitting on the shoulders of
giants. We see more, and things that are more distant, than they did, not
because our sight is superior or because we are taller than they, but because
they raise us up, and by their great stature add to ours."
A
society—a culture—that discards memory, that cuts itself off from its
inheritance, whether purposefully or accidentally, deprives itself of the
accumulated richness of that heritage. Of course, there are always those who
revile the past and its legacy, or at the very least, seek to modify or
transform it. And, no doubt, change and reform, in some degree, are always
necessary to any well-functioning society.
There is
a fascinating quote from Prince Giuseppe di Lampedusa’s famous novel detailing
the turmoil of 19th century Italy, The Leopard (Il Gattopardo):
“Things will have to change in order that they remain the same.” There
is a wonderful film based on that novel starring, quite improbably, Burt
Lancaster which director Luchino Visconti directed (1963), in which the
tensions between the immemorial past and the circumstances created by change
are vividly explored.
No society—no culture—can completely denude itself of its
inheritance and its history and actually survive. Such experiments in total
revolutionary transformation have inevitably ended in bloodshed and incredible
destructiveness—in the massacres of the French Revolution, and more recently,
in the Gulag and the concentration camp, or of blood soaked Maoism.
Over the past half century and more we have witnessed a different
kind of complete revolution; it does not employ as weapons of choice the tank
and bayonet, nor of the Gulag as the final destination for unrepentant opponents—at
least not yet. It has been an unfolding, all-encompassing cultural movement
spanning decades, subverting and then incorporating in its service diverse radical
revolutionary elements injected into our educational system, into our
entertainment industry, into our politics, even into the very language we use
to communicate with each other. The “violence” it metes out is mostly of the
cerebral nature, not of the physical kind, but rather predicated on shame,
humiliation, fear of the loss of a job or reputation, and the playing on the
natural human desire for conformity, while steadily upping the ante in our laws—constantly
moving the goalposts of what is acceptable. It is the kind of intellectual
“violence,” now writ large, that once impelled people to look the other way
when their neighbors were hauled off to Siberia under Stalin, or to Dachau
under Hitler.
And it has been highly effective, utilizing as its major weaponry
the terrifying twins, the ineradicable accusations of the sins of “racism” and
“sexism,” and a whole panoply of subterms that accompany such charges: “white
supremacy,” “historic white oppression,” “colonialist imperialism,” “misogyny,”
“toxic masculinity,” and increasingly expanded to incorporate terms like “anti-migrant”
or “anti-transgender” bigotry.
The overarching desire of this Progressivist Revolution is, in
fact, not reform—not what Lampedusa’s character the Prince of Salina says consolingly
about some things changing so that other things can remain the same. No, it is incredibly
“post-Marxian,” making the older Communist and Marxist revolutionary dreams
seem tame in comparison. It invokes and demands a total reversal, a complete
transformation in which nearly all, if not all, of those institutions, those
traditions, and that inheritance vouchsafed to us from our ancestors is rudely
discarded, rejected, and vilely condemned as racist, sexist, fascist—in other
words, our remembered past is cut off from us.
And we are then naked before history, isolated individuals,
without a heritage, without a past, without family, and without memory:
neutralized, bland “tabula rasa” vessels to be filled with the “new”
Progressivist ideology that will convert us all into the model obedient automatons
only hinted at in Orwell’s Nineteen-Eighty-Four
or by Russian film director Nikita Mikhalkov’s deeply disturbing 1994 film of
Stalin’s Russia, Burnt By the Sun.
Such attempts have always run aground when eventually confronted
by human nature itself, those God-given natural characteristics ingrained in
the human being and psyche that desperately seek belonging, family, a usable history,
and memory. In the past all putative totalitarian systems have been impelled to
offer substitutes in an attempt to satisfy those natural longings. Verifiably, none of those ersatz replacements
has worked, whether the Goddess of Reason enthroned in Paris’s Notre Dame
Cathedral, or the deification of the Worker and Party (or of Chairman Mao)
under Communism, or modern appeals to a debauched and poisonous corruption of Christianity.
Yet such efforts continue, and in our day with increased feverish
and fanatical determination. Just take a look at the Web sites of such zealous groups
as the Workers World Party (centered in Durham, NC), Redneck Revolt, Black
Lives Matter, or various Antifa-related outfits. The chiliastic vision of some
future Utopia bleeds through nearly every line, it is right around the corner,
if only—if only—all those white supremacists and racists, all those male
misogynists, all that historic, European-originated and colonialist bigotry and
oppression, could be swept from the scene, and, of course, if only those
monuments to Confederate veterans or to Christopher Columbus, and maybe to
Thomas Jefferson, too, could be secreted safely away in some remote museum
(just a small first step, of course, in the continuing revolution).
And our timorous and pusillanimous elites, those cowardly
“guardians” of our culture, those globalists and “deep state” denizens, and
those political prostitutes, give way in fearful obeisance and run, cowering,
to hide in the tall grass.
It is the lunacy—the sickness—of the madman, but unlike the
outbreaks of such contagions in the past, its modern roots are far more demonic,
and it is far closer to apparent success. It is best described perhaps in the
words of the great Irish poet William Butler Yeats in his visionary poem
written almost 100 years ago, “The Second Coming,” an intimation of the final
emergence of the “Rough Beast,” an incarnation of what can only be described as
an “anti-Christ,”
“Things fall apart; the centre cannot hold;
Mere anarchy is loosed upon the world,
The blood-dimmed tide is loosed, and everywhere
The ceremony of innocence is drowned;
The best lack all conviction, while the worst
Are full of passionate intensity.
Mere anarchy is loosed upon the world,
The blood-dimmed tide is loosed, and everywhere
The ceremony of innocence is drowned;
The best lack all conviction, while the worst
Are full of passionate intensity.
Surely some revelation is at hand;
Surely the Second Coming is at hand.
Surely the Second Coming is at hand.
[….]
The darkness drops again but now I
know
That twenty centuries of stony sleep
Were vexed to nightmare by a rocking cradle,
And what rough beast, its hour come round at last,
Slouches towards Bethlehem to be born.”
That twenty centuries of stony sleep
Were vexed to nightmare by a rocking cradle,
And what rough beast, its hour come round at last,
Slouches towards Bethlehem to be born.”
This, then, is the ultimate challenge and the multifaceted Enemy—the
Legion—we face, which appears to have victory and domination within its grasp.
And it is why we must never lose hope, for Our Creator is still Master of the
Universe, and His promises are as valid and true now as ever before.
Our watchword—our abiding confidence—may be summed up in the words
of early 20th century Spanish writer, Miguel de Unamuno in his
volume, The Tragic Sense of Life: “Our life is a hope which is continually
converting itself into memory and memory in its turn begets hope.”
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