August 13, 2021
MY CORNER by Boyd Cathey
Can the South Rise Again? Faith of Our Fathers
Friends,
Growing up in mostly-rural North Carolina, most of my friends
and especially their parents could go on a bit about their family backgrounds,
about their familial histories. Most of my friends—like me—had
great-grandfathers or great-great-grandfathers who had served in Confederate
ranks back in 1861-1865. Pride in family and in our ancestors was taken for
granted, a devout appreciation we all shared.
Especially during the centennial commemorations of the early
1960s, most of us youngsters took an intense interest in all the various
events, the re-enactments on a large scale and the ceremonies attending the
anniversary. Our imaginations were filled with stories of heroism, sacrifice,
honor, tragic defeat and attendant suffering, unrealized dreams, and legends
and traditions passed down to us. Indeed, public schools back then actually
supplemented and encouraged this fascination and interest in history and the
characters and personalities in it who seemed, almost like magic, to come alive
once again.
Indeed, it had been scarcely a decade since the last
Confederate veteran had passed away in 1959! Many of us could recall
that. And our parents? They had grown up surrounded by the ever-decreasing
ranks of those valiant veterans, listening to first-hand accounts of the great
and heartbreaking epic that was the War for Southern Independence.
My grandfather on my mother’s side was Henry Johnson Perry.
Granddad Perry was born in Raleigh in 1877 and lived until 1962. As a young boy
I remember well him recounting to me standing hatless on old Fayetteville
Street in North Carolina’s capital on May
30, 1893, a sixteen year old apprentice, dressed all in black, with
thousands of other citizens reverently paying tribute to President Jefferson
Davis, whose remains were carried by horse-drawn caisson from the railroad
station to lie in state under the rotunda of the historic North Carolina State
Capitol, en route to his final resting place in Richmond.
Granddad’s father, Josiah Hunter Perry, an official with the
old Raleigh & Gaston Railroad, had been impressed in April 1865 by General
Sherman to conduct him and his staff by rail over to Bennitt Station (now
Durham) to receive the surrender of General Joseph Johnston. Waiting for the surrender to occur, he sat
under a cherry tree and carved a “peace pipe,” a relic I still have and which continues
to remind me of my history and my ancestor.
Granddad’s grand-father, Robert, had served in the North
Carolina legislature in the 1820s and had married the grand-daughter of Isaac
Hunter, the founder of Raleigh. All that family—all that history—danced through
my thoughts and imagination sixty years ago; I could visualize it, I could see
it in my mind’s eye. It was real, it was present…and despite the many years that
have elapsed, it still is.
Pride in one’s ancestry…pride in what the late Southern writer
and historian Mel Bradford termed “remembering who we are”…was integral to
defining what we valued and held dear in life. We were intimately related to
our ancestors, they were part of us. Their blood coursed through our veins.
Their memory was not that far removed. Their examples stood before us as models
to emulate, a challenge for us to uphold their honor and their noble efforts to
defend home, family, and the rights vouchsafed to them by their fathers and ancestors…who had cobbled together the American
confederation.
In any nation, in any people or civilization worthy of the
name, such an appreciation is natural, part of the national and cultural
psyche. It is indeed quite normal for a people to recall its past, to celebrate
its successes and heroes, to lament its defeats and hardships. These are part
and parcel of what define and make us, as Bradford states, “who we are.”
Deprive a people of its history, of its traditions, of its inherited culture,
and you deprive it of essential ingredients of its very existence. It becomes a
mass of rootless individuals, of automatons, subject to the latest whim or the most
persistent and enticing siren voice of some powerful ideology or, in modern
times, of George Orwell’s Big Brother and its extensive tentacles in and incestuous
partnership with the communications industry, education, and the media.
Fyodor Dostoyevsky has one of the three brothers in his novel The Brothers Karamazov declare, “If God
does not exist, everything is permitted.” Stripping people of their faith, and
then denuding them of the essential characteristics which define them is and
has always been the work of Revolutions, whether of the Cromwellian attempt in
the 17th century, the fanaticism of the Robespierres in France in
the late 18th, or the genocide of the Marxists in Russia and China
in the 20th. As now, in our
day the lunatics who run our schools and colleges, dominate our entertainment,
spout our daily news, and control our politics, whether it be the Democrats or
the Republicans, do the same with unalloyed frenzy. They make Orwell’s “Big
Brother” look like a Sunday school teacher.
My dissertation topic years back at the University of Navarra
in Spain, Juan Vazquez de Mella, stated it this way:
“Who has ever seen ‘the
individual,’ if not defined by his family, his region, his profession, his
language, his inheritance, his faith? Removed from these defining characteristics
the individual is an abstraction, and a political system based on an
abstraction must either end in despotism or revolution.”
Since the 1980s and ‘90s, we have seen the almost unrestrained
and rapacious growth of an eventually fatal cancer within our body politic. Denominated
variously as “progressivism,” “neo-“ or “post-Marxism,” and more recently as
“anti-racism” or “the movement for equity,” it draws its strength
intellectually from the concept of the Idea
of Progress, that is, that history unfolds irresistibly in one direction—the “progressive”
direction—which encompasses the ineluctable advance and triumph of essentially
secular and globalist ideas. At base it is egalitarian, and even though it may profess
respect for or even belief in God, its cumulative effects are to pervert, weaken
and, finally, destroy the natural linkage between man and his Creator. For the
progressivist, religion, particularly the Christian religion, becomes just one
more obstacle to be tamed, neutralized, and lastly, employed in the advance to
a universal secular utopia.
It was not that traditional society was opposed to advances in
science or economics; far from it. But such innovations were seen as a natural
part of the flourishing of God’s Creation, not opposed to it or superseding it.
The great stratagem of Marx and Lenin and their votaries was
to expropriate “progress” and weaponize it: the proletariat, united, under the
leadership of the self-anointed heads of the Revolution would lead the
“oppressed” to victory, to that utopia where there was no want, no poverty, no
sadness, where everyone was equal and happy.
Throughout history different revolutions have shared these
characteristics, have made these promises, and each time the result has been a
terrible dystopian nightmare.
The full attack in recent years on Southern traditions, identity,
and iconography is but a symptom, an element of an all-out assault on Western
Christian civilization, its culture, and belief. Prominent members of the official opposition
“conservative movement”—a Rich Lowry at National
Review, a Brian Kilmeade at Fox News, or a Ben Shapiro, and any number of others—attempt to compartmentalize the ongoing “culture war” by accepting,
even applauding the eradication of any visible sign of Confederate and Southern
history. But like temporizers in any revolution they fail to understand the
futility of their positions, which only abet the appetite of the radicals.
Whether a Kerensky and the Social Revolutionaries who helped
usher in Lenin’s rise to power in Russia, or the Girondins who believed they
could somehow harness the revolutionary fury in late 18th century
France, moderation and attempts to placate the madness and hysteria of
revolutionary zealots are doomed to disaster. Half-measures never work.
There is a whimsical episode in the superb historical film,
“Waterloo” (1970), which illustrates exactly the position of Establishment
Conservatives and their “opposition” to the fanatical tsunami of violent
revolution: an illiterate private in the Welsh Guards who has engaged in
plunder and stolen a young pig, cautions the pig not to squeal, not to alert
those around him of his plunder (a capital offense under military rules). “Be
quiet,” he tells the pig, “and I’ll only eat half of you!” Confronted by shrill
and seemingly overwhelming demands by a noisy nucleus of woke leftists,
authorized conservatives and Republicans respond to the revolutionaries in the
same manner: “Only kill us half-way, but please, oh please, don’t call us
racists!”
The recent attacks on Southern monuments and symbols, which are essentially an assault on Southern identity, cannot be dissociated from a
broader offensive by our modern “progressivists.” To think otherwise is worse
than wrongheaded, it is fatal.
In the contemporary South the great success of the
revolutionaries has been to atomize much of society, deprive large portions of
it, especially the young, of those inherited traditions, those customs, those
beliefs—those memories—which have given it substance and continuity, which have
served as its shield and buckler. Instead of what Southern writer Richard
Weaver called a communitarian “social bond individualism,” life centered around
family and church, and indelibly defined by region and custom, progressivism
breaks and severs those bonds, isolates individuals, and renders them subject
to the social decay and dislocation which an omnipotent managerial state, in
league with woke capitalism, utilizes to advance its vision of a future society.
In the past I have urged the termination of the public school
system—privatizing education and putting it back in the hands of the parents
where it belongs. I have authored several pieces on the possibilities for
secession, or, rather, the separation of various American states and counties
(perhaps the best and most peaceful means to resolve the irreducible
differences within the American citizenry). But more importantly, I have
advocated a return, a rededication to those principles and that belief which
once motivated and annealed our ancestors. That spirit, that wisdom, that
inspiration is there, is still there, for those who wish it. Scraping away the
ugly dross of political correctness and “wokeness” we can, again, recover those
memories, rekindle them, and draw from them strength…if we will it.
In his work, Requiem for A Nun (1951), Southern novelist William Faulkner says
of his fellow Southerners that for them, “The past is never dead. It's not even
past."
One
of the most remarkable poems of the 20th century is by the incomparable
Southern Agrarian Donald Davidson. Titled “Lee in the Mountains,” it summons us
once more to the battle lines and to eventual victory, if we have faith and the
Virtue of Hope. For, in the end, God will not forsake us. We must be like
Gideon’s small army and Forrest’s “critter company.”
Sense
the confidence that springs from our Christian faith and which Davidson reminds
us of:
Young men, the God of your fathers is a just
And merciful God Who in
this blood once shed
On your green altars
measures out all days,
And measures out the
grace
Whereby alone we live;
And in His might He
waits,
Brooding within the
certitude of time,
To bring this lost
forsaken valor
And the fierce faith
undying
And the love quenchless
To flower among the
hills to which we cleave,
To fruit upon the mountains
whither we flee,
Never forsaking, never
denying
His children and His
children’s children forever
Unto all generations of
the faithful heart.
Well said! The past is never dead because the blood of our Confederate ancestors flow in us.
ReplyDeleteVery pleased that you are raising the spectre of secession, Mr. Cathey. Attempting to return people who have lost their sanity to the realities of the human condition is a fruitless enterprise. Let them go their way, and let the rest of us whose minds and hearts are still functional reassemble in a new land of freedom right here on our own soil.
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