Posted on 10/21/2001 5:30:17 PM PDT by summer
A Pacifist Dictionary
By Kate Maloy
Someone recently said to me: My pacifism stops when someone declares war on me. She is apparently a pacifist only until the condition that actually calls for pacifism arises. She wants to know how we can protect ourselves if we dont return violence for violence. She wants to know what we should do.
No wonder she is at a loss. The human race has almost no experience with lasting peace or its strategies.
Our default has always been war. When at risk, we want to destroy the enemy that has put us there. This is not our noblest option--it comes from reflex, not reflection--but we nearly always resort to it, first or last.
Those of us who hang onto pacifist ideals, even in times like these, are dismissed, attacked, and mocked.
We are dismissed by the likes of NPRs Cokie Roberts, who, when asked whether there is any opposition to this current war, answered: None that matters. We are attacked in editorials and sometimes by our own friends or relatives as unrealistic, simple-minded, airy-fairy, even dangerous. We are mocked in mainstream media like Newsweek, in which there recently appeared a snide comment about anachronistic, bead-and-Birkenstock types.
The fear sparked by recent horrors intensifies suspicion toward pacifism. People dont want their traditional forms of defense--the only ones they know--called into doubt. It makes them too afraid. And in turn it makes them scorn us peaceniks, as if our ideals deepen their risk, as if we would sacrifice the world before relaxing our principles.
The fact is, we see real safety as possible only through our principles. The more surprising fact is, we can state our principles just like everyone else. We are patriots, and we believe in defense. We love our freedoms, desperately mourn the violence against our country, and long for justice. We recognize the need for sacrifice and courage in these terribles times. We pray for peace. Its just that we define the relevant nouns a little differently.
Excerpts from a pacifist dictionary might read something like this (though not in alphabetical order):
Patriotism. Unswerving loyalty to the first and foremost principle of our country, which is also the first principle of humanity--All people are created equal. Because violence betrays this principle, true patriotism must seek nonviolent ways both to extend it and defend it.
<> Defense. Protection against violence achieved by eliminating its causes, including hatred, intolerance, injustice, and fear. This is accomplished through the universal application of humanitys first principle. When all people are treated as equals, there remains little reason for warfare.
<> Freedom. A human condition that arises from a generous sufficiency of food, clothing, shelter, education, health care, civil and religious liberties, and employment opportunities. It is a self-limiting condition; it breeds no desire for excess, whether material, behavioral, or political. A truly free person or nation sees that in a world of finite resources the drive for disproportionate wealth and power necessarily exploits or subjugates others and thus betrays humanitys first principle.
<> Justice. All actions and policies that ensure and protect humanitys first principle and guarantee to all people and nations an equal right to freedom.
<> Sacrifice. Forgoing any over-use of resources by countries or individuals so that the first principle can apply worldwide. The only alternative to material sacrifice is blood sacrifice--the continued endangerment or death of the young to save the old or the greedy.
<> Courage. The quality that overrides personal fear in order to keep faith with ideals and act upon them.
<> Peace. An enduring condition that can come about only when patriotism, defense, freedom, justice, sacrifice, and courage--the concepts defined above--prevail among all people and nations. This condition is deeper and stronger than historys periods of uneasy quiet between wars.
We pacifists know that our definitions are not in common usage. We know we are a tiny minority. We know this war will run over our ideals like a tank. We know we must either take the long view or despair altogether. Pacifism, in the long view, is far from being illogical and powerless, as most people think. It is the only logic and the only power.
The long view sees, for instance, that the use of ever more lethal weapons--from teeth, feet, and elbows to chemical, biological, and nuclear threats--has never increased security but rather has led us into the ultimate danger. It sees that all weapons are powerless against hatred, as our countrys massive arsenal was powerless against militants with knives and boxcutters. It sees the most terrible lesson of war, which is that it does not neutralize peril but doubles it. War creates two kinds of danger--the kind embodied in our global destructive power and the kind embodied in the hatred that first spawned that power.
The only way to extinguish both hazards is to put humanitys first principle first--to make that, instead of war, our default. The human race has probably needed its wars in order to see the limits of war, but we reached those limits at the end of World War II. That was when the world truly changed. That was when we should have seen that we had forever ruled out either war or humankind.
Thus in answer to that earlier question--What should we do?--pacifists would say: In every moment, act, vote, speak, and choose not for that moment but for what it can give rise to--hatred or compassion, war or peace. Be alert for the old ways and the old rhetoric and recognize what they truly stand for, which is more and deeper peril. Uphold humanitys first principle at every personal and national decision point, not just when it is convenient. Do these things, and peace will fall into place, slowly no doubt, but with infinite grace.
KATE MALOY is a Quaker author and a pacifist. Her memoir, A Stone Bridge North, will be published in January by Counterpoint Press.
Please visit the following Web sites:
http://www.counterpointpress.com/1582431450.html
http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/tg/stores/detail/-/books/1582431450/customer-reviews/ref=ce_dpr_r_4/103-2920403-4907005#tab-link
[Kate Maloy's Stone Bridge North]
And the fatal flaw in her argument is right there.
As Robert Heinlein once observed, "Pacifism is a shifty doctrine under which someone accepts the benefits of the social group, refuses to pay his share of the cost, and claims a halo for his dishonesty."
Very Well Put.
I think that's where many Quakers are now. Not long ago, the Atlanta papers ran a piece on the local group. Several members commented that they no longer consider themselves Christians because restricting themselves to a single religious tradition is not "inclusive." All that's left when you cut loose your moorings, of course, is individual inspiration--or the whim of the moment, as the case may be.
Exactly so! An earlier poster said that pacifists only exist in this country--how true.
The one glaring omission from the writer's essay is any congnizant knowledge of sin and its effects on human society. These people haven't learned anything from either history or theology.
Probably because the definitions are fatuous.
<> Freedom. A human condition that arises from a generous sufficiency of food, clothing, shelter, education, health care, civil and religious liberties, and employment opportunities. . . .
Here the author confuses the cause with the effect. Freedom does not result from sufficient food, clothing, shelter, etc., etc.; the sufficiency arises only as the result of freedom.
Precisely- it's always "rough men with guns in their hands" who stand in front of pacifists' "rights" to practice their beliefs... I wonder how many like her would be willing to move to Cuba and try staging an anti-government rally?
It is also my understanding that CO's can be pressed into non-combat roles. I could be wrong about that, however. I do know that many genuine pacifists performed much homeland humanitarian assistance during WWII in particular.
I am very interested in your assessment of madprof98's assertion that some Quaker sects have gone to calling themselves non-Christian. My understanding of Unitarianism, for example, is that it varies widely from church to church. Have Quakers gone that route? Have you visited other Quaker churches?
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