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9/11 LESSONS FROM "LORD OF THE RINGS" AUTHOR: Tolkien, Hitler, and Nordic Heroism
FrontPageMagazine.com ^ | December 20, 2001 | J.P. Zmirak

Posted on 03/25/2002 5:06:44 AM PST by Liz

A SHADOWY, evil overlord hides himself amid an unmapped mountain range. There he wields absolute power over fanatics and slaves, scheming for domination over the free peoples of the world. He sends forth assassins into peaceful lands and cities, spreading terror among civilians.

A capsule history of the past six months? No, that’s the plot of the movie I’m going to see tonight—The Lord of the Rings. Director Peter Jackson (Heavenly Creatures, 1994) could not have known how timely its release would prove—coming as it does as America hunts down a terror network built on a theology of evil, a perversion of Islam which promises eternal sensual reward for the reckless slaughter of civilians. The Lord of the Rings speaks to current events. It also touches on the most important themes of Western civilization—freedom, faith, and what it means to be a hero.

The Birth of Middle Earth
As a teenager, J.R.R. Tolkien neglected his Latin and Greek to study Norse. And Finnish. And Anglo-Saxon. Tolkien thrilled at studying medieval eddas and sagas, and mastering dusty grammars to decode half-forgotten tales. At Oxford, he made himself the university’s expert in Nordic literature, and won a prestigious chair which he’d hold for the next four decades.

What attracted Tolkien to these tales was their unique, heroic ethos. Written down by recently Christianized barbarians, stories such as Beowulf and Sir Gawain and the Green Knight intertwined the old, pagan values of individualism, courage and promise-keeping with Biblical themes of self-sacrifice, defense of the helpless, and piety towards the One God. Thus were the warriors of the North civilized, and urged to restrain their swords by the codes of Hebrew prophets and Christian theologians. The grandsons of the Viking raiders began to bind themselves to the Ten Commandments and Augustine’s "just war" theory.

Tolkien saw in this literature a great, unsung moment in the birth of the West. Like the Baron de Montesquieu, Tolkien saw as specifically "Nordic" the individualism and hatred for tyranny that pervades these sagas, which set medieval and modern man apart from the obedient subjects of Rome and Byzantium. (See David Gress’ From Plato to NATO for more on this fascinating connection.)

This freeman’s spirit survived for centuries in the stubborn cantons of Switzerland, the "free cities" of the Holy Roman Empire, and the gentry of England; the privileges won by Anglo-Saxons from their kings formed the basis of English Common Law, and its great modern descendant—the U.S. Bill of Rights. (See Wilhelm Röpke’s The Social Crisis of Our Time and Russell Kirk’s The Roots of American Order for documentation and analysis.)

The work of Tolkien’s close friend C.S. Lewis also refers to "the North" as the source of individualism and resistance to unjust authority; in The Chronicles of Narnia, his heroes’ battle cry is "for Narnia and the North." In Narnia, as in The Lord of the Rings, the heroes were based on medieval, Northern European knights, who fought for free societies based on tradition, custom, and courage—against slave armies recruited from southern climes, who carried scimitars, lived in the desert, and cringed before Oriental despots. (Of course, that brings us back to current events...)

The Modern Barbarians
It is ironic that even as Tolkien wrote to immortalize the great synthesis of Northern heroism with Biblical morality, modern barbarians labored to reverse it. The proto-Nazi "Völkisch" movement, born in the blood and humiliation of Napoleon’s conquest of Germany, had for a century agitated against Judaeo-Christian "softness," in favor of pagan ruthlessness. (Peter Viereck’s Metapolitics [Capricorn, 1961] traces this re-barbarization of German thought in the 19th century.) Völkisch boosters of Nordic literature ignored its heroic individualism in favor of its residues of pagan tribalism, "deconstructing" the Judaeo-Christian elements as "inauthentic" overlays on the "pure" originals. The artistic pinnacle of this project appeared in Wagner’s grand operas, based on "pure" pagan sources. Its political apogee came with the victory of a Völkish-socialist demagogue in Germany.

While Adolf Hitler was careful at first to conceal his neo-pagan agenda, his followers were not: Heinrich Himmler created the SS explicitly as a pagan parody of the Society of Jesus, conducted extensive research attempting to rehabilitate medieval witchcraft, and held torchlit liturgies to Odin and other Norse gods. Hitler’s ideologist, Alfred Rosenberg, issued tracts denouncing the Gospels. Josef Goebbels aspired to wipe out "after the last Jew, the last priest." Hitler’s ally, General Erich Ludendorff, called for the abolition of Christianity in Germany. By 1936, Hitler was suppressing Catholic trade unions, movements and schools, and forming amongst Protestants a militaristic "German Christian" church that would sanction the regime’s savage anti-Semitism. Hitler opined to Albert Speer that he wished Germany had been converted to Islam instead of Christianity, the better to suit it to ruthless warfare.

Fighting for the True North
As a fervent Catholic, a veteran of the Somme, and a genuine scholar of Nordic cultures, Tolkien was not blind to these events. In 1938, Tolkien denounced the Nazis’ "wholly pernicious and unscientific race-doctrine." When German publishers Rütten and Loening wished to translate The Hobbit from English, they wrote him, inquiring whether his name was of "Aryan" origin. Tolkien’s reply dripped scorn:

I regret that I am not clear as to what you intend by arisch. I am not of Aryan extraction: that is, Indo-Iranian; as far as I am aware none of my ancestors spoke Hindustani, Persian, Gypsy, or any related dialects. But if I am to understand that you are enquiring whether I am of Jewish origin, I can only reply that I regret that I appear to have no ancestors of that gifted people.

As he would write his son, Michael, in 1941 (then a cadet training for the British army):

...I have in this War a burning private grudge—which would probably make me a better soldier at 49 than I was at 22: against that ruddy little ignoramus Adolf Hitler... Ruining, perverting, misapplying, and making for ever accursed, that noble, northern spirit, a supreme contribution to Europe, which I have ever loved, and tried to present in its true light. Nowhere, incidentally, was it nobler than in England, nor ever more early sanctified and Christianized.

We see in Tolkien’s life, opinions, and work an enduring rebuff to the totalitarian evils of his century. The moral key to The Lord of the Rings is the refusal of ruthlessness and the immutability of the moral law. The Ring is a mighty weapon of war—but profoundly tinged with evil. The Ring may not be used, even against the Dark Lord himself, lest its user be corrupted and become what he hates. Some means are so evil that no end can justify them. Some laws are so sacred that we must willingly die rather than violate them. We may never target the innocent in order to weaken the guilty. These lessons, which Tolkien drew from the Christian, heroic sagas of the North, should linger in our minds and restrain our passions—especially in time of war.

Mr. Zmirak is author of Wilhelm Röpke: Swiss Localist, Global Economist, a study of the free-market economist who was architect of the post-war German economic "miracle."


TOPICS: Culture/Society
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Writing to his son, Tolkien opines: ......" I have in this War a burning
private grudge ......against that ruddy little ignoramus Adolf Hitler... "
1 posted on 03/25/2002 5:06:44 AM PST by Liz
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To: Liz
What the!?!??!!? Nazis were pagans? I keep reading they were a Christian scurge.
2 posted on 03/25/2002 5:12:45 AM PST by DManA
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To: DManA
One learns something new everyday.
3 posted on 03/25/2002 5:14:25 AM PST by Liz
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To: Liz
Good article. Thanks for sharing it. I've always been struck by the smiliarities between LOTR and the German epic Das Nibelungenlied which was the basis of the Wagnerian cycle of operas Der Ring des Nibelungen. I have always believed that Tolkien wrote LOTR to "ne-nazify" Wagner's "Ring."

Wagnerian hobbit:


4 posted on 03/25/2002 5:26:31 AM PST by Alouette
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To: HDawg
On a different thread I posted: wait'll Hollyweird finds out Tolkien, who
wrote "Lord of The Rings," which won four Oscars, was a Catholic.

Seems there was a brouhaha over cut-throat Oscar campaigns with charges, countercharges and media
themes centering on Hollywood's Racism, homophobia, sexism, anti-Semitism, white-guy heterotocracy.

Thanks to HDawg's suggestionn that we read this FrontPage Magazine article
about Tolkien, a story inspired by Teutonic values of individualism and heroism.

Hollywarped may never recover.

5 posted on 03/25/2002 5:28:53 AM PST by Liz
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To: Alouette
...always believed that Tolkien wrote LOTR to "ne-nazify" Wagner's "Ring"....

....not implausible, knowing of his oft-spoken anti-Nazi sentiments....

6 posted on 03/25/2002 5:31:31 AM PST by Liz
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To: registered
Not C.S. Lewis but just as good.
7 posted on 03/25/2002 5:34:05 AM PST by Liz
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To: Alouette;HDawg
Good article. Thanks for sharing it

As I said above, all thanks must extend to HDawg.

8 posted on 03/25/2002 5:35:33 AM PST by Liz
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To: ecurbh
Ring Ping to the One Ping King
9 posted on 03/25/2002 5:38:57 AM PST by HairOfTheDog
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To: Alouette
Actually more of a warrior of Gondor.
10 posted on 03/25/2002 5:48:41 AM PST by Valin
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To: Liz
Very interesting article. Unfortunately, LOTR can't approach the cultural import, the moral depth of Monsters Ball. /sarcasm>
11 posted on 03/25/2002 5:49:12 AM PST by Faraday
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To: Uff da;Viking Chick
Oscar time for the long boats!
12 posted on 03/25/2002 5:49:30 AM PST by Graewoulf
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To: Liz
"Not C.S. Lewis but just as good."

A long talk with J.R.R.T., a devout Catholic, in Sept. of 1931 led Lewis to become a Christian. The Middle Earth books are regarded as Tolkien's masterwork but this one act of Christian witness to Lewis will have far more lasting consequences.

13 posted on 03/25/2002 5:49:47 AM PST by Brute_Force
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To: Faraday
>Very interesting article. Unfortunately, LOTR can't approach the cultural import, the moral depth of Monsters Ball. /sarcasm>

I suspect one of these years LOTR will be up there collecting all the Oscars almost like Titanic. LOTR does have two more parts to it.

14 posted on 03/25/2002 5:56:48 AM PST by Dialup Llama
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To: Valin
Actually more of a warrior of Gondor.

OK, what would these Wagnerian babes correspond to in LOTR?


15 posted on 03/25/2002 6:03:34 AM PST by Alouette
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To: Alouette
Talk about your babes!
I'm thinking shieldmaidens of the Rohirrim.
16 posted on 03/25/2002 6:11:00 AM PST by Valin
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To: DManA
What the!?!??!!? Nazis were pagans? I keep reading they were a Christian scurge.

Of course you have since the liberals comtinue to spread this lie in order to kill Christianity. Only a few historians or professors will acknowledge this and openly teach their classes this fact. The SS had bizarre rituals where they tried to commune with Nordic gods and ancient dead kings. You will hear Hitler and the Nazi's always refer to the Jews as a "race" and not a religion for two reasons: 1) Hitler's ideas on race and eugenics were the dominant motivators for his murderous actions, and 2) If you are a Christian you have to accept the Book of the Jews, the Old Testament, as part of the faith.

17 posted on 03/25/2002 6:17:23 AM PST by KC_Conspirator
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To: Brute_Force
My post "Not C.S. Lewis but just as good" is an allusion to a series of
threads we've posted here on Lewis' master work, "The Screwtape Letters."

The threads were very popular and introduced many to the genius of Lewis
and to the designs of his diabolical characters Screwtape and Wormwood.

Proof-positive that Christian witness to Lewis has lasting consequences for the world.

18 posted on 03/25/2002 6:21:56 AM PST by Liz
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To: Faraday
.... can't approach the cultural import, the moral depth of Monsters Ball. /sarcasm>

Monsters Ball is arthouse......no, make that outhouse........fare......

19 posted on 03/25/2002 6:25:41 AM PST by Liz
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To: Valin
shieldmaidens of the Rohirrim.

Theme music reminds you of napalm in the morning, doesn't it?

20 posted on 03/25/2002 6:26:07 AM PST by Alouette
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