Reading Nien’s Cheng’s Life and Death in Shanghai, an account by
a Chinese woman arrested during the Culture Revolution in the 1960’s, I am
disturbingly reminded of an oppressive book I read as part of my Russian
Studies program, namely Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn’s The Gulag Archipelago. Curiously it is not the cruelty of the
regimes depicted in this book that is so disturbing but instead their callousness.
To paraphrase Hannah Arendt, while the Nazi regime wanted people, mainly
non-Germans, to die, Stalin and Mao simply did not care if you died, whether
you were of the same nationality or not.
Tens of millions of Russians and Chinese perished, with the exact toll
impossible to determine. In any case, the numbers are numbing to the mind and
ultimately impossible to comprehend.
Regardless of the political background of the individual killing waves,
including collectivization, the Great Purge, the Great Leap Forward and the
Cultural Revolution, to name a few, one of the most puzzling aspects is the
genuine public support or at least acceptance of these extreme measures. To a
large degree, many of the citizens of these country had no problem as their
fellow farmers, professionals and closest friends were cruelly punished for
nothing. Clearly, in the pre-Internet years, most did not have access to any
other information aside from the official channels. Also, by nature, many
peasants and workers did not actively seek the “truth’ or think it was wise to
do so. Yet, beyond the impact of behaving politically correct, I sense the
cynical use of one of the basic instincts of human nature, envy.
Max Weber describes peasant thinking in terms of a zero-sum world.
The term refers to the concept that everything, both material and spiritual, is
limited in quantity and cannot be expanded.
Therefore, if someone receives more food or love, their extra is
ultimately at my expense. In the context of Russia and China, both of which
were very peasant before and during the revolution, a kulak, technically
a rich peasant, had one more cow than you while a bourgeois had a slightly
bigger house or a better job. Stalin and Mao exploited this natural joy in
seeing someone get his/her comeuppance and were able to perpetrate the greatest
massacres of their own populations that history has recorded. This mass murder
was not committed with viciousness but instead, and maybe even worse, with
apathy.
There is a Russian proverb recounting that a peasant, offered anything
that he wanted on condition that his neighbor received twice of it, requested
to have one of his eyes removed. If the horrors of the Russian and Chinese
revolution as described in the books mentioned above were aberrations, I would
be less disturbed. However, today’s politicians have more tools than ever to
exploit the basest instincts of the public to their own good and no less
inclination. That is what is so scary.
No comments:
Post a Comment