Priyamvada Gopal Guardian/UK 27
February 2014
The question 'Do you love your country?' is not answered by blindly following politicians.
The
commemorations of the first world war now under way in the media and museums
will cover the roles of women, soldiers from Africa and Asia, even animals, and
examine the impact of the war on everything from the economy and technology to
medicine and cinema. But there seems to
be a curious exclusion. The bravery of those who rallied behind the powerful
banner of nationalism will be honoured, but what about the courage of those who
took the path of most resistance and dissented from the status quo by
challenging the war itself?
The coalitions that organised resistance to the unfolding of the
first world war did so in the face of enormous social disapproval and
institutional pressures. As the War
Propaganda Bureau's massive efforts kept public opinion on side, it
took a special kind of bravery to query the wisdom of bloodshed before shots
were fired, or call for a negotiated peace mid-carnage. Fighting for peace
earned you anything from vitriolic accusations of cowardice and treachery to
job loss, mob attacks, arrest, imprisonment, hard labour, courts-martial, show
trials and even execution orders. As a consequence, many campaigners suffered
nervous breakdowns and ill health. Their sacrifices must not go unsung.
Well before the first trenches were dug, questions were being
asked about the motives for and conduct of the war by an expanding anti-war
coalition, fronted by some of Britain's most distinguished people. Denounced
furiously by Rudyard
Kipling as "human rubbish", Britain's dissenters included
Liberals, Labour supporters and socialists; a striking number were women. They
ranged from the aristocratic philosopher Bertrand Russell, who lost his
Cambridge lectureship over his activism, to the socialist James Keir Hardie,
raised in a Glasgow slum; the lion tamer John Smith Clarke; and the train
driver's daughter Alice Wheeldon. There were aristocratic pacifists like the
conscientious objectors Clifford Allen and Stephen Hobhouse; feminists like
Catherine Marshall and Sylvia Pankhurst and the famous exposer of Belgian
atrocities in the Congo ED Morel, imprisoned on obscure charges for criticising
secret diplomacy. Adam Hochschild's excellent To End All Wars tells some of
their stories.
While anti-war organisations such as the Women's
International League, the Society
of Friends, the Union
of Democratic Control, and the No-Conscription
Fellowship differed on many matters, including whether it was all
right to work in non-combat roles, what brought them together was a sense that
behind the rhetoric of a "glorious, delicious war" for civilisation
and freedom lay rather more grubby interests, not necessarily those of ordinary
Britons. Some believed this was not so much a war against militarism as a war
between militarisms.
As the commemorative drums of national unity start to beat again
to rally us behind dominant narratives, it is time to remember that more than
20,000 men refused conscription. Then,
as now, dissidents understood that the belligerent question "do you love
your country?" is not answered by blindly following politicians' commands,
particularly where there is lack of consultation. The distinguished economist JA Hobson,
neither socialist nor pacifist, saw the war as rational only for those who
stood to benefit from the "ever-worsening burden of armaments". To be anti-war was to actively fight poverty,
mediate for peace, build schools and workshops, undertake relief work, and
provide refuge for troops and civilians alike.
Many critics of the war also understood that it was being waged
for stakes outside Europe in great tracts of colonised land in Asia and Africa.
In those countries Britain was doing
anything but defending freedom. Many
prominent anti-war leaders, including the feminist Sylvia Pankhurst and
Labour politician Fenner Brockway,
became trenchant critics of British imperialism, which believed itself better
than the German brand. At a 1917 Leeds anti-war conference, resolutions were
also passed calling for the independence of Ireland, India and Egypt.
Commemorating
Britain's anti-war campaigners is not about fetishising the past. Many of the
issues they faced remain pressing today. They were on the front lines of the
criminalisation of dissent, the erosion of civil liberties and press freedom in
the name of national security, and crackdowns on industrial action and popular
unrest. Then, as now, the poor were requisitioned to
fight the wars which enrich the few, dying and suffering disproportionately.
The
fighting spirit we need to invoke today is that which was willing to face down
a small but powerful ruling class with control of state and media apparatuses
complete with embedded war correspondents and close advisory relationships
between politicians and press barons. Remembering that the Great War also
unleashed revolution and anti-colonial rebellion, it is this spirit of
principled dissent that we must seek to channel and honour. [Abridged]
http://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2014/feb/27/first-world-war-bravery-fight-for-peace
When reading a history of WWI I was struck by the attitude that was promoted and accepted in Germany in support of the war. The attitude was that Germany was protecting civilization from the barbarian hordes, the forces of chaos and darkness that threatened to engulf us all.
ReplyDeleteRings a bell...Matt S