Wednesday, November 08, 2006

Culture / Poets Against War

RISE LIKE LIONS: WRITERS AND RESISTANCE


Howard Zinn

(Howard Zinn is a historian, playwright, and social activist. He was a shipyard worker and Air Force bombardier before he went to college under the GI Bill and received his Ph.D. from Columbia University. He has taught at Spelman College and Boston University, and has been a visiting professor at the University of Paris and the University of Bologna. He has received the Thomas Merton Award, the Eugene V. Debs Award, the Upton Sinclair Award, and the Lannan Literary Award. He lives in Auburndale, Massachusetts. For more information visit his site; http://howardzinn.org)




Whenever I become discouraged (which is on alternate Tuesdays, between three and four) I lift my spirits by remembering: the writers are on our side! I mean those poets, novelists, playwrights and songwriters who speak to the world in a way that is impervious to assault because they wage the battle for justice in a sphere which is unreachable by the dullness of ordinary political discourse.


The billionaire mandarins of our culture can show us the horrors of war on a movie screen and pretend they are making an important statement (“War is hell”, says the general as he orders his troops forward into no-man's land). But the artists go beyond that, to resistance, defiance. I think of Edna St. Vincent Millay, in her poem “Conscientious Objector”:


I shall die, but that is all that I shall do for Death.

I hear him leading his horse out of the stall; I hear the clatter

on the barn floor.


He is in haste; he has business in Cuba, business in the Balkans,

many calls to make this morning.

But I will not hold the bridle while he cinches the girth.

And he may mount by himself: I will not give him a leg up.


Though he flick my shoulders with his whip, I will not tell

him which the way the fox ran.

With his hoof on my breast, I will not tell him where the blackboy hides in the swamp.

I shall die, but that is all that I shall do for Death; I am not on

his pay-roll….


e.e cummings, whose own experience with the first World War had powerfully affected him (see his memoir The Enormous Room) wrote in the same vein but in his own unique style:


i sing of Olaf glad and big

whose warmest heart recoiled at war:

a conscientious object-or…
but – though all kinds of officers

(a yearning nation's blueeyed pride)

their passive prey did kick and curse…Olaf (upon what were once knees)

does almost ceaselessly repeat

“there is some shit I will not eat”…


And Langston Hughes, observing the invasion of Ethiopia by Mussolini, wrote simply:
The little fox is still.The dogs of war have made their kill.


Hughes could make his point in a few words. Waiting for his fellow writers to speak out on the outrageous framing of the “Scottsboro Boys” in Alabama, he wrote:


Surely, I said,

Now will the poets sing.

But they have raised no cry.

I wonder why.


In Catch-22, Joseph Heller created the absurd war resister, Yossarian, who at one point, on a bombing run, asks his fellow crewmen: “Do you guys realize we are going to bomb a city that has no military targets, no railroads, no industries, only people?”


There is a touch, or more, of the anarchist in writers, who (with some shameful exceptions, those who rush to kiss the flag when the trumpets blow) will not go along even with “good” wars. Thus, Kurt Vonnegut did not hesitate, in the midst of the self-congratulation that accompanied victory in World War II, to remind the nation of Dresden, our own counterpart, in spades, to the Nazi bombing of civilians. His book Slaughterhouse Five held us to the mirror of our ruthlessness and that of all nations which pretend to moral superiority while joining the enemy in the back and forth of atrocities.


Vonnegut never fails to quote Eugene Debs (a fellow native of Indiana) when Debs, about to go to prison for ten years for opposing World War I, declared to the jury: “While there is a lower class, I am in it. While there is a criminal element, I am of it. While there is a soul in prison, I am not free.”


Eugene O'Neill, six months after Pearl Harbor, wrote to his son:


“It is like acid always burning in my brain that the stupid butchering of the last war taught men nothing at all, that they sank back listlessly on the warm manure pile of the dead and went to sleep, indifferently bestowing custody of their future, their fate, into the hands of State Departments, whose members are trained to be conspirators, card sharps, double-crossers and secret betrayers of their own people; into the hands of greedy capitalist ruling classes so stupid they could not even see when their own greed began devouring itself; in the hands of that most debased type of pimp, the politician, and that most craven of all lice and job-worshippers, the bureaucrats.”


The barrage of film and books glorifying World War II (The Greatest Generation, Saving Private Ryan, Pearl Harbor, Flags of Our Fathers, and more) comes at a time when it is necessary for the Establishment to do what it must periodically do, try to wipe out of the public mind the ugly stain of the war in Vietnam, and now that the aura around the Gulf War has turned sour, to forget that too. A justification is needed for the enormous military budget, and so the good war, the best war, is trundled out to give war a good name.


At such a time, our polemical prose is not enough. We need the power of song, of poetry to remind us of truths deeper than the political slogans of the day. The years of the war in Vietnam brought forth such songs, lyrics that were more symphonic than lyrical. I'm thinking of Bob Dylan and his “Masters of War,” with his unique, disturbing voice that cannot be duplicated on a printed page, though the words themselves can.


Come you masters of war

You that build all the guns

You that build the death planes

You that build the big bombs

You that hide behind walls

You that hide behind desks

I just want you to know

I can see through your masks….



You've thrown the worst fear

That can ever be hurled

Fear to bring children

Into the world

For threatening my baby

Unborn and unnamed

You ain't worth the blood

That runs in your veins….


Let me ask you one question

Is your money that good

Will it buy you forgiveness

Do you think that it could

I think you will find

When your death takes its toll

All the money you made

Will never buy back your soul….


The great writers could see through the fog of what was called “patriotism”, what was considered “loyalty.” Mark Twain, in his brilliant satire A Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur's Court, puts it this way:


“You see my kind of loyalty was loyalty to one's country, not to its institutions or its officeholders. The country is the real thing, the substantial thing, the eternal thing; it is the thing to watch over, and care for, and be loyal to; its institutions are extraneous, they are its mere clothing, and clothing can wear out, become ragged, cease to be comfortable, cease to protect the body from winter, disease and death. To be loyal to rags, to shout for rags, to worship rags, to die for rags – that is a loyalty of unreason….”


George Bernard Shaw, unsure, perhaps, if the message of his plays was clear, stated his philosophy boldly in his prefaces, as in this one from Major Barbara:


“I am and have always been, and shall now always be, a revolutionary writer, because our laws make laws impossible; our liberties destroy all freedom; our property is organized robbery; our morality is an impudent hypocrisy; …our power wielded by cowards and weaklings, and our honor false in all its points. I am an enemy of the existing order.”


Today Arundhati Roy, author of The God of Small Things, has linked her energy as a citizen to her brilliance as a novelist to join the struggle in India to save the land and the people from the ravages of greedy corporations.


The great writers of the world have almost always been on the side of the poor, from Dickens to Tolstoy to Balzac to John Steinbeck. Percy Bysshe Shelley (whose wife Mary was the daughter of the anarchist William Godwin and the feminist Mary Wollstonecraft), in his passionate poem, “The Mask of Anarchy,” wrote five powerful lines that later, in the early 20 th century United States, would be read aloud by garment workers to one another:


Rise like Lions after slumber

In unvanquishable number,

Shake your chains to earth like dew

Which in sleep had fallen on you –

Ye are many – they are few.


Today we have the fierce revolutionary poetry of Alice Walker, Suheir Hammad, Martín Espada, and Marge Piercy – all activists as well as poets--and the “slam poetry” of Alix Olson and Aye de Leon. We have the example of a poet in action, the gifted Adrienne Rich, refusing to accept a prize from President Bill Clinton as her protest against the signing of the “welfare reform” bill.
The poets have taken Joe Hill's advice to heart: Don't mourn, organize. Sam Hamill founded Poets Against War (PAW) in 2003. Since that time the organization has gathered more than 20,000 poems and statements against war, the largest collective response of poets to any event in world history. The group is responsible for a website, a newsletter, hundreds of readings, and an anthology called Poets Against the War (Nation Books, 2003). PAW is living proof that poets may unite to serve as a single eloquent voice for the voiceless, as the conscience of the nation and indeed the world.


The roster of writers with social consciences is endless. I point to a few to represent so many, because their work, their commitment, encourages me and I want it to encourage others.

1 comment:

Indian darkness said...

I think one of the most important things about writers is that they really can transcend time. Any book can be burnt or banned, but no book can be annihilated from the face of time.
I liked this article much. the list of writers, though can be lengthened . Immediately one of them I can bring to my mind is black american woman Dr. Maya Angelou who wrote " I know why the caged bird sings" and a poem called " Life does not frighten me".