Slavoj Žižek
http://www.lrb.co.uk/v36/n09/slavoj-zizek/barbarism-with-a-human-face
Again and again in
television reports on the mass protests in Kiev against the Yanukovich
government, we saw images of protesters tearing down statues of Lenin. It was
an easy way to demonstrate anger: the statues functioned as a symbol of Soviet
oppression, and Putin’s Russia is perceived as continuing the Soviet policy of
Russian domination of its neighbours. Bear in mind that it was only in 1956
that Lenin’s statues started to proliferate throughout the Soviet Union: until
then, statues of Stalin were much more common. But after Krushchev’s ‘secret’
denunciation of Stalin at the 20th Congress of the Communist Party, Stalin’s
statues were replaced en masse by Lenin’s: Lenin was literally a stand-in for
Stalin. This was made equally clear by a change made in 1962 to the masthead of Pravda.
Until then, at the top left-hand corner of the front page, there had been a
drawing of two profiles, Lenin’s and Stalin’s, side by side. Shortly after the
22nd Congress publicly rejected Stalin, his profile wasn’t merely removed but
replaced with a second profile of Lenin: now there were two identical Lenins
printed side by side. In a way, this weird repetition made Stalin more present
in his absence than ever.
There was nonetheless a
historical irony in watching Ukrainians tearing down Lenin’s statues as a sign
of their will to break with Soviet domination and assert their national
sovereignty. The golden era of Ukrainian national identity was not tsarist Russia
– where Ukrainian national self-assertion was thwarted – but the first decade
of the Soviet Union, when Soviet policy in a Ukraine exhausted by war and
famine was ‘indigenisation’. Ukrainian culture and language were revived, and
rights to healthcare, education and social security introduced. Indigenisation
followed the principles formulated by Lenin in quite unambiguous terms:
The proletariat cannot but
fight against the forcible retention of the oppressed nations within the
boundaries of a given state, and this is exactly what the struggle for the
right of self-determination means. The proletariat must demand the right of
political secession for the colonies and for the nations that ‘its own’ nation
oppresses. Unless it does this, proletarian internationalism will remain a
meaningless phrase; mutual confidence and class solidarity between the workers
of the oppressing and oppressed nations will be impossible.
Lenin remained faithful to
this position to the end: immediately after the October Revolution, when Rosa
Luxembourg argued that small nations should be given full sovereignty only if
progressive forces would predominate in the new state, Lenin was in favour of
an unconditional right to secede.
In his last struggle against
Stalin’s project for a centralised Soviet Union, Lenin again advocated the
unconditional right of small nations to secede (in this case, Georgia was at
stake), insisting on the full sovereignty of the national entities that
composed the Soviet state – no wonder that, on 27 September 1922, in a letter
to the Politburo, Stalin accused Lenin of ‘national liberalism’. The direction
in which Stalin was already heading is clear from his proposal that the
government of Soviet Russia should also be the government of the other five
republics (Ukraine, Belarus, Azerbaijan, Armenia and Georgia):
If the present decision is
confirmed by the Central Committee of the RCP, it will not be made public, but
communicated to the Central Committees of the Republics for circulation among
the Soviet organs, the Central Executive Committees or the Congresses of the
Soviets of the said Republics before the convocation of the All-Russian
Congress of the Soviets, where it will be declared to be the wish of these
Republics.
The interaction of the
higher authority, the Central Committee, with its base was thus abolished: the
higher authority now simply imposed its will. To add insult to injury, the
Central Committee decided what the base would ask the higher authority to
enact, as if it were its own wish. In the most conspicuous case, in 1939, the
three Baltic states asked to join the Soviet Union, which granted their wish.
In all this, Stalin was returning to pre-Revolutionary tsarist policy: Russia’s
colonisation of Siberia in the 17th century and Muslim Asia in the 19th was no
longer condemned as imperialist expansion, but celebrated for setting these
traditional societies on the path of progressive modernisation. Putin’s foreign
policy is a clear continuation of the tsarist-Stalinist line. After the Russian
Revolution, according to Putin, the Bolsheviks did serious damage to Russia’s
interests: ‘The Bolsheviks, for a number of reasons – may God judge them –
added large sections of the historical south of Russia to the Republic of
Ukraine. This was done with no consideration for the ethnic make-up of the
population, and today these areas form the south-east of Ukraine.’
No wonder Stalin’s portraits
are on show again at military parades and public celebrations, while Lenin has
been obliterated. In an opinion poll carried out in 2008 by the Rossiya TV
station, Stalin was voted the third greatest Russian of all time, with half a
million votes. Lenin came in a distant sixth. Stalin is celebrated not as a
Communist but as a restorer of Russian greatness after Lenin’s anti-patriotic
‘deviation’. Putin recently used the term Novorossiya (‘New Russia’)
for the seven south-eastern oblasts of Ukraine, resuscitating a term last used
in 1917.
But the Leninist
undercurrent, though repressed, persisted in the Communist underground
opposition to Stalin. Long before Solzhenitsyn, as Christopher Hitchens wrote
in 2011, ‘the crucial questions about the Gulag were being asked by left
oppositionists, from Boris Souvarine to Victor Serge to C.L.R. James, in real
time and at great peril. Those courageous and prescient heretics have been
somewhat written out of history (they expected far worse than that, and often
received it).’ This internal dissent was a natural part of the Communist
movement, in clear contrast to fascism. ‘There were no dissidents in the Nazi
Party,’ Hitchens went on, ‘risking their lives on the proposition that the
Führer had betrayed the true essence of National Socialism.’ Precisely because
of this tension at the heart of the Communist movement, the most dangerous
place to be at the time of the 1930s purges was at the top of the nomenklatura:
in the space of a couple of years, 80 per cent of the Central Committee and the
Red Army leadership were shot. Another sign of dissent could be detected in the
last days of ‘really existing socialism’, when protesting crowds sang official
songs, including national anthems, to remind the powers of their unfulfilled
promises. In the GDR, by contrast, between the early 1970s and 1989, to sing
the national anthem in public was a criminal offence: its words (‘Deutschland
einig Vaterland’, ‘Germany, the united Fatherland’) didn’t fit with the idea of
East Germany as a new socialist nation.
The resurgence of Russian
nationalism has caused certain historical events to be rewritten. A recent
biopic, Andrei Kravchuk’s Admiral, celebrates the life of Aleksandr
Kolchak, the White commander who governed Siberia between 1918 and 1920. But
it’s worth remembering the totalitarian potential, as well as the outright
brutality, of the White counter-revolutionary forces during this period. Had
the Whites won the Civil War, Hitchens writes, ‘the common word for fascism
would have been a Russian one, not an Italian one … Major General William
Graves, who commanded the American Expeditionary Force during the 1918 invasion
of Siberia (an event thoroughly airbrushed from all American textbooks), wrote
in his memoirs about the pervasive, lethal anti-Semitism that dominated the
Russian right wing and added: “I doubt if history will show any country in the
world during the last fifty years where murder could be committed so safely,
and with less danger of punishment, than in Siberia during the reign of Admiral
Kolchak.”’
The entire European
neo-fascist right (in Hungary, France, Italy, Serbia) firmly supports Russia in
the ongoing Ukrainian crisis, giving the lie to the official Russian
presentation of the Crimean referendum as a choice between Russian democracy
and Ukrainian fascism. The events in Ukraine – the massive protests that
toppled Yanukovich and his gang – should be understood as a defence against the
dark legacy resuscitated by Putin. The protests were triggered by the Ukrainian
government’s decision to prioritise good relations with Russia over the
integration of Ukraine into the European Union. Predictably, many
anti-imperialist leftists reacted to the news by patronising the Ukrainians:
how deluded they are still to idealise Europe, not to be able to see that
joining the EU would just make Ukraine an economic colony of Western Europe,
sooner or later to go the same way as Greece. In fact, Ukrainians are far from
blind about the reality of the EU. They are fully aware of its troubles and
disparities: their message is simply that their own situation is much worse.
Europe may have problems, but they are a rich man’s problems.
Should we, then, simply
support the Ukrainian side in the conflict? There is a ‘Leninist’ reason to do
so. In Lenin’s very last writings, long after he renounced the utopia ofState
and Revolution, he explored the idea of a modest, ‘realistic’ project for
Bolshevism. Because of the economic underdevelopment and cultural backwardness
of the Russian masses, he argues, there is no way for Russia to ‘pass directly
to socialism’: all that Soviet power can do is to combine the moderate politics
of ‘state capitalism’ with the intense cultural education of the peasant masses
– not the brainwashing of propaganda, but a patient, gradual imposition of
civilised standards. Facts and figures revealed ‘what a vast amount of urgent
spadework we still have to do to reach the standard of an ordinary West
European civilised country … We must bear in mind the semi-Asiatic ignorance
from which we have not yet extricated ourselves.’ Can we think of the Ukrainian
protesters’ reference to Europe as a sign that their goal, too, is ‘to reach
the standard of an ordinary Western European civilised country’?
But here things quickly get
complicated. What, exactly, does the ‘Europe’ the Ukrainian protesters are
referring to stand for? It can’t be reduced to a single idea: it spans
nationalist and even fascist elements but extends also to the idea of what
Etienne Balibar calls égaliberté, freedom-in-equality, the unique
contribution of Europe to the global political imaginary, even if it is in
practice today mostly betrayed by European institutions and citizens
themselves. Between these two poles, there is also a naive trust in the value
of European liberal-democratic capitalism. Europe can see in the Ukrainian
protests its own best and worst sides, its emancipatory universalism as well as
its dark xenophobia.
Let’s begin with the dark
xenophobia. The Ukrainian nationalist right is one instance of what is going on
today from the Balkans to Scandinavia, from the US to Israel, from Central
Africa to India: ethnic and religious passions are exploding, and Enlightenment
values receding. These passions have always been there, lurking; what’s new is
the outright shamelessness of their display. Imagine a society which has fully
integrated into itself the great modern axioms of freedom, equality, the right
to education and healthcare for all its members, and in which racism and sexism
have been rendered unacceptable and ridiculous. But then imagine that, step by
step, although the society continues to pay lip service to these axioms, they
are de facto deprived of their substance. Here is an example from very recent
European history: in the summer of 2012, Viktor Orbán, the right-wing Hungarian
prime minister, declared that a new economic system was needed in Central
Europe. ‘Let us hope,’ he said, ‘that God will help us and we will not have to
invent a new type of political system instead of democracy that would need to
be introduced for the sake of economic survival … Co-operation is a question of
force, not of intention. Perhaps there are countries where things don’t work that
way, for example in the Scandinavian countries, but such a half-Asiatic rag-tag
people as we are can unite only if there is force.’
The irony of these words
wasn’t lost on some old Hungarian dissidents: when the Soviet army moved into
Budapest to crush the 1956 uprising, the message repeatedly sent by the
beleaguered Hungarian leaders to the West was that they were defending Europe against
the Asiatic communists. Now, after the collapse of communism, the
Christian-conservative government paints as its main enemy the multicultural
consumerist liberal democracy for which today’s Western Europe stands. Orbán
has already expressed his sympathy for ‘capitalism with Asian values’; if the
European pressure on Orbán continues, we can easily imagine him sending a
message to the East: ‘We are defending Asia here!’
Today’s anti-immigrant
populism has replaced direct barbarism with a barbarism that has a human face.
It enacts a regression from the Christian ethic of ‘love thy neighbour’ back to
the pagan privileging of the tribe over the barbarian Other. Even as it
represents itself as a defence of Christian values, it is in fact the greatest
threat to the Christian legacy. ‘Men who begin to fight the Church for the sake
of freedom and humanity,’ G.K. Chesterton wrote a hundred years ago, ‘end by
flinging away freedom and humanity if only they may fight the Church … The
secularists have not wrecked divine things; but the secularists have wrecked
secular things, if that is any comfort to them.’ Doesn’t the same hold for the
advocates of religion too? Fanatical defenders of religion start out attacking
contemporary secular culture; it’s no surprise when they end up forsaking any
meaningful religious experience. In a similar way, many liberal warriors are so
eager to fight anti-democratic fundamentalism that they end up flinging away
freedom and democracy if only they may fight terror. The ‘terrorists’ may be
ready to wreck this world for love of another, but the warriors on terror are
just as ready to wreck their own democratic world out of hatred for the Muslim
other. Some of them love human dignity so much that they are ready to legalise
torture to defend it. The defenders of Europe against the immigrant threat are
doing much the same. In their zeal to protect the Judeo-Christian legacy, they
are ready to forsake what is most important in that legacy. The anti-immigrant
defenders of Europe, not the notional crowds of immigrants waiting to invade
it, are the true threat to Europe.
One of the signs of this
regression is a request often heard on the new European right for a more
‘balanced’ view of the two ‘extremisms’, the right and the left. We are
repeatedly told that one should treat the extreme left (communism) the same way
that Europe after the Second World War treated the extreme right (the defeated
fascists). But in reality there is no balance here: the equation of fascism and
communism secretly privileges fascism. Thus the right are heard to argue that
fascism copied communism: before becoming a fascist, Mussolini was a socialist;
Hitler, too, was a National Socialist; concentration camps and genocidal
violence were features of the Soviet Union a decade before Nazis resorted to
them; the annihilation of the Jews has a clear precedent in the annihilation of
the class enemy, etc. The point of these arguments is to assert that a moderate
fascism was a justified response to the communist threat (a point made long ago
by Ernst Nolte in his defence of Heidegger’s involvement with Nazism). In
Slovenia, the right is advocating the rehabilitation of the anti-communist Home
Guard which fought the partisans during the Second World War: they made the
difficult choice to collaborate with the Nazis in order to thwart the much
greater evil of communism.
Mainstream liberals tell us
that when basic democratic values are under threat from ethnic or religious
fundamentalists, we should unite behind the liberal-democratic agenda, save
what can be saved, and put aside dreams of more radical social transformation.
But there is a fatal flaw in this call for solidarity: it ignores the way in
which liberalism and fundamentalism are caught in a vicious cycle. It is the
aggressive attempt to export liberal permissiveness that causes fundamentalism
to fight back vehemently and assert itself. When we hear today’s politicians
offering us a choice between liberal freedom and fundamentalist oppression, and
triumphantly asking the rhetorical question, ‘Do you want women to be excluded
from public life and deprived of their rights? Do you want every critic of
religion to be put to death?’, what should make us suspicious is the very
self-evidence of the answer: who would want that? The problem is that
liberal universalism has long since lost its innocence. What Max Horkheimer
said about capitalism and fascism in the 1930s applies in a different context
today: those who don’t want to criticise liberal democracy should also keep
quiet about religious fundamentalism.
What of the fate of the
liberal-democratic capitalist European dream in Ukraine? It isn’t clear what
awaits Ukraine within the EU. I’ve often mentioned a well-known joke from the
last decade of the Soviet Union, but it couldn’t be more apposite. Rabinovitch,
a Jew, wants to emigrate. The bureaucrat at the emigration office asks him why,
and Rabinovitch answers: ‘Two reasons. The first is that I’m afraid the
Communists will lose power in the Soviet Union, and the new power will put all
the blame for the Communists’ crimes on us, the Jews.’ ‘But this is pure
nonsense,’ the bureaucrat interrupts, ‘nothing can change in the Soviet Union,
the power of the Communists will last for ever!’ ‘Well,’ Rabinovitch replies,
‘that’s my second reason.’ Imagine the equivalent exchange between a Ukrainian
and an EU administrator. The Ukrainian complains: ‘There are two reasons we are
panicking here in Ukraine. First, we’re afraid that under Russian pressure the
EU will abandon us and let our economy collapse.’ The EU administrator
interrupts: ‘But you can trust us, we won’t abandon you. In fact, we’ll make
sure we take charge of your country and tell you what to do!’ ‘Well,’ the
Ukrainian replies, ‘that’s my second reason.’ The issue isn’t whether Ukraine
is worthy of Europe, and good enough to enter the EU, but whether today’s
Europe can meet the aspirations of the Ukrainians. If Ukraine ends up with a
mixture of ethnic fundamentalism and liberal capitalism, with oligarchs pulling
the strings, it will be as European as Russia (or Hungary) is today. (Too
little attention is drawn to the role played by the various groups of oligarchs
– the ‘pro-Russian’ ones and the ‘pro-Western’ ones – in the events in
Ukraine.)
Some political commentators
claim that the EU hasn’t given Ukraine enough support in its conflict with
Russia, that the EU response to the Russian occupation and annexation of Crimea
was half-hearted. But there is another kind of support which has been even more
conspicuously absent: the proposal of any feasible strategy for breaking the
deadlock. Europe will be in no position to offer such a strategy until it
renews its pledge to the emancipatory core of its history. Only by leaving
behind the decaying corpse of the old Europe can we keep the European legacy of égaliberté alive.
It is not the Ukrainians who should learn from Europe: Europe has to learn to
live up to the dream that motivated the protesters on the Maidan. The lesson
that frightened liberals should learn is that only a more radical left can save
what is worth saving in the liberal legacy today.
The Maidan protesters were
heroes, but the true fight – the fight for what the new Ukraine will be –
begins now, and it will be much tougher than the fight against Putin’s
intervention. A new and riskier heroism will be needed. It has been shown
already by those Russians who oppose the nationalist passion of their own
country and denounce it as a tool of power. It’s time for the basic solidarity
of Ukrainians and Russians to be asserted, and the very terms of the conflict
rejected. The next step is a public display of fraternity, with organisational
networks established between Ukrainian political activists and the Russian
opposition to Putin’s regime. This may sound utopian, but it is only such
thinking that can confer on the protests a truly emancipatory dimension.
Otherwise, we will be left with a conflict of nationalist passions manipulated
by oligarchs. Such geopolitical games are of no interest whatever to authentic
emancipatory politics.
25 April
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