Native American mystic, Crazy Horse.
ED Noor: My main criticism of this piece is that Hedges puts the blame on the White race completely, omitting the fact that most of these cruelties such as slavery were primarily Jewish business ventures. The decimation of aboriginal peoples around the globe was largely due to large trading companies that worked for the Rothschilds as well as the European royals.
By Chris Hedges
Truthdig
January 21, 2013
The
planet we have assaulted will convulse with fury. The senseless greed of
limitless capitalist expansion will implode the global economy. The decimation
of civil liberties, carried out in the name of fighting terror, will shackle us
to an interconnected security and surveillance state that stretches from Moscow
to Istanbul to New York.
To
endure what lies ahead we will have to harness the human imagination.
It
was the human imagination that permitted African-Americans during slavery and
the Jim Crow era to transcend their physical condition.
It
was the human imagination that sustained Sitting Bull and Black Elk as their
land was seized and their cultures were broken.
And
it was the human imagination that allowed the survivors in the Nazi death camps
to retain the power of the sacred.
It
is the imagination that makes possible transcendence. Chants, work songs,
spirituals, the blues, poetry, dance and art converged under slavery to nourish
and sustain this imagination. These were the forces that, as Ralph Ellison wrote, “we had in place
of freedom.”
The
oppressed would be the first ~ for they know their fate ~ to admit that on a
rational level such a notion is absurd, but they also know that it is only
through the imagination that they survive.
Jewish
inmates in Auschwitz reportedly put God on trial for the Holocaust and then
condemned God to death. A rabbi stood after the verdict to lead the evening
prayers.
African-Americans
and Native Americans, for centuries, had little control over their destinies.
Forces of bigotry and violence kept them subjugated by whites. Suffering, for
the oppressed, was tangible. Death was a constant companion. And it was only
their imagination, as William Faulkner noted at the end of “The Sound and the
Fury,” that permitted them ~ unlike the novel’s white Compson family ~ to
“endure.”
The
theologian James H. Cone captures this in his masterpiece “The Cross and the
Lynching Tree.” Cone says that for oppressed blacks the cross was a
“paradoxical religious symbol because it inverts
the world’s value system with the news that hope comes by way of defeat, that
suffering and death do not have the last word, that the last shall be first and
the first last.” Cone continues:
That God could “make a way out of no way” in Jesus’ cross was truly absurd to the intellect, yet profoundly real in the souls of black folk. Enslaved blacks who first heard the gospel message seized on the power of the cross. Christ crucified manifested God’s loving and liberating presence in the contradictions of black life ~ that transcendent presence in the lives of black Christians that empowered them to believe that ultimately, in God’s eschatological future, they would not be defeated by the “troubles of this world,” no matter how great and painful their suffering. Believing this paradox, this absurd claim of faith, was only possible in humility and repentance. There was no place for the proud and the mighty, for people who think that God called them to rule over others. The cross was God’s critique of power ~ white power ~ with powerless love, snatching victory out of defeat.
Reinhold Niebuhr, as Cone points out in his book,
labeled this capacity to defy the forces of repression “a sublime madness in
the soul.”
Niebuhr
wrote that “nothing but madness will do battle with malignant power and
‘spiritual wickedness in high places.’ ”
This
sublime madness, as Niebuhr understood, is dangerous, but it is vital. Without
it, “truth is obscured.”
And
Niebuhr also knew that traditional liberalism was a useless force in moments of
extremity.
Liberalism, Niebuhr said, “lacks the spirit of enthusiasm, not to say fanaticism, which is so necessary to move the world out of its beaten tracks. It is too intellectual and too little emotional to be an efficient force in history.”
Niebuhr’s
“sublime madness” permits the rest of us to view the possibilities of a world
otherwise seen only by the visionary, the artist and the madman. And it permits
us to fight for these possibilities. The prophets in the Hebrew Bible had this
sublime madness. The words of the Hebrew prophets, as Abraham Heschel wrote, were “a scream
in the night. While the world is at ease and asleep, the prophet feels the
blast from heaven.”
Primo Levi in his memoir “Survival in Auschwitz” tells of teaching
Italian to another inmate, Jean Samuel, in exchange for lessons in French. Levi
recites to Samuel from memory Canto XXVI of Dante’s “The Inferno.” It is the
story of Ulysses’ final voyage.
“He
has received the message,” Levi writes, “he has felt that it has to do with
him, that it has to do with all men who toil, and with us in particular.” Levi
goes on. “It is vitally necessary and urgent that he listen, that he understand
… before it is too late; tomorrow he or I might be dead, or we might never see
each other again.”
The
poet Leon Staff wrote from the Warsaw ghetto:
“Even more than bread we now need poetry, in a time when it seems that it is not needed at all.”
It
is only those who can retreat into the imagination, and through their
imagination can minister to the suffering of those around them, who uncover the
physical and psychological strength to resist.
“The
people noticed that Crazy Horse was queerer than ever,” Black Elk said in
remembering the final days of the wars against the Indians. He went on to say of
the great Sioux warrior:
“He hardly ever stayed in the camp. People would find him out alone in the cold, and they would ask him to come home with them. He would not come, but sometimes he would tell the people what to do. People wondered if he ate anything at all. Once my father found him out alone like that, and he said to my father: ‘Uncle, you have noticed me the way I act. But do not worry; there are caves and holes for me to live in, and out here the spirits may help me. I am making plans for the good of my people.’ ”
Homer,
Dante, Beethoven, Melville, Dostoevsky, Proust, Joyce, W.H. Auden, Emily
Dickinson and James Baldwin, along with artists such as the sculptor David
Smith, the photographer Diane Arbus and the blues musician Charley Patton, all
had it.
It
is the sublime madness that lets one sing, as bluesman Ishman Bracey did in Hinds County,
Miss., “I’ve been down so long, Lawd, down don’t worry me.” And yet in the
mists of the imagination also lies the certainty of divine justice:
I feel my hell a-risin’, a-risin’ every day;
I feel my hell a-risin’, a-risin’ every day;
Someday it’ll burst this levee and wash the whole wide world away.
Shakespeare’s
greatest heroes and heroines ~ Prospero, Anthony, Juliet, Viola, Rosalind,
Hamlet, Cordelia and Lear ~ all have this sublime madness. As Theseus says in
“A Midsummer Night’s Dream”:
Lovers and madmen have such seething brains,
Such shaping fantasies, that apprehend
More than cool reason ever comprehends.
The lunatic, the lover, and the poet
Are of imagination all compact.
“Ultimately, the artist and the revolutionary function as they function, and pay whatever dues they must pay behind it because they are both possessed by a vision, and they do not so much follow this vision as find themselves driven by it,” wrote James Baldwin. “Otherwise, they could never endure, much less embrace, the lives they are compelled to lead.”
Loss of fanciful imagination in today's children.
http://lindseynarrates.wordpress.com/2013/01/26/lindsey-narrates-who-brought-the-slaves-to-america-by-walter-white-jr/
ReplyDeleteCIA O
fear not...
ReplyDeletethere are many who have escaped the programming and reflect the will of the Divine
enough to secure the realms of the Kingdom
of this we may know for sure...
let the dead bury the dead
I hear the rocks and trees calling
come let us rejoice
and be happy
Thank you both. First, Lindsey, for the link.
ReplyDeleteSecond for the lovely words of rejoicing, so simple and they touched my heart ~ the eternal optimist deep inside that keeps my heart beating and my thoughts on life, not annihilation.