1984 and The Gulag Archipelago revisited

Image from paradoxoftheday.com

When a philosophy becomes a religion, or using a definition for philosophy as being ‘a theory or attitude that acts as a guiding principle for behaviour’ becomes a dogma, a power structure which over rides the moral principles of human existence, we have a problem.

The George Orwell novel, 1984 was written shortly after World War II. A fictional account possibly based on the horrors of the Nazi regimes. The use of ‘philosophy’ as doctrine, a quasi religious manifestation of political power, the manipulative control of a population fostering hate, division and the inherent dangers of ever pervasive spying to ensure that disparate voices are silenced, the evil eye of Big Brother a ubiquitous reminder that no secret thought were beyond the watchful party apparatus.

The image visible to the main character, Winston, whether on the screen in his apartment or on the wall of Party Headquarters, visible through his window:

“… the face of Big Brother faded away again, and instead the three slogans of the Party stood out in bold capitals:

WAR IS PEACE
FREEDOM IS SLAVERY
IGNORANCE IS STRENGTH

1984 is a work of fiction, an imaginary view of what may be in the not too distant future, leaning on lessons from the then recent past.

The Gulag Archipelago however is not a work of fiction, it is the collected writings of Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn, writings scribbled secretly while detained in the notorious prison system developed by the communist regime of the USSR to quell dissent, to enforce compliance to the doctrines of the ruling party… Or should that be the supreme leader, Party Chairman, Joseph Stalin.

The writings are a retelling of the stories told by fellow inmates during his time in detention.

From the foreword to the recently republished book, a key passage is quoted:

“So let the reader who expects this book to be a political expose slam its covers shut right now.” The passage proceeds to specify that moral matters are fundamental, because ‘the line dividing good and evil cuts through the heart of every human being’… far from limiting himself to politics, he (Solzhenitsyn) attends primarily to ‘timeless essence of humanity’ to those ‘fixed universal concepts called good and justice’.”

In 1984, the fear of arrest is evident from the first pages, the fear of writing down or saying thoughts which oppose the Party line. But the fear is in a work of fiction.

In The Gulag Archipelago, there is the reality of arrest:

“You are under arrest.”

If you are arrested, can anything else remain unsheltered by this cataclysm?

But the darkened mind is incapable of embracing these displacements in our universe, and both the most sophisticated and the veriest simpleton among us, drawing on all life’s experience, can gasp out only: “Me? What for?” (From the opening page of Chapter One.)

When politics becomes doctrine, when political philosophy becomes dogma, when ideology becomes the rule of law, freedoms are repressed.

In many respects we are most fortunate to live in one of the most democratic nations in the world. But we need to remember that Hitler’s rise to power was in the newly minted democratic Germany. The restive nature of politics during the Weimar Republic days saw conflicts between the various political parties, the clash of the ‘isms’, the experiment with ideologies and how to transition from the German Empire ruled by the House of Hohenzollern with Kaiser (King) Wilhelm II to a democracy was a painful journey as Germany dealt with the repercussions of defeat in WWI and the repressive conditions imposed by the Treaty of Versailles which very much restricted the rebuilding of the German economy and limited its military capacities. Germany was effectively told to pay for the damage caused by the war they had started.

Out of the ashes defeat and the disfunction of the Weimar Republic rose Hitler and his National Socialist party, which got enough votes in the election of 1932 to form a minority government and forced changes which ultimately made Hitler the ‘Fuhrer’, leader or guide, but effectively Dictator. Both Head of Government (Prime Minister) and Head of State (President).

That rise to power enabled political ideology to become dogma, the rule of law, the ability to govern through compliance or fear.

Joseph Stalin did not so much have a democratic system to manipulate as much as a political party to control. The rise to power of the communist regime came through the overthrow of the Czarist regime and a civil war to transform the philosophic foundations of The Communist Manifesto into political reality. But the equality sought in the philosophy of Marx was overlaid by a power structure, the democratic ideal restricted to the party faithful and the suppression of freedoms which conflicted with the variability of free speech.

His rise to power was through the strong man of politics, so strong that to stand up to him was lethal. As a military leader during the civil war he was ruthless, and when he attained the Chairmanship of the Communist Party he ruled both the party and the state in a draconian fashion. He is attributed to having been responsible for the deaths of over 20 million people and the development of the prison system called the Gulag.

In both cases, the governments had a form of democracy, but limited in who could participate, in both cases what started as a multi-party form, become a one party rule with a demagog as leader, a man who would not countenance opposition, wither within the party or from outside, controlling the press, controlling the information the public was privy to and imprisoning or killing opposing voices.. or even potentially opposing voices.

War is Peace

In both books, the idea of war is the struggle against opposition within the country. The idea of being at war with dissent and even potential dissenters.

Stalin imprisoned those who returned from Europe after WWII, fearing they may have experienced a somewhat better, more benign form of government, or that the economies being rebuilt after WWII were performing better than in the USSR.

Hitler’s war was a war of ethnic cleansing, but it was more than that. It was a crusade against all forms of ‘difference’, it was a commitment to falling in line behind the party. Targets for discrimination were as disparate as sexual deviance, mental illness, willingness to take up arms, the Jehovah’s Witnesses were on the ‘kill’ list, as well as ethnicities and racially defined people. Apart from those killed in WWII, the targeting of those not fitting the racial purity code of Nazi-ism saw over 11 million killed. Too often we are reminded that 6 million were Jews, but stated in such a way that we may believe that only Jews were targeted.

Freedom is Slavery

To be ‘free’ in USSR or Hitler’s Germany was to tread a fine line of subservience to Party rule. Deviation from that line made one a target in the WAR IS PEACE scenario. And when arrested, the question, “Me? What for?” The unspoken answer may well be “Just because.”

Both authors enumerate the many forms of punishment, the many reasons for the ‘just because’ and the many creative means of torture. One is an imagining, the other is a remembering.

Repeatedly ignored is the imprisonment of Palestinians in the West Bank or before 7 October 2023, in Gaza, ‘just because’, or brining it closer to home the imprisonment of First Nations people here in Australia, also seemingly ‘just because’.

Ignorance is Strength

Misinformation, lies or just a vacuum of information was the hallmark exposed in both books. The party, whether Big Brother’s fictional or the Communist Party of the USSR controlled information, lulling the population into a slumber of ignorance so they could be easily manipulated.

The spy network included children telling tales to teachers or other authority figures, or just saying the wrong thing over a drink, a coffee, a chat with a friend.

When philosophy becomes dogma, thinking is outlawed. This applies in religions, especially when religions become the government as we see in various Islamic regimes, or a run through the history of Europe, the religious wars of the Reformation period, but it also applies where too much power is in the hands of a political power elite.

Or when the flow of information and disinformation is such a fog that it is hard to discern what is real and what is not, what is true and what is fiction, ignorance becomes a comfortable place, just let the shit roll by. Disengagement is good, and so political participation is restricted, turned off.

In the political and geo-political climate of today, it is relevant to look at what lessons we may have learned, or what lessons are passing us by as we allow totalitarians to govern, to allow the the rights we have, the rights we rightfully demand, to be stripped away. The peace we desire to be rendered so fragile that we live in fear.

At a time such as we have now, where we have seen in Britain, considered a bastion of democracy by some , we have witnessed the misinformation campaign which was BREXIT, we see racism and Islamophobia rife. We see a continual fight against immigrants, racism rears its head constantly from a nation which was the greater Empire, with colonial holdings on every continent (except Antarctica), where it dominated over ‘inferior’ races.

In that leader of democracy, the USA, we see political participation fuelled by messages of hate and division, we see a ‘free press’, meaning the ever growing media, both mainstream and ‘social media’ demanding that freedom of speech means saying what ever one wants to say, no matter how wrong, how scurrilous, how defamatory, how hateful.

And the ostensibly democratic system to a congress and presidency being bought by the movers and shakers of industry.

And the rise to power of a most divisive president in the history of the American Republic who has managed to wage war against the very people he has sworn to defend, the least of the citizens who depend on government services such as food stamps, Medicare and Medicaid. A president who has unleashed the military on his war against immigration, sweeping up legal citizens along with those who are not documented as citizens but who are a much needed workforce, filling the most basic of tasks.

Both books, 1984 and The Gulag Archipelago were written to remind us of the dangers which are present in any political environment, that the rights we have, the rights which have been hard fought for are able to be removed. The right to question governments, the right to fight for the humane treatment of dissenters, the right to be who we are, what ever colour, creed, ethnicity, sexual orientation, what ever difference we choose to have, so long as that same right is extended to all others, is what underwrites humanitarianism.

The fight for freedom has been a long one.

After WWII the United Nations Organisation was formed as a watch dog over the world, trying to create a peaceful world. It has succeeded to some degree. I read recently that there have been about 26 days since the end of WWII that no wars were being fought.

I don’t know how accurate that is, but it is a scary thought.

That means that for 26 days in the last 80 years all people have been able to live in peace.

In establishing the bi-cameral structure of the UN, the winners of WWII, five nations, America, Britain, China, France and USSR (now Russia) were given the power of veto in the ‘upper house’ of the UN, the Security Council. That I suggest has been one of the worst decisions ever made in trying to establish an organisation built to ensuring a peaceful world, when time and again that power of veto has been used to enable genocidal conflicts to continue. In the case of Israel, that the conflict in Gaza, while condemned by so many, continues because debate is useless, since the USA will veto any sanctions proposed. The USSR and now Russia have protected its allies during the cold way period and into today.

John Lennon and Yoko Ono wrote these words in 1969:

Two, one two three four

Everybody’s talking ‘bout
Dragism, Madism, Ragism, Tagism Bagism, Shagism,
This-ism, that is-m, is-m, is-m, is-m

All we are saying is give peace a chance
All we are saying is give peace a chance

Let me tell you now
Everybody’s talking ‘bout
Revolution, evolution, masturbation, flagellation, regulation, integrations,
Meditations, United Nations, congratulations

All we are saying is give peace a chance…

Also by Bert Hetebry:

The woman problem

 

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About Bert Hetebry 35 Articles
Bert is a retired teacher in society and environment, and history, holds a BA and Grad Dip Ed. Since retiring Bert has become an active member of his local ALP chapter, joined a local writer’s group, and started a philosophy discussion group. Bert is also part of a community art group – and does a bit of art himself – and has joined a Ukulele choir. “Life is to be lived, says Bert, “and I can honestly say that I have never experienced the contentment I feel now.”

4 Comments

  1. Thought crime! That’s what Iran is guilty of ? Yes? They were thinking about nuclear weapons weren’t they?
    Or were they just thinking about not being attacked by Netanyahu?

  2. Bert, I don’t know that it’s a great idea to present Solzhenitsyn as a credible historian. A great writer, perhaps not so great on the history.
    There’s a fair chance that his Gulag Archipelago has a propaganda element to it.
    From a critic — “In The Gulag Archipelago Solzhenitsyn systematically attempts to demonstrate with facts and figures that institutionalized terror began at the time of the October Revolution…In dozens of pages he lays out a detailed description of the red terror. But not a word  about the white terror that came first and that led to the Bolsheviks’ response! Not a word about the generosity of the revolutionists in October, November, and December, 1917, when they freed most, if not all, of their prisoners; like General Kaledin, for example, who quickly responded by unleashing a wave of terror and assassinations against the proletariat in power! Not a word about the thousands of communists, commissars, and soldiers traitorously murdered throughout a country put to the torch and drowned in blood with the aim of reestablishing the rule of the landlords and capitalists. Not a word about the intervention of foreign armies, about the invasion of Soviet territory on seven different fronts! Solzhenitsyn the “moralist” and “nationalist” is singularly reduced in stature by presenting such a one-sided analysis.”

    Now all that could be merely a case of he said this, no he said that, and we’ll probably never know the full story. (The reference to the dozens of pages about the red terror should be easy to check though.)
    But I do know that we were fed lies about the prison camps. It turns out that while conditions were harsh, they were better than in many Western countries.

    A 1957 CIA document titled “Forced Labor Camps in the USSR: Transfer of Prisoners between Camps” reveals the following information about the Soviet Gulag in pages two to six:
    Until 1952, the prisoners were given a guaranteed amount food, plus extra food for over-fulfillment of quotas. From 1952 onward, the Gulag system operated upon “economic accountability” such that the more the prisoners worked, the more they were paid. For over-fulfilling the norms by 105%, one day of sentence was counted as two, thus reducing the time spent in the Gulag by one day. Furthermore, because of the socialist reconstruction post-war, the Soviet government had more funds and so they increased prisoners’ food supplies. Until 1954, the prisoners worked 10 hours per day, whereas the free workers worked 8 hours per day. From 1954 onward, both prisoners and free workers worked 8 hours per day. A CIA study of a sample camp showed that 95% of the prisoners were mainstream criminals.

    We all need to keep in mind that almost all information of a political nature, an economic nature or a moral nature pertaining to perceived enemies or rivals of the West, is false.

  3. Always a tendency towards reevaluation of the dominant paradigm; in this instance, Solzhenitsyn’s veracity. As a prisoner under the Stalinist program of internment of those who opposed his regime, his exposition via his published works spoke to his experiences in what he termed The Gulag Archipelago. Is it appropriate or necessary to critically reevaluate his account of his experiences?

  4. It was good to see that Antoinette Lattouf won her court case. While many native born ozzies sat on their apathetic collective arses, this plucky woman fought a hard battle for truth. And this extends to our system, since the alternative to the win was a Goebbelsian msm system and the final defeat of a resposble press and media-
    Whither Democracy?

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