A meeting of the leaders of far right parties this weekend
proclaimed “the return of nation-states” and “patriotism as the
policy of the future” (BBC
-Link) In reply we republish the classic socialist
analysis of patriotism that appeared in the December 1915 Socialist
Standard that “The only universal bond of nationality or patriotism
that exists for us to-day is, then, that of subjection to a single
government. Patriotism in the worker is pride in the common yoke
imposed by a politically unified ruling class.”
The Johnsonian Definition and Others
The answer depends largely upon the point of view. From one
standpoint patriotism appears as the actual religion of the modern
State. From another it is the decadence and perversion of a noble
and deep-rooted impulse of loyalty to the social unit, acquired by
mankind during the earliest stages of social life. From yet another
viewpoint, that of capitalist interests, patriotism is nothing more
or less than a convenient and potent instrument of domination.
The word itself, both etymologically and historically, has its
root in paternity. In tribal days the feeling of social solidarity,
which has now become debased into patriotism, was completely bound
up with the religion of ancestor worship. In tribal religion, as in
the tribe itself, all were united by ties of blood. The gods and
their rights and ceremonies were exclusive to the tribesmen. All
strangers were rigidly debarred from worship. The gods themselves
were usually dead warriors.
Every war was a holy war. Among the
ancient Israelites, for instance, the holy Ark of Jehovah of Hosts
accompanied the tribes to battle. It was this abode or movable tomb
of the ancestral deity that went with the Jews in their march
through the desert, and even to Jericho, playing an important part
in the fall of that remarkable city. All the traditions of the
Jewish religion, in fact, were identified with great national
triumphs.
The Merits of the Early Brand
Thus tribal religion was completely interwoven with tribal
aspirations and integrity. Tribal “patriotism" and religion were
identical. Indeed, without the strongest possible social bond,
without a kind of “patriotism" that implied the unhesitating
self-sacrifice of the individual for the communal existence, it
would have been utterly impossible for tribal man to have won
through to civilisation.
Natural selection insured that only those
social groups which developed this supreme instinct of mutual aid
could survive; the rest were crushed out in the struggle for
existence. Is it a matter for wonder if it be found that such a
magnificent social impulse, so vital to the struggling groups of
tribal man, received periodical consecration in the willing human
sacrifices so common in primitive religious ceremonial ? Bound up
with the deliberate manufacture of gods for the protection of the
tribe and its works, there is indicated a social recognition of the
need for, and value of, the sacrifice of the individual for the
common weal.
This noble impulse of social solidarity is the common
inheritance of all mankind. But being a powerful social force it has
lent itself to exploitation. Therefore, with the development of
class rule this great impulse is made subordinate to the class
interests of the rulers. It becomes debased and perverted to
definite anti-social ends. As soon as the people become a slave
class “the land of their fathers” is theirs no more. Patriotism to
them becomes a fraudulent thing. The “country” is that of their
masters alone. Nevertheless, the instinct of loyalty to the
community is too deep-seated to be eradicated so easily, and it
becomes a deadly weapon in the hands of the rulers against the
people themselves.
With the decay of society based on kinship, religion changed
also, and from being tribal and exclusive it became universal and
propagandist. “Patriotism” at the same time began to distinguish
itself from religion. The instinctive tribal loyalty became
transformed, by the aid of religion and the fiction of kinship, into
political loyalty. In a number of instances in political society, as
in Tudor England, the struggle for priority between religion and
patriotism became so acute as to help in the introduction of a more
subservient form of religion. Thus patriotism became emancipated
from religion, and the latter became a mere accessory to patriotism
as handmaiden of class rule.
A Most Accommodating Conception
Though universal religion did not split up at the same time as
the great empire that gave it birth, patriotism did so. The latter
has, in fact, always adapted, enlarged, or contracted itself to fit
the existing political unit, whether feudal estate, village,
township, county, kingdom, republic or empire. No political form has
been too absurd for it to fill with its loyalty. No discordance of
race, colour or language has been universally effective against it.
What, then, is patriotism in essence to-day? It is usually
defined as being devotion to the land of our fathers. But which is
the land of our fathers? Our fathers came from many different parts
of the world. The political division of the world in which we live
is an artificial entity. The land has been wrested from other races.
The nation they call “ours” is the result of a conquest over
original inhabitants, and over ourselves, by successive ruling
classes. Unlike the free tribesmen we are hirelings; we possess no
country.
Nationality, of which patriotism is the superstition, covers
no real entity other than that of a common oppression, a unified
government. It does not comprise any unity of race, for in no nation
is there one pure race, or anything like it. It does not cover a
unity of language, for scarcely a nation exists in which several
distinct languages are not indigenous. Nor is it any fixity of
territory, for this changes from decade to decade, while the
inhabitants of the transferred territory have to transfer their
allegiance, their patriotism, to the new nation.
The Product of the Analysis
The only universal bond of nationality or patriotism that
exists for us to-day is, then, that of subjection to a single
government. Patriotism in the worker is pride in the common yoke
imposed by a politically unified ruling class. Yet it is this
artificial entity that we are called upon to honour before life
itself. This badge of political servitude is called an object worthy
of supreme sacrifice. The workers are expected to abandon all vital
interests and sacrifice all they hold dear for the preservation of
an artificial nationality that is little more than a manufactured
unit of discord: a mere focus of economic and political strife.
Ignoble Exploitation
Thus one of the noblest fruits of man’s social evolution—the
impulse of sacrifice for the social existence—is being prostituted
by the capitalist class to maintain a system of exploitation, to
obtain a commercial supremacy, and preserve or extend the boundaries
of a superfluous political entity. The workers are duped by the
ruling class into sacrificing themselves for the preservation of a
politico-economic yoke of a particular form and colour. Many
so-called Socialists have fallen headlong into this trap.
Had social solidarity developed in equal measure with the
broadening of men’s real interests, it would now be universal in
character instead of national. The wholesale mixture of races, and
the economic interdependence of the whole world, show that
nationalism is now a barrier, and patriotism, as we know it, a
curse. Only the whole world can now be rightly called the land of
our fathers. Only in the service of the people of the whole world,
and not against those of any part of it, can the instinct of social
service find its highest and complete expression. The great
Socialist has pointed the way. He did not call upon the workers of
Germany alone to unite. He appealed to the toilers of the whole
world to join hands; to a whole world of labour whose only loss
could be its parti-coloured chains. And in this alone lies the
consummation of that tribal instinct of social solidarity of which
patriotism is the perverted descendant.
Something Better than Patriotism
Capitalism, therefore, stands as the barrier the destruction
of which will not only set free the productive forces of society for
the good of all, but will also liberate human solidarity and
brotherhood from the narrow confines of nationality and patriotism.
Only victorious labour can make true the simple but pregnant
statement: “Mankind are my brethren, the world is my country.”
Patriotism and nationalism as we know them will then be remembered
only as artificial restrictions of men’s sympathy and mutual help;
as obstacles to the expansion of the human mind; as impediments to
the needful and helpful development of human unity and co-operation;
as bonds that bound men to slavery; as incentives that set brothers
at each other's throats.
Despite its shameless perversion by a robber class the great
impulse to human solidarity is by no means dead. Economic factors
give it an ever firmer basis, and in the Socialist movement it
develops apace. Even the hellish system of individualism, with its
doctrine of every man for himself and the devil take the hindmost,
has been unable to kill it. And in the great class struggle of the
workers against the drones, of the socially useful against the
socially pernicious, in this last great struggle for the liberation
of humanity from; wage-slavery, the great principle of human
solidarity, based upon the necessities of to-day and impelled by the
deep-seated instincts of the race, will come to full fruition and
win its supreme historical battle.
A Vile Use of a Noble Sentiment
That is our hope and aspiration. For the present, however, we
are surrounded by the horrors of war added to the horrors of
exploitation, and subjected to the operation of open repression as
well as to the arts of hypocrisy and fraud. With the weakening power
of religion to keep the workers obedient, the false cult of
nationality and patriotism is being exploited to the full. Like
religion, patriotism has its vestments, its ceremonies, its sacred
emblems, its sacred hymns and inspired music; all of which are
called in aid of the class interests of our masters, and utilised
desperately to lure millions to the shambles for their benefit. Thus
is an heroic and glorious social impulse perverted and debased to
the support of a régime of wage-slavery, and to the furtherance of
the damnable policy of the slave-holding class: to divide and rule.
F. C. Watts
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