Untitled Document
Special Insert
|
The Optimism of Uncertainty
By Howard Zinn, historian, teacher
and activist
|
I have tried hard
to match my friends in their pessimism about the world (is it
just my friends?), but I keep encountering people who, in spite
of all the evidence of terrible things happening everywhere,
give me hope. Especially young people, in whom the future rests. |
|
In
this awful world where the efforts of caring people often pale
in comparison to what is done by those who have power, how do
I manage to stay involved and seemingly happy?
I am totally confident not that the world will
get better, but that we should not give up the game before all
the cards have been played. The metaphor is deliberate; life
is a gamble. Not to play is to foreclose any chance of winning.
To play, to act, is to create at least a possibility of changing
the world.
There is a tendency to think that what
we see in the present moment will continue. We forget how often
the sudden crumbling of institutions has astonished us, by extraordinary
changes in people's thoughts, by unexpected eruptions of rebellion
against tyrannies, by the quick collapse of systems of power
that seemed invincible.
What leaps out from the history of the
past hundred years is its utter unpredictability. A revolution
to overthrow the czar of Russia, in that most sluggish of semi-feudal
empires, not only startled the most advanced imperial powers
but took Lenin himself by surprise and sent him rushing by train
to Petrograd.
Who would have predicted the bizarre shifts
of World War II - the Nazi-Soviet pact (those embarrassing photos
of von Ribbentrop and Molotov shaking hands), and the German
Army rolling through Russia, apparently invincible, causing colossal
casualties, being turned back at the gates of Leningrad, on the
western edge of Moscow, in the streets of Stalingrad, followed
by the defeat of the German army, with Hitler huddled in his
Berlin bunker, waiting to die?
And then the postwar world, taking a shape
no one could have drawn in advance: The Chinese Communist revolution,
the tumultuous and violent Cultural Revolution, and then another
turnabout, with post-Mao China renouncing its most fervently
held ideas and institutions, making overtures to the West, cuddling
up to capitalist enterprise, perplexing everyone.
No one foresaw the disintegration of the
old Western empires happening so quickly after the war, or the
odd array of societies that would be created in the newly independent
nations, from the benign village socialism of Nyerere's Tanzania
to the madness of Idi Amin's adjacent Uganda. Spain became an
astonishment. I recall a veteran of the Abraham Lincoln Brigade
telling me that he could not imagine Spanish Fascism being overthrown
without another bloody war.
But after Franco was gone, a parliamentary
democracy came into being, open to Socialists, Communists, anarchists,
everyone.
The end of World War II left two superpowers
with their respective spheres of influence and control, vying
for military and political power. Yet they were unable to control
events, even in those parts of the world considered to be their
respective spheres of influence.
The failure of the Soviet Union to have
its way in Afghanistan, its decision to withdraw after almost
a decade of ugly intervention, was the most striking evidence
that even the possession of thermonuclear weapons does not guarantee
domination over a determined population.
The United States has faced the same reality.
It waged a full-scale war in Indochina, conducting the most brutal
bombardment of a tiny peninsula in world history, and yet was
forced to withdraw. In the headlines every day we see other instances
of the failure of the presumably powerful over the presumably
powerless, as in Brazil, where a grassroots movement of workers
and the poor elected a new president pledged to fight destructive
corporate power.
Looking at this catalogue of huge surprises,
it's clear that the struggle for justice should never be abandoned
because of the apparent overwhelming power of those who have
the guns and the money and who seem invincible in their determination
to hold on to it.
That apparent power has, again and again,
proved vulnerable to human qualities less measurable than bombs
and dollars: moral fervor, determination, unity, organization,
sacrifice, wit, ingenuity, courage, patience - whether by blacks
in Alabama and South Africa, peasants in El Salvador, Nicaragua
and Vietnam, or workers and intellectuals in Poland, Hungary
and the Soviet Union itself. No cold calculation of the balance
of power need deter people who are persuaded that their cause
is just.
I have tried hard to match my friends in
their pessimism about the world (is it just my friends?), but
I keep encountering people who, in spite of all the evidence
of terrible things happening everywhere, give me hope. Especially
young people, in whom the future rests.
Wherever I go, I find such people. And
beyond the handful of activists there seem to be hundreds, thousands,
more who are open to unorthodox ideas. But they tend not to know
of one another's existence, and so, while they persist, they
do so with the desperate patience of Sisyphus endlessly pushing
that boulder up the mountain.
I try to tell each group that it is not
alone, and that the very people who are disheartened by the absence
of a national movement are themselves proof of the potential
for such a movement.
Revolutionary change does not come as one
cataclysmic moment (beware of such moments!) but as an endless
succession of surprises, moving zigzag toward a more decent society.
We don't have to engage in grand, heroic actions to participate
in the process of change. Small acts, when multiplied by millions
of people, can transform the world.
Even when we don't "win," there
is fun and fulfillment in the fact that we have been involved,
with other good people, in something worthwhile. We need hope.
An optimist isn't necessarily a blithe,
slightly sappy whistler in the dark of our time. To be hopeful
in bad times is not just foolishly romantic. It is based on the
fact that human history is a history not only of cruelty but
also of compassion, sacrifice, courage, and kindness. What we
choose to emphasize in this complex history will determine our
lives. If we see only the worst, it destroys our capacity to
do something.
If we remember those times and places -
and there are so many - where people have behaved magnificently,
this gives us the energy to act, and at least raise the possibility
of sending this spinning top of a world in a different direction.
And if we do act, in however small a way, we don't have to wait
for some grand utopian future.
The future is an infinite succession of
presents, and to live now as we think human beings should live,
in defiance of all that is bad around us, is itself a marvelous
victory.
|