No Act of Rebellion Is Wasted

by: Chris Hedges  |  Truthdig | Op-Ed

No Act of Rebellion Is Wasted
Flowers and candles in Prague’s Wenceslas Square in November 1989. (Photo: Piercetp)

I stood with hundreds of thousands of rebellious Czechoslovakians in 1989 on a cold winter night in Prague’s Wenceslas Square as the singer Marta Kubišová approached the balcony of the Melantrich building. Kubišová had been banished from the airwaves in 1968 after the Soviet invasion for her anthem of defiance, “Prayer for Marta.” Her entire catalog, including more than 200 singles, had been confiscated and destroyed by the state. She had disappeared from public view. Her voice that night suddenly flooded the square. Pressing around me were throngs of students, most of whom had not been born when she vanished. They began to sing the words of the anthem. There were tears running down their faces. It was then that I understood the power of rebellion. It was then that I knew that no act of rebellion, however futile it appears in the moment, is wasted. It was then that I knew that the Communist regime was finished.

“The people will once again decide their own fate,” the crowd sang in unison with Kubišová.

I had reported on the fall of East Germany before I arrived in Prague. I would leave Czechoslovakia to cover the bloody overthrow of the Romanian dictator Nicolae Ceausescu. The collapse of the Communist regimes in Eastern Europe was a lesson about the long, hard road of peaceful defiance that makes profound social change possible. The rebellion in Prague, as in East Germany, was not led by the mandarins in the political class but by marginalized artists, writers, clerics, activists and intellectuals such as Vaclav Havel, whom we met with most nights during the upheavals in Prague in the Magic Lantern Theater. These activists, no matter how bleak things appeared, had kept alive the possibility of justice and freedom. Their stances and protests, which took place over 40 years of Communist rule, turned them into figures of ridicule, or saw the state seek to erase them from national consciousness. They were dismissed by the pundits who controlled the airwaves as cranks, agents of foreign powers, fascists or misguided and irrelevant dreamers.

I spent a day during the Velvet Revolution with several elderly professors who had been expelled from the Romance language department at Charles University for denouncing the Soviet invasion. Their careers, like the careers of thousands of professors, teachers, artists, social workers, government employees and journalists in our own universities during the Communist witch hunts, were destroyed. After the Soviet invasion, the professors had been shipped to a remote part of Bohemia where they were forced to work on a road construction crew. They shoveled tar and graded roadbeds. And as they worked they dedicated each day to one of the languages in which they all were fluent - Latin, Greek, Italian, French, Spanish or German. They argued and fought over their interpretations of Homer, Virgil, Dante, Goethe, Proust and Cervantes. They remained intellectually and morally alive. Kubišova, who had been the most popular recording star in the country, was by then reduced to working for a factory that assembled toys. The playwright Havel was in and out of jail.

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The long, long road of sacrifice, tears and suffering that led to the collapse of these regimes stretched back decades. Those who made change possible were those who had discarded all notions of the practical. They did not try to reform the Communist Party. They did not attempt to work within the system. They did not even know what, if anything, their protests would accomplish. But through it all they held fast to moral imperatives. They did so because these values were right and just. They expected no reward for their virtue; indeed they got none. They were marginalized and persecuted. And yet these poets, playwrights, actors, singers and writers finally triumphed over state and military power. They drew the good to the good. They triumphed because, however cowed and broken the masses around them appeared, their message of defiance did not go unheard. It did not go unseen. The steady drumbeat of rebellion constantly exposed the dead hand of authority and the rot and corruption of the state.

The walls of Prague were covered that chilly winter with posters depicting Jan Palach. Palach, a university student, set himself on fire in Wenceslas Square on Jan. 16, 1969, in the middle of the day to protest the crushing of the country’s democracy movement. He died of his burns three days later. The state swiftly attempted to erase his act from national memory. There was no mention of it on state media. A funeral march by university students was broken up by police. Palach’s gravesite, which became a shrine, saw the Communist authorities exhume his body, cremate his remains and ship them to his mother with the provision that his ashes could not be placed in a cemetery. But it did not work. His defiance remained a rallying cry. His sacrifice spurred the students in the winter of 1989 to act. Prague’s Red Army Square, shortly after I left for Bucharest, was renamed Palach Square. Ten thousand people went to the dedication.

We, like those who opposed the long night of communism, no longer have any mechanisms within the formal structures of power that will protect or advance our rights. We too have undergone a coup d’état carried out not by the stone-faced leaders of a monolithic Communist Party but by the corporate state. We too have our designated pariahs, whether Ralph Nader or Noam Chomksy, and huge black holes of state-sponsored historical amnesia to make us ignore the militant movements, rebels and radical ideas that advanced our democracy. We opened up our society to ordinary people not because we deified the wisdom of the Founding Fathers or the sanctity of the Constitution. We opened it up because of communist, socialist and anarchist leaders like Big Bill Haywood and his militant unionists in the Industrial Workers of the World (IWW).

We may feel, in the face of the ruthless corporate destruction of our nation, our culture, and our ecosystem, powerless and weak. But we are not. We have a power that terrifies the corporate state. Any act of rebellion, no matter how few people show up or how heavily it is censored by a media that caters to the needs and profits of corporations, chips away at corporate power. Any act of rebellion keeps alive the embers for larger movements that follow us. It passes on another narrative. It will, as the rot of the state consumes itself, attract wider and wider numbers. Perhaps this will not happen in our lifetimes. But if we persist we will keep this possibility alive. If we do not, it will die.

All energy directed toward reforming political and state structures is useless. All efforts to push through a “progressive” agenda within the corridors of power are naive. Trust in the reformation of our corporate state reflects a failure to recognize that those who govern, including Barack Obama, are as deaf to public demands and suffering as those in the old Communist regimes. We cannot rely on any systems of power, including the pillars of the liberal establishment—the press, liberal religious institutions, universities, labor, culture and the Democratic Party. They have been weakened to the point of anemia or work directly for the corporations that dominate our existence. We can rely now on only ourselves, on each other.

Go to Lafayette Park, in front of the White House, at 10 a.m. Dec. 16. Join dozens of military veterans, myself, Daniel Ellsberg, Medea Benjamin, Ray McGovern, Dr. Margaret Flowers and many others who will make visible a hope the corporate state does not want you to see, hear or participate in. Don’t be discouraged if it is not a large crowd. Don’t let your friends or colleagues talk you into believing it is useless. Don’t be seduced by the sophisticated public relations campaigns disseminated by the mass media, the state or the Democratic Party. Don’t, if you decide to carry out civil disobedience, be cowed by the police. Hope and justice live when people, even in tiny numbers, stand up and fight for them.

There is in our sorrow - for who cannot be profoundly sorrowful?—finally a balm that leads to wisdom and, if not joy, then a strange, transcendent happiness. To stand in a park on a cold December morning, to defy that which we must defy, to do this with others, brings us solace, and perhaps even peace. We will not find this if we allow ourselves to be disabled. We will not find this alone. As long as a few of us rebel, it will always remain possible to defeat a system of centralized, corporate power that is as criminal and heartless as those I watched tumble into the ash bin of history in Eastern Europe.

Chris Hedges is a senior fellow at The Nation Institute. His newest book is “Death of the Liberal Class.” You can find out more about the Washington protest at www.stopthesewars.org 

All republished content that appears on Truthout has been obtained by permission or license.





     

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But let none call it

But let none call it rebellion, lest habeas corpus be suspended and the federal Public SERVANTS who ought join US be extralegally rendered by their Bush HOG (who's already lipstuck Them UP)!



Great article as always from

Great article as always from Hedges! An inspiration to all. Thank you.



Yeah, go rebel on a Thursday

Yeah, go rebel on a Thursday with dozens in a puny little park, instead of on Saturday with tens of thousands on the Mall. Good call on that one.

Who is leading this inept rebellion, Republicans?



Kevin Schmidt, I've been to

Kevin Schmidt, I've been to demonstrations in DC on weekends. No one is there EXCEPT those participating along with hundreds of police. If you truly are serious, as are the Vets for Peace members, you will put yourself out and take a day out of your busy schedule of typing and get out there during the week, when there might actually be people there to see you.
If you live anywhere on the East Coast you owe it to those of us who live 3000 miles away to get out there and stand for PEACE NOT PERPETUAL WAR.



I so wish my old truck could

I so wish my old truck could make the drive to DC...



I hope and pray that, as in

I hope and pray that, as in Eastern Europe, We the American People overcome the corporate communism and fascism that have taken over the U.S., and that are very quickly taking over the entire world, and that we make all of corporatism's invisible walls fall! May the American people wake up to the roots and true meaning of the liberty and freedom that the U.S. was founded on; may they stand with the few as the oppressed and repressed people in other completely controlled states did; may our emotional, loud cry reverberate throughout the country and the world; and may we completely overcome corporatism's repression and oppression before it is too late!



Sustainable economics

Sustainable economics brought the fall, because immoral acts finally translate out into death--these acts all add up over time. Americans do the =: find out what the Koch bros industries are and make and don't buy that stuff!! None of this stuff is essential to life. Where do these nasty people get the extra$ to spend on all this lobbying?--from you, us! Take it away from them. Actually easy informative website on this information would be appreciated. The fact that companies 'lobby' at all should be the giveaway to their nature. Go for a day, then a week, then a month without shopping at Walmart or =. People all do different things--but at the end it all adds up.



Alas Mr. Hedges recognizes

Alas Mr. Hedges recognizes neither the nature of our oppressor nor the magnitude of our oppression.
 
Thus he formulates an analogy that is gravely wrong. The United States is not like the Soviet Union (which despite its tyrannies was founded on the Marxist ideals of universal democracy and freedom), and the citizenry of the United States is not like the citizenry of the former U.S.S.R., who were the best-educated people on the entire planet, whose huge courage in the fight against Nazi Germany is truly inconceivable, and whose later drive for liberation from Moscow demonstrated equal bravery.
 
Indeed Mr. Hedges' retains a notion of the United States that is now mere fantasy.  He refuses to acknowledge that the U.S. has become the de facto Fourth Reich -- that its credo of infinite greed as maximum virtue and limitless selfishness as ultimate good is as savagely tyrannical as the Nazi fuhrerprinzip  and its associated doctrines of global empire and Aryan supremacy.  He thus blinds himself to the fact the U.S. is now at every level governed accordingly: absolute power and boundless profit for the Ruling Class; total subjugation and genocidal poverty for the rest of us. 

But most of all Mr. Hedges remains in denial that we in the U.S. are the psychological opposite of the people of Eastern Europe. We are instead identical to the most obedient subjects of the Third Reich; we obey without question and accept oppression without protest. The courageous women and men whose influence liberated Eastern Europe from Soviet domination would never be heard here in Moron Nation; brainwashing that began the instant World War II ended has reduced our artists and intellectuals to the most despised and scorned people of all time, more hated  than even the most vile common criminals and therefore without any influence at all. 
 
The one political analogy that does apply to the United States is from a science fiction short-story in which Hitler conquers the world, India included, and when Gandhi resists the Nazis as he did the British, he and his followers are exterminated. 

 



To paraphrase the Scottish

To paraphrase the Scottish declaration;
...for, as long as but a hundred of us remain alive, never will we on any conditions be brought under Corporate rule. It is in truth not for glory, nor riches, nor honours that we are fighting, but for freedom – for that alone, which no honest man gives up but with life itself.



Maybe the "progressives" on

Maybe the "progressives" on radio will heed Mr. Hedges and initiate some action instead of just talking about how deplorable things are in our country. We already know how bad things are, so how about suggesting what we can do? Remember, the antiwar movement during the 1960s and 1970s eventually was supported by a majority of Americans and it helped end that fiasco in Vietnam.



Thank you, Chris Hedges, for

Thank you, Chris Hedges, for your usual, moving, important article. Jake, give a little more heed to Vic Anderson (despite his being an Arch Curmudgeon); it was BECAUSE of the effectiveness of Vietnam War Protests that the USA-MIC has reinvented Fascism - this time there will be mass busting of heads. Don't give up, Loren. Remain vigilant for opportunities to protest, so that in future generations ('sorry; it's too late for us), an avalanche of the Goodness of the People will bury them.