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Nationalism
and culture
Nationalism
is a perversion of a shared identity in the interest of some local
elite.
Home
– where the heart is; the place with overtones of permanence,
belonging, security, comfort, childhood memories, bonds between
people, familiarity with how things are done, habits and customs
taken for granted. People go home, go back to family, village,
mountains woods, familiar streets, smells, sounds, to the things that
framed them and in doing so strengthen the impressions of who they
are and what they stand for. Different worldwide communities share a
culture of ‘going home’ for high days and holidays, religious
festivals or annual visits. Airports, seaports, train and bus
stations are crowded at certain times with passengers loaded with
their symbols of how good it will be to be together again. Home is
where differences and similarities are known; not automatically
accepted, respected or approved but understood without explanation;
the background culture, the very fabric of the culture being so
second nature that words aren’t necessary to express fundamental
emotions.
For
millions living in exile with only memories of home, painful memories
of seeing family members taken away, tortured, killed, for children
born in refugee camps and now old enough to be parents themselves in
the same camps, never having seen anything of their homeland, home
conjures up images of lost and stolen lives, physical pain and deep
emotional scars. Traditions and places only heard of now and little
expectation of ever being able to reclaim them. In these situations
home for the child is not the home of the parent. However hard the
parent tries, however passionate their ties to their original life,
the child’s impressions can only be second hand, severely lacking
in emotional sustenance, expectations manufactured out of hope. For
migrants, both forced and voluntary, ‘home’ may be different for
parents and children. Having emigrated or relocated internally the
parents’ notions of home are ‘there’ but for the children born
in a new place it is ‘here’. Which team shall they support? Where
shall their allegiance lie?
In
a broader context home may be perceived as a wider geographical area,
a country, a homeland standing for something more than a family’s
local community. The ‘one-world’ home, in common to all of the
human species, has 200 or so artificially created entities called
‘nations’, almost all armed and ready to arrest or attack anyone
who crosses a boundary without permission, the same boundary showing
little or no obstacle to trade or capital or wealth. What is it a
nation offers its individual inhabitants and what is their offering
to it? What do they require from their country and it from them? The
country is a geographical, physical place; large, small, populous or
sparse, barren or lush, mountainous, coastal, frozen,
earthquake-prone, temperate, fertile or harsh, requiring nurture,
husbandry, protection. Physically it can offer minerals and crops
depending on its situation and in proportion to the care given it.
The shared identity of the inhabitants of the nation will be as has
developed over generations – history, customs, religion, community
relations, occupations, way of thinking – something impossible to
enforce as empire builders and nation creators have been reluctant to
accept. A shared identity with universal, mutual respect and
acceptance cannot be enforced. It is surely the shared identity, that
elusive quality, love of one’s birthplace, hopes, dreams,
aspirations, that people feel when they talk of ‘their country’,
the tangible and intangible connections.
Mark
Twain said that the country is the real thing to be watched over,
cared for, that the institutions, the government are extraneous.
Confusion of the country with its institutions brings the problems of
nationalism and patriotism, “my country, right or wrong”. One of
the (ill)-effects of nationalist thinking is a loss of sense of
proportion as in the justification of the invasions responsible for
the killing of tens of thousands in Afghanistan and Iraq because
around 3,000 people died in U.S. on 9/11/2001. Fighting for a
country, dying for what? – the pursuit of happiness? – brings
grief and despair to both sides. One nation’s moral purpose,
promoting democracy, saving lives, eliminating threats, is recognised
by another nation merely as expansionism, access to vital resources,
a way of diverting attention from domestic issues. One side’s
vision of globalisation for humanity’s sake is felt as rape,
plunder and aggressive war by the other. Nationalism, whilst a
powerful tool of oppression, was created in part as a defence against
imperialism and colonialism, against dominance from outside and in
fear of being denied the rights of self-determination. It manifests
itself like a sophisticated tribalism, with pride, tradition,
attitudes of superiority, patriotism, national security, enemies real
and imagined, flag-draped buildings, glorification of all things
military and biased history tying populations into misconceptions of
themselves and others.
Xenophobia
becomes a useful ally in promoting nationalism. In the early 1700s
Jonathan Swift recommended it in “The Examiner” thus – “the
first principle of patriotism is to resent foreigners.” This
method, of setting one section of population against another, has
been used ultra-successfully all around the world – so successfully
that great swathes of people can now rouse themselves, with no
apparent external cue, against the newest threat, the most recent
immigrant group, asylum seekers, anyone who looks or sounds like they
may be from a group that’s not their own. In one part of the world
Arab look-alikes are held to be suspicious – in another an American
accent is not welcome. Groups engineered to see themselves in
opposition to others, in manufactured fear. Or fear of fear. And
those who dare question the status quo become unpatriotic internal
defectors. Enemies are required by the state elites. Enemies within
and without, social, cultural, economic enemies to keep the
population vigilant against all possible threats, to keep them fully
occupied, suspicious of each other, divided, protecting the national
interest against any wayward individual or group – including
themselves.
Under
constant construction are barriers of one sort or another, the
US/Mexico wall mostly through desert where hundreds die every year
seeking a better life but where the wealthy aren’t hunted by
vigilantes; the Israeli/Palestinian wall and multiple check-points
favouring one group and harassing and humiliating the other; the
entry to countries at airports, ports and road crossings. Stand in
line, don’t step over this line. For some apply weeks in advance
for a visa – or just for an interview to seek permission to apply
for a visa – the rich may pass, for the poor it’s a lottery.
Within
our communities are guarded apartment blocks, electronically
monitored residential enclaves, embassies on distant, secure sites,
schools with guards and alarms, tourist sites with armed guard
protection, 5 star hotels with walled-in grounds denying visitors the
view to the local residents in their shanty towns on the other side
of the wall, living in the seeping filth from the hotel sewage
system.
Chop
up society into more and more pieces, more separate entities, create
more divisions, more fears and suspicions and when the globe is
totally criss-crossed with walls, fences, barricades and border posts
shall we allow ourselves to become so paranoid, afraid and suspicious
of each other that we finally close the door to our minds? What hope
for humanity when imaginations are so closed to the others’
humanity that they can’t even see, aren’t even aware of,
the physical barriers all around them? Ill-considered rhetoric needs
to be confronted, contested at any and every opportunity.
Self-replicating, regurgitated mantras built on lies, fears and
hatred need overturning without hesitation.
The
frontierless world begins with frontierless minds. The challenge is
to dismantle the barriers which deafen, blindfold, shackle and
dehumanise us. A mind without barriers can step over any line, has
endless possibilities, unlimited potential, can acknowledge and
appreciate the diversity and congruent value of humankind. The
frontierless mind can value the vision in which all have their own,
inalienable home.
JANET
SURMAN
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