Monday, April 22, 2024
On Religious Fanaticism and Passionate Intensity
By Naseer Ahmed, New Age Islam
22 April 2024
“Much of what is greatest in human achievement involves some element of intoxication, some sweeping away of prudence by passion. Without the Bacchic element, life would be uninteresting; with it, it is dangerous. Prudence versus passion is a conflict that runs through history. It is not a conflict in which we ought to side wholly with either party.” Bertrand Russell
Nat Turner in Gaza - The story as told by Norman Finkelstein
(Norman Finkelstein is the author of “Gaza: An Inquest into Its Martyrdom.” This story first appeared on Norman Finkelstein’s Official Substack).
“In 1831, a slave named Nat Turner organized an insurrection in Virginia. It proved to be the largest slave revolt in American history. Turner hoped to stir the whole slave population into action but could only enlist 70 others. It’s unknown whether Turner expected to achieve a military victory or, short of that, force a national reckoning with slavery.
(Photo: The Daily Guardian)
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He exhorted his fellow insurrectionists to “kill all the white people.” (It appears that he intended to spare women, children and surrendering men once the insurrection gained a firm foothold.) The unfolding scene was ghastly: babies decapitated, other whites disembowelled and hacked to pieces.
With only the rarest exception, for 48 hours, no white in their tracks was spared the slaves’ accumulated wrath and fury. Some 60 whites perished: “whole families, fathers, mothers, daughters, sucking babes and school children butchered, thrown into heaps, and left to be devoured by hogs and dogs or to putrefy on the spot.” (Turner himself, it seems, displayed forbearance. He killed only one person.)
In the course of quelling the rebellion, whites randomly murdered and mutilated some 120 Blacks “in ways that witnesses refused to describe,” often severing heads and mounting them on poles as a portent “to all those who should undertake a similar plot.”
A biographer of Turner (Stephen Oates, “The Fires of Jubilee”) observes that his “rage” sprang from the “prodigious chasm” that separated his talents and aspirations – by all accounts, Black as well as White, he was a match for any White man’s wits – and the slave’s fate which Turner was born into and to which he was consigned for his terrestrial existence.
Possessed of a “prodigious knowledge of the Bible,” Turner was a religious zealot. He contrived that God ordained his bloody revolt, he was the vehicle and executor of God’s will, and God had sanctioned his actions.
But it’s also true that he found in scripture a “rational” vision of divine retribution and earthly redemption that resonated with his plight. After the insurrection was repressed, Turner’s rage was ascribed by whites to his religious delirium to obscure the slave uprising’s real taproot: not “fanatical delusion” but the system of bondage that stoked the flames for vengeance. White Southerners, Oates muses, “had to believe that the insurrection sprang from religious fanaticism, which had bewildered and deranged Nat’s mind and had led him and his “band of savages” to commit atrocities beyond the capacity of ordinary slaves. whites could not blame the rebellion on their slave system – they were too much a part of it to do that.”
Whites demonized Turner after his death, the honourable exception being the White Abolitionists. William Lloyd Garrison, editor of the anti-slavery Liberator, championed moral suasion to win the public over to manumission. Yet, whereas he stated that the “excesses” of Turner’s revolt could not be justified and that he was “horror-struck at the late tidings,” Garrison conspicuously did not condemn the slave revolt. Instead, he railed against the hypocrisy of those who sang paeans to the sanguinary struggles for liberty then being fought out in Europe but who fell deathly silent when it came to the enslaved, lacerated Black population in their midst.
It took uncommon courage to take Garrison’s stand. A $5,000 price was put on his head in North Carolina, while Georgia offered the same amount to anybody who would kidnap him and drag him for trial. The “radical” podcasting universe of our day wouldn’t risk two “likes” and one “share.”
Even as none contested the gruesome facts of the rebellion, Southern Blacks did not recoil in horror at Turner’s name. On the contrary: “He became a legendary Black hero … enshrined in an oral tradition that still flourishes today. They regard Nat’s rebellion as the ‘First War’ against slavery and the Civil War as the second. So in death, Nat achieved a kind of victory denied him in life – he became a martyred soldier of slave liberation who broke his chains and murdered whites because slavery had murdered Negroes.”
Oates wrote the above words in 1973. In 1988, a book on Turner’s life (introduced by Coretta Scott King) was selected for inclusion in children's “Black Americans of Achievement” biography series. By now, Nat Turner occupies an honoured place in American history.
The Story of John Brown
Similarly, slavery abolitionist John Brown imagined himself the instrument of God's will, and he had that crazed look in his eyes. And guess what? He's among the most honoured figures in American history. He's probably one of the only figures after whom a song was written, “John Brown's Body”. And that was sung by the Union Army troops during the Civil War: “John Brown's body lies a-mouldering in the grave…”
The Story of Gaza
The 2,000 young men who burst the gates of Gaza on Oct. 7, 2023, had been born into a concentration camp. For fully two decades they had been immured in a 25-mile long by 5-mile-wide sliver of land that was among the most densely populated places in the world. The vast majority of them could never hope to leave but only to pace each day the camp’s suffocating perimeter; never aspire to gainful employment or eat a full meal; never expect to marry or raise a family.
Abandoned by everyone, they were “remaindered” to languish and die. To expedite this process, Israel periodically launched “operations” visiting death and destruction on Gaza: thousands methodically mowed down; homes and critical infrastructure systematically pulverized. It might sound like the script of a bad B-movie, but on the night of Oct. 6, each of those 2,000 men probably kissed his mother, then his father, goodbye. Forever. And then each silently vowed to vindicate the remorseless torture of a twilight existence and to avenge the murder of a grandparent, sister, brother, niece, or nephew by that satanic power that cursed their lives.
Dolores Ibarruri, La Passionaria, famously exhorted during the Spanish Civil War, “Better to die on your feet than live forever on your knees.” If we honour Nat Turner’s slave revolt, and John Brown’s armed resistance to slavery, if we honour the Jews who revolted in the Warsaw Ghetto—then moral consistency commands that we honour the heroic resistance in Gaza.
“The owl of Minerva spreads its wings only with the falling of the dusk. One only acquires wisdom into an epoch with the ripeness of time”, Hegel famously said. It’s still high noon, and thus, it's too soon to resolve what verdict history will cast on the slave revolt in Gaza on Oct. 7, 2023.
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A frequent contributor to NewAgeIslam.com, Naseer Ahmed is an Engineering graduate from IIT Kanpur and is an independent IT consultant after having served in both the Public and Private sector in responsible positions for over three decades. He has spent years studying Quran in-depth and made seminal contributions to its interpretation.
URL: https://newageislam.com/spiritual-meditations/religious-fanaticism-passionate/d/132179
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