Egor Kholmogorov: Alexander Solzhenitsyn - A Russian Prophet
Anatoly Karlin from The Unz Review • April 24, 2018 Translator’s Foreword (Fluctuarius Argenteus)
Almost
by necessity, all previous Kholmogorov translations have been those of
his older texts, with a “lag” between the original and the translation
varying between several days and several months.
What you see now is a
much rarer treat. Kholmogorov has just finished a long and engrossing
article on Alexander Solzhenitsyn, clocking in at 16,000 words, to be
published by a Russian conservative outlet. Publishing a complete
translation on The Unz Review would require the text to be split into
three or four parts, and would be an exercise in futility if the figure
of Solzhenitsyn doesn’t attract enough attention from the readership in
the first place.
As a
result, this text was born. It is the preamble to Kholmogorov’s
yet-unpublished Solzhenitsynean magnum opus, and it functions well on
its own as a glimpse into Solzhenitsyn’s status in present-day Russia,
going far beyond CliffsNotes truisms and common ideological myths
surrounding his name. The article argues that, far from being a relic of
the Cold War, Solzhenitsyn remains a relevant figure, perhaps even more
so than during his lifetime, with many of his predictions coming true
and some of his suggestions and ideas being adopted wholesale by the
Russian government.
It is
worth adding that Solzhenitsyn’s global importance is far from
diminishing any time soon as well, attracting both detractors (usually
from the NeoCon/NeoLib Unholy Alliance, as evidenced by this hot take)
and admirers (e.g., Jordan B. Peterson, one of the Alt Right’s
intellectual darlings, speaks fondly of Solzhenitsyn’s influence on his
life philosophy in 12 Rules for Life).
Unz
Review readers have the rare opportunity to get a primer of this article
before it comes out in Russian. If it flies well with the audience, get
ready for an epic three- or four-parter!
Note from AK: If you are enjoying these translations, please feel free to donate to Egor Kholmogorov here: http://akarlin.com/donations-kholmogorov/
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Alexander Solzhenitsyn: A Russian Prophet
Translated by Fluctuarius Argenteus
Alexander
Solzhenitsyn was, without doubt, the most politically successful author
in world history. Surely there were crowned poets, but their talents
had never been truly exceptional. There were politicians awarded the
Nobel Prize in literature, such as Winston Churchill. There were men of
letters who had made a successful bureaucratic career, such as Johann
Wolfgang von Goethe, Prime Minister of Saxe-Weimar. But there was but
one writer whose words could uplift entire continents and send
shockwaves through global political trends. There was only one who
bequeathed his nation a detailed ideological and political program that
would become not less, but more relevant after his death. This man was
Solzhenitsyn.
At
present, Russia – to both the joy and chagrin of many – is entering a
new political era, codified specifically by Solzhenitsyn’s writings and
ideas. It is not the Solzhenitsyn of ideologically varnished Liberal
anthologies, nor is this his twisted inversion, the Solzhenitsyn who, as
an “enemy of the people”, is the never-ending source of Neo-Communist
hysterics. The driving factor of current politics is becoming the true
Solzhenitsyn, as revealed in his actual writings – novels, short
stories, articles, discourses, and interviews.
Some
formulas coined by the writer became part of government policy, such as
the emphasis on the “preservation of the people”. Others became a
political reality, such as his call for a nationally minded
authoritarianism, as opposed to the aping Western multiparty democracy.
There are also still many – such as his ideas regarding the zemstvo, organs of “small-space democracy” – that are yet to be widely heard and discussed.
Our
civic and political maturation, in line with Solzhenitsyn’s vision, is
happening right here and now. For many years, Solzhenitsyn kept pointing
out that the mid-17th century church reforms that had provoked the
schism of the Old Believers was one of the direst and most calamitous
events of Russian history. Nothing could be more pathetic than a
struggle against the most pious and hard-working part of the Russian
nation. But we nowadays see a determination to heal that old wound from
within both the government and the Orthodox Church.
On
August 30, 1991, Solzhenitsyn wrote a letter to President Yeltsin,
urging him to refrain from automatically accepting Soviet administrative
demarcation lines as the new state boundaries. For more than 15 years,
he kept insisting that the idea of Crimea and Sevastopol as parts of the
Ukraine is nonsensical, and that the Eastern Ukrainian oblasts, once
known as Novorossiya, should be granted the right to make their own
choice of allegiance in a referendum. A rejection of all attempts to
“drive a wedge between kindred peoples” and construct the Ukrainian
state as an anti-Russia project is a mainstay of Solzhenitsyn’s writings
– and reflective of his own dual Russian (Solzhenitsyn) and Ukrainian
(Scherbak) ancestry. All of this seemed of only minor importance at the
time of his passing in 2008, but ever since 2014, we have been living in
a reality where these issues have again become cardinal.
One
of Solzhenitsyn’s chief concerns was the question of Russian unity: The
injustice inherent in the system of federalism that was rife with
another “parade of sovereignties”[1], the idiocy of the central
government making treaties with minority republics, the unacceptable
discrimination against the Russian language. Solzhenitsyn was one of the
first critics of the US Public Law 86-90 regarding the so-called
“Captive Nations”, in which Russia was tarred as the “occupier” of
ephemeral “nations” such as “Idel-Ural” and “Cossackia”. Once again, we
feel Solzhenitsyn’s legacy acquiring the most acute present-day
relevance.
It
is not just Solzhenitsyn’s ideas that are coming to the fore, but even
his historical appraisals. It was Solzhenitsyn who hailed Peter Stolypin
as the consummate Russian statesman, and the late imperial Prime
Minister now occupies a central place in the Russian political canon.
Likewise, it was Solzhenitsyn who singled out the figure of Alexander Parvus
in the history of the Revolution, and nowadays, no analysis of the
Russian Catastrophe avoids discussing this international man of mystery
and his contribution to Russia’s destruction. The only figure that our
present day views with more appreciation than Solzhenitsyn is probably
Emperor Nicholas II. However, even in this case, we see a creeping
evolution towards latent monarchism in Solzhenitsyn’s old age.
ROGPR: Towards Tropical Hyperborea?
It
sometimes seems that even nature itself hews to Solzhenitsyn’s will.
When he first proclaimed the necessity of developing the Russian
North-East and harnessing its vast and inhospitable spaces, it seemed an
impossible utopian dream. His claim that “Russia is the North-East of the planet,
and our ocean is the Arctic, not the Indian” was countered by the
seemingly commonsense reply that the ocean is called the Arctic Ocean –
or the “Ice Ocean”, as it is called in Russian – because it’s literally
covered with ice, and that one can’t live in the permafrost. Soon
afterwards, the rapid melting of the Arctic has begun to provoke
geopolitical ferment; there are conversations about internationalizing
the Northern Sea Route to foreign shipping, and mutterings that
Solzhenitsyn’s call to settle and secure the Far North was left
unattended for too long. But better late than never.
Solzhenitsyn’s legacy is not only a Russian, but a planetary political phenomenon. It was Solzhenitsyn who in his famous Harvard Speech
warned the West that they were not alone on this planet, that
civilizations described by Western historians and culture theorists are
no mere decorative elements, and instead living worlds in themselves,
that cannot have a Western measure imposed upon them. Russia, a unique
civilization, is of these historical worlds. And the Western measure
itself has become subjected to spiritual corrosion, and has fallen far
relative to the bygone greatness of Christian civilization.
Solzhenitsyn’s once-shocking idea that a globalist “End of History” is
impossible has since been appropriated by Western political theorists,
namely Samuel Huntington with his “Clash of Civilizations”. This very
idea has constituted the bedrock of Russian foreign policy since Putin’s
Munich Speech in 2007.
The Gulag Archipelago,
published in the West, carried out a sweeping detoxification of Western
elites from their poisoning by Communism, that “opiate for the
intellectuals” (to quote Raymond Aron). However, this transformation
gave them no antidote for militant atheism, the very force that had
spawned Bolshevism. A liberal version of anti-Communism logically led to
the triumph of Communism under the modernized and updated guise of
Cultural Marxism – leftist feminism,
totalitarian “tolerance”, racist “anti-racism”, the final victory of
Homintern. Even this had already been envisioned by Solzhenitsyn. He
theorized that, at a certain point in the future, a Russia liberated
from Communist totalitarianism would gaze in horror at the triumph of a
Liberal-built Western “Communism”.
That
said, Solzhenitsyn’s main concern was never an abstract global
humanity, but the Russian people. He is perhaps the writer with the most
acute and intensely conscious national awareness out of those who had
risen to fame in the second half of the 20th century. His resistance to
Communism cannot be properly understood without its main motive: The
Russian people cannot and must not be used as a tool for any utopias or
experiments, be they Communist or “progressive” in nature. Solzhenitsyn
equally rejects political projects that treat Russians as expendable
fodder – be it for the Empire, or the “world revolution”, or the triumph
of industrialism, or the space race. Everything that improves and
intensifies Russian national life is good; everything that doesn’t, is
bad.
His
resolute and outspoken anti-Communism, his determination to bring down
the Reds whatever the cost, was borne out of the conviction that the
Occidentalist Marxist utopia had led to a colossal and bloodstained
waste of national human resources, that the Russians had been reduced to
cogs in a machine and fuel for the fire, that the organic development
of Russia, both spiritual and economic, had ceased. The constant
leitmotif of his books is not just the enunciation of the damage wrought
by Communist tyranny upon the Russian psyche and livelihoods, but also
in revealing the forces of resistance and freedom hidden inside that
psyche.
In
addition to his anti-Communism, he was just as merciless towards both
Occidentalist and plain Western Russophobia. He lambasted the
intelligentsia, devoid of tradition and roots, as “the Smatterers”[2].
He introduced the very notion of Russophobia into modern political
parlance, to be later developed into a coherent theory by his closest
ally, the mathematician Igor Shafarevich. Solzhenitsyn provided his
definition of Russophobia: The view of Russia as a backward “land of
slaves”, the claim that the Soviet regime was a natural continuation of
historical Russian statehood, both Muscovite and Imperial, which was
purportedly also based on wanton cruelty and inhumanity. In his
anti-Russophobe polemics, Solzhenitsyn emphasized the normalcy of
Russia’s pre-Bolshevik history. He spurned both October and February
revolutions of 1917 as the fruits of a nihilistic desire to unmake and
remake Russia based on a total ignorance of Russian life.
Solzhenitsyn
is opposed to both the verbal mockeries of Russia-bashing “pluralists”
with their non-concealed contempt for “this country”, and the cold
determination of Western politicians and political theorists to paint
Russians and not Communism as the main adversary of the West.
Solzhenitsyn publicly lashed out at US military plans to specifically
bomb the Russian population in case of war, and came to realize both his
own and his Russian compatriots’ unenviable position as “a grain caught
between two millstones”[3] – that of Communism and that of Western
Liberalism.
It
was clear to him that these millstones were both just parts of an
infernal machine built by a godless anti-Christian “humanism”. Communism
and Liberalism are two siblings spawned by the Enlightenment ideology
that would put mankind on the disastrous road of worshiping Matter
instead of Spirit, which would inevitably lea to the sullying and
degradation of said Matter. Solzhenitsyn puts forward a detailed and
consistent anti-Enlightenment doctrine: A return to God, voluntary
self-restraint and self-restriction of humankind, emphasizing duties
instead of ever-expanding “rights”, prioritizing inner freedom, and
rejecting the sacrifice of national life not only to totalitarian utopia
but also to the orgy of freedom. Solzhenitsyn’s doctrine is one of the
most consistent and politically sound Conservative philosophies
formulated over the last couple of centuries. His duel with the ghosts
of Voltaire and Rousseau goes on after his death, and the score is still
in the Russian writer’s favor.
Sviyazhsk, Russia.
It
was Solzhenitsyn’s activity directed against the convergence of the
Western and Soviet systems, towards the moral discreditation of
Communism and the awakening of a spirit of radical resistance to the Red
evil in the West, his critique of the Liberal foundations and
hypocritical hegemonism of the West itself, and last but not least, his
post-homecoming attempts at a moral consolidation of Russia around a
nationalist, conservative, populist, anti-Western and anti-Neo-Communist
platform – it was all of this which drove the global Enlightenment
project into its current state of crisis.
Moreover,
this is not just a merely ideological crisis, manifested in the
increasingly totalitarian Liberal self-destruction of Western
civilization. It is also a geopolitical crisis, caused by the following
fact: Moscow, once a center of global Communism (that is, one of the
poles of the Enlightenment spectrum), is rapidly transforming – unless
it deviates from Solzhenitsyn’s legacy – into a Vatican, or if you will,
a Mecca of Conservatism. It is precisely here where the strongest
redoubt that defends the image of mankind in its traditional Christian
interpretation is now located.
***
References
[1] A
byword for the snowballing secessionism of Soviet republics in 1988-91,
when they first proclaimed “state sovereignty” (primacy of republican
legislation over Soviet laws) and then full independence.
[2] The most common English translation of his 1974 essay Obrazovanschina, alluding to the narrow and superficial intellectual development of Liberal intelligentsia.
[3]
Russian proverb equivalent to “between the devil and the deep blue sea”,
also the title of Solzhenitsyn’s memoirs published in 1998-2003
(usually rendered in English as simply Between Two Millstones).
***
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