Sunday, February 15, 1969 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PQ Sunday, February 16, 1969 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Pc journalism for Trots kyite oet r olutionaries by PHIL BALLA Untimely T h o u g hit s, y Maxim Gorky, translated by Herman Ermolaev. Eriksson, $6.95. A famous woman writer once said that a thousand years from now no one will read Gorky, but everyone will remember the man. Orphaned at an early age, Gorky grew up along the Volga boat docks amid the tramps and the destitute who people his writing. Russia in the last part of the nineteenth century was an unhappy p.ace and Gor- ky, a pen name which means "bitter", knew its dregs. Liter- ature and culture became his hope to affirm and awaken hu- manity. By his death in 1936 Gorky had become as powerful as Sta- lin -himself: Russia's literary tsar. The letters and essays he @ wrote in horror and aghast at the Revolution in 1917 may surprise those who already knew that a dozen years ear- lIer Gorky was an ardent Bol- shevik and that he launched Soviet Realism with his 1905 novel Mother-which he began in New York while serving as a Bolshevik representative. Untimely Thoughts is a ser- ies of articles that Gorky wrote in his newspaper between May of 1917 and June of the next year. Their purpose is singular and blatant: the defense of cul- ture and humanity against the' excesses of the Revolution. The first few articles seem too re- petitious and too hyperbolic to, be good writing or even fair journalism, Continued reading convinces, however, that Un- timely Thoughts is wonderfully Russian writing, historically apocalyptic, polemical, ' folksy, morosely anecdotal, pop-eyed, bombastic. woeful, hair-pulling, and redundant inquiry into the mysterious Russian soul emerg- ing with Revolution's chaos. In one of his articles he ad- mits the futility of trying to untangle his pplitical contra- dictions, for to ' achieve har- mony would be to kill that part of him "which most passionate- ly and painfully loves the liv- ing, sinning, and-forgive me- pitiful Russian man." Gorky says in prose what his countrymen were doing in fact: "We Russians are anarchists by nature, we are cruel beasts, the poisonous inheritance of t h e Tartars and of serfdom . - There are no words that one could not use in cursing t h e Russian." Except' for the obvious differ-, ference in Pasternak's aristo- cratic restraint, much of the time Gorky is saying what can be found in a line from the journal of Dr. Zhivago, that the pursuit of perfection may not be worth the sea of blood it costs, Gorky is much closer to the flood of barbarism and Un- timely Thoughts reflects that immediacy. "Where can we find a justi- fication for this unprecedented crime against world culture?" He lists examples and repeats, "Will we not choke in the mud which we so diligently pro- duce?" Although the overall sensa- tion is rich in flair, Gorky turns his attention to specifics which cannot fail to impress today's readers with historical insight. With Tolstoyan moralists par- ticularly in mind, he attacks all those with "anxieties about their personal self-perfection" because "this kind of pursuit creates an especially dense and stifling atmosphere of hypo- crisy, lies, and bigotry." He attacks Lenin on the same grounds: in the pursuit of so- cial perfection Lenin "is only performing a certain experi- ment" on the skin and blood of the working class. No one is safe from Gorky's polemics. When the proletariat succeeds in achieving power on the conduct of the war with Germany artists are ordered to the front and put into battle without straining. Gorky calls this "as wasteful and stupid as to put gold horseshoes on a dray horse." Another article attacks the imprisonment of publisher Sy- tin. He urges establishment of an "Institute of Chemistry" be- cause, "The countries with in- dustrial culture look upon Rus- sia as upon Africa, a colony where they can dispose of any kind of goods at a high price and from which they can cheaply export raw materials that we are unable to process ourselves due to our ignor- ance and laziness." He condemns Russians who allow American money to buy up priceless art treasures. Even when he advocates an "Institute of Biology" he can- parables. Sometimes he simp- ly says, "Dead, arise!" But his wit is unbounded: "The awe- some Jewish God saved a whole city of sinners because there was one righteous man among them; those who believe in the gentle Christ think that all the Jewish people should suffer for the sins of two or seven Bol- sheviks." Gorky refers cynically to the mad archpriest Avaakum. fam- ous in Russian literature for in,-' jecting personality into his account of his seventeenth cen- tury persecutions. His own Un- timely Thoughts bear striking resemblance to Avaakum. Where the mad archpriest rails in venomous rhetoric against the tsar and then becomes sen- timental and meek over t h e chicken that laid eggs for his children, Gorky mixes his ac- counts of terror in the streets with humorous anecdotes. When he says that the revolu- tionaries "have made m a n y serious, depressing errors," he next says that "God also er- red in making all of us m o r e stupid than necessary.' While Gorky's language re- mains high-strung, his analo- gies remain folksy: Comparing revolution to childbirth he says: "You women . . howl like beasts at the moment of birth and you smile the happy smile of the Virgin, pressing the new- born to your breast." The singular and striking '4- theme of Untimely Thoughts is respect for culture and individ- ual humanity being so abused in the Revolution that Gorky himself had hoped for. When he says, "On the road to free- dom, love and concern for man cannot be left somewhere along the way," he is arguing for the same kind of beauty that Pas- ternak elevated above the con-. structions that men pursue with such disastrous violence. For Gorky saw that, "In striv- ing to change the external forms of social existence the revolu- tionary for today is not capable of filling the new forms with new content, and brings into them the same emotions against which he fought." While Gorky advocates a no- ble ideal, his own style and flair both enlivens and debases his argument. He knows how deep and liable is the Russian soul and resigns himself to whatever beauty can be found and created along the way. As he says, . . "having put man into a pigsty, it is stupid to demand that he be an angel." Untimely Thoughts may not -be good literature, nor even fair journalism, but it is certainly wpnderfully Russian. It would appeal most to a historian like Arthur Mendel, whom the Uni- versity pays to be a professor of Russian Intellectual History, but is in face, as Trotskyist Robert Bernard says, a frustrated poet. Today's writers PHIL BALLA is a senior in the Literary College who plans on entering the army as an in- terpreter in Russian upon grad- uation. HOWARD KOHN, Daily As- sociate Editorial Director, is a senior journalism major, a n d part-time philosopher - theolo- gian. SHERMAN DREW is also a literary college senior and a re- cent contributor to the Books Page. Litter doesn't throw itself away; litter doesn't just happen. People cause it--and' only people can prevent it. "People" means you. Keep America Beautiful. Aadvertising contributed for the public good K, iS 0 0 k s b 0 0 I G" Gorky rrcv, n to :Russ 99 Won't you give a buck. to Christ?9 By HOWARD KOHN "The Religion Business," by Alfred Balk. John Knox Press, $3.00. Matthew, a reformed Roman tax collector, writes that Jesus Christ chased the moneychangers and merchants out of the temple of Judah. "Ye have made this place into a den of thieves," said Christ. Clergymen ever since have searched Christ's behavior for a lesson in amorality. Almost unanimously they have decided that day-to-day bartering with the obviously mercenary was a petty and sordid affair. Subsequently they have refined economic tastes, flavoring them with corporate aesthetics of legitimate bigtime business. "America's religious community is rich-richer than any counterpart in recent history," explains Alfred Balk, a reformed journalist, "richer than even most ecclesiastical leaders are will- ing to admit." The value of their "visible" assets is estimated at $79.5 bil- lion-or almost double the combined assets of the nation's top five industrial corporations. Our clerical barons have built this empire with thoughtful investments in American gold mines like TV-radio stations and bra and .girdle manufacturing com- panies. Balk, of course, is not as Much concerned with the societal influence of this clerical craze for materialism as much as he is uptight about their legal evasion of $1.6 billion in taxes each year. He quotes Dr. Eugene Carson Blake, of the liberal National Council of Churches on the wizardry of their anti-tax lobbying: "When one remembers that churches pay no inheritance tax (churches do not die), that churches may own and operate business and may exempt from the 52 per cent corporate income tax, and that real property used for church purposes (which in some states are most generally construed) is tax exempt, it is not unreasonable to prophesy that with reasonably prudent man- agement, the churches ought to be able to control the whole economy of the nation within the predictable future." This then is the contingency Balk has set out to prevent, tacking his 95 theses on the church doorstep in the Martin Luther tradition. - Balk mimics the liability-asset, dollar-cent attitude in his short-paragraphed invectives: black-white tangents devoid of any mitigating overtones. But his evangelism is honest. And the sad truth is that Congress has incessantly referred the review of sancte-sanctus religious privileges to 'a dead-ended committee- the Supreme Court has consistently washed its hands of the issue. Balk's major failure lies in his closeting of the substance behind the issue, the Christian credo of materialism. Simply updating the tax laws and converting cathedrals into civic cen- ters can cure only the symptoms of the disease. The social gospel which preaches the godly miracle of multi- plying shares of AT&T and three small bonds into a pile so able and so unwilling to feed thousands upon thousands is not pre- dicated simply on George Bernard Shaw's theory that "the only thing wrong with Christianity is that no one practices it." In Christianity, more than in any other organized religion, the Golden Calf doctrine of ostentation leads directly to the tenet of private property. Although once committed to the onus of owning a House of the Lord, the Monopoly game is now pragmatically reformed. Reformation of the church's obsession with wealth, even forcing the clergymen to drink the molten gold of their idols as Moses once did, does not strike at the belief that giving your tithe outweighs giving your soul on heaven's scale. Neither does dooming the church to perfunctory ceremonies (weddings, funerals, christenings, etc.), since the Christian mania is rooted in the economic value of such ceremonies. , If Christianity is, indeed, timeless and infinitely self-re- newing, then more property, more privilege and more materialism is the very instrument of the church's salvation. Take them away and Christianity becomes as banal as the Satanic creed. Alfred Balk, unfortunately, has not recognized them as the very bowels of the Christian organism, thinking them only needless excretions. His book then is so anti-Christian as to be anti-American and/ should immediately be banned and burned. not refrain from wild pamph- leteering. Between paragraphs he writes one word -"Citi- zens!" His calls for action are based not only on emotions, but vivid portraiture: "Half of all peasant children die of var- ious diseases before the age of five. Almost all the women in the village suffer from women's diseases. The villages are rot- ting with syphilis." In another article, G o r k y solicits funds for a woman phy- sician who is starving to death. If this sounds strange one might recall that Herbert Hoov- er rose to international fame for his role in speeding emer- gency relief supplies to a starv- ing Russia, and that the fame of Gorky the man arose not so much from his writing, but from the numbers of other writ- ers he saved from despair, dif- ficulty, and even death. Among these are Grin, Isaac B a b e 1, Ivanov, Zamyatin, and Bialik, the father of modern Hewbrew poetry, (Some speculate that Stalin poisoned Gorky in 1936 to clear the way for the purge trials the next year, although Stalin him- self headed the 800,000 people in Gorky's funeral procession.) One may look for historical documntatio - in ntimely Thoughts but it is a taste of peasant crusade that sustains the articles. Interspersed a r e i "o V. , GUILD HOUSE 802 Monroe Towardia By SHERMAN DREW individual nations. Through bai- more than 10 per cent over whe periods, there is no case MON., FEB 17 Noon Luncheon 25c In PROF. MARSTON BATES, Prof. of Zoolog,: "The Biological Future" The Lopsided World, by Bar- bara Ward. Norton, $3.95. Western civilization has effec- tively insulated itself from the rest of mankind. Throughout history, the gap between rich and poor has been widening . until now, to 80 per cent of humanity, poverty is the only teality. Today, however, this other 80 per cent is beginning to think about disrupting economic in- ertia. And the question arises whether the affluent can afford this lopsided state of affairs. Barbara Ward, the British economist who is one of theI world's foremost authorities on the economics of underdevelop- ed nations, says in her new book, The Lopsided World; that the situation is dangerous in very practical terms. It does not "pay." The 20 fully or chiefly de- veloped nations produce 80 per cent of the world's industrial products and dispose of the same portion of its income. Moreover,rtheir share is rising and th gap between them and the Tinderdeveloped nations is widening. The major parts of Asia, Af- rica, and Latin America are economically frozen, their fate dtermined. In these areas any occurrence of increased produc- tion is offset by population in- creases, resulting in a zero mark on the savings-for-investment side of the ledger. Yet these same poor lands are sources of primary products and potential markets. Miss Ward maintains that the failure of the rich nations to give one per cent of their GNP to the poor ones, and of their capital- ,ists to invest a matching amount each year endangers the ceo- nomic and political stability of the world. The urgently needed develop- ment must be continuous and conform to the plans of the grams, the rich nations have learned how to advise, train, and give aid. The techniques are available. Miss Ward simply urges us to act on this crucial issue of appropriating financial aid and maintaining what amounts to a great deal 'of patience. To a great many people, Miss Ward's proposal seems to be a realonable answer. To me, it does not. The entire argument rests on a proposal made by, economic historian and Washington ad- visor Walt W. Rostow. Rostow maintains that if a nation could boost its savings and investment from less than five per cent to lateral and multilateral pro- total output in the economy (i.e., at least a twofold increase in the rate of capital forma- tion), it would be possible fr an economy to become self-sus- taining and "take-off." The Rostow argument has been the basis of many of our foreign aid programs. Along the same line,. Miss Ward feels that if wet were to give one per cent of our GNP we could raise the rate of sav- ings and investment enough to get these countries off e ground. This is just not tre. In all of the historical studies done on advanced nations due- ing their critical "take-off" which capital formation even approaches a doubling of value. Therefore, I think it is wrong to assume an increase in our aid would ipso facto induce ad- vanceme t. It is true that aid is needed, but it is not certain that aid alone will become a patent panacea for the problem of in- ternational economic imbalance. Miss Ward's book is stimulat- ing not for the solutions it offers-which are, to be sure, less than perfect-but for the manner in which it addresses itself to one of the monumental crossroads in history. TUES., FEB. 18 Noon Luncheon PROF. SHERIDAN BAKER, JR., English Dept., Editor of the Michigan Quarterly Review: "Requirements in General It is important that are beginning to care. people REFER ENCE }'P , y,, f 3 i 'T Ly. . S ; j , 1 t ' "' 4 c "' + ,. " ' ' All Subjects h OU s I d aand up Opposite Engineering Arch 'Writers, Poets, tirTiu "' , .... r _:' ::" '- ''S'a 'y.: f ?rig. I. A rtists, FRENCH STUDENTS ASSoCIATI N Photogrph ers spon sors DELIHOUSE TODAY-5:30 CHARTER FLIHT tar,. IRE 44 37 -F J pr.l eneralion BY JET AIR FRANCE I A no. ME. a 0 AVA 0% - 9 as NIL ago gnaw-d f : rer~r ti# ~ry rtil~r f:# -0 HA D 11 I) L .1N EI 'LL1 I