The Blackness of War
“War is the black spot of human character. In individual or collective life one can struggle, but war is based on hatred and on divisive tendencies. Is it not black?”, P.R. Sarkar
When Language Fails…
Wars are initiated by leaders and elites that wield political and economic power, not by the ordinary citizens of the populations that they lead, who would generally prefer peace to conflict. Ukrainians and Russians that I know have family relationships, business partnerships, spiritual communities, or friendships that transcend the borders between these two countries. However, governments need the support of their populations to not only create a perception of legitimacy but also to effectively mobilize the nation’s resources when going to war with a neighbouring people. To gain the cooperation and willingness of its people to undergo the hardships and sacrifices that war brings, propaganda designed to incite hatred and inflame grievances can create profound divisions even where none would have existed naturally. This consolidates the power of the leadership, uniting a nation or group of allies using glorious or patriotic narratives while vilifying the “other”. All of these tactics tap into the enormous motivational power of geo and socio-sentiments, which overrides the more rationalistic stance of relating to common bonds of humanity.
While many focus on the historical, geopolitical roots of the conflict between these two nations, the mediator Kenneth Cloke, takes a different perspective in his article, “The War in Ukraine: Lessons for Mediators”.
“Margaret Atwood may have put it best: “War is what happens when language fails.” …. War is what happens when people are demonized and disrespected when needs remain unaddressed and interests unsatisfied, when pressing problems are ignored, when intense emotions are left unheard and unacknowledged, and when conflicts are allowed to fester, turning small, preventable, easily resolvable differences into immense, unavoidable, intractable crises in which violence seems the only way out.
The Blackness of War
“War is the black spot of human character. In individual or collective life one can struggle, but war is based on hatred and on divisive tendencies. Is it not black?”, P.R. Sarkar
When Language Fails…
Wars are initiated by leaders and elites that wield political and economic power, not by the ordinary citizens of the populations that they lead, who would generally prefer peace to conflict. Ukrainians and Russians that I know have family relationships, business partnerships, spiritual communities, or friendships that transcend the borders between these two countries. However, governments need the support of their populations to not only create a perception of legitimacy but also to effectively mobilize the nation’s resources when going to war with a neighbouring people. To gain the cooperation and willingness of its people to undergo the hardships and sacrifices that war brings, propaganda designed to incite hatred and inflame grievances can create profound divisions even where none would have existed naturally. This consolidates the power of the leadership, uniting a nation or group of allies using glorious or patriotic narratives while vilifying the “other”. All of these tactics tap into the enormous motivational power of geo and socio-sentiments, which overrides the more rationalistic stance of relating to common bonds of humanity.
While many focus on the historical, geopolitical roots of the conflict between these two nations, the mediator Kenneth Cloke, takes a different perspective in his article, “The War in Ukraine: Lessons for Mediators”.
“Margaret Atwood may have put it best: “War is what happens when language fails.” …. War is what happens when people are demonized and disrespected when needs remain unaddressed and interests unsatisfied, when pressing problems are ignored, when intense emotions are left unheard and unacknowledged, and when conflicts are allowed to fester, turning small, preventable, easily resolvable differences into immense, unavoidable, intractable crises in which violence seems the only way out.