MARGIN NOTES: ABOUT PATRIOTISM
Hrach Bayadyan
hetq
15:10, August 3, 2012
The horse herder knew his Armenian history well and was the only man
in the mountains that felt his Armenianism. The others knew that they
were shepherds, drovers, tillers, milkers and shearers who went back
down the valley Tzmakout with the first cold, in front of the heat,
with the coolness they come out of the mountains. (Hrant Matevosyan,
"Mesrop")
After accepting another periodic offer of Hetq to write, I couldn't
put pen to paper for a long time. The opportunity arose when the
Utopia organization proposed that I be interviewed about the topic,
"Modern Processes in Armenian Society. Thus, my first writings
(marginal notes), to a lesser or greater degree, refer to the topic
of that interview: Nationalism, authority and the media.
I agree that the expression "the villager is not a patriot, when taken
out of the context of speech, can appear incomprehensible or even
insulting. (Here I bring the following comment left by a viewer, Mr.
GK Harutyunyan, saying, "Geez, Hrach Bayadyan, who do you think
you've become to talk about villagers that way." And while I think
that my subsequent explain was sufficient to explain what I meant,
I will now try to make it even clearer.
What bases do I have to say such a thing, if I try to shape the
question a bit more delicately? I was born and raised in a village. My
parents still live there. Until recently, for many long years I
participated in the summer chores of the village. I have scythed
and I invite Mr. Harutyunyan to come to the village and reap next
year. That is if he's ever picked up a scythe.
In other words, my knowledge of the village and villagers is based
on personal experience and not on official data or TV reportage. In
addition, I am familiar with Armenian literature that, for
understandable reasons, is mainly about the village and villagers.
This affords me the right to speak about the villager.
Thirdly, that idea refers to villagers in general and, in that sense,
Armenian villagers are no exceptions. In studies of the nation and
nationalism, the "nationalization of the villager", as part of the
nationalization process of society, is a well-known issue. Etienne
Balibar, for example, observes that the French villager was finally
"nationalized" only when, as a class comprising the bulk of the
populace, it was already on the verge of extinction. Others claim that
even during the years of mass Russification of the Soviet peoples,
the Russian peasant (muzhik) remained as such and still remains
un-nationalized.
The nationalization of the population takes place, among other things,
via universal school education, obligatory military service, free
movement of labor, the strengthening of joint traditions, holidays
and rituals and, of course, through the crafting and spreading of
a patriotic ideology. Thus, we are talking about patriotism as an
ideology. The claim heard today on various occasions that the school
must prepare "patriotic citizens" speaks directly to this. When does
a villager become a "patriotic citizen"? When he or she becomes the
bearer of a specific ideology and consciousness. And even when they
become so do they continue to remain villagers?
History is replete with attempts to forge an army of patriots from the
people in a short time. A shining example is fascist Germany when not
only were villagers nationalized very quickly but also women. To avoid
yet another misunderstanding, let me clarify. Patriotic ideology as a
rule, as an expression of nationalism, is built on the principle of
patrimony, which for women envisages another less sympathetic role;
perhaps another type of patriotism. (Parenthetically, let us note
that the two concepts "patriotism" and "patrimony" are derived from
the root word pater or father). This has done with the assistance
of a huge propaganda machine, which becomes even more influential,
when accompanied by violence, either real or possible.
Thus, patriotism is not at all a "natural" or innocent thing, even if
that's how it is portrayed and understood. It is an ideology, perhaps
a necessary one for a given people and each nation-state. It can sow
feelings of belonging and responsibility in individuals and can assist
society in reaching the most desirable heights of unity and harmony.
On the other hand, it is unavoidably constructed on various forms of
discrimination, on hierarchal societal structures and frequently on
xenophobia. In its most crude of forms it often serves the interests
of the powers that be.
What has been said allows us to claim (let us also remember what H.
Tumanyan wrote about the villagers of his day) that we can only talk
about the nationalization of the Armenian villagers starting from
the Soviet period, with all its ambiguities.
When the village hero in the film "We are our mountains" mouths the
much loved expression "We are important and so is America", the "we",
as you know, doesn't at all refer to the Armenian people.
Today, in conditions of extreme social inequality, deafening injustice,
exodus and labor migration, and outdated official nationalist populism,
what can be said regarding the patriotism of the villager and, in
general, that of the citizens of Armenia?
From: A. Papazian
Hrach Bayadyan
hetq
15:10, August 3, 2012
The horse herder knew his Armenian history well and was the only man
in the mountains that felt his Armenianism. The others knew that they
were shepherds, drovers, tillers, milkers and shearers who went back
down the valley Tzmakout with the first cold, in front of the heat,
with the coolness they come out of the mountains. (Hrant Matevosyan,
"Mesrop")
After accepting another periodic offer of Hetq to write, I couldn't
put pen to paper for a long time. The opportunity arose when the
Utopia organization proposed that I be interviewed about the topic,
"Modern Processes in Armenian Society. Thus, my first writings
(marginal notes), to a lesser or greater degree, refer to the topic
of that interview: Nationalism, authority and the media.
I agree that the expression "the villager is not a patriot, when taken
out of the context of speech, can appear incomprehensible or even
insulting. (Here I bring the following comment left by a viewer, Mr.
GK Harutyunyan, saying, "Geez, Hrach Bayadyan, who do you think
you've become to talk about villagers that way." And while I think
that my subsequent explain was sufficient to explain what I meant,
I will now try to make it even clearer.
What bases do I have to say such a thing, if I try to shape the
question a bit more delicately? I was born and raised in a village. My
parents still live there. Until recently, for many long years I
participated in the summer chores of the village. I have scythed
and I invite Mr. Harutyunyan to come to the village and reap next
year. That is if he's ever picked up a scythe.
In other words, my knowledge of the village and villagers is based
on personal experience and not on official data or TV reportage. In
addition, I am familiar with Armenian literature that, for
understandable reasons, is mainly about the village and villagers.
This affords me the right to speak about the villager.
Thirdly, that idea refers to villagers in general and, in that sense,
Armenian villagers are no exceptions. In studies of the nation and
nationalism, the "nationalization of the villager", as part of the
nationalization process of society, is a well-known issue. Etienne
Balibar, for example, observes that the French villager was finally
"nationalized" only when, as a class comprising the bulk of the
populace, it was already on the verge of extinction. Others claim that
even during the years of mass Russification of the Soviet peoples,
the Russian peasant (muzhik) remained as such and still remains
un-nationalized.
The nationalization of the population takes place, among other things,
via universal school education, obligatory military service, free
movement of labor, the strengthening of joint traditions, holidays
and rituals and, of course, through the crafting and spreading of
a patriotic ideology. Thus, we are talking about patriotism as an
ideology. The claim heard today on various occasions that the school
must prepare "patriotic citizens" speaks directly to this. When does
a villager become a "patriotic citizen"? When he or she becomes the
bearer of a specific ideology and consciousness. And even when they
become so do they continue to remain villagers?
History is replete with attempts to forge an army of patriots from the
people in a short time. A shining example is fascist Germany when not
only were villagers nationalized very quickly but also women. To avoid
yet another misunderstanding, let me clarify. Patriotic ideology as a
rule, as an expression of nationalism, is built on the principle of
patrimony, which for women envisages another less sympathetic role;
perhaps another type of patriotism. (Parenthetically, let us note
that the two concepts "patriotism" and "patrimony" are derived from
the root word pater or father). This has done with the assistance
of a huge propaganda machine, which becomes even more influential,
when accompanied by violence, either real or possible.
Thus, patriotism is not at all a "natural" or innocent thing, even if
that's how it is portrayed and understood. It is an ideology, perhaps
a necessary one for a given people and each nation-state. It can sow
feelings of belonging and responsibility in individuals and can assist
society in reaching the most desirable heights of unity and harmony.
On the other hand, it is unavoidably constructed on various forms of
discrimination, on hierarchal societal structures and frequently on
xenophobia. In its most crude of forms it often serves the interests
of the powers that be.
What has been said allows us to claim (let us also remember what H.
Tumanyan wrote about the villagers of his day) that we can only talk
about the nationalization of the Armenian villagers starting from
the Soviet period, with all its ambiguities.
When the village hero in the film "We are our mountains" mouths the
much loved expression "We are important and so is America", the "we",
as you know, doesn't at all refer to the Armenian people.
Today, in conditions of extreme social inequality, deafening injustice,
exodus and labor migration, and outdated official nationalist populism,
what can be said regarding the patriotism of the villager and, in
general, that of the citizens of Armenia?
From: A. Papazian