{"id":4113,"date":"1992-09-01T01:00:00","date_gmt":"1992-09-01T01:00:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/about-us\/history\/letter\/vol-73-no-5-september-october-1992-sacrifice-and-society\/"},"modified":"2022-11-27T02:20:21","modified_gmt":"2022-11-27T02:20:21","slug":"vol-73-no-5-september-october-1992-sacrifice-and-society","status":"publish","type":"rbc_letter","link":"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/about-us\/history\/letter\/vol-73-no-5-september-october-1992-sacrifice-and-society\/","title":{"rendered":"Vol. 73 No. 5 &#8211; September\/October 1992 &#8211; Sacrifice and Society"},"content":{"rendered":"<div id=\"layout-column-main\">\n<p class=\"boldtext\">At a time when everybody seems to be pushing                     for more social &#8216;space,&#8217; self-sacrifice is not much in fashion.                     But if people can&#8217;t relearn how to subordinate their individual                     interests to the common good, it could spell disaster for                     us all &#8230;<\/p>\n<p> Have you ever stopped to think about where the human race                     would be if nobody ever made sacrifices? Or, more to the point,                     where you would be if nobody ever made sacrifices for you?                     If there were ever a formula for rendering life &#8220;nasty, brutish                     and short,&#8221; it would be for everybody to refuse to give up                     anything for anybody. Yet there are disturbing signs that,                     in western society today, the spirit of serf-sacrifice is                     coming to be regarded as a dispensible remnant of a less rational                     age.<\/p>\n<p>Granted, the original concept of sacrifice was not distinguished                     for its rationality. It involved pleasing a lot of temperamental                     deities who would not deliver on their bargains if they happened                     to be in a bad mood. As for sacrifice being dispensible, modern                     people are justifiably content to do without the throwing                     of maidens into volcanoes or the stabbing of lambs on stone                     altars. But there is a deep difference between that kind of                     sacrifice and the kind we normally think of when we use the                     word today.<\/p>\n<p>Primitive sacrifice was essentially based on self-interest.                     The people making the offerings &#8211; which often cost them little                     or nothing anyway &#8211; reckoned that a little divine palm-greasing                     might save them from the wrath of the gods and fortify their                     future wellbeing.<\/p>\n<p>In contrast, the contemporary notion of sacrifice is not                     to give up something to help oneself, but to give up something                     to help others. The two concepts are as far apart as barbarism                     and civilization. Civilized society could not exist if citizens                     did not agree to sacrifice something for the common good,                     without expecting any direct return.<\/p>\n<p>The definitive self-sacrifice in western culture is, of                     course, that of Christ on the cross, suffering for humanity.                     Christ&#8217;s teachings have been grotesquely distorted to serve                     selfish motives ever since. But in its pure form, Christian                     philosophy promotes a selfless sense of community. A clergyman                     as well as a novelist, Charles Kingsley once summarized the                     basic rules of his religion: &#8221; to give, not take; to serve,                     not rule; to nourish, not devour; to help, not crush; if need,                     to die, not live.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>This is not to suggest that Christians are the only ones                     to teach self-denial. In many parts of the world, the &#8220;savages&#8221;                     Christian missionaries set out to convert could have taught                     them a thing or two about self-sacrifice. It was a unanimously-accepted                     tradition in some so-called primitive societies that certain                     classes of people would literally sacrifice themselves for                     those around them. In times of poor hunting, for instance,                     old Inuit men and women would stay behind on the trail to                     die so that the rest of the family might have enough food                     to survive.<\/p>\n<p>A similar understanding has prevailed in time of war throughout                     the ages. Warriors have always gone out to die so that others                     of their group might survive and perpetuate their common cause.                     In keeping with its status as the least rational of human                     pursuits, war reverses the logical pattern of those who are                     closer to death sacrificing their lives for those who are                     farther away from it. In 20th-century warfare, at least, most                     battle casualties have been pathetically youthful. The poet                     A. E. Housman probed the depth of their sacrifice when he                     wrote: &#8220;Death, to be sure, is nothing much to lose,\/ But young                     men think it is, and we were young.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>Housman came from Britain, a country which has made massive                     sacrifices in this century to preserve freedom not only for                     itself, but for other nations. He served in World War I, in                     which temporary soldiers fresh from civilian life lived in                     filth and terror in the trenches, and were herded out like                     cattle by callous and incompetent generals to die or be wounded                     in no man&#8217;s land.<\/p>\n<p>It was unbelievably horrible; still, a recognition of horrors                     of war should not detract from the legitimacy of the sacrifices                     made in it. The men who fought on the Allied side believed                     that they were risking death or disablement to save the people                     of Western Europe from a vicious tyranny. In his 1981 book                     My Grandfather&#8217;s War , William D. Mathieson tells of a Canadian                     veteran of the trenches walking down a street in his home                     town with one sleeve empty. A passerby stopped to commiserate                     with him for the loss of his arm. &#8221; I didn&#8217;t lose it, I gave                     it,&#8221; the veteran said.<\/p>\n<h3>A willingness to &#8216;give over&#8217; helped Britons through their worst crisis<\/h3>\n<p>In World War II the British people were again called upon                     to deprive themselves and to suffer and die in what was nothing                     less than a fight to save civilization. If in the beginning                     they were ill -equipped to do so militarily, they were well-equipped                     psychologically by virtue of their national tradition of civility.<\/p>\n<p>The British, of course, are famous for their self-restraint.                     They will automatically line up in situations where people                     of other nationalities would mill around and push and shove                     to be first through an entrance. Their willingness to stand                     aside for others proved an iron core of strength during the                     most desperate crisis in their long and eventful history.<\/p>\n<p>Where another country&#8217;s army might have disintegrated in                     panic and chaos when forced onto a beach with its back to                     the sea at Dunkirk in 1940, the British formed queues to carry                     out the most famous and successful military evacuation in                     history. In the ensuing &#8220;blitz,&#8221; their penchant for order                     sustained them in their resolve to fight on when they stood                     alone against the might of the German war machine , supported                     only by relatively small allied forces, primarily from Canada.<\/p>\n<p>Ordinary Britons coolly refused to give in to the terror                     and despair which the German bombing of their homeland was                     intended to engender. In the bomb shelters of the London Underground,                     good manners and good humour combined to see them through                     what their leader, Winston Churchill, called &#8220;their finest                     hour.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>More than one writer has speculated on how the British would                     respond to those events if they occurred today, after the                     &#8220;me generation&#8221; has wrought its changes on the public psychology                     of their country as well as North America. The likelihood                     is that the British genius for courtesy would come to the                     fore to see them through another such ordeal.<\/p>\n<p>After all, they still show a willingness to &#8220;give over.&#8221;                     If a chap in a pub is harping on a subject, his mate will                     say, &#8220;Come on, Bert , give over!&#8221; Your average Bert will then                     turn his attention to his beer and yield the conversation                     to another speaker, suppressing his own desire to talk on.<\/p>\n<p>Unfortunately, the expression does not seem to have an equivalent                     in the current North American English vocabulary &#8211; or if it                     has, it is certainly not translated into practice. A far more                     typical saying in late 20th-century North America might be,                     &#8220;Excuse me, but you&#8217;re in my space!&#8221; Everyone, it seems, is                     either fiercely defending his or her &#8220;space,&#8221; or pushing to                     expand it. The term essentially means the extent of a person&#8217;s                     &#8220;rights,&#8221; power and privileges in the society.<\/p>\n<p>If the television news is any guide, the struggle for space                     goes on ceaselessly. Night after night TV-viewers are exposed                     to an endless parade of demonstrators protesting this, demanding                     that, crying victimization, and\/or accusing somebody of having                     violated their rights. They all insist that their particular                     grievance is such a burning question of justice that it must                     be dealt with before any others. The trouble is that, in the                     clamour of voices shouting &#8220;me first,&#8221; really grave injustices                     are likely to lose their rightful political priority.<\/p>\n<h3>Is the public mentality frozen in permanent immaturity?<\/h3>\n<p>The cacophony of special pleading has resulted in political                     fragmentation. Some of the grievances expressed seem rather                     trivial on the scale of the problems facing other Canadians,                     let alone people elsewhere. Still, political attention is                     frequently turned to the latest source of clamour rather than                     to policies designed for the long-term good of the whole nation.                     The natural tendency of elected politicians to act out of                     expediency rather than principle is strengthened by a perceived                     need to respond to strident public demands.<\/p>\n<p>In words of Robert Hughes in Time magazine, there has arisen                     &#8220;a juvenile culture of complaint in which Big Daddy is always                     to blame and the expansion of rights goes on without the other                     half of citizenship: attachment to duties and obligations.&#8221;                     The word &#8221; juvenile&#8221; is apt: In Canada as well as the United                     States, the public mood often seems to reflect an arrested                     maturity.<\/p>\n<p>A juvenile mind will focus on one all-consuming question                     at a time to the exclusion of any other consideration &#8211; as,                     indeed, do the single-issue politics which now loom so large                     in our public discourse. Juveniles typically are determined                     to get their way regardless of the impact on others or even                     the impact on their own future. In Canada and elsewhere, we                     can see this immature approach being taken to some of the                     most serious issues of our times.<\/p>\n<p>The great authority on the psychological stages of life,                     Erik Erikson, wrote that to reach full adulthood, a person                     must pass through the immature stage of &#8220;self-absorption&#8221;                     to the stage of &#8221; generativity.&#8221; In the latter, one is concerned                     with what has been generated to date in his or her life, with                     the emphasis on parenthood. This care for the generations                     has a strong spiritual element to it. &#8220;It is &#8216;not of this                     world,&#8217; and instead of competition for the world&#8217;s goods &#8230;                     it seeks human brotherhood in self-denial,&#8221; Erikson explained.<\/p>\n<p>Whatever their age, some individuals never pass out of self-                     absorption into the stage of generativity. What evidently                     worries many thoughtful people today is the possibility that                     this permanent immaturity is creeping from the individual                     level into the overall society.<\/p>\n<h3>The Japanese worry that children will think too much of themselves, too little of the group<\/h3>\n<p>For instance, the recent report of the Alberta Premier&#8217;s                     Council on the Family said that &#8220;the rise in materialism is                     viewed by many as a primary cause of family instability.&#8221;                     In Erikson&#8217;s terms, this could be taken to mean that a growing                     number of people are not progressing into generativity; that                     they are too self-absorbed to make the sacrifices needed to                     build stable families. The report, based on submissions from                     3,000 Alberta citizens, deplored the tendency to equate possessions                     with happiness &#8211; a classically immature mistake.<\/p>\n<p>Whether or not more people really are becoming frozen in                     permanent juvenility, the social atmosphere seems perilously                     conducive to it. For example, there could be no better way                     to spoil a teenager who is convinced that the world was especially                     made for him than to keep asking him if everything is to his                     liking, and if not, how he would like it changed. Yet that                     is exactly what opinion polls do on a collective scale.<\/p>\n<p>Also, it is difficult to convince people that they should                     not always think of themselves first when advertising is constantly                     telling them how special they are. Whatever the case in real                     life, in television commercials you are always &#8220;Number One.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>If advertising thus appears to encourage egocentricity,                     so does the self-esteem movement. The laudable aim of schools,                     churches and community groups in cultivating self-esteem is                     to make socially- disadvantaged people feel that they are                     as good as anybody else. The idea is that individuals who                     value themselves more will act less self-destructively. Self-esteem                     programs have had some success in dealing with social problems                     such as street crime, teenage promiscuity, and drug and alcohol                     abuse.<\/p>\n<p>The task for those in charge of instilling it is to make                     sure that self-esteem is not gratuitously self-granted. Much                     of what is done in the field concerns recognition of achievement                     among people who need to be reassured of their worth. But                     it is temptingly easy to put the recognition before the achievement.                     In the United States, where one school has a program called                     &#8220;Very Important Kids&#8221; for children three to six years old,                     critics have pointed out that such stroking might make children                     over-confident.<\/p>\n<p>In recent international tests of mathematical skills, American                     grade school pupils ranked far above Oriental children in                     their assessment of their own abilities, but far below in                     actual performance. (Canadian children did only slightly better,                     incidentally.) Commenting on the difference between child-rearing                     customs in the two cultures, a pyschologist pointed out that                     Japanese parents do not heap praise on their children in case                     they start thinking too much of themselves and too little                     of the group.<\/p>\n<p>At least some exponents of self-esteem have concluded that                     people only feel badly about themselves because they have                     not lived up to their full potential. One American church                     has gone so far as to proclaim that the greatest sin of all                     is not living up to your potential: from that, presumably,                     all other sins flow.<\/p>\n<p>The proposition is fraught with potential misunderstanding.                     If the definition of personal fulfilment includes a regard                     for others and the possibility of individual sacrifice for                     the good of the community, then it could be a civic virtue.                     On the other hand, people might conclude that, if living up                     to your full potential is the be-all and end-all of life,                     then you must not allow others to get in the way.<\/p>\n<p>It might be argued that a man like Paul Gauguin launched                     himself on the road to reaching his full potential when he                     threw over his career as a stockbroker to take up painting.                     No doubt he became a very great artist, but at what price                     to the wife and five children he left behind?<\/p>\n<p>There are times when most people with families would like                     to break free of their responsibilities &#8211; and perhaps, like                     Gauguin, vanish in the mists of the South Sea islands. How                     nice it would be never to have to make sacrifices for others;                     to have everyone else make sacrifices for you. But for every                     latter-day Gauguin responding to the stirrings of &#8220;divine                     discontent,&#8221; there must be thousands of frustrated geniuses                     in various fields who have stayed where they are out of a                     sense of duty. Having reached the adult stage of generativity,                     they have decided that it is more important to fulfil their                     obligations to their families and communities than to attempt                     to fulfil themselves.<\/p>\n<p>But what is self-fulfilment anyway? The wisdom of the ages                     states that it is not to be confused with the illusory glow                     of temporary self-satisfaction. Instead, the famous inscription                     at the Delphic Oracle summed it up in two words: &#8220;Know thyself.&#8221;                     And how do you get to know yourself?. According to the American                     theologian O. D. Gifford, the only way is through self-denial.                     Certainly you will never know what constitutes genuine satisfaction                     until you have given up some personal pleasure or advantage                     in order to do good.<\/p>\n<p>Too selfish for obligations, too selfish for reciprocal                     love<\/p>\n<p>&#8220;He who never sacrificed a present to a future good, or                     a personal to a general one, can speak of happiness only as                     the blind do of colours,&#8221; Horace Mann wrote. This quotation                     has appeared on these pages before, but it bears repeating                     because we are all in our own ways seeking our own version                     of happiness. And if it is true that, to achieve happiness,                     &#8220;all you really need is love,&#8221; then self- sacrifice is imperative.                     For it is clear that, without self- sacrifice, there can be                     no reciprocal love.<\/p>\n<p>Certainly it is impossible to imagine a happy marriage without                     the little sacrifices made by both parties day by day, to                     say nothing of the sacrifices parents make for their children                     to try to secure the happiness of the next generation. In                     his novel How Sleep the Brave, H. E. Bates examined the anatomy                     of an unhappy marriage through the meditations of a World                     War II airman stranded on a life raft and facing death:<\/p>\n<p>&#8220;We had really been attracted by a mutual selfishness. And                     then we got to hate each other because the selfishness of                     one threatened the selfishness of the other. A selfishness                     that surrenders is unselfishness. Neither of us would surrender.                     We were too selfish to have children; we were too selfish                     to trouble about obligations. Finally, we were too selfish                     to want each other.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>That willingness to &#8220;surrender&#8221; one&#8217;s selfish aims is vital                     not only to the family, but to society in general. By refusing                     to contribute to the good of the whole, we perversely contribute                     to our own downfall.<\/p>\n<p>A Somalian saying traces the spiral of hostility that comes                     from an over-concentration on oneself: &#8220;I and Somalia against                     the world. I and my clan against Somalia. I and my family                     against the clan. I and my brother against the family. I against                     my brother.&#8221; Somalia lately has been suffering through an                     appallingly brutal civil war.<\/p>\n<p>History is full of object lessons as to what happens when                     people refuse to recognize the need for self-sacrifice. Until                     well into this century, for example, Argentina was one of                     the richest nations in the world. But there came a time when                     none of the competing interests in its economy &#8211; the landed                     gentry, the labour movement, the bourgeousie, the financiers                     &#8211; was willing to make the sacrifices needed to keep it growing.                     Eventually the economy collapsed under the weight of all their                     demands on it.<\/p>\n<p>The refusal of the various Argentine factions to subordinate                     their interests to the common good not only wrecked the country&#8217;s                     economy , but caused terrible social misery. At its lowest                     ebb, Argentina alternated between violent anarchy and brutal                     dictatorship. Its history makes an extreme example of what                     happens when particularism &#8211; the public manifestation of &#8220;every                     man for himself&#8221; &#8211; becomes the dominant force in politics.                     It shows that selfishness can be so strong that &#8220;it will break                     a world to pieces, to make a stool to sit on,&#8221; as the old                     English preacher Richard Cecil wrote.<\/p>\n<p>Break a world to pieces? At the very end of the day, after                     everybody has pleaded that he was only exercising his own                     God-given rights, that is just what an excess of selfishness                     could be instrumental in doing. The underlying message from                     the recent Earth Summit in Brazil was that the nations of                     this earth simply cannot continue polluting its atmosphere,                     land and water as they have up to now. Genuine, substantive                     and massive sacrifices will have to be made to put the world                     on the path of sustainable development. In the long run, a                     willingness to make sacrifices may be all that stands between                     the human race and catastrophe. Selfishness or survival &#8211;                     which is it to be?<\/p>\n<\/div>\n","protected":false},"author":79,"featured_media":0,"template":"","categories":[1],"rbc_letter_theme":[],"rbc_letter_year":[79],"class_list":["post-4113","rbc_letter","type-rbc_letter","status-publish","hentry","category-uncategorized","rbc_letter_year-79"],"acf":[],"yoast_head":"<!-- This site is optimized with the Yoast SEO Premium plugin v27.2 (Yoast SEO v27.2) - https:\/\/yoast.com\/product\/yoast-seo-premium-wordpress\/ -->\n<title>Vol. 73 No. 5 - September\/October 1992 - Sacrifice and Society - RBC<\/title>\n<meta name=\"robots\" content=\"index, follow, max-snippet:-1, max-image-preview:large, max-video-preview:-1\" \/>\n<link rel=\"canonical\" href=\"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/about-us\/history\/letter\/vol-73-no-5-september-october-1992-sacrifice-and-society\/\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:locale\" content=\"en_US\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:type\" content=\"article\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:title\" content=\"Vol. 73 No. 5 - September\/October 1992 - Sacrifice and Society - RBC\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:description\" content=\"At a time when everybody seems to be pushing for more social &#8216;space,&#8217; self-sacrifice is not much in fashion. 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