by Alemayehu G. Mariam
Recently, Naom Chomsky, MIT Professor of Linguistics and arguably America’s foremost public intellectual, gave an
interview to Al Jazeera on the social (ir)responsibility of American
academics and intellectuals. Chomsky, 84, has been raising hell for over
four decades, getting into the faces of the powerful and mighty and
whipping them with the truth. He recently excoriated President Obama as
lacking a “moral center” for using drone warfare to “run a global
assassination campaign”. Chomsky has been called a “left winger”, a
“radical activist” and even a “communist”, and has been on the receiving
end of a few distasteful epithets. But the firebrand octogenarian is
undeterred and as strong, as plain-spoken and outspoken as ever. He
remains a relentless critic of capitalism, neoliberalism, globalization,
warfare, corruption, repression, abuse and misuse of power and human
rights violations in America and abroad. Along the way, he has continued
his scholarly pursuits in linguistics.
In his Al Jazeera interview, “Noam Chomsky: The Responsibility of Privilege”,
Chomsky chafed at the social irresponsibility of American intellectuals
and denounced the greedy and rapacious elites for using their power to
disempower ordinary people, confuse and render them intellectually
inert, servile and defenseless.
Al Jazeera: Is it the responsibility of academics and other intellectuals to be engaged politically?
Chomsky:
Or every other human being. Responsibility is basically measured by
opportunity. If you are a poor person living in the slums and have to
work 60 hours a week to put bread on the table, your degree of
responsibility is less than if you have a degree of privilege.
Al Jazeera: If you have privilege, are you more obligated to give back?
Chomsky:
Yes. The more privilege you have, the more opportunity you have. The
more opportunity you have, the more responsibility you have. It is
elementary.
Al Jazeera: So why don’t we see that in
the U.S.? There has been so much talk about people getting richer, many,
many more people are getting poorer, and yet the rich are seemingly
resistant to giving more of their time, more of their wealth and talent?
Chomsky:
For the most part, that’s why they are rich. If you dedicate your life
to enriching yourself and those are your values and you don’t care what
happens to anyone else, then you won’t care what happens to anyone else.
It is self-selecting. It is also institutional. In its extreme
pathological form, it’s Ayn Rand’s ideology: “I don’t care about anybody
else. I am just interested in benefitting myself and that is just and
noble.”
George Ayittey, the noted Ghanaian economist
and one of Africa’s foremost public intellectuals, has long been
chagrined by the social irresponsibility of Africa’s best and brightest.
He argued that Africa’s intellectual class is in bed with those who
have built “vampire states” to suck billions of dollars out of the
pockets of their impoverished people to line their own pockets. In 1996, he told African intellectuals exactly what he thought of them:
“Hordes of politicians, lecturers, professionals, lawyers, and doctors
sell themselves off into prostitution and voluntary bondage to serve the
dictates of military vagabonds with half their intelligence. And time
and time again, after being raped, abused, and defiled, they are tossed
out like rubbish — or worse. Yet more intellectual prostitutes stampede
to take their places…” Ouch! Ouch!
So why don’t we see more
Ethiopian intellectuals engaged in politics? Are they merely following
in the footsteps of their American counterparts? Could they be followers
of Ayn Rand’s ideology: “I don’t care about anybody else. I am just
interested in benefitting myself and that is just and noble.” Could
Ayittey’s mordant criticism apply to Ethiopian intellectuals?
In a June 2010 commentary, I asked: “Where have the Ethiopian intellectuals gone?”
I had no answer at the time, nor do I have one now; but I was, and
still am, bewildered and puzzled by their conspicuous absence from the
public square and the cyber square. Their absence reminded me of “the
Greek philosopher Diogenes who used to walk the streets of ancient
Athens carrying a lamp in broad daylight. When amused bystanders asked
him about his apparently strange behavior, he would tell them that he
was looking for an honest man. Like Diogenes, one may be tempted to walk
the hallowed grounds of Western academia, search the cloistered spaces
of the arts and scientific professions worldwide and even traverse the
untamed frontiers of cyberspace with torchlight in hand looking for
Ethiopian intellectuals.” They are nowhere to be found. They seem to be
shrouded in a cloak of invisibility.
Truth be told, I was once a
member of that invisible empire of Ethiopian intelligentsia– disengaged,
silent and deaf-mute. I was forced to uncloak myself when Meles
Zenawi’s troops slaughtered 196 unarmed demonstrators, and shot and
wounded nearly 800 more in the streets after the 2005 election in
Ethiopia. I suppose there comes a time in a man’s or a woman’s life when
s/he has to step out of the shadows of sheltered anonymity and silence,
remove the veil of smug indifference and proclaim outrage at tyranny
and crimes against humanity.
But there are tens of thousands of
Ethiopian intellectuals who have chosen, made a conscious decision, to
take a vow of silence and inhabit the subterranean recesses of
anonymity. When they see elections stolen in broad daylight, they become
afflicted by temporary blindness. When they hear innocent people being
arrested and convicted in kangaroo courts, they become stone deaf. When
they witness religious liberties trashed and the people crying out for
freedom, they don’t try to stand with them or by them; they assuage
their own consciences through a ritual of private grumbling, moaning and
groaning. Above all, they have made a virtue of silence. They live a
life of silent anonymity.
It is rather difficult to understand.
Could it be that they are silent because they believe silence is golden?
That is to say, if you want to be given the gold, stay silent? Do they
not know “oppression can only survive through silence”? Could they be
thinking that their silence is a manifestation of their contempt against
those they consider ignorant and barbaric? Is it not true that “the
cruelest lies are often told in silence” and the cruelest acts
overlooked in silence? Is their silence a practical expression of Ayn
Rand’s ideology: “I don’t care about anybody else. I am just interested
in benefitting myself and that is just and noble.”
But silence is
not golden; silence is a silent killer. Pastor Martin Niemöller
expressed his silent outrage over the silence of German intellectuals
following the Nazi rise to power:
First they came for the communists,
and I didn’t speak out because I wasn’t a communist.
Then they came for the socialists,
and I didn’t speak out because I wasn’t a socialist.
Then they came for the trade unionists,
and I didn’t speak out because I wasn’t a trade unionist.
Then they came for me,
and there was no one left to speak for me.
As
Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. admonished, “In the end, we will remember
not the words of our enemies, but the silence of our friends.”
The Social Responsibility of Ethiopian Intellectuals?
It
is said that the voice of the people is the voice of God (vox populi,
vox dei). But silence is no way to communicate with oppressed people.
The intellectual is to privileged to think, to speak, to imagine, to
create, to understand and to envision. But silence is never the
privilege of the intellectual. Silence is one of the few privileges of
the oppressed, the persecuted and the victimized. Silence is the
ultimate survival technique of the weak, the powerless and defenseless.
The
intellectual has the moral responsibility to speak up for the silenced.
S/he does not have the privilege to stand by idly and shake her head in
dismay or mumble complaints under one’s breath. Those who have been
privileged to study, to think, to write, to innovate and to create have
the duty to give back to the people, particularly those people who have
been dispossessed not only of material things but also their human
dignity.
The silent Ethiopian intellectuals are missing the point.
It is a privilege, not a burden, to be a voice for the downtrodden. It
is a distinct honor to be the voice of the voiceless. It is a priceless
gift to speak truth to power on behalf of the powerless.
The
silent intellectual — without a sense of moral commitment or obligation
to something other than the pursuit of happiness through greed or
without some sacrifice of personal interest — is merely a well
programmed robot of higher education. Nietzsche once remarked that all
higher education is “to turn men into machines”; they did not have
robots in his day.
I believe the intellectual has the
responsibility not only to make a moral commitment but also to act on
them. In other words, when one commits oneself to a cause, one must
accept the fact that the pursuit and fulfillment of that cause will
involve a measure of sacrifice of one’s self-interest. Many Ethiopian
intellectuals have professed moral commitment to human rights but they
are not willing to speak, write or do anything meaningful about exposing
human rights abuses or defending against abuses of power. Some are
timid, others are downright fearful. So they speak and sing in the
language of silence.
In 1967, Chomsky wrote,
“It is the responsibility of intellectuals to speak the truth and to
expose the lies of governments, to analyze actions according to their
causes and motives and often hidden intentions… It is the responsibility
of the intellectual to insist upon the truth” and not to “tolerate the
deceptions that will be used to justify the next defense of freedom.”
It seems to me that Ethiopian intellectuals must shoulder the same
burden. It is their responsibility to challenge not only those in power
but also each other. It is their responsibility to critically think
about issues and problems facing Ethiopian society and to offer and
imagine better alternatives and braver futures. It is their highest
moral duty to fight tyranny with the power of ideas. History shows that
an idea whose time has come cannot be defeated; it cannot be stopped.
The
Internet has been the great equalizer in the struggle between the
practitioners of tyranny and champions of liberty. The Internet helped
end the winter of discontent for millions of disenfranchised peoples in
the Middle East and ushered in a glorious summer which continues to
simmer. Mubarak, Ben Ali, Gadhaffi, Gbagbo and many others were simply
no match for the ideas of freedom that had penetrated deep into the
psyches of their citizens. Despite the complete monopoly over the press,
telecommunication services and electronic radio and satellite jamming
technology obtained at great cost, the tyrants in Ethiopia have not been
able to censor the truth or filter out ideas they do not like from
wafting into the ears, heart and mind of any Ethiopian interested in
alternative perspectives. But Ethiopian intellectuals have not been
able to take full advantage of this ubiquitous medium. As a result, the
Internet is used by the younger generation mostly to seek cheap thrills
and entertainment and conduct mindless chatter on social media.
Ethiopian
intellectuals have the responsibility to be the vanguard of social,
political and scientific change. They must use this burgeoning medium to
provide real education to the young people and as a forum for serious
discussion of the major issues facing the country. The real struggle
against tyranny is for the hearts and minds of the young people (70
percent of Ethiopia’s population), and the irresistible weapons in this
struggle are not guns and tanks but new and creative ideas. Until
Ethiopian society, its economy and politics become knowledge- and
ideas-based and its intellectuals play a guiding role in the process,
that country will have great difficulty escaping from the clutches of a
benighted dictatorship.
Ethiopia’s intellectuals should focus
their energies and invest their efforts on Ethiopia’s young people (the
Cheetah Generation). They should pitch new ideas to the younger
generation; plant and cultivate the seeds of critical thinking in thier
minds; promote free thinking and inquiry; encourage them to always be
skeptical of not just authority but also themselves; preach against
hatred, herd mentality and groupthink; give young people the
intellectual tools they need to examine themselves and their beliefs;
encourage them to change their minds when confronted by contradictory
evidence; help them look at old problems in a new way; teach them (after
learning it themselves) to admit mistakes when they are wrong,
apologize and ask forgiveness; urge them to speak the truth, defend what
is right and stand for human rights. They should inspire them to be all
they can be.
The examples the intellectuals are setting today are
disappointing and discouraging, to put it charitably. The message they
telegraph to the younger generation is unmistakable: When confronted by
abusers of power, be a conformist and remain silent. When faced with the
arrogance of power, be submissive and obedient. When you can ask
questions, seal your lips. When faced with the truth, turn a blind eye
and deaf ears. When the opportunity for free thinking is available, be
dogmatic, doctrinaire and obdurate. When you can speak truth to power,
forever hold your peace.
In my June 2010 commentary,
I urged Ethiopian intellectuals to act in solidarity with the
oppressed. Since I wrote that piece, the silence of Ethiopian
intellectuals has been deafening. I wish I could close this commentary
with a more heartening message; but restating the last paragraph of that
commentary still captures my disappointments and hopes:
As
intellectuals, we are often disconnected from the reality of ordinary
life just like the dictators who live in a bubble. But we will remain on
the right track if we follow Gandhi’s teaching: ‘Recall the face of the
poorest and the most helpless man you have seen and ask yourself
whether the step you contemplate is going to be of any use to him. Will
he be able to gain anything by it? Will it restore to him a control over
his own life and destiny? In other words, will it lead to Swaraj
(independence) or self-rule for the hungry and spiritually starved
millions of your countrymen? Then you will find your doubts and yourself
melting away.’ Let us always ask ourselves whether our actions (and
words) will help restore to the poorest and most helpless Ethiopians a
control over their own life and destiny.
As
I point an index finger at others, I am painfully aware that three
fingers are pointing at me. So be it. I believe I know ‘where all the
Ethiopian intellectuals have gone’. Most of them are standing silently
with eyes wide shut in every corner of the globe. But wherever they may
be, I hasten to warn them that they will eventually have to face the
‘Ayittey Dilemma’ alone: Choose to stand up for Ethiopia, or lie down
with the dictators who rape, abuse and defile her.
To whom much is given, much is expected.
Professor
Alemayehu G. Mariam teaches political science at California State
University, San Bernardino and is a practicing defense lawyer.
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