Henry David Thoreau. (illustration: unknown)
27 May 13
emorial Day began as a commemoration for the dead in the US Civil War, and especially for the Northern dead. Southern states for the most part had their own days of mourning for Confederate dead (some still do). Only after World War I when the day was repurposed as a commemoration of the soldiers killed in all American wars was it gradually adopted by all the states; ultimately it became the subject of Federal legislation.
In its original incarnation as a product of the Civil
War, Memorial Day was divisive and triumphalist, a Northern institution.
If it were more widely remembered that the day began with this focus,
we might be less enthusiastic about it today. After all, we have mixed
feeling about having fallen into civil war in the first place. Perhaps
repurposing is central to our commemorations today.
Progressives have long been uncomfortable with the
idea of a day dedicated to soldiers killed in the nation's wars.
Conflicts like James K. Polk's Mexican War, William McKinley's
Spanish-American War, Teddy Roosevelt's Philippines War, Lyndon
Johnson's Vietnam War, and George W. Bush's Iraq War were wars of
aggression, seeking territory or resources or both. No one would want to
exalt these seedy episodes in American history, however much we regret
the soldiers' lives expended.
Polk imposed a poll tax to pay for his Mexican War,
which Henry David Thoreau declined to pay. He had authored, the first
year of the war (1846), a work he entitled "Civil Disobedience," staking
out the right of individuals to decline to obey unjust laws. Thoreau
went to jail for a night over the stance he took on the poll tax, until
someone paid his bail. There is an anecdote that his friend, the
essayist Ralph Waldo Emerson, came to see him in jail. Emerson
exclaimed, "What are you doing in there?" Thoreau replied, "Waldo, the
question is what you are doing out there?"
Thoreau was saying that in times of an unjust law and an unjust war, honorable persons will likely be in jail.
Thoreau's "Civil Disobedience" went on to influence
Tolstoy and Mahatma Gandhi, and Martin Luther King (which is how we got
the Civil Rights movement and an end to Jim Crow segregation.)
While the American soldiers who have died in the
nation's wars deserve to be memorialized, not all the wars they fought
in do. A wise nation would barbecue with a sense of unease today, a
sense of regret at all the unnecessary and merely greedy wars the nation
has fought.
Memorial Day, it seems to me, should also honor the
Thoreaus, the conscientious objectors, the anti-war protesters, who
attempted to forestall or shorten the more unjust or immoral of these
wars. It isn't only the fallen soldiers who served the nation, but also
those who worked to ensure that no soldiers fell in unjust wars, in wars
that after the UN Charter was passed in 1945, would be designated as
"illegal.
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