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History Is Bunk

HISTORY IS BUNK
by Sergei Boukhonine

Lew Rockwell, CA
April 19 2007

In early 1998 I had a very long (about four hours) business lunch
with a vice-president of a major Moscow bank (now defunct). My
interlocutor was a young and bright Armenian guy, born and educated
in Yerevan (Armenia’s capital). Unsurprisingly, he invited me to a
fancy Armenian restaurant. The meal was delectable – a never-ending
procession of meats, vegetables, cheeses, rice, etc., all washed
down with copious amounts of fine Armenian brandy. Armenian cuisine
in particular and Caucasian cuisine in general is outstanding –
try it if you have a chance. At one point, we were served a plate
of delicious dolma. Ah, said I, I know this dish – it’s Azeri –
the mother of an Azeri acquaintance cooked it once. At that point,
my lunch (dinner?) companion suddenly became livid. No, said he,
it’s Armenian through and through. Azeris and Turks may cook it,
but they are just usurpers who stole this and many other recipes from
Armenians! Moreover, added he, Armenians are the original Caucasians,
while Azeris are invaders and newcomers.

At that point I became confused. OK, so they are newcomers… how long
have they been around the Caucasus? The answer is around a thousand
years, give or take a century. To be sure, Urartu (Armenia’s ancient
name) is an extremely old civilization which originated over 3000
years ago! But "newcomers" after a thousand years??? Hmm… it is
often said that people in the Middle East have long memories; this
is but one confirming example.

This and many other examples strongly tempt me to agree with Henry
Ford’s assessment of history as bunk. To be sure, "history is bunk"
is an inappropriate and oversimplified generalization per se, but
Ford did not put it quite so bluntly. Instead, he said the following:

"History is more or less bunk. It’s tradition. We don’t want
tradition. We want to live in the present, and the only history that
is worth a tinker’s damn is the history that we make today." (Chicago
Tribune, 1916).

This paragraph is still an oversimplification, but a more nuanced
one. It’s about thinking about the present and the future rather than
dwelling in the past. But here is a further quotation from Ford:

As a young man, I was very interested in how people lived in earlier
times; how they got from place to place, lighted their homes, cooked
their meals and so on. So I went to the history books. Well, I could
find out all about kings and presidents; but I could learn nothing
of their everyday lives. So I decided that history is bunk. (1935).

Now, this is a great observation! Many of us remember having to
memorize historic dates and how pointless it was. It is also a known
historical fact that the politicians who blundered into the WWI were
students of history, but look how much good did their historical
expertise do to them or millions of victims!

Human beings naturally try to use historical knowledge to predict
the future, often with disastrous results. Forecasters should rely
on a priori knowledge created by praxeology more than on contextual
historical experience. But historical experience is still a valid
forecasting base, since all human experience is historical in nature.

See my article about predictions.

What I find really bothersome and disturbing are attempts to inspire
and justify future actions relying on historic grievances. Look
what history did to former Yugoslavia. For over six centuries,
Serbs remembered the Battle of Kosovo, which marked the end of
their independence and centuries of the brutal Ottoman Turkish rule
(or misrule). Serbs remembered that the Turks converted Bosnian and
Albanian Christians to Islam. Serbs also remembered that Croatian
Ustashi allied with Nazi Germany exterminated hundreds of thousands
of Serbs. Here is Wikipedia:

According to the Simon Wiesenthal Center (citing the Encyclopedia
of the Holocaust): "Ustasa terrorists killed 500,000 Serbs, expelled
250,000 and forced 250,000 to convert to Catholicism. They murdered
thousands of Jews and Gypsies."

Now, history unequivocally proves that Serbs suffered terribly. So,
based on their knowledge of it, Serbs decided to strike first,
to remedy the past wrongs and prevent the future ones. As a result,
thousands and thousands of people died and hundreds of thousands were
ethically cleansed. Kosovo and Kraina are all but lost to the Serbs.

The economy is in ruins. Much good did history do to them!

But what if the Serbs actually had prevailed? Albanians and Croats
would then have had a martyr history of their own, calling for action
and revenge (well, they actually do have that history). Sooner or
later, they would have stricken back.

The former Yugoslavia is but one example of history stoking the flames
of hatred and vengeance around the world. If this is all history is
useful (or used) for, then it is indeed bunk (or worse)!

Let’s stop using history as a trumpet call for revenge. "Vengeance is
mine" says the Lord and "do not be overcome with evil, but overcome
evil with good." I agree that the guilty should be punished, but
their children and grandchildren? Even Stalin said that a son is
not responsible for his father. Should we be more bloodthirsty than
this tyrant?

So let’s treat history as it should be treated – the past. It’s gone
forever (unless you reject the linearity of time). Let the dead bury
their dead. Even tragic history should be a matter of quiet meditation,
but never a call for a vendetta.

Emil Lazarian: “I should like to see any power of the world destroy this race, this small tribe of unimportant people, whose wars have all been fought and lost, whose structures have crumbled, literature is unread, music is unheard, and prayers are no more answered. Go ahead, destroy Armenia . See if you can do it. Send them into the desert without bread or water. Burn their homes and churches. Then see if they will not laugh, sing and pray again. For when two of them meet anywhere in the world, see if they will not create a New Armenia.” - WS
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