Several weeks ago at the Lighthouse Fellowship's Bible Study, the topic of why some Germans joined the Nazi Party and obeyed immoral orders during World War II was brought up. Although I cannot recall all that was talked about, we did have a lively discussion.
A week or two later, I came across an article talking about independent thinking, the Nuremberg Trials, and the Milgram Obedience Experiment. The experiment was very interesting but the results quite disturbing . I won't go into details of the Milgram Experiment, but would like to share a quote:
"Ordinary people, simply doing their jobs, and without any particular hostility on their part, can become agents in a terrible destructive process. Moreover, even when the destructive effects of their work become patently clear, and they are asked to carry out actions incompatible with fundamental standards of morality, relatively few people have the resources needed to resist authority." (Milgram, 1974)
This quote immediately brought the Cultural Revolution (文化大革命, 1966-1976) to my mind. Although I was merely a first grader when the Cultural Revolution ended, I have first heard from my parents and grandparents and then read from various authors (both fictions and non-fictions) about life during that time. I was intrigued early on (since middle school maybe) into the history of the decade of catastrophe.
Of the books and articles that I had read on the Cultural Revolution years ago, "一百个人的十年" (English translation: Ten Years Madness) was one that I still remember. It was non-fiction, a collection from interviews with 100 people who lived through that harrowing decade. Real life stories told by these people were truly more dramatic (and more distressing in this case) than fiction. Some questions had lingered in my mind after reading the book. Did people truly believe all the propaganda? What made them, even teenagers, treat their fellow countrymen so brutally when the latter had done no harm? What motivated people to betray their co-workers, neighbors, and even spouse and parents? Why there was no museum for the Cultural Revolution? Why there was very little reflection and repentance either on personal or national level? The questions can go and on.
It has been over 30 years since the end of the Cultural Revolution. Is what the author of Ten Year Madness feared most ("..that later generations will adopt a sensationalist attitude towards the suffering of an earlier one") becoming a reality in China? Do the younger generations know and learn from history? I don't know. I do try to keep up with news from my homeland but I only go back every 2 to 3 years now and usually only stay several weeks each time.
Well, what do I try to say through all this ramble? Maybe this. "That is the supreme value of history. The study of it is the best guarantee against repeating it." -John Buchan, Baron Tweedsmuir
As a student, I used to consider history a boring subject. Not my fault. Looking back, I realized that besides dry facts of names and dates most of which I could not recall, my history textbooks contained many plain lies. Fortunately, my children will have the freedom to learn history from many living books, preferably primary source document, including the Bible. In fact, Daniel loves reading history stories and I love learning along side with him. It is my hope that through learning from the past my children will gradually develop the habit of independent thinking and my own mind will be challenged and sharpened as well.
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