“Of Good and Evil – Solzhenitsyn on Appeasement” by Leslie J. Sacks

Solzhenitsyn died last Sunday at age 89, the Russian historian who singlehandedly
documented the fascist excess of Russian communism and totalitarianism, a dictatorship
of terror that caused the deaths of 60 million innocents. His book The Gulag Archipelago
(1973) finally buried the West’s infatuation with things socialist, with politics Karl Marxian.

With clairvoyant intuition that would ring today with deafening silence amongst contemporary peaceniks, those “peace at any price” absolutists, those “good and evil are always relative” appeasers, Solzhenitsyn prophetically warned in his acceptance speech for the 1970 Nobel literature prize:

    “The timid civilized world has found nothing with which to oppose the onslaught
    of a sudden revival of barefaced barbarity, other than concessions and smiles,”

The Wall Street Journal (Tuesday, August 5, 2008 Review & Outlook, pg. A18) pays
homage to this great writer, who saw absolute evil triumph when good and evil are indelibly melded, who understood that the West blinds itself to such evil in its zealous discarding of moral criteria. Solzhenitsyn warned of…

    “an atmosphere of moral mediocrity, paralyzing man’s noblest impulses,” and a “tilt
    of freedom in the direction of evil . . . evidently born primarily out of a humanistic
    and benevolent concept according to which there is no evil inherent to human nature.”

Unlike our own armchair liberals who wax eloquent on freedom and redemption from
their San Francisco penthouse verandas, martini in one hand and The New York Times
in the other, Solzhenitsyn’s extended internship in the Siberian prison camps (so
eloquently elucidated in his 1968 novel Cancer Ward), exhumed the devastating reality
of evil and the undeniable need to confront it.

Solzhenitsyn is a writer for all times, for all the world, whose understanding of man’s proclivity for evil necessitates our readoption of moral courage and a national clarity of vision, particularly in these times of terrorism and nuclear proliferation.

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