SUMMARY OF LEARNERS INTRO & VOCAB BURNING LIBRARIES (BCE)
Dates listed hereafter
are Christian Era (CE), unless noted otherwise.
Please consult “Burning Libraries
(BC)” for a list of prior atrocities and a preamble to this
nauseating topic. LEARNERS has an
abbreviated version in French (link above) of these two chapters, for those who
care. Translating all these place names
into their French equivalents was beyond me.
The Book of Mormon proclaims that Christ carried His
teachings around the world. It is
written therein that He went to what would become Latin America (?) where
mighty Judeo-Christian empires originated from a boatload of Israelite refugees. These Christian civilizations are said to
have flourished for centuries and then degenerated into prehistoric
obscurity. A book of encoded golden
pages, since lost, revealed this chronicle to the founder of the
Others conclude that
Jesus took Buddhist instruction during a youthful pilgrimage to
The giant library at
Eighty CE saw the first
destruction of one of the greatest Buddhist centers,
During the first four
hundred years of the Christian era, the city of
In the first two
centuries CE, the Cushan invaded, settled and administered a Golden Age of
Buddhism in
The Huns had been held
out of
Circa 600, Niu Hung wrote a memorandum to the Sui Emperor concerning
the destruction of previous libraries.
He suggested that imperial collections should be augmented by copying
private books. The Chia-tse palace
accumulated 370,000 volumes by following this new policy. In 605, the Chinese emperor, Liu Fang, sacked
Indrapura, the Cham capital. From 754,
when the Chinese population was about 53 million, it fell to 17 million by 764.
Two key texts on Japanese
history disappeared, the Kokki (National Record), during the Isshi
(Itsushi) Incident in 645, and the Tennoki at some later date.
In 758, Arabs and Persians
sacked
In 907, building
materials from the ruins of Ch'ang-an were rafted to build the new capital,
Actually, the loss of
Chinese technological superiority can be laid at the hooves of the Mongol Horde
and its ninety-year suppression of Chinese culture, followed by centuries of
mixed rule that slavishly imitated the Mongols in military tyranny and
technological backwardness, if nothing else.
The Song Renaissance (circa 1200) produced a fountainhead of peaceful
creativity and a shortage of weapon capability.
For the next seven centuries, various dynasties, both Chinese and
foreign-born, would make sure that no such vulnerability reoccurred by
suppressing Chinese creativity.
Paradoxically, as usual, the suppression of peace technology brought
about an equivalent standstill in new weapon development; in attempting to
strengthen
Internal chaos destroyed
half the books in various imperial libraries by the end of Hsuan Tsung’s reign
c. 1000. Under T’ang leadership, both
private and monastic libraries flourished for awhile. During the Northern Sung period, which lasted
until 1126, the Chung-wen Hall was established in modern K’ai-feng. This library contained 6,705 works in 73,877
volumes. The Chin destroyed it when they
took over.
For millennia, Middle
Kingdom expeditions raked foreign tribes, cities, libraries and monasteries
along its expanding frontier. The
Tibetans fought back. They occupied
Ch’ang-an, the Chinese capital, in 763.
They had been Chinese vassals before, would see their
Kublai Khan abandoned his
Mongol capital,
There
followed the horrific Taiping rebellion with its twenty million dead (the concurrent American Civil War killed
600,000 – the worst war Americans have ever known). Then two Opium Wars against the London/Boston
Drug Cartel. Believe it or not, this
gang of thieves was led by Queen
During the Boxer
rebellion, European, American and Japanese armies sacked the Imperial Residence
in
Back to ‘
In 105,
In the 2nd
Century, the most famous western libraries were
An earthquake toppled the
Bishop Alexander
established the Latin Library in
This massive purge
probably cancelled the last opportunity to chronicle Christ’s life
accurately.
The library at
In 365
Some historians attribute
the next thousand years’ Dark Age to these alternating acts of Christian/Pagan
fanaticism. You can’t stage a
respectable Dark Age without burning all the books beforehand.
The Vandals sacked
A Chinese Army chased the
Huns from their steppe homeland in 91, all the away across
St. Cyril of
Massive earthquakes and
plagues wracked the world around 543, they halved
The list of towns Muslims
captured with varying degrees of destruction, includes but is not limited to:
“Umar wrote [to the local Muslim commander who had requested permission to distribute these books to his troops as booty]: ‘Throw them into the water. If what they contain is right guidance, God has given us better guidance. If it is error, God has protected us against it.’” The Muqaddimah: An Introduction to History, Franz Rosenthal, translator, Bollingen Series, Princeton University Press, 1967, p. 373.
In
Sound familiar? Fundamentalists cannot be told apart,
regardless of their religion, date of birth or mother race. At least their mothers must have loved them,
nonetheless…
The list goes on. Cyrene and Tripoli, which the Muslims took in
643; rebellious Alexandria again in 645 (ending its manuscript exchange
once-and-for-all); Cyprus in 649; Rhodes in 654; Kabul in 664, 708 and 1504;
Bokhara in 674 and 710; Samarkhand (where Chinese craftsmen taught Muslims the
art of paper-making) in 676 and 711; Carthage in 698; Gibraltar, Lisbon
(burned) and Toledo in 711; Samarkhand again in 712; Khwarizm, Ferghana,
Tashkent and Kashgar in 713; Multan in 715; Lisbon in 717; Narbonne in 719;
Seville in 721 (where the Western Gothic King Isidor’s library was destroyed);
Carcassonne and Nimes in 726; Bordeaux (burned down) in 732; Derbent in 733;
Samarkhand, once and for all, in 737 or 738.
The Franks took
The monastery at
The Haeinsa temple,
established in 802 near the Korean city of
The Javanese invaded Anam
and Champa in 774. In 832, the Pyu
capital, Sri Kshetra, was destroyed during a Thai raid led by Nanchao. Escaping northwards, its urban population was
eventually taken captive by the Mon.
Beneficiaries of trade between
In 807, Muslim raiders
plundered
In 871, ex-slaves
destroyed
The Patriarch of
Constantinople, Photius (c. 820-891) compiled his Bibliotheca, an
account of 280 earlier texts. It is a
valuable reference source for many lost works.
In 846, a Muslim army
from
“… proceeded to the library of
al-Hakam [his father, the ex-Caliph], caused all the writings therein contained
to be brought forth in the presence of a number of theologians, and ordered
these latter to put on one side, with the exception of medical texts and
treatises on arithmetic, all those books dealing with the sciences of the
ancients: logic, astronomy and other sciences cultivated by the Greeks. When these had been separated from all the
books relating to lexicography, grammar, poetry, history, medicine,
jurisprudence, traditions, in short those sciences recognized by the
Andalusians, Ibn Abi ‘Amir commanded that the works treating of the ancient
sciences should be burned. Some were in
fact committed to the flames; others were flung into the palace moats, or
buried, or destroyed in some other manner.
Ibn Abi ‘Amir acted in this fashion in order to ingratiate himself with
the people of al-Andalus and to discredit in their eyes the principles followed
by al-Hakam. Indeed, these sciences were
ill regarded by the older generation and criticized by the leading men. The majority of those then engaged in the
study of philosophy lost their ardor and kept secret what they knew of these
sciences, only cultivating openly the branches permitted them, such as
arithmetic, the rules governing the partition of inheritances, medicine and the
like.” Toynbee,
Around the year 999, the
same year he murdered his brother, Mahmud of Ghazni destroyed the Hindu temple
dedicated to Shiva at Somnath in
Between 1014 and 1018,
Byzantine Basil II attacked
In 1019, a Liao army was
driven out of Koryo (
Seljuk Turks captured
Ceasarea in 1067. In 1076, Almoravid
fanatics took the salt and gold trading center of Kumbi. They massacred its pagan majority and imposed
Islam on the
In 1170, Seljuk Turks
destroyed the Armenian library in Syunik with its 10,000 manuscripts. The Kurd Saladin retook
The Muslim invasion of
Hindu India induced massive mortality and destruction. Battles and subsequent massacres occurred at
Usually, they erected
mosques over the ruins—the way Christian evangelicals built churches over pagan
ruins, and Communists built community centers over Christian ruins, at
gunpoint. This has been an endless
source of friction since, from the Temple Mount in Jerusalem to most cities in
Northern India. After all, what the
Muslims got away with at sword-point a thousand years ago, they’re not going to
permit anyone to do to them today. And
it has never occurred to any of these fanatics – Muslim, atheist or otherwise –
that inviting Allah into a building and ejecting Shiva from the same building,
or inviting the Christian God and evicting the Gods of old, is the same as
rejecting every version of God including one’s own.
God has more patience
than I, with silly humans nit-picking each other to death over their
contradictory, restrictive, and yammering definitions of GOD’S INFINITE,
IMMESURABLE AND LIMITLESS LOVE.
The Kingdom of East Java
was destroyed in 1017. Tangut, Khmer,
Mon, Chola (who invaded Malayu in 1025) Viet, Burmese, Srivijaya, Annamese and
Champa civilizations fought one another across every portion of the Asian
mainland that Turks, Mongols and Muslims had spared. Equivalent massacres blossomed in the Indonesian
and Philippine archipelagos. Many
islands contained one or more warring tribes and city-states. Like most societies, they destroyed each
other’s citadels and libraries at every opportunity.
Great Novgorod, the seat
of the Russian state under the Viking Rurik, was established in 862. It repulsed attacks from Teutonic and
Livonian Knights, from the Swedes and the Mongols. It was taken by Ivan III of Moscow and laid
waste by Ivan IV. The Uzbeks took
Meshed, holy Shiite city, in 1582.
Moscow burnt down in 1570; there were 200,000 dead. Khiva was destroyed in 1603, Karakorum in
1688.
The Lombards, Marcomanni,
Gepidae, Heruli, Vandals, Avars, Burgundi, Helvetii, Teutons, Alans, Franks,
Saxons, Goths, Huns, Vikings, Magyars and Pechnegs formed a host of killer
swarms. Thanks to them, no city,
monastery or library in Eurasia and North Africa survived the decline of Roman
power and the onset of Christianity.
Just like nowadays, civilization was on the verge of total annihilation
at the hands of born-again Huns who retained just enough familiarity with true
civilization to destroy it.
Charlemagne could barely
read and he couldn’t write. He took
hostage almost every educated nobleman in Europe. Then he had most of them killed to secure his
hold over the Empire. He destroyed the
independent commercial center of Fiume on the Adriatic. Circa 800, he and his mentor, Alcuin, had to
recruit clerical volunteers from the four corners of the cramped Catholic
world: (North Africa, Rome, Ireland and Byzantium) to reteach noble orphans
their forgotten ABC’s. His grandson,
Charles the Bald, was a bibliophile. He
created his own library and added to the Palace’s. Both libraries disappeared after his
death. Abbey libraries were established
at
Meanwhile, mead-soaked
Vikings toasted each other from hollowed human skulls (from which the term
Sköll!). They burned down Aachen and
Cologne (Köln) around 800, sacked London, Cadiz and Pisa. They sacked the famous Monastery of Iona in
806, Clonmore in 836. The Danes took
Dublin in 851. York, Canterbury with its
Cathedral, London, Paris, Aix, Worms, Algerica and Toulouse, all these and
lesser satellites succumbed by 861.
Looting their way from the White Sea southwards along Russian rivers,
Varengian Norsemen sacked Constantinople in 865. After this display of military prowess, they
signed on as its mercenaries.
After an abrupt Roman
evacuation, the backwater that was England absorbed centuries of raids,
massacres and invasions by Celts, renegade Gallo-Romans, Angles, Saxons, Danes,
Irish, Jutes, Picts, Scots, Vikings and assorted barbarians. Alfred the Great of England staged a revival
of Old English literature around 890.
In 978, the Holy Roman
Emperor and Charlemagne’s heir apparent sacked Aix-la-Chapelle, Charlemagne’s
coronation city. London burned down
again in 982. Another Caliph destroyed
Jerusalem’s Church of the Holy Sepulcher in 1009. Oghuz Turks sacked Tabriz in 1029. Benares, India, was plundered by a Punjabi
(Muslim) army in 1034. In 1084 the
Normans sacked Rome. Am I repeating
myself? Resurgent Christian crusaders
massacred the populations of Antioch in 1098 and Jerusalem in 1099.
Venice burned in
1106. Crusaders destroyed Tripoli’s
thousand-year-old library during a siege in 1109. They sacked Christian Byzantium and destroyed
its libraries in 1204. Pisa sacked
Amalfi, Italy in 1135 and 1137. In 1151,
the Persians burned down Chazni. In
1177, the Chams sacked Angkor Wat.
Zimbabwe, capital of a mining empire intermittently rich since the 3rd
Century CE, was abandoned for unknown reasons during the 11th
Century. In 1184, the great Abbey at
Glastonbury, site of one of the oldest Christian churches in Europe, (do you
recall my mention of Jesus visiting Britain?) burned down along with all its
sacred scriptures.
Constantinople and its
libraries began in 330. Its first Hagia
Sophia (
Constantinople boasted a
half million inhabitants, free bread, circuses and rudimentary medical care for
the poor. Savage rioting between Blue
(reactionary) and Green (radical) parties, however, accelerated the Empire’s
decline. Actually, these mutual benefit
societies opposed each other on every social issue, including religion and
politics, largely because they championed different sides during Hypodrome
chariot races—another instance of sports enthusiasm run amok. This zero-sum patronage system – doling out
minimal benefits after enormous military taxes had been paid – set its members
against each other, tooth and nail.
Finally, the Imperial Guard waded into one of their worst riots and
massacred the Greens—the Blues were the Empress’ favorites. These ridiculous squabbles (reminiscent of
the factional squabbling between interchangeable American Democrats and
Republicans) caused a military disaster during the battle of Manzikert, in
1071, during which the Seljuk Turks massacred the entire Byzantine army. This disaster befell the army, even though it
was at the height of its military power and was costing its civilian population
a fortune to support. It happened
largely because the top commanders were Green/Blue political fanatics and
wouldn’t support each other during the battle.
In 1204, Frankish and
Venetian Crusaders sacked Christian Constantinople and its libraries. In 1212, London burned down. In 1236, the Holy Roman Emperor burned down
Vicenza. French Louis IX had the Talmud
burned in Paris. In 1453, the Turks
finally took Constantinople, with grievous loss to life and property. Shiploads of books were evacuated to
1453 was the year the
Vatican established its own Library. The
Catholic Pope hadn’t lifted a finger to save Greek Orthodox Constantinople from
the Muslims. The Vatican Library is
famous for having blacklisted unique manuscripts of Europe’s greatest works, on
a Papal INDEX LIBRORUM PROHIBITORIUM (index of
forbidden books, commonly called The Index). Papal suppression of rare knowledge stifled
intellectual discourse for centuries—almost as effectively as our media-glut of
commercial white noise does so today.
During the European Dark
Ages, brilliant Muslim scholars guarded Koranic commentaries as well as some
Greek and Roman thought. Abū
‘Alī al-Ḥasan ibn al-Ḥasan ibn
al-Haytham (Arabic: أبو
علي الحسن بن
الحسن بن
الهيثم, Latinized:
Alhacen or (deprecated) Alhazen) (965 – 1039),
wrote two hundred books, at least ninety-six scientific texts, of which
more than fifty have survived in whole or in part. He is one of the originators of modern
science.
Nevertheless, around
1100, a pious Muslim scholar concluded that ancient Greek texts led to “loss of
belief in the origin of the world and in the creator.” In 1150, the latest Caliph set alight the
enormous philosophical library of Baghdad (a relatively recent city established
in 762), saving onrushing Mongols the trouble.
Actually, when the Mongols took Baghdad with near-total massacre, its
river Tigris was said to have run red with blood from bodies thrown into it,
then black with ink from books treated likewise.
Some of these tidbits
were taken from L. Sprague de Camp’s The Ancient
Engineers, Dorset Press, 1963. A
handful of enlightened Christians and Jews preserved the Old and New Testaments,
as well as a few Talmudic and monastic commentaries. Anyone else’s thoughts – Persia’s Zoroastrian
religion/bureaucracy and the Hellenized Buddhism of the Cushan – were
extirpated without mercy.
Fundamentalist Taliban
gangsters are putting the finishing touches to this task today. They’ve wrecked the last of countless
Buddhist statues that once lined the Silk Road.
Across the Mediterranean and South Asia, thousands of beautiful statues
were destroyed or had their noses and facial features gouged out. I don’t think this boorish vandalism had
anything to do with Mohammed’s teachings, and I doubt he would have approved of
it. Such vandalism makes Islam look bad
to cultivated outsiders: just a bunch of snot-nosed, ignorant vandals. One should expect fewer conversions that way;
and Mohammed was a great believer in collecting as many converts as possible,
through peacemaking and noble generosity.
Constantinople was nearly
spared from Turkish sack by the Mongols who conquered the largest contiguous
empire in history. Calling themselves
the Chin dynasty, Juchen Mongols destroyed the Sung capital, Kaifeng, twice, in
1126 and in 1127. Nanking, the Southern
Sung capital, fell to them in 1127.
Nomad Mongols despised cities.
They tended to level them on the run.
Major cities sacrificed to the Mongols include but are not limited to:
Peking and the Chinese cities north of the Yellow River, in 1215; Susa in 1218
(dating back to 5000 BCE; leveled prior by the Assyrian King Assurbanipal in
647 BCE and in 638 CE when Muslim armies conquered Persia), Khojend, Otrar, Bokhara (which surrendered
without a fight but was destroyed anyway), and Samarkand in 1220; Zenjan,
Ghazni, Gurganj, Nishapur, Merv, Balkh, Thalequan, Bamian, Ghulghuleh in 1221;
Herat, Astrakhan and Sudak in 1222; Ninghsia in 1227; Tbilisi, Erivan and Baku
between 1231 and 1236; many south central Chinese cities including Pien Liang
(Kaifeng) in 1234; Moscow and Kaluga in 1237; Kiev in 1240; Cracow, Pest and
Lahore in 1241; Nanchao, China in 1253; the major cities of Koryo, 1253-57;
Hanoi in 1257; Baghdad in 1258 (see above).
A Khwarezmian army fled
the Mongols in good order. It managed to
sack Jerusalem in 1244. Mongols took
Hanoi in 1257; they destroyed Maiyafarign; Alamut (where the great Persian historian
and Mongol bureaucrat, ‘Ala ad-Din Juviani,
persuaded the Mongol tyrant Hulägu to spare the precious Library of the
Assassins (Isma’ilis); Baghdad in
1258; Cracow, Sandomir, Bythom and Sidon
in 1259; Aleppo and Nablus in 1260; Mosul in 1262 (at the time, Mosul was
world-famous for its beautiful paintings – typical patterns for mosque
decoration since – for its brilliant
enamel and metalwork, and for the fabric muslin); Urgench, Khiva and Bukhara in
1273; Hangchow in 1276; Chaochow and Canton in 1278 and 1279 (exterminating
heroic Sung resistance in China); Bhamo in 1283; Hanoi in 1285; Pagan and
Hanoi, for the last time, in 1287.
Shortly thereafter, the
indomitable Annamese ejected the Mongols.
Any amateur historian could have forewarned French, Japanese and
American invaders of their eventual defeat by Vietnamese Nationalists. If only they’d bothered to listen. The Soviet invaders of Afghanistan, likewise. The only people who beat Alexander the Gross
in a fair fight were Afghan Gypsies. The
only people who stopped the Mongols on a battlefield were Egyptian Mamelukes
and the Vietnamese, plus Indonesian and Japanese islanders. Of course, this wasn’t always good news. In 1291, the Mamelukes destroyed Tyre, Sidon,
Beirut and Haifa.
It was said that a comely
virgin balancing a pitcher of gold on her head could walk the length of the
Silk Road without fear of molestation – except, probably, by Mongol
watchmen. For the first time in history,
Marco Polo and his party could cross the length of Asia under one
passport. Humans purchased this
hyper-security with untold suffering and waste.
How badly do we want to feel secure?
This Highway to Hell became the transmission route of the Black Death.
The National Geographic
Society published a beautiful. oversized book called Peoples and Places of
the Past: The National Geographic Illustrated Cultural Atlas of the Ancient
World, 1983. One of that society’s
countless informative, inexpensive and highly entertaining historical texts;
not to mention the cheapest super-high qualify magazine in circulation, many
issues of which contain beautifully drawn maps and posters. Bless them.
This book’s three foot wide, two-foot-tall full-folio title page
contained a giant picture and the following caption on the next page:
“Afghan [camel] riders pick their way past the ruined citadel now known as Shar-e-Gholgola, the ‘city of screams.’ Once the seat of empire and a lush, prosperous metropolis, the city fell before Mongol invaders in the 13th Century.”
Why do my day-dreams torment me with equivalent images of a ‘planet of screams’: this desolate Earth? Can’t we do better than that?
In 1081, Hiei monks
burned down the monastery at Miidera. In
1113, 20,000 armed monks attacked Enryajuji.
In 1165, Hiei monks burned the Hosso fortress in Kyoto. In 1193, Zen was prohibited in Japan. The Japanese stopped two Mongol invasions on
their beaches, with a lot of help from kamikaze (Divine Wind) typhoons. Thereafter, the Japanese fought civil wars
among themselves for centuries.
Internally pacified by force, they launched the first of a series of
viciously futile invasions of Korea. The
Japanese drew inspiration for their Neo-Confucian religion, from books they
stole from Korea’s ransacked libraries.
In 1275, a major library was founded in Kanazawa (part of Yokohama),
intending to collect every book written in Chinese and Japanese. Though diminished, it still exists.
The Mongols invaded Java
by sea and burned its capital, Kediri or Daha, in 1293. Shortly thereafter, the Javanese expelled the
Mongols. The Mamelukes destroyed Sis,
Adana, Tarsus and Lajazzo in 1275. In
1303 Alexandria was flooded once again by a monstrous tidal ware.
The Egyptians destroyed
Around 1405, the
Turk/Mongol butcher Tamerlane unleashed more chaos across Central Asia than we
can imagine. Also known as Timur the
Lame, he was a devout Muslim and brilliant psychopath. He killed adherents of every creed with
ecumenical gusto. His annihilation of
Delhi cost over 80,000 lives. The city
would take a century to recover.
Hundreds of thousands were butchered under Timur’s personal
supervision. Meanwhile, he ordered the
best artisans he could find to guild his magnificent capital, Samarkand. He spared Mosul from siege and rebuilt its
pontoon bridge across the Tigris.
His city-kill credits
include Balkh in 1370, Urgench in 1379, Abdizhan in 1375, Isfarian in 1381,
Zaranj in 1383, Asterabad in 1384, Kars and Tiflis in 1386, Van and Ispahan
(70,000 dead) in 1387, Tiflis in 1400, Baghdad (with 90,000 dead) in 1401. His rivals destroyed Moscow, Vladimir,
Yriiel, Mozhaisk in 1382; and Tabriz in 1386.
Tamerlane destroyed Azov in 1395; Astrakhan and Sarai in 1396; Multan
and Talamba in 1398; Delhi and Miraj in 1399; Aleppo, Moma, Homs and Baalbek in
1400; Damascus in 1401; the Ottoman capital of Bursa, Smyrna (Izmir) and Sardis
in 1402. Tamerlane died in Otrar on
January 19, 1405. His death cut short
his plan to annihilate Chinese civilization once and for all, and turn its
rotting skeleton into the pivot point for his conquest of the entire world.
Fourth Crusaders sacked
Zara in 1202 and Thessalonica in 1204.
These so-called crusaders destroyed every city and massacred everyone
they encountered: Christian and otherwise, armed and otherwise, resisting and
otherwise. Then they were massacred like
a pack of wild dogs by the first real army of Muslims they met.
In the 1200’s, the
Almohad Berbers – raging Muslim fundamentalists from Morocco – re-re-invaded
Spain. Their Almoravid predecessors had
already wrested Spain from Visigoth hegemons in 711. Resurgent Spanish Christians took advantage
of this inter-Muslim strife to snuff out the most advanced society of the
Middle Ages: the Islamic colonies of al-Andalus
(
In Central America, Diego
de Landa, the Bishop of Yucatan, patiently studied the literature of the
Maya. Their records dated back to August
12, 3113 BCE. They had predicted that
the world would end on the winter solstice of December 21, 2012. On that date, animals would find their
voices, artifacts would come alive in men’s hands and they would unite to
destroy mankind. This may be a likely
outcome, when you think of it, of future bionanotechnology. Patiently, de Landa taught
himself High Mayan. Eventually, he
earned the grudging respect of native elders, shamans and priests. Reverently, they brought him their last
surviving copies for safekeeping. Once
he believed he had captured the entire collection, he had everything burned. He substituted his own Relación de las
Cosas de Yucatán. Of thousands of
hypothetical Maya texts, only a few survive today. Those survivors include the Dresden Codex, the Paris Codex (including the Popol
Vuh and the Rabinal Achi), the Madrid Codex and a handful more. The Aztecs, their vassals and enemies
(including the inhabitants of the 2000 year-old Zapotek city of
Northern Europeans dealt
equivalent Christian mercy to North American Indians.
Let’s set aside, for a
moment, the grim British project to distribute smallpox-infected blankets to
Indians they didn’t care for. The
Canadian Government managed to dispossess its fewer but proportionately more
menacing Native Indians almost peacefully—unlike genocidal bully/victim
relationships perfected in the U.S.
They adopted two
expedients: 1) they guaranteed native title in perpetuity to small tracts of
land centered on each tribe’s most sacred ground, instead of shuffling crushed
survivors onto reservations sited on more and more remote badlands; and 2) the
Royal Canadian Mounted Police administered justice more or less equitably
between the natives and settlers. In
contrast, the U.S. hired glory-hound militarists, larcenous political
appointees and bigot Christian fanatics to abuse Native Americans at gunpoint.
Only a few Amerindian
nations were peaceable by nature. Oral
traditions, archeological remnants and pictorial records tell their own story
of inter-tribal warfare and even complete tribal and urban extermination in
Meso-America. Population pressures
largely drove it. The great urban
civilizations of South and Central America succeeded each other in ascending
order of blatant militarism and brutal sacrifice. Only the Six Nations of the Iroquois (the
fiercest warriors in America) are on the record as having established a
peaceful Confederacy. They tended to
kick non-confederate butt, until the Whites arrived with their diseases,
firepower and overwhelming numbers. A
few Native-American nations on the California coast were inherently
peaceful. Perhaps predictably, their red
and white neighbors mistreated them with equal enthusiasm. Apparently, Guarani Indians greeted the
Spanish colonizers of Paraguay peacefully.
What other native peoples were pacifists at heart and suffered
annihilation or forced assimilation into more warlike tribes, no surviving records
document.
By 400 CE, some unknown combination
of catastrophes had destroyed the nearly two-thousand-year-old Olmec
civilization. Meso-American urban
society is traceable from 1500 BCE to about 600 BCE, at Chavin de Huantar in
Northern Highlands of Peru. A city-site
existed at San Loranzo,
Monte Alban was a
mountaintop city that housed some 24,000 people. It declined in the 7th
Century. The city of Teotihuacán was the
largest city in the New World: population 200,000, founded c. 300 CE. It destroyed itself with fires deliberately
set between 700 and 750. More and more
warriors appear in its final century’s art.
Copan was the proud capital of the Maya race. Its ceremonial centers went back to c. 2000
BCE. It snuffed out, along with its
satellite cities, between 830 and 930.
An inspiration to the Maya was the Toltec capital of Tula or Tollan
(35,000 inhabitants). It lost its
ceremonial center to fire between 1150 and 1200. By 1300, the starving inhabitants of
Tiahauanaco abandoned their Andean plateau.
They’d inscribed it with giant mounded-pebble glyphs visible only from
the air. The neighboring Huari Empire
collapsed around the same time, c. 1000 CE.
Giant metropolises were
abandoned, which once housed 100,000 people or more. Speculation about these disasters includes
abrupt climate changes (super-El Niños), irrigation-disrupting earthquakes,
crop depletion, civil war, invasion, disease—even rabid vampire bat
infestations and mass evacuation by extraterrestrials.
In North America, one
could find advanced urban centers like Casas Grandes; the Hohokam, Chaco,
Mogollon and Anasazi (Pueblo Bonito) cultures of the American Southwest; Mound
People towns like the Hopewell complexes near the Great Lakes; and equivalent
Mississippian towns like Cahokia near St. Louis. All of them may have traded with more
southerly nations listed above. They
also disintegrated for a variety of mysterious reasons by 1300.
Ani was the capital of
the ancient Armenian state. An
earthquake destroyed it during the 14th Century. The same fate befell the Pharos of
Alexandria. It was a lighthouse one
hundred feet square at its base and two hundred feet tall, completed in 280
BCE. Apart from the Pyramids, it was the
last survivor of the Seven Wonders of the World. Wrecked by earthquakes in 956 and 1303, and
finished off in 1323, its remnants were camelled off as scrap bronze.
Berlin burned in
1405. Palembang, Sumatra was destroyed
in 1407. Harfleur fell to the English in
1415. Its surrender initiated what would
become the 116-year “Hundred Years War” between France and England
(1337-1453). In 1419, the Lesser Town of
Prague was destroyed during interminable Hussite rebellions. Amsterdam burned in 1421 and again in
1453. Altenburg, Germany was burned by
the Hussites in 1430. These heavily
armed, wagon-borne heretics formed one of the first modern armies. Nearly half its combatants carried firearms,
and many of its private soldiers were literate.
Utraquist and Taborite (Hussite) sectarians ravaged Central Europe until
1452, when Prague fell once again and local nobles exterminated them.
The three main halls of
Peking’s Forbidden City were destroyed by fire in 1421. Successive conflicts between Turkic and
Mongol descendants (who were fanatical Muslim and Buddhist converts,
respectively) destroyed Nishni Novgorod and Gorodites in 1408; Urgench in 1431;
the Uzbeck capital Olugh-beg and Samarkand (whose famous porcelain tower was
smashed) c. 1450; Sairam and Tashkent in 1451; Sarai, the capital of the Golden
Horde in 1502; Aksu, Jusha and Bai in 1514.
The Chams (Champa) raided
the region of Angkor in 1177. It was the
urbanized and intensively cultivated seat of Khmer power. The Cambodians counter-invaded in 1190. The Thais defeated the Khmers at Sukothai in
1238. They captured Ankhor Wat in 1353
and |Angkor Thom in 1431. Those cities
were finally abandoned just before 1450.
In 1431, Tuaregs took and sacked Timbuktu, the 200 year-old capital of
the Mali Empire. In 1439, the Ottoman
Turks took Semendia, the Serbian capital; in 1448 they took Herat. Spain took Naples in 1442. Circa 1450, the Annamese (Vietnamese) took,
lost and retook the Champa, capital of Vijaya.
The Tatars took Moscow in 1451.
Thai Ayuthians took the Chiengmai capital (founded by the Thai King
Mangrai after 1239) in 1452.
In 1453, the French
retook Bordeaux. This ended the Hundred
Years War and set loose thousands of routiers
(ROOTIAY, “roadies”, demobilized soldiers) to ravage the French countryside and
torment its peasantry for decades to come.
Immediately thereafter, the English fought the civil War of the Roses
until 1485. Thereafter, the French fought
out their Fronde (Sling) civil war.
Affluent Trebizond
surrendered to Ottoman Turks in 1461; it never recovered from their abuse. Timbuktu was sacked by the Songhai in
1468. After decades of civil war, the
Japanese Monastery at Honganji was destroyed in 1465. Civil war ravaged Kyoto from 1467 until
1477. Otranto, Italy, fell to the
Ottoman Turks in 1481. In 1482, the
English took Edinburgh. Dresden burned
in 1491.
During the 15th
Century, the Aztecs pulsed ever outward.
Before 1325 CE, they had been a handful of sociopathic ‘chosen
people.’ They were outcast by their
victorious neighbors to two snake-infested swamp islets. By around 1430, they had destroyed their own
chronicles to erase the bitter memory of their snake-eating past. By the time the Spaniards brought about their
doom in 1518, they had become the most vicious imperialists in Mexico. They lashed out against their neighbors, more
or less at random, from the Atlantic to the Pacific coast of Mexico. Aztec women were said to have been the most
beautiful…
The Moscovites took Tver
in 1485. In 1492, Granada fell to the
Christians, ending Muslim occupation of Spanish territory. The Swedes sacked Ivangorod in 1496. Milan, Naples and other Italian cities fell
repeatedly to French-led Renaissance invaders hired from all over Europe and
then sent packing riddled with syphilis.
Uzbeks took Herat,
Khorasan and Transoxiana c. 1500. In
1505, the Portuguese sacked Kilwa and Mombassa: the two greatest trade emporia
of East Africa. They took Hormuz in
1508. These events marked the beginning
of Europe’s conquest of the world.
During this period, every center of world commerce would be sacked,
burned and raked over (most several times), and almost every tribe and nation
on Earth would be enslaved.
Anglo-Saxons love to
condemn the Reign of Terror during the French Revolution, when about 40,000
French elites were executed by vengeful French proletarians in three
years. Tisk, tisk. How much more civilized we smug Anglo-Saxons
are, compared to those rabid Frogs!
Well, amphibians can’t catch rabies, but you get my point. They fail to mention the fact that it was a
sorry year, since the Sixteenth Century, when less than 10,000 native elites
weren’t massacred by European imperialists (including those hypocrite Brits and
Americans, and, yes, the French too), somewhere around the globe. I am of Irish descent; no English speaker has
anything honest to tell me about political massacre. Americans keep harping on how much more
‘civilized’ their Revolution was, compared to the French. Tell me, you flaming hypocrites, weren’t
thousands of Loyalist American Tories killed in combat during the American
Revolution, and many more forced overseas at gunpoint after the war? People who live in glass houses shouldn’t
throw stones.
Mombassa, capital of a
vast African empire, burned down in 1508.
In 1510, the Persians took Baku and Tabriz back from Tatars, and the
Russians took Pskov. Don Affonce de
Albuquerque sacked Goa for four days that same year; he boasted he filled the
mosques with Muslim citizens and then set them afire. A year later, this Portuguese entrepreneur
sacked Malacca, the greatest seaport in South East Asia with its 100,000
inhabitants.
Ottoman Turks defeated
the Mamelukes during days of bloody fighting in the streets of Cairo, and then
sacked it in 1517. Rhodes fell to the
Turks in 1522. Rebellious peasants
pillaged Mainz in 1525. In 1527, the
Shans sacked Ava, the Northern Burmese capital.
That same year, the Holy Roman Emperor Charles V sacked Rome, thus
ending the Renaissance with a military flourish.
Spain sacked Tunis in
1535. In 1536, British King Henry VIII
and his Prime Minister, Sir Thomas Cromwell, ransacked and dissolved 800
abbeys, friaries and nunneries. The
Abbey at Glastonbury – said to have once housed the Sacred Chalice – suffered a
commercial sack from which it never recovered.
“The destruction of books was almost incredibly
enormous. Bale describes the use of them
by bookbinders and by grocers and merchants for the packing of their
goods. Maskell calculates the loss of
liturgical books alone to have approached the total of a quarter of a
million. An eye-witness describes the
leaves of Duns Scotus as blown about by the wind even in the courts of
The French army and its
Berber pirate allies sacked Nice in 1543.
In 1544, the English re-sacked Edinburgh. Russians took Kazan in 1554 and Astrakhan in
1556. The Portuguese destroyed Rio de
Janeiro in 1557. From 1562 to 1628,
France indulged its worst bigots during the Huguenot Wars. The Protestant half of the brightest French
luminaries was forced to seek refuge, honor and prosperity in foreign
lands. France would compete with them
for centuries to come. In this manner,
France doomed itself to second-rate – if good Catholic – status. In 1569, Northern English Earls sacked Durham
Cathedral.
The Russians sacked
Novgorod in 1570. The Tatars sacked and
burned Moscow in 1571 (200,000 dead).
Antwerp fell to Spain in 1576, and again in 1585. Venice burned in 1577. After liberating themselves from Spain and
enjoying a brief Golden Age, most Flemish cities were sacked by foreign
armies. The English fleet sacked Cadiz
and Lisbon in 1587. Another Portuguese
army sacked Mombassa in 1589. Moroccans
destroyed Gao, the
At Oxford, the Bodleian
library replaced the original that had burned down in 1602. Khiva was destroyed in 1603. Cardinal Federigo Borromeo founded the
Ambrosian Library in Milan in 1609, possibly from remnants of the great library
of its defeated rival, Como. The
Achenese sacked Johore in 1613. The
Japanese government took Osaka Castle in 1615.
During the Thirty Years War (1618-1648) at least ten million victims
died—nearly every other German. You can
image what happened to the region’s libraries.
Dutch adventurers burned down Jakarta in 1619 and enslaved the Banda islanders
to extract more spice. Prague was looted
repeatedly; the Austrians sacked it in 1620.
Heidelberg was sacked twice between 1688 and 1697; the French ravaged
Germany equivalent destruction to the Thirty Years War (no wonder the Germans
would come back later and demand payback).
In 1630, Ottomans destroyed Hamadan, the ancient capital of Media. The next year, Protestant Swedes took
Frankfurt and Catholic Germans took Magdeburg, both by storm. Japanese government troops stormed Hara
castle in 1637. In 1645, the Manchus
sacked Yang-chou with ‘very heavy casualties.’
They would take another forty years to subdue the Ming dynasty. Kandahar fell to the Persians in 1649. In 1654, the Russians took Smolensk. A year later, the Swedes took Warsaw, lost it
to the Poles and then retook it. That
same year, the Russians retook Kiev.
The magnificent city of
Edo (Tokyo) numbered 107,000 inhabitants in 1657, the year it burned down. The Siamese took Chiengmai in 1662. The next year, the Moguls took Assam. In 1664 and again in 1670, King Sivaji took
Surat. Its twice-wrought destruction
became the pivot point of his life—how sad.
By 1665, 100,000 Londoners had died of plague. The city burned down the next year. The Moguls took Chitagong in 1666. Tsaritsyn and Astrakhan fell to Cossacks in
1670. The Russians retook Astrakhan in
1671.
The Library of the
Escorial of Madrid burned down in 1671, taking with it most of the official
documentation of the Spanish conquest of the Americas, since the Spanish Crown
forbade dissemination of this information beyond its domain. In 1673, the French took Maastricht. In 1688, Karakorum was destroyed and Athens
was gutted. The Turks used the Parthenon
as a powder magazine, which Venetian artillery promptly blew up. Five months later, the Venetians ‘won’ the
battle of Athens. By then, plague had
emptied the city. It would remain empty
for three years. Then, the Turks retook
it.
During the endgame of
World War II, despite Churchill’s promise to the contrary, the British Army
used the Parthenon as a gun battery site.
From this dominant height, they could shell the working class districts
of Athens. Thus did Churchill and a
succession of Anglo-Saxon hypocrites re-employ Greek fascists to rule
In 1693, a French army
sacked Heidelberg. Three years later,
the Russians took Azov. The Omani took
Mombassa in 1698. That was the same year
Whitehall Palace burned down. In 1703,
the Swedes took Warsaw again. Algerians
took Oran in 1709. French troops sacked
Rio de Janeiro in 1711. In 1716, fanatical
Lamaist Dzugar Mongols took and sacked the Lamaist holy center at Lhasa, the
capital of Tibet. In 1720, the Chinese
took Turfan and Urumchi. Copenhagen
burned down in 1728. Constantinople
suffered great fires in 1729, 1756 and 1782.
The Persians sacked Delhi in 1736.
They took Balkh, Ghazni and Kabul in 1738. They destroyed Delhi and the entire Mogul
Empire in 1739. They took Bukhara and
Khiva in 1740. In 1751, the Mons took
Ara, the capital of Burma. Six years
later, the Burmese took Pegu, the Mon capital.
Moscow burned down in 1752. The
Bambaras took Timbuktu, Djenne and Bamako in 1755. Russians took Azov in 1783. As part of the British conquest of India,
Lord Cornwallis gloriously burned down the city of Bangalore. Thus he ‘redeemed’ his military reputation
that had been ‘soiled’ by his defeat at Yorktown.
Has this tale of wanton
destruction made you cross-eyed yet?
Almost every European,
Turkish and Persian town was besieged, plundered and/or burned during this
period—ostensibly over the best way to worship God. Lisbon – the capital of a prosperous maritime
empire two hundred years old – was annihilated, one crisp Sunday morning in
1755, by a massive earthquake, tidal wave and firestorm. Voltaire noted
this sample of God’s affection in his novel, Candide.
The founder of the
Afghan/Durani dynasty sacked Delhi in 1756, and again in 1760. That same year, the Russians burned down
Berlin. In 1765, Harvard College burned
down along with its library, destroying over 90% of its books; Princeton’s
Nassau Hall Library burned in 1802. The
Burmese sacked Ayutha in 1767. In 1775,
the Tuaregs took Timbuktu. In 1799, the
French took Naples, once again by storm.
In the late 1700’s, fanatical Wahhabi tribesmen invaded Tarim. It was an Arab city with 365 mosques and a
great many libraries. Between their
assault and an infestation of white worms, every book housed there was lost.
Almost every European and
Mediterranean city suffered significant damage during the Napoleonic Wars. Wellington’s army, for example, sacked
Bajadoz in 1811—imitating Napoleon and his marshals whose troops sacked almost
every city they took. In 1812, the
Russians burned Moscow out from under Bonaparte. In 1811, the Montserrat Monastery Library
burned down. In 1814, the British took
Washington D.C. Seeking reprisal for an
equivalent atrocity the Americans had perpetrated against the Canadian capital
at Toronto, they burned down the White House and the Capitol Building. These structures housed the first Library of
Congress. It was later replaced by
Thomas Jefferson’s library. A tornado
descended on the city. It killed and
maimed more British soldiers than ineffectual American resistance had, on that
day.
In 1820, the Siamese were
alarmed at vague rumors that the British were about to attack them, presumably
with Laotian help. They invaded Laos and
burned down every public structure in Vientiane, the Lao capital. They burned alive, in giant bamboo cages,
every Lao prisoner they did not enslave.
Canton burned in 1822. Macau’s Archives were destroyed by fire in
1825 and 1885. In 1827, the Dahomey took
Whydah. In 1828, the Russians carried
off the fine library from Ardebil, capital of Azerbaijan. New York City burned in 1845. Montreal’s Parliament buildings were destroyed
by fire in 1849. So was Rangoon, Burma,
in 1850. In 1851, the remaining two
thirds of Jefferson’s book collection burned up along with most of the second
Library of Congress; so did San Francisco.
Tokyo burned in 1857. Along with
many other cities, Nanking was destroyed during the Taiping Rebellion. In 1864, its magnificent Porcelain Pagoda,
Hong Xiquan’s palace and the Ming Palace nearby were smashed. Vicksburg, Tennessee; Jackson, Mississippi;
Atlanta, Georgia; Laurence, Kansas; Columbia, South Carolina; Richmond,
Virginia and other American towns suffered the same fate during the American
Civil War (1860-65). Quebec City burned
in 1866. Beginning August 23, 1870, the
Prussians decided to burn down Strasbourg with incendiary shells from their
siege artillery, along with its picture gallery, its city library full of
ancient treasures, its Huguenot Temple Neuf and most of the roof of its
Cathedral. A German rehearsal for future
outrages of this kind, intended to force surrender, which only cohered local
resistance. A French Communard mob
burned down the Tuilleries library in Paris in 1871, with its 250,000
books. The Great Chicago fire occurred
the same years; Boston burned down a year later. In 1882, Chile confiscated the National
Library of Peru and transferred its contents from Lima to Santiago.
From the mid-1800s on,
some excuse or other was found to flatten almost every city on Earth. For example, British troops burned down
Benin, the capital of an empire at least 600 years old. Its magnificent sculpted wood and cast bronze
artwork never recovered.
Messina was swallowed by
a gruesome tidal wave in 1908. The
entire 1890 U.S. Census burned up in 1920.
In 1922, Young Turks burned down the city of Smyrna and sent the Greek
minority and the Greek Army dispatched to protect them, scrambling back to
Greece. This atrocity was a continuation
of their super-efficient, futuristic, German-supervised campaign to exterminate
every Turkish Armenian (at least a million of them from 1894 to 1915). Who knows how many Orthodox churches,
seminaries and libraries went up in flames?
Whenever human avarice
and cruelty were not up to the task, natural catastrophe did the trick. For example, 140,000 people and uncounted
documents perished when an earthquake and firestorm leveled Tokyo in 1923. On February 19, 1938, a fire at West Point
destroyed its library and a lot of American history prior to that date.
The University of
Virginia Library burned down at the beginning of the twentieth century. So did the Italian National Library at Turin,
from an electrical fire in 1904. At
least 100,000 items of the 320,000 book collection went up in flames, including
many priceless manuscripts and its entire Oriental collection.
Major libraries and
collections destroyed by warfare during the last century include but are not
limited to: Peking, Port Arthur, Louvain, Noyon, Amiens, Ypres, Arras,
Soissons, Salonika, Rheims, Cambrai, Belgrade, Smyrna, Kiev, Vilna, Minsk,
Shanghai, Suchow, Nanking, Guernica, Madrid, Nanking, Warsaw, Cracow,
Amsterdam, Rotterdam, Coventry, London, Valetta, Benghazi, Tripoli, Belgrade,
Minsk, Vitebsk, Kiev, Viasma, Smolensk, Bryansk, Odessa, Uman, Kharkov,
Sevastopol, Rostov, Stalingrad, Belgorod, Budapest, Ancona, Naples (where the
retreating Nazis burned 80,000 volumes of the Royal Society), Pisa, Milan,
Caen, St. Nazaire, Brest, Metz, Arnhem, Hamburg, Berlin, Dusseldorf, Köln,
Essen, Dresden, Heidelburg, (virtually every German, Japanese, Eastern European
and Eastern Chinese city was leveled, as were many more across Europe),
Mandalay, Rovaniemi, Tartu, Manila, Tokyo, Nagoya, Kobe, Osaka, Yokohama,
Shuri, Rangoon, Hiroshima, Nagasaki, Seoul, Pyongyang (founded in 1122 BCE;
ravaged by the Japanese in 1592, 1894 and 1904; and by the Americans in 1951),
Jerusalem, Port Said, Hanoi, Hue, Phnom Penh, Jolo, Belfast, Beirut, Amritsar,
Dubrovnik, Sarajevo, Vukovar, Grozny, Kabul and Baghdad.
During the Greater
Paroxysm, European fascists made a point of burning every Hebrew and Yiddish
scripture, every Cyrillic text and icon they found in Russia, as well as every
progressive book they could find anywhere in any language. Their destruction totals hundreds of millions
of books.
“The most extensive Soviet deportations, however, were carried out as Soviet troops liberated territory in 1943-44. The people affected were the minorities living on the north slope of the Caucasus and the west bank of the Volga, who maintained their own languages and religions, primarily Islam but also Buddhism, and who had been largely unaffected by the strongly Slav and Orthodox elements of Russian culture ... In total, about 1,200,000 were affected. During 1943-44, the Soviets deployed hundreds of thousands of troops to forcibly remove these people, and they were moved with few possessions, in cattle trucks with little or no food and water. Probably about 500,000 died in transit or subsequently in the Gulag. The Soviet authorities removed all references to these people, and all materials in their written languages were destroyed.” Clive Ponting, Armageddon, Random House, 1995, p. 223. Italics mine.
These predatory policies
are not unique to Soviet Russia. On the
contrary, they are consistent with weapon managers in general. Euro-Americans treated American Indians with
equivalent tenderness. For example, they
forbade Indian children to speak their mother tongue in forced residential
schools. Other empires treated their
ethnic minorities just as shamelessly.
Chunking, China burned
down in 1949; Tottori, Japan in 1952.
Priceless text collections in Florence were ravaged by flooding in the
1960’s. Mandalay, Burma burned in 1981
and Lashio in 1988.
In this so-called 21st
Century of ‘modern’ civilization, library collections are systematically
neglected; they go up in flames by accident or malevolent intent. Librarians at the Czech National Library in
Prague confessed to enormous damage from neglect and appealed for international
aid. The entire ex-Soviet Union’s
collection is in dire straights. The
same confession applies to most Second and Third World collections. America’s Library of Congress is a
sieve. The American University Library
in Beirut was bombed. Bosnia’s National
Library was especially sought out for Aggressor destruction. In 1966, Indonesia’s greatest living writer,
Pramoedya Ananta Toer (Pram), saw his library burnt to the ground by gleeful
militarists before they dragged him off to ten years in exile. How many more private libraries had to suffer
the same fate at the hands of sneering, armed infants? The library in Hama, Syria was destroyed in
1982. In 1983, a fire destroyed the St.
Michael’s House collection in Australia.
The Los Angeles Public Library burned down in 1986. In the Spring of 1988, a Shiite library in
Teheran was wiped out by one of Saddam Hussein’s randomly aimed Scud
missiles. Many irreplaceable,
thousand-year-old texts were destroyed.
A 1989 fire leveled the Russian Library of the Academy of Sciences on
Vasilievski Island. The Chinese
destroyed the major monastery of Gandem, outside Lhasa, in the 1960’s. Inexcusably, they’ve wrecked every Tibetan
monastery since. A hundred year flood
and ensuing fire in 1995 gutted the archives of the Grand Forks Herald in North
Dakota. On September 21, 1996, the
library at Linkoeping, Sweden, was destroyed by fire. Takastan Monastery, the largest Buddhist
monastery in
If I’ve left out some act
of cultural vandalism or urban disaster of noteworthy viciousness, please write
to me about it for inclusion in future editions. If anyone ever bothered to write up
humanity’s global self-lobotomy, that work was destroyed in its turn.
Meanwhile, almost every
book printed since the 1800’s is quietly self-destructing. Their cheap, high-acid paper reacts to light,
heat and moisture by crumbling to dust. Fahrenheit 451 has reached room temperature,
these days. The wonderful world of
chemistry has relieved Ray Bradbury’s fascistic, science fiction dystopians
from the thankless chore of burning every book. Ephemeral electronic media are even more
vulnerable. Any massive breakdown of
civilization will see most of them perish, including this work. In addition, our recording media’s engineered
obsolescence affords our literature repeated opportunities to disappear. Herculean efforts to transfer print media
onto digital databases (mostly meaningless megatons of accounting documents)
will only mitigate this devastation. In
library after library, reluctant staffers dump truckloads of perfectly fine
books and bibliographic materials into the nearest landfill. Meanwhile, their MBA-certified weapon
managers crow that they’ve achieved cost-cutting ‘goals’.
In the future, preserving
old ideas – especially idiosyncratic and culturally specific ones deviating
from the mass media norm – shall become private, oral and website
responsibilities much more often than public, paper-published ones. Since the technocrats refuse to do their
obvious duty, we will need many more bards, witches, griots and shamans to
assume these adult responsibilities.
ADDENDUM, ADDENDA of
endless, depthless and shameless human stupidity. On the Black Tuesday of April 15, 2003,
Iraq’s National Library, its National Museum and its Islamic Library were looted,
ruined and burned by unchecked rioters and expert grave robbers. Once again for the ten thousandth time, the
world suffered a terrible lobotomy.
Tell me, is this really
the 21st Century I’m serving time in, or is the Monster Hulagu still in charge? In effect, we Americans have confirmed that
we are worse news than the Taliban who blew up their own giant statues of
Buddha in the valley of Bamian. The
official in charge of that demolition just got elected into the new Afghan
Parliament.
A hundred years from now,
once everyone will have forgotten Saddam Hussein, Bush the Juvenile will be
remembered as that American yokel who oversaw the annihilation of Baghdad’s
priceless collections. A thousand years
from now, that may be the only thing this flash-in-a-pan American Empire is
known for. How mightily those mental
midgets will have fallen! Only Texans
and their greed-driven, reactionary associates could secure the Oil Ministry,
yet leave the National Library, Islamic Library and Museum of Iraq unguarded. Their school-marms didn't learn them
Mesopotamian archeology the way mine did, with profound reverence. The U.S. Central Command was repeatedly
warned before-hand. It did nothing.
As for U.S. Marines, some
butter-bar Platoon Leader should have grasped what his superiors – from the
President on down – were too stupid and lazy to realize. That kind of man-on-the-ground,
take-the-initiative response is what good officers are paid for: to post guards
over unforeseen yet vital installations.
He should have arrested anyone who touched this sacred collection, and
his superiors should have backed him instinctively.
Perhaps he tried; who
knows? History is the first love of a
real soldier. No true historian would
have permitted that outrage without protest.
But he would have had to buck his request up the Chain of Command. During its ascent, it would have had to run
past the stupidest link in the chain (perhaps in the White House?). Did some overworked staff officer – perhaps
tallying available squads of warm bodies versus square blocks left to guard –
simplify his worthless career by bucking back a sharply worded: “Negative. Do nothing.”?
Or perhaps he was just an insider, a hireling of rich collectors intent
on ripping off those artifacts, and made sure his political patron’s lusts were
satisfied?
In either case, if there
is any difference between overwhelming firepower and victorious acumen,
Americans have yet to learn it.
This must be a new low
for the United States Marine Corps.
Letting the Baghdad collections burn down on your watch, that rates
right down there with routing from the gun line at First Bull Run and thus
earning the Union Army another four years of massacre. Or allowing the Marine Barracks in Beirut to
be truck-bombed flat without a serious fight, days after similar targets were
struck the same way.
America must learn – very
slowly and very painfully – what every stupid empire in history has had to
learn during its roller-coaster ride of development, conquest, stagnation and
annihilation—just before its combined victims strip it of everything it once
cherished. Like accidental homicide
during the commission of another crime; stupidity, shortsightedness and
cultural ignorance do not excuse the unintended consequences of our worst
impulses. History doesn’t care how
Texan, Republican, corporate and otherwise inept and self-serving our leaders
are, or how clueless we must have been to empower them, except to hasten our
defeat.
America and Australia
have the luxury of dominating their own continents without a military rival
worthy of the name (unlike other, sub-continental nations). They may cower on their own continents and
remain as small-town, closed-minded and bigoted as they please. Americans may miseducate their youth until
our college students don’t know what a twelve year-old would know
overseas. Our most mephitic fat cats may
send mercenaries out to comb the world and rip off its treasury, bolted down or
otherwise, with relative impunity. Once
we venture boldly forth into the Big Bad World, however, permissive
incompetence becomes lethal. It will
bring us grave consequences beyond merely embarrassing us in public concerning
our collective bumpkinhood.
Americans, be
warned! Like a spoiled child during a
temper tantrum, we’ve broken a priceless vase in a china shop. We’ve already been badly scraped, once (on
9/11). Next time, we’re likely to get
sliced up real good. Everyone has, who’s
preceded us down this Shining Path to fantasy dominion of WeaponWorld.
Organizing PeaceWorld on
our watch would be a much better deal for everyone concerned—America’s
interests, strengths and limitations foremost.
On Monday, January 5,
2004 of this so-called civilized age, thousands of rare Sanskrit manuscripts,
ancient books and palm leaf inscriptions were destroyed in half an hour as 250
protesters ransacked the Bhandarkar Oriental Research Institute. One of the worst losses is a clay tablet
dating back to the Assyrian civilization of 600 BCE. The protesters, members of a group called the
Sambhaji Brigade, pelted stones and broke glass at the Institute. Some cut telephone lines so the police could
not be alerted. Police protection had
been given to three historians, G. B. Mahendale, Shrikant Bahulkar and V. L.
Manjul, in the light of the controversy over a book containing allegedly
objectionable observations by author and teacher James Laine, on the parentage
of Maratha warrior king Shivaji. In the
process, he paints a new and more complex picture of Hindu-Muslim relations from
the Seventeenth Century to the present.
The controversy seemed to have been resolved when Mr. Laine apologized
last month for his statements on Shivaji.
The book's publisher, Oxford University Press, withdrew the book from
the market. Police arrested 72 people
for the vandalism, reports Newkerala.com.
Thus do fundamentalists
disgrace their own creed.
“4/29/2005 -- The Central Library in Imphal, the capital of the northeastern Indian state of Manipur, has suffered what historian Gangumei Kamei called “an incalculable loss.” A group pushing for Mayek script to replace the state’s official Bengali script, set the facility ablaze, destroying as many as 145,000 books including some of the oldest and rarest texts. Officials say the protestors were a combination of members of the regional United Forum for Safeguarding Manipuri Script and Language, and a separatist rebel group, the Kangleipak Communist Party. The BBC News quoted an attorney as describing the arson as a “Taliban-style” act. Officials say that for several months the groups have been demanding the government adopt the Mayek script and drop the Bengali used for the last 300 years to write the Meitei language. Some local newspapers have begun publishing editions in both languages.” http://www.libraryjournal.com./article/CA527242?display=breakingNews
I wish I never had to add
another disgraceful incident to this long, sorry list. I suspect I shall have to. This human race can truly sicken one, at
times. Oh well; as my favorite tee-shirt
would say:
LEARNER:
NOT OF THIS SPECIES,
NOT FROM THIS PLANET.
The December 2004 Indian
Ocean tsunami drowned out who knows how may archives within that region and
their guardians. A fire in September,
2004, gutted the Anna Amalia Library in
March 5, 2007: the
Al-Mutanabi book market in Baghdad was car bombed and destroyed. It had been a world-famous center of reading
and scholarship for centuries, even under the heavy hand of Saddam
Hussein. Like the dynamiters of the
Shia’s most holy Karbala and Najaf shrines, may the perpetrators repent their
deeds!
On March 3, 2009, the
municipal archives of Köln (Cologne) collapsed, killing two people, ruining
many medieval manuscripts and four hundred boxes of the author Heinrich Böll’s
(1917-1985) private papers and unpublished manuscripts.
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