Publication information |
Source: Arena Source type: magazine Document type: article Document title: “Political, Economic, and Religious Causes of Anarchism” Author(s): Newton, R. Heber Date of publication: February 1902 Volume number: 27 Issue number: 2 Pagination: 113-25 (excerpt below includes only pages 119-20) |
Citation |
Newton, R. Heber. “Political, Economic, and Religious Causes of Anarchism.” Arena Feb. 1902 v27n2: pp. 113-25. |
Transcription |
excerpt |
Keywords |
anarchism (dealing with); society (criticism); McKinley assassination (personal response); McKinley assassination (lessons learned); anarchism (religious response); anarchism (causes); Leon Czolgosz (as anarchist). |
Named persons |
Leon Czolgosz; William McKinley; Jean Jacques Élisée Reclus [first name misspelled below]. |
Notes |
From cover: Rev. R. Heber Newton, D. D.
The author is identified as residing in New York (p. 125). |
Document |
Political, Economic, and Religious Causes of Anarchism [excerpt]
As the Civic Counselor of our own
city writes: “The one permanent way out is to strike at the causes that produce
these enemies of society—the bad home, the cramped opportunities, the false
education. He who opens a school, who improves the tenements, who opens opportunities
for labor—he most effectually drives anarchy from the land. We want no coddling
of the poor, no sentimental dallying with perpetrators of dastardly deeds; but
we do need to allay discontent by giving every man and every child an opportunity
by honest labor to live an honest, hopeful, contented life. Opportunity for
hopeful labor will take away the opportunity of perverted minds. He who makes
government the friend of the common people, the servant of the masses, and who
does away with the flaunting inequalities of wealth—he does more to dispel anarchism
than he who merely cries, ‘Away with the wretch!’”
Elise Reclus, the brilliant geographer, said:
“We are all revolutionizers, because we desire justice.” The only sure way to
stop the manufacture of revolutionists is to turn out justice from our industrial
plant.
To one or the other of these means for the prevention
of anarchism we must be goaded. It may be that the martyrdom of our good President
is to force open our blind eyes.
The supreme lesson of the crime of September is
that even our Republic must put its house in order, must make its government
a real commonwealth, must make its industry humane, just, and Christian. McKinley
will not have died in vain if his death warns our nation of the rocks ahead
from selfish commercialism, from our apostasy to the worship of Mammon. Perhaps
by such horrors our people will be made ready to consider whether no other and
higher industrial order is possible, no saner and more Christian civilization
is attainable in the orderly way of evolution. [119][120]
III.
Below the economic causes of anarchism
lie the religious causes, or, more strictly speaking, the irreligious causes
of anarchism.
It is more than a program of reform: it is a creed,
passionately held and often heroically lived up to. Say what you will about
Czolgosz, he took his life in his hand to assert his crazy creed. While men
are willing so to do, we can only hope to prevent such crimes by dispossessing
the false faith and inspiring the true one.