|
The
Problem of Peace
ALBERT SCHWEITZER
Nobel Lecture*, November 4, 1954
For the subject of my lecture, a redoubtable honor imposed
by the award of the Nobel Peace Prize, I have chosen
the problem of peace as it is today. In so doing, I
believe that I have acted in the spirit of the founder
of this prize who devoted himself to the study of the
problem as it existed in his own day and age, and who
expected his Foundation to encourage consideration of
ways to serve the cause of peace.
I shall begin with an account of the situation at the
end of the two wars through which we have recently passed.
The statesmen who were responsible for shaping the world
of today through the negotiations which followed each
of these two wars found the cards stacked against them.
Their aim was not so much to create situations which
might give rise to widespread and prosperous development
as it was to establish the results of victory on a permanent
basis. Even if their judgment had been unerring, they
could not have used it as a guide. They were obliged
to regard themselves as the executors of the will of
the conquering peoples. They could not aspire to establishing
relations between peoples on a just and proper basis;
all their efforts were taken up by the necessity of
preventing the most unreasonable of the demands made
by the victors from becoming reality; they had, moreover,
to convince the conquering nations to compromise with
each other whenever their respective views and interests
conflicted.
The true source of what is untenable in our present
situation - and the victors are beginning to suffer
from it as well as the vanquished - lies in the fact
that not enough thought was given to the realities of
historical fact and, consequently, to what is just and
beneficial.
The historical problem of Europe is conditioned by the
fact that in past centuries, particularly in the so-called
era of the great invasions, the peoples from the East
penetrated farther and farther into the West and Southwest,
taking possession of the land1. So it came about that
the later immigrants intermingled with the earlier already
established immigrants.
A partial fusion of these peoples took place during
this time, and new relatively homogeneous political
societies were formed within the new frontiers. In western
and central Europe, this evolution led to a situation
which may be said to have crystallized and become definitive
in its main features in the course of the nineteenth
century.
In the East and Southeast, on the other hand, the evolution
did not reach this stage; it stopped with the coexistence
of nationalities which failed to merge. Each could lay
some claim to rightful ownership of the land. One might
claim territorial rights by virtue of longer possession
or superiority of numbers, while another might point
to its contribution in developing the land. The only
practical solution would have been for the two groups
to agree to live together in the same territory and
in a single political society, in accordance with a
compromise acceptable to both. It would have been necessary,
however, for this state of affairs to have been reached
before the second third of the nineteenth century. For,
from then on, there was increasingly vigorous development
of national consciousness which brought with it serious
consequences. This development no longer allowed peoples
to be guided by historical realities and by reason.
The First World War, then, had its origins in the conditions
which prevailed in eastern and southeastern Europe.
The new order created after both world wars bears in
its turn the seeds of a future conflict.
Any new postwar structure is bound to contain the seeds
of conflict unless it takes account of historical fact
and is designed to provide a just and objective solution
to problems in the light of that fact. Only such a solution
can be really permanent.
Historical reality is trampled underfoot if, when two
peoples have rival historical claims to the same country,
the claims of only one are recognized. The titles which
two nations hold to disputed parts of Europe never have
more than a relative value since the peoples of both
are, in effect, immigrants.
Similarly, we are guilty of contempt for history if,
in establishing a new order, we fail to take economic
realities into consideration when frontiers. Such is
the case if we draw a boundary so as to deprive a port
of its natural hinterland or raise a barrier between
a region rich in raw materials and another particularly
suited to exploiting them. By such measures do we create
states which cannot survive economically.
The most flagrant violation of historical rights, and
indeed of human rights, consists in depriving certain
peoples of their right to the land on which they live,
thus forcing them to move to other territories. At the
end of the Second World War, the victorious powers decided
to impose this fate on hundreds of thousands of people,
and under the most harsh conditions2; from this we can
judge how little aware they were of any mission to work
toward a reorganization which would be reasonably equitable
and which would guarantee a propitious future.
Our situation ever since the Second World War has been
characterized essentially by the fact that no peace
treaty has yet been signed3. It was only through agreements
of a truce-like nature that the war came to an end;
and it is indeed because of our inability to effect
a reorganization, however elemental, that we are obliged
to be content with these truces which, dictated by the
needs of the moment, can have no foreseeable future.
This then is the present situation. How do we perceive
the problem of peace now?
In quite a new light - different to the same extent
that modern war is different from war in the past. War
now employs weapons of death and destruction incomparably
more effective than those of the past and is consequently
a worse evil than ever before. Heretofore war could
be regarded as an evil to which men must resign themselves
because it served progress and was even necessary to
it. One could argue that thanks to war the peoples with
the strongest virtues survived; thus determining the
course of history.
It could be claimed, for example, that the victory of
Cyrus over the Babylonians created an empire in the
Near East with a civilization higher than that which
it supplanted, and that Alexander the Great's victory
in its turn opened the way, from the Nile to the Indus,
for Greek civilization. The reverse, however, sometimes
occurred when war led to the replacement of a superior
civilization by an inferior one, as it did, for instance,
in the seventh century and at the beginning of the eighth
when the Arabs gained mastery over Persia, Asia Minor,
Palestine, North Africa, and Spain, countries that had
hitherto flourished under a Greco-Roman civilization.
It would seem then that, in the past, war could operate
just as well in favor of progress as against it. It
is with much less conviction that we can claim modern
war to be an agent of progress. The evil that it embodies
weighs more heavily on us than ever before.
It is pertinent to recall that the generation preceding
1914 approved the enormous stockpiling of armaments.
The argument was that a military decision would be reached
with rapidity and that very brief wars could be expected.
This opinion was accepted without contradiction.
Because they anticipated the progressive humanization
of the methods of war, people also believed that the
evils resulting from future conflicts would be relatively
slight. This supposition grew out of the obligations
accepted by nations under the terms of the Geneva Convention
of 1864, following the efforts of the Red Cross. Mutual
guarantees were exchanged concerning care for the wounded,
the humane treatment of prisoners of war, and the welfare
of the civilian population. This convention did indeed
achieve some significant results for which hundreds
of thousands of combatants and civilians were to be
thankful in the wars to come. But, compared to the miseries
of war, which have grown beyond all proportion with
the introduction of modern weapons of death and destruction,
they are trivial indeed. Truly, it cannot be a question
of humanizing war.
The concept of the brief war and that of the humanization
of its methods, propounded as they were on the eve of
war in 1914, led people to take the war less seriously
than they should have. They regarded it as a storm which
was to clear the political air and as an event which
was to end the arms race that was ruining nations.
While some lightheartedly supported the war on account
of the profits they expected to gain from it, others
did so from a more noble motive: this war must be the
war to end all wars. Many a brave man set out for battle
in the belief that he was fighting for a day when war
would no longer exist.
In this conflict, just as in that of 1939, these two
concepts proved to be completely wrong. Slaughter and
destruction continued year after year and were carried
on in the most inhumane way. In contrast to the war
of 18704.the duel was not between two isolated nations,
but between two great groups of nations, so that a large
share of mankind became embroiled, thus compounding
the tragedy.
Since we now know what a terrible evil war is, we must
spare no effort to prevent its recurrence. To this reason
must also be added an ethical one: In the course of
the last two wars, we have been guilty of acts of inhumanity
which make one shudder, and in any future war we would
certainly be guilty of even worse. This must not happen!
Let us dare to face the situation. Man has become superman.
He is a superman because he not only has at his disposal
innate physical forces, but also commands, thanks to
scientific and technological advances, the latent forces
of nature which he can now put to his own use. To kill
at a distance, man used to rely solely on his own physical
strength; he used it to bend the bow and to release
the arrow. The superman has progressed to the stage
where, thanks to a device designed for the purpose,
he can use the energy released by the combustion of
a given combination of chemical products. This enables
him to employ a much more effective projectile and to
propel it over far greater distances.
However, the superman suffers from a fatal flaw. He
has failed to rise to the level of superhuman reason
which should match that of his superhuman strength.
He requires such reason to put this vast power to solely
reasonable and useful ends and not to destructive and
murderous ones. Because he lacks it, the conquests of
science and technology become a mortal danger to him
rather than a blessing.
In this context is it not significant that the first
great scientific discovery, the harnessing of the force
resulting from the combustion of gunpowder, was seen
at first only as a means of killing at a distance?
The conquest of the air, thanks to the internal-combustion
engine, marked a decisive advance for humanity. Yet
men grasped at once the opportunity it offered to kill
and destroy from the skies. This invention underlined
a fact which had hitherto been steadfastly denied: the
more the superman gains in strength, the poorer he becomes.
To avoid exposing himself completely to the destruction
unleashed from the skies, he is obliged to seek refuge
underground like a hunted animal. At the same time he
must resign himself to abetting the unprecedented destruction
of cultural values.
A new stage was reached with the discovery and subsequent
utilization of the vast forces liberated by the splitting
of the atom. After a time, it was found that the destructive
potential of a bomb armed with such was incalculable,
and that even large-scale tests could unleash catastrophes
threatening the very existence of the human race. Only
now has the full horror of our position become obvious.
No longer can we evade the question of the future of
mankind.
But the essential fact which we should acknowledge in
our conscience, and which we should have acknowledged
a long time ago, is that we are becoming inhuman to
the extent that we become supermen. We have learned
to tolerate the facts of war: that men are killed en
masse -some twenty million in the Second World War -
that whole cities and their inhabitants are annihilated
by the atomic bomb, that men are turned into living
torches by incendiary bombs. We learn of these things
from the radio or newspapers and we judge them according
to whether they signify success for the group of peoples
to which we belong, or for our enemies. When we do admit
to ourselves that such acts are the results of inhuman
conduct, our admission is accompanied by the thought
that the very fact of war itself leaves us no option
but to accept them. In resigning ourselves to our fate
without a struggle, we are guilty of inhumanity.
What really matters is that we should all of us realize
that we are guilty of inhumanity. The horror of this
realization should shake us out of our lethargy so that
we can direct our hopes and our intentions to the coming
of an era in which war will have no place.
This hope and this will can have but one aim: to attain,
through a change in spirit, that superior reason which
will dissuade us from misusing the power at our disposal.
The first to have the courage to advance purely ethical
arguments against war and to stress the necessity for
reason governed by an ethical will was the great humanist
Erasmus of Rotterdam in his Querela pacis (The Complaint
of Peace) which appeared in 15175. In this book he depicts
Peace on stage seeking an audience.
Erasmus found few adherents to his way of thinking.
To expect the affirmation of an ethical necessity to
point the way to peace was considered a utopian ideal.
Kant shared this opinion. In his essay on "Perpetual
Peace", which appeared in 17956, and in other publications
in which he touches upon the problem of peace, he states
his belief that peace will come only with the increasing
authority of an international code of law, in accordance
with which an international court of arbitration would
settle disputes between nations. This authority, he
maintains, should be based entirely on the increasing
respect which in time, and for purely practical motives,
men will hold for the law as such. Kant is unremitting
in his insistence that the idea of a league of nations
cannot be hoped for as the outcome of ethical argument,
but only as the result of the perfecting of law. He
believes that this process of perfecting will come of
itself. In his opinion, "nature, that great artist"
will lead men, very gradually, it is true, and over
a very long period of time, through the march of history
and the misery of wars, to agree on an international
code of law which will guarantee perpetual peace.
A plan for a league of nations having powers of arbitration
was first formulated with some precision by Sully, the
friend and minister of Henry IV. It was given detailed
treatment by the Abbé Castel de Saint-Pierre
in three works, the most important of which bears the
title Projet de paix perpétuelle entre les souverains
chrétiens [Plan for Perpetual Peace between Christian
Sovereigns]. Kant was aware of the views it developed,
probably from an extract which Rousseau published in
17617.
Today we can judge the efficacy of international institutions
by the experience we have had with the League of Nations
in Geneva and with the United Nations. Such institutions
can render important services by offering to mediate
conflicts at their very inception, by taking the initiative
in setting up international projects, and by other actions
of a similar nature, depending on the circumstances.
One of the League of Nations' most important achievements
was the creation in 1922 of an internationally valid
passport for the benefit of those who became stateless
as a consequence of war8. What a position those people
would have been in if this travel document had not been
devised through Nansen's initiative! What would have
been the fate of displaced persons after 1945 if the
United Nations had not existed!
Nevertheless these two institutions have been unable
to bring about peace. Their efforts were doomed to fail
since they were obliged to undertake them in a world
in which there was no prevailing spirit directed toward
peace. And being only legal institutions, they were
unable to create such a spirit. The ethical spirit alone
has the power to generate it. Kant deceived himself
in thinking that he could dispense with it in his search
for peace. We must follow the road on which he turned
his back.
What is more, we just cannot wait the extremely long
time he deemed necessary for this movement toward peace
to mature. War today means annihilation, a fact that
Kant did not foresee. Decisive steps must be taken to
ensure peace, and decisive results obtained without
delay. Only through the spirit can all this be done.
Is the spirit capable of achieving what we in our distress
must expect of it?
Let us not underestimate its power, the evidence of
which can be seen throughout the history of mankind.
The spirit created this humanitarianism which is the
origin of all progress toward some form of higher existence.
Inspired by humanitarianism we are true to ourselves
and capable of creating. Inspired by a contrary spirit
we are unfaithful to ourselves and fall prey to all
manner of error.
The height to which the spirit can ascend was revealed
in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries. It led
those peoples of Europe who possessed it out of the
Middle Ages, putting an end to superstition, witch hunts,
torture, and a multitude of other forms of cruelty or
traditional folly. It replaced the old with the new
in an evolutionary way that never ceases to astonish
those who observe it. All that we have ever possessed
of true civilization, and indeed all that we still possess,
can be traced to a manifestation of this spirit.
Later, its power waned because the spirit failed to
find support for its ethical character in a world preoccupied
with scientific pursuits. It has been replaced by a
spirit less sure of the course humanity should take
and more content with lesser ideals. Today if we are
to avoid our own downfall, we must commit ourselves
to this spirit once again. It must bring forth a new
miracle just as it did in the Middle Ages, an even greater
miracle than the first.
The spirit is not dead; it lives in isolation. It has
overcome the difficulty of having to exist in a world
out of harmony with its ethical character. It has come
to realize that it can find no home other than in the
basic nature of man. The independence acquired through
its acceptance of this realization is an additional
asset.
It is convinced that compassion, in which ethics takes
root, does not assume its true proportions until it
embraces not only man but every living being. To the
old ethics, which lacked this depth and force of conviction,
has been added the ethics of reverence for life, and
its validity is steadily gaining in recognition.
Once more we dare to appeal to the whole man, to his
capacity to think and feel, exhorting him to know himself
and to be true to himself. We reaffirm our trust in
the profound qualities of his nature. And our living.
experiences are proving us right.
In 1950, there appeared a book entitled Témoignages
d'humanité [Documents of Humanity]9, published
by some professors from the University of Göttingen
who had been brought together by the frightful mass
expulsion of the eastern Germans in 1945. The refugees
tell in simple words of the help they received in their
distress from men belonging to the enemy nations, men
who might well have been moved to hate them. Rarely
have I been so gripped by a book as I was by this one.
It is a wonderful tonic for anyone who has lost faith
in humanity.
Whether peace comes or not depends on the direction
in which the mentality of individuals develops and then,
in turn, on that of their nations. This truth holds
more meaning for us today than it did for the past.
Erasmus, Sully, the Abbé Castel de Saint-Pierre,
and the others who in their time were engrossed in the
problem of peace dealt with princes and not with peoples.
Their efforts tended to be concentrated on the establishment
of a supranational authority vested with the power of
arbitrating any difficulties which might arise between
princes. Kant, in his essay on "Perpetual Peace",
was the first to foresee an age when peoples would govern
themselves and when they, no less than the sovereigns,
would be concerned with the problem of peace. He thought
of this evolution as progress. In his opinion, peoples
would be more inclined than princes to maintain peace
because it is they who bear the miseries of war.
The time has come, certainly, when governments must
look on themselves as the executors of the will of the
people. But Kant's reliance on the people's innate love
for peace has not been justified. Because the will of
the people, being the will of the crowd, has not avoided
the danger of instability and the risk of emotional
distraction from the path of true reason, it has failed
to demonstrate a vital sense of responsibility. Nationalism
of the worst sort was displayed in the last two wars,
and it may be regarded today as the greatest obstacle
to mutual understanding between peoples.
Such nationalism can be repulsed only through the rebirth
of a humanitarian ideal among men which will make their
allegiance to their country a natural one inspired by
genuine ideals.
Spurious nationalism is rampant in countries across
the seas too, especially among those peoples who formerly
lived under white domination and who have recently gained
their independence. They are in danger of allowing nationalism
to become their one and only ideal. Indeed, peace, which
had prevailed until now in many areas, is today in jeopardy.
These peoples, too, can overcome their naive nationalism
only by adopting a humanitarian ideal. But how is such
a change to be brought about? Only when the spirit becomes
a living force within us and leads us to a civilization
based on the humanitarian ideal, will it act, through
us, upon these peoples. All men, even the semicivilized
and the primitive, are, as beings capable of compassion,
able to develop a humanitarian spirit. It abides within
them like tinder ready to be lit, waiting only for a
spark.
The idea that the reign of peace must come one day has
been given expression by a number of peoples who have
attained a certain level of civilization. In Palestine
it appeared for the first time in the words of the prophet
Amos in the eighth century B.C.10, and it continues
to live in the Jewish and Christian religions as the
belief in the Kingdom of God. It figures in the doctrine
taught by the great Chinese thinkers: Confucius and
Lao-tse in the sixth century B.C., Mi-tse in the fifth,
and Meng-tse in the fourth11. It reappears in Tolstoy12
and in other contemporary European thinkers. People
have labeled it a utopia. But the situation today is
such that it must become reality in one way or another;
otherwise mankind will perish.
I am well aware that what I have had to say on the problem
of peace is not essentially new. It is my profound conviction
that the solution lies in our rejecting war for an ethical
reason; namely, that war makes us guilty of the crime
of inhumanity. Erasmus of Rotterdam and several others
after him have already proclaimed this as the truth
around which we should rally.
The only originality I claim is that for me this truth
goes hand in hand with the intellectual certainty that
the human spirit is capable of creating in our time
a new mentality, an ethical mentality. Inspired by this
certainty, I too proclaim this truth in the hope that
my testimony may help to prevent its rejection as an
admirable sentiment but a practical impossibility. Many
a truth has lain unnoticed for a long time, ignored
simply because no one perceived its potential for becoming
reality.
Only when an ideal of peace is born in the minds of
the peoples will the institutions set up to maintain
this peace effectively fulfill the function expected
of them.
Even today, we live in an age characterized by the absence
of peace; even today, nations can feel themselves threatened
by other nations; even today, we must concede to each
nation the right to stand ready to defend itself with
the terrible weapons now at its disposal.
Such is the predicament in which we seek the first sign
of the spirit in which we must place our trust. This
sign can be none other than an effort on the part of
peoples to atone as far as possible for the wrongs they
inflicted upon each other during the last war. Hundreds
of thousands of prisoners and deportees are waiting
to return to their homes; others, unjustly condemned
by a foreign power, await their acquittal; innumerable
other injustices still await reparation.
In the name of all who toil in the cause of peace, I
beg the peoples to take the first step along this new
highway. Not one of them will lose a fraction of the
power necessary for their own defense.
If we take this step to liquidate the injustices of
the war which we have just experienced, we will instill
a little confidence in all people. For any enterprise,
confidence is the capital without which no effective
work can be carried on. It creates in every sphere of
activity conditions favoring fruitful growth. In such
an atmosphere of confidence thus created we can begin
to seek an equitable settlement of the problems caused
by the two wars.
I believe that I have expressed the thoughts and hopes
of millions of men who, in our part of the world, live
in fear of war to come. May my words convey their intended
meaning if they penetrate to the other part of the world
- the other side of the trench - to those who live there
in the same fear.
May the men who hold the destiny of peoples in their
hands, studiously avoid anything that might cause the
present situation to deteriorate and become even more
dangerous. May they take to heart the words of the Apostle
Paul: "If it be possible, as much as lieth in you,
live peaceably with all men".13 These words are
valid not only for individuals, but for nations as well.
May these nations, in their efforts to maintain peace,
do their utmost to give the spirit time to grow and
to act.
* Dr. Schweitzer delivered this lecture in the Auditorium
of Oslo University almost a year after having received
the award. The Oslo Aftenposten for November 5 reports
that he read quietly from a manuscript and that the
seriousness and simplicity of his speech moved the audience.
This translation is based on the text in French, the
language which Dr. Schweitzer used on this occasion,
published in Lex Prix Nobel en 1954.
1. The Huns moved into the Danube valley in the fourth
century; the Visigoths moved westward into Italy and
Spain early in the fifth century; the Vandals moved
into France and Spain somewhat later in the century.
2. The major example: The Potsdam Conference (1945),
attended by the principal World War II Allies, allowed
the mass expulsion of the German population from Czechoslovakia
and from the territories given over to Russian and Polish
administration.
3. Nor has a peace treaty with Germany been signed as
of August, 1971.
4. France versus Germany.
5. Desiderius Erasmus (1466?-1536), Querela pacis undique
gentium ejectae profligataeque (Basel: Joh.Froben, 1517).
6. Immanuel Kant (1724-1804), Zum ewigen Frieden (1795).
English translation entitled Perpetual Peace (New York:
Columbia University Press, 1932); the introduction is
by Nicholas Murray Butler, Nobel Peace co-laureate for
1931.
7. Maximilien de Béthune, duc de Sully (1560-1641),
in scattered passages of his memoirs, Oechonomies royales
(1638), describes a "Grand Design" for world
organization which he attributes to Henry IV. Abbé
Castel de Saint-Pierre (1658-1743), Projet de paix perpétuelle
(1712, 1717); Discours sur la polysynodie (1719). Jean
Jacques Rousseau (1712-1778), Extrait du Projet de paix
perpétuelle de M. l'Abbé de Saint-Pierre
(Amsterdam, 1761). Two other such pieces by Rousseau,
on Polysynodie and his Jugement sur la Paix perpétuelle,
were written in 1756 but published for the first time
in the posthumous editions of his works.
8. The "Nansen Passport" (so called for Fridtjof
Nansen, recipient of the Nobel Peace Prize for 1922)
was an identification certificate, established in July,
1922, for Armenian, Chaldean, Turkish, and Syrian refugees,
which could be used as a passport.
9. Documents of Humanity during the Mass Expulsions,
compiled by K.O. Kurth, translated by Helen Taubert
and Margaret Brooke (Göttingen: Göttingen
Research Committee, 1952).
10. Amos 9:11-15.
11. Confucius (551-479 B.C.); Lao-tse (600-517 B.C.);
Mi-tse [also Mo Ti or Micius] (479-372 B.C.); Meng-tse
[also Mencius] (371-289 B.C.).
12. In the Works (London: Oxford University Press, 1935),
Volume 20 is entitled The Kingdom of God and Peace Essays.
See, for example, "Address to the Swedish Peace
Congress in 1909", pp. 583-591.
13. Romans 12:18.
From Nobel Lectures, Peace 1951-1970, Editor Frederick
W. Haberman, Elsevier Publishing Company, Amsterdam,
1972
|
|