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Title: Must It Be So?
Author: Leo Tolstoy
Date: 1911
Language: en
Topics: fiction
Source: Original text from http://www.revoltlib.com/?id=10691, 2021.

Leo Tolstoy

Must It Be So?

1

Amid fields there stands an iron foundry, surrounded by a wall, with

incessantly smoking chimneys, clattering chains, furnaces, a railway

siding, and the scattered little houses of the managers and laborers.

The working people swarm like ants in this foundry and in the mines

belonging to it. Some of them are at work from morning until night, or

from night until morning, mining the ore in passages two hundred feet

underground, which are dark, narrow, close, damp, and constantly

threaten with death. Others in the darkness, bending over, take this ore

or clay to the shaft and take back empty cars, and again fill them, and

so work for twelve or fourteen hours a day throughout the week.

Thus they work in the mines. In the foundry itself, some work at the

furnace in oppressive heat, while others work at the trough of the

melted ore and slag. Others again, the engineers, stokers, smiths, brick

makers, and carpenters, are at work in the shops, also from twelve to

fourteen hours a day throughout the week.

On Sunday all these men receive their wages, wash themselves, or

sometimes even do not wash themselves, go to the taverns and pubs which

surround the foundry on all sides, and which entice the working people.

Early on Monday morning they go back to their work.

Near this same foundry peasants plow somebody else’s field with lean,

worn-out horses. These peasants get up with the dawn, if they have not

passed the night in the pasture near a swamp, which is the only place

where they can feed their horses. They get up with the dawn, come home,

harness the horses, and, taking a slice of bread with them, go out to

plow somebody else’s field.

Other peasants are sitting not far away from the foundry, on the

highway, and, having made themselves a shield from matting, are breaking

rock for the highway. The legs of these men are bruised, their hands are

all calluses, their whole bodies are dirty, and their faces, hair,

beards, and even their lungs are permeated with lime dust.

Taking a small unbroken stone from a heap, these men put it between the

soles of their feet, which are covered with burlap shoes and wrapped in

rags, and strike this stone with a heavy mallet until the stone breaks.

When the stone has broken, they take the smaller parts and strike them

until these are broken fine. Again they take whole stones, and again.

And thus these men work from early summer dawn until night, for fifteen

or sixteen hours, resting only for two hours after dinner, and twice

strengthening themselves with bread and water at breakfast and at noon.

And thus do these men live in the mines and in the foundry, as do the

plowmen and the stonebreakers, from early youth until old age. Their

wives and their mothers live in similar work above their strength,

suffering from diseases of the womb. And thus live their fathers and

their children, poorly fed, poorly dressed, doing work that is above

their strength and that ruins their health, from morning until evening,

from childhood until old age.

A carriage races past the foundry, past the stonebreakers, past the

plowing peasants, meeting and overtaking ragged men and women with their

knapsacks, who are wandering from place to place and begging in the name

of Christ. The carriage has tinkling bells and is drawn by four matched

chestnut horses of good height, the worst of which is worth the whole

farm of any of the peasants who are admiring the team. In the carriage

are seated two ladies, displaying brightly colored parasols, ribbons,

and hat feathers, each of which costs more than the horse with which a

peasant plows his field. In the front seat sits an officer, shining in

the sun with lace and buttons, and dressed in a freshly laundered

uniform. On the box sits a ponderous coachman in blue silk shirtsleeves

and velvet sleeveless coat. He came very near to crushing some of the

women pilgrims, and almost hit a peasant, who, dressed in a dirty,

ore-soiled shirt, was sent jolting in his empty cart into the ditch.

“You see this?” says the coachman, showing the whip to the peasant, who

was not quick enough in turning aside, and the peasant pulls the rein

with one hand and timidly pulls his cap off his lousy head with the

other.

Behind the carriage, glinting in the sun with the nickel-plated parts of

their machines, two men and one woman noiselessly race on bicycles. They

laugh merrily as they overtake and frighten the wandering women, who

make the sign of the cross.

On the side-path of the highway pass two riders: a man on an English

cob, and a lady on an ambler. To say nothing of the cost of the horses

and the saddles, the one black hat with the lilac veil cost two months’

work of the stonebreakers. As much was paid for the fashionable English

whip as will be earned in a week by that young lad, who is happy that he

has been hired to work underground in the mine. He is getting out of the

way while admiring the sleek forms of the horses, the riders, and the

fat, imported, immense dog in an expensive collar, which is running with

protruding tongue behind them.

Not far from this company there travel in a cart a dressed-up, smiling

maid with curls, wearing a white apron, and a fat, ruddy man with

well-groomed side-whiskers, who is whispering something to the maid. In

the cart may be seen a samovar, bundles in napkins, and an ice-cream

freezer. These are the servants of the people who are traveling in the

carriage, on horseback, and on bicycles. The present day is nothing out

of the ordinary. They live this way the whole summer, going out for

pleasure almost every day, and at times, as now, taking with them tea,

beverages, and sweets, in order to eat and drink, not in the same, but

in some new place.

These people are three families that are passing the summer in the

country. One is the family of a proprietor, the owner of two thousand

hectares of land, another that of an official, who receives a salary of

three thousand rubles, and the third – the wealthiest family – the

children of a manufacturer. All these people are not in the least

surprised or touched by the sight of all the poverty and hard labor that

surround them. They think that all this must be so. They are interested

in something quite different.

“No, that is impossible,” says the lady on horseback, looking back at

the dog, “I cannot see that!” and she stops the carriage. All talk

together in French and laugh, and they put the dog into the carriage and

proceed, covering the stonebreakers and the itinerants with clouds of

lime dust. The carriage, the riders, and the bicyclists have flashed by

like beings from another world.

The people in the foundry, the stonebreakers, and the plowmen continue

their hard, monotonous work for somebody else, which will end with their

lives.

“Some people have a fine time!” they think, as they watch the travelers

leave. And their painful existence appears still more painful to them.

2

What is this? Have these laboring people done something very criminal

that they are punished thus? Or is this the lot of all men? And have

those who passed by in the carriages and on the bicycles done something

particularly useful and important that they are thus rewarded? Not in

the least! On the contrary, those who are working with such tension are,

for the most part, moral, self-controlled, modest, industrious people.

Those who passed by are, for the most part, corrupted, lustful,

impudent, idle people. This is so, because such a structure of life is

considered natural and regular in the world of men who assert that they

are professing Christ’s law of love of their neighbor, or that they are

people of culture – that is, perfected people.

Such a structure exists, not only in that corner of TĂşla County, which

presents itself vividly to me because I frequently see it, but

everywhere: not only in Russia from St. Petersburg to Batum, but also in

France from Paris to Auvergne, and in Italy from Rome to Palermo, and in

Germany, in Spain, in America, in Australia, and even in India and in

China. Everywhere, two or three people in a thousand live in such a way

that, without doing anything for themselves, they in one day consume in

food and drink as much as would support hundreds of people for a year.

They wear clothes that cost thousands, live in palaces where thousands

of laboring people could find room, and spend thousands of rubles on

their whims – the equivalent of millions of workdays.

Others again, getting neither enough sleep nor enough food, work above

their strength, ruining their bodily and their spiritual health for

these few elect.

For one class of women, when they are about to bear children, they send

for a midwife and a doctor – sometimes even two doctors. Their layettes

contain a hundred baby-shirts and swaddling clothes with silk ribbons,

and they get little wagons ready that swing on springs. The other class

of women, the vast majority, bear children in any chance place and in

any chance manner, without aid, swaddle them in rags, put them into

woven cradles filled with straw, and are glad when they die.

The children of one class are taken care of by the midwife, the nurse,

and the wet-nurse while the mother is lying in bed for nine days; the

children of the other class are not taken care of, because there is no

one to do so, and the mother herself gets up immediately after

childbirth, makes the fires in the oven, milks the cow, and sometimes

washes the clothes for herself, her husband, and her children. One class

of children grows up among toys, amusements, and instructions; at first,

the other children crawl with their bared bellies over thresholds,

become maimed, are eaten up by pigs, and at five years of age begin to

work above their strength. The first are taught all the scientific

wisdom that is adapted to their age; the others learn vulgar curses and

the most savage of superstitions. The first fall in love, carry on love

affairs, and then marry after they have experienced all the pleasures of

love; the others are married off between the ages of sixteen and twenty

years to those whom the parents choose, for the purpose of receiving

additional aid. The first eat and drink the best and the most expensive

things in the world, feeding their dogs on white bread and beef; the

second eat nothing but bread and kvass, nor do they get enough bread,

and what they get is stale so that they may not eat too much of it. The

first change their fine underwear every day so as not to get soiled; the

second, who are constantly doing work for others, change their coarse,

ragged, lousy underwear once in two weeks, or do not change it at all

but wear it until it falls to pieces. The first sleep between clean

sheets on feather beds; the second sleep on the ground, covering

themselves with their tattered caftans.

The first drive out with well-fed horses, not for work, but simply for

pleasure; the second work hard with ill-fed horses, and walk if they

have any business to attend to. The first wonder what to do in order to

occupy their leisure time; the second find no time to clean themselves,

to wash, to take a rest, to say a word, or to visit their relatives. The

first read four languages and amuse themselves every day with the

greatest variety of things; the second do not know how to read at all

and know no other amusement than drunkenness. The first know everything

and believe in nothing; the second know nothing and believe any nonsense

that they are told. When the first get sick, they travel from place to

place in search of the best curative air, to say nothing of all kinds of

spas, every kind of attention, and every kind of cleanliness and

medicine; the second lie down on the oven in a smoky hut with unwashed

sores, with the absence of any food but stale bread, with air that is

infected by ten members of the family, the calves and the sheep, and

they rot alive and die before their time.

Must it be so?

If there is a higher reason and a love that guide the world, if there is

a God, He cannot have wished to see such division among men. One class

of them do not know what to do with the surplus of their wealth and

senselessly squander the fruit of the labors of other men, and the

others grow sick and die before their time, or live an agonizing life,

working above their strength.

If there is a God, this cannot and must not be. But if there is no God,

such a structure of life, in which the majority of men must waste their

lives so that a small number of men may enjoy an abundance, which only

corrupts this minority and weighs heavily upon it, is, from the simplest

human point of view, insipid because it is disadvantageous for all men.

3

Why, then, do men live thus?

It is natural for the rich, who are used to their wealth and who do not

see clearly that wealth does not give happiness, to try to maintain

their position. But why does the vast majority, in whose hands is every

power, assume that there is happiness in wealth, continue to live in

want, and submit to the minority?

Indeed, why do all those men who are strong in muscles, artisanship, and

the habit of work – the vast majority of men – submit and give in to a

handful of feeble people, pampered old men and mainly women, who for the

most part are not fit for anything?

Take a walk before the holidays or during bargain weeks along the

business streets, through the Moscow Passages for example. Ten or twelve

Passages, consisting of solid rows of magnificent shops with immense

plate-glass windows, are all filled with all kinds of expensive and

exclusively feminine wares: stuffs, dresses, laces, gems, foot-gear,

house adornments, furs, and so forth. All these things cost millions and

millions of rubles, and all these articles have been manufactured in

establishments by working people who frequently ruin their lives over

this work, and all these articles are of no use, not only to the working

people, but even to the wealthy men – they are all amusements and

adornments of women. At the entrances, porters in galloons stand on both

sides, and coachmen in expensive garments sit on the boxes of expensive

carriages, which are drawn by trotters that cost into the thousands.

Again, millions of working days have been wasted on the production of

all the luxury of the harnesses. Old and young working people, men and

women, have devoted all their lives to the production of all these

articles. And all these articles are in the power and in the hands of a

few hundred women, who are dressed in expensive furs and hats of the

latest fashion, saunter through these shops, and purchase all these

articles, which are manufactured for them.

A few hundred women arbitrarily dispose of the labor of millions of

working people, who work to support themselves and their families. The

fate and lives of millions of people depend on the whims of these women.

How did this happen?

Why do all these millions of strong people, who have manufactured these

articles, submit to these women? Now a lady in a velvet fur coat and a

hat of the very latest fashion drives up with a pair of trotters.

Everything upon her is new and most expensive. A porter hurries to throw

back the boot of her sleigh, and respectfully helps her out by

supporting her under her elbow. She walks down the Passage as though

through her kingdom, enters one of the shops, buys five thousand rubles’

worth of material for her drawing-room, and, having given the order to

send it up to her house, goes elsewhere. She is an evil, stupid, and not

at all beautiful woman, who does not bear any children and has never

done anything in her life for anyone else. Why, then, do the porter, the

coachman, and the clerks fawn before her in such a servile manner? And

why has all that, over which thousands of workmen have labored, become

her property? Because she has money, and the porter, the coachman, the

clerks, and the workmen in the factory need money with which to support

their families. The money is most convenient for them, and frequently

can be gained only by serving as a coachman, a porter, a clerk, or a

workman in a factory.

And why does this woman money have money? She has money because people

who have been driven off the land and have forgotten how to do any other

work are living in her husband’s factory. Her husband, while giving the

workmen only as much as they must necessarily have for their support,

takes all the profit from the factory for himself, to the amount of

several hundred thousand rubles. Not knowing what to do with the money,

he is glad to give it to his wife, for her to spend it on anything she

may wish.

And here is another lady, in a still more luxurious carriage and

garments, who is buying up all kinds of expensive and useless things in

all kinds of shops. Where does she get the money? She is the mistress of

a wealthy landowner of twenty thousand hectares, which were given to his

ancestor by a harlot queen for his debauchery with that old queen. This

landowner owns all the land around a colony of peasants, and rents this

land to the peasants at seventeen rubles per hectare. The peasants pay

this money because they would starve without the land. And this money is

now in the hands of the mistress, and with this money she buys things

that have been made by other peasants, who have been driven off the

land.

Here again a third rich woman, with her fiancé and mother, is walking

down the Passage. This woman is about to marry, and she is buying

bronzes and expensive dishes. She has money given her by her father, a

distinguished official, who is receiving a salary of twelve thousand

rubles. He gave his daughter a dowry of seven thousand rubles. This

money was collected from import revenues and taxes, again from the

peasants. These same taxes compelled the porter, who opens the door (he

is a KalĂşga peasant, and his wife and children are left at home), the

coachman, who brought them up (he is a TĂşla peasant), and millions of

men, who work out in houses or in factories, to leave their homes and to

work on articles that are consumed by the ladies, who receive the money,

which is collected by the manufacturers, landowners, and officials from

the profit from the factories, or from the land, or from the taxes.

Thus millions of workmen have submitted to these women, all because one

man has taken possession of a factory in which people work, another has

taken possession of the land, and a third has seized the taxes, which

are collected from the laboring classes. It is this that produced that

which I saw about the foundry.

The peasants plowed somebody else’s field, because they do not have

enough land, and he who owns the land permits them to use his land only

on condition that they work for him. The stonebreakers broke rock

because they were only able to pay the taxes demanded of them by means

of this work. The people worked in the foundry and in the mines because

the earth from which the ore is extracted and the smelter where it is

smelted do not belong to them.

All these working people do hard work, not for themselves, because the

rich have taken possession of the land, collect taxes, and own the

plants.

4

Why does he who does not work own the land, and not he who works? Why do

a small number of men make use of the taxes that are collected from all

men, and not those who pay them? Why are the factories owned, not by

those who built them and work in them, but by a small number of men who

did not build them and do not work in them?

To the question as to why non-workers have seized the land of the

workers, the customary answer that land was given them as a reward or

bought with money earned. To the question as to why one set of men, a

small number of men, the non-working managers and their helpers, collect

for themselves the greater share of the wealth of all the working people

and use it at will, the customary answer is that the men who use the

money that is collected from the masses manage the others, defend them,

and preserve order and decency among them. And to the question as to why

rich people of leisure own the products and implements of the labor of

the working people, the answer is that these products and implements of

labor were earned by them or by their ancestors.

And all these men – the landowners, the servants of the government, the

merchants, and the manufacturers – are sincerely convinced that their

possession is quite just and that they have the right to such a

possession.

However, neither the possession of the land, nor the collection of the

taxes and use of them, nor the possession of the products and implements

of labor by people of leisure has any justification. The possession of

land by those who do not work upon it has no justification, because the

land, like the water, the air, and the sunlight, forms an indispensable

condition of the life of every man, and so cannot be the exclusive

possession of one person. If the land, and not the water, the air, and

the sunlight, has become an object of possession, this is not due to the

fact that the land is not just as indispensable and appropriable a

condition for the existence of any man, but only because it has been

impossible to deprive people of water, air, and sunlight, while it has

been possible to deprive them of the land.

The ownership of land, having originated in violence (through conquest

people appropriated the land, and then gave it away and sold it), has

remained, in spite of every effort at turning it into a right, nothing

but an act of violence of the strong and armed against the weak and

unarmed.

Let a man, who is working the land, violate this imaginary right, let

him plow the land that is considered to be the property of another, and

there will soon appear that on which this supposed right is based: at

first in the form of policemen, and then in the form of a military force

of soldiers, who will stab and shoot those who are trying to make use of

their real right to support themselves by means of work on the land.

Thus, what is called the right to the ownership of land is nothing but

violence exerted against all those who may have need of this land. The

right to the land is like the right to a road which robbers have seized

and over which they do not permit people to travel without a ransom.

A still lesser semblance of justification can be found for the right of

the government to a forcible levy of taxes. It is asserted that the

taxes are used for the defense of the government against foreign

enemies, for the establishment and support of domestic order, and for

the execution of necessary public works.

But, in the first place, foreign enemies have long ago ceased to exist,

even according to the declarations of the governments themselves. They

all assure their nations that they wish for nothing but peace. The

Emperor of Germany wants peace, the French republic wants peace, England

wants peace, and Russia wants the same. Still more urgently do the

Transvaalers and the Chinese want peace. So against whom are we to

defend ourselves?

In the second place, in order to give up the money for the establishment

of domestic order and public works, it is necessary to be sure that the

men who establish order will do so, and, besides, that this order will

be good and that the public works to be executed will actually be needed

by society. But if, as is always and everywhere repeated, those who pay

the taxes are not convinced of the fitness or even of the honesty of

those who establish order, and consider the order itself to be bad and

the public works about to be executed not such as the taxpayers need, it

is evident that there is no right to collect taxes, but only violence.

I remember the utterance of a Russian peasant, who was religious and,

therefore, truly liberal. Like Thoreau, he did not consider it just to

pay taxes for things that his conscience did not approve of, and when he

was asked to pay his share of the taxes, he asked what the taxes would

be used for, saying,” If the taxes shall be used for a good thing, I

will at once give you not only what you demand, but even more; but if

they shall be used for something bad, I cannot and will not give a

kopeck of my own free will.”

Of course, they lost no time with him, but broke down his closed gate,

carried off his cow, and sold it for the taxes. Thus in reality there is

but one true and real cause of taxes: the power that collects them. The

robbing of those who do not give the taxes willingly, the beating of

those who refuse, their imprisonment and punishment – all of this is

actually done.

The fact that, in England, in France, in America, and in most

constitutional governments, the taxes are determined by the parliament,

the supposed representatives of the people gathered together, does not

change the matter. The elections are so arranged that the members of the

parliament do not represent the people, but are politicians. If they

were not to start with, they become such as soon as they get into

parliament, and are busy with their personal ambition and the interests

of the warring parties.

Just as groundless are the justifications of the supposed right of

ownership, which the leisure class claims in respect to the products of

the labor of other people. This right of ownership, which is even called

a sacred right, is generally justified on the ground that property is

the result of self-restraint and industrious activity, which are useful

to men. But we need only analyze the origin of great fortunes to be

convinced of the contrary.

Fortunes always originate, either in violence (this is most common), in

nastiness, in rascality on a large scale, or in chronic cheating, like

what is practiced by merchants. The more a man is moral, the more

certain he is to be deprived of the fortune which he has, and the more

he is immoral, the more certain he is to gain and retain a fortune.

Popular wisdom says that one cannot earn stone palaces with righteous

labor, and that labor gives one stooping shoulders instead of wealth.

Thus it was, indeed, of old, and it is still truer of the present, when

the distribution of wealth has long ago taken place in a most irregular

manner. Though we may admit that a more temperate and industrious man in

primitive society will gain more than an unrestrained man, who does not

work much, nothing of the kind is true in our present society.

No matter how temperate and industrious a man or laborer may be, who is

working on somebody else’s land, who purchases such articles as he may

need at a price established for him, and who works with other people’s

implements of labor, he will never acquire any wealth. But the most

unrestrained and idle of men, as we see in the case of thousands of

individuals, who stand in with the government or with rich men, who busy

themselves with usury, factories, houses of prostitution, banks, or the

sale of liquor, will easily acquire a fortune.

The laws, which are supposed to protect property, only protect property

which has been stolen and which is already in the hands of the rich.

They not only fail to protect the laborers, who have no property except

their labor, but even aid in robbing them of this labor.

We see an endless number of administrators – the czar, his brothers,

uncles, ministers, judges, and the clergy – who receive enormous

salaries, collected from the people, and who do not even attend to those

easy duties which they have undertaken to attend to for this

remuneration. And so, it would seem, these people steal the salary

collected from the masses, that is, the property of the masses, but it

does not even occur to anyone to condemn them. But let a laborer make

use of even a part of the money received by these people, or of the

objects bought with this money, and it will be said that he has violated

the sacred ownership, and he is sentenced, imprisoned, and deported for

making use of this sum.

A manufacturer, who is a millionaire, promises to pay the laboring man a

wage which for him, the manufacturer, represents one ten-millionth part

of his fortune – almost nothing. But the laborer puts himself under

obligation, in consequence of his want, to furnish in the course of the

year, with the exception of the holidays, his daily work of twelve

hours, which is dangerous and harmful for his health. He puts himself

under obligation to give the manufacturer the greater part of his life,

perhaps his whole life, and the government protects alike either kind of

ownership.

In this manner the manufacturer, as is well known, year in and year out

robs the laborer of the greater share of his earnings, and appropriates

it to himself. It would seem to be obvious that the manufacturer robs

the laborer of the greater half of his property, and so ought to be made

responsible for it, but the government considers the manufacturer’s

property thus gained to be sacred, and punishes the laborer who carries

off two pounds of copper under his coat, which amounts to one-billionth

part of the manufacturer’s property.

Let the laborer try, as happens during the anti-Jewish riots, to take

away from the rich ever so small a part of what was lawfully taken from

the laborers; let a starving man, as lately occurred in Milan,

appropriate a loaf, which, taking advantage of the famine, the rich are

selling at a high price to the laborers; or let a laborer endeavor to

get back a small part of what was taken from him by means of a strike –

this laborer violates the sacred right of property, and the government

immediately comes with its army against the laborer and to the aid of

the landowner, the manufacturer, or the merchant. Thus the right on

which the rich base their ownership of the land, the right to levy taxes

and possess the products of labor of other people, has nothing in common

with justice, and all of it is based on nothing but violence, which is

produced by the army.

5

Let a farmer try to plow the field which he needs for his support; let

him endeavor to refuse to pay the taxes, either direct or indirect; let

him try to take provisions of corn which he has not earned, or

implements of labor, without which he cannot work – and the army will

appear and will use force to keep him from doing so.

Thus the alienation from the land, the levy of taxes, and the power of

the capitalists form, not the cause, but the result of the wretched

condition of the laborers. The fundamental cause why millions of

laborers live and work at the will of the minority does not lie in the

minority seizing the land, owning the implements of production, or

receiving the taxes. The cause lies in the fact that the minority can do

so – that there is an instrument of violence, an army, which is in the

hands of the minority and is ready to kill those who do not wish to do

the will of this minority.

When the peasants want to take possession of the land which is

considered to be the property of a man of leisure, or when a man does

not want to pay the taxes, or when the strikers want to keep other

laborers from taking their places, there appear the same peasants whose

land has been taken away, the payers of taxes and the laborers, except

that they wear uniforms and bear arms, and they compel their brothers –

who are not in uniforms – to go away from the land, to pay taxes, and to

stop the strike.

A man can hardly believe it when he first comes to understand this, it

seems so strange. The working people want to free themselves, and the

working people themselves compel themselves to submit and to remain in

slavery.

Why do they do so? Because the working people, drafted or hired into the

army, are subjected to an artificial process of stupefaction and

corruption, after which they cannot help but blindly obey their

superiors, no matter what they may compel them to do.

This is done in the following manner. A boy is born in the country or in

the city. In all the

Continental countries, as soon as the boy reaches the age when his

strength, agility, and flexibility have reached the highest point, while

his spiritual forces are in a dim and indeterminate state (about twenty

years), he is taken into the army. He is examined like a beast of

burden, and when he is found to be able-bodied, he is attached to some

particular part of the army and is made solemnly to swear that he will

slavishly obey his superiors. He is then removed from all the former

conditions of his life, filled up with whiskey or beer, dressed up in

motley garments, and locked up with other lads like him in barracks,

where he is in absolute idleness (that is, doing no useful or rational

work). He is taught the most insipid military rules and names of

objects, and the use of the implements of murder: the sword, the

bayonet, the rifle, and the cannon. Above all, he is taught, not only

blind, but even mechanically reflex obedience to the superiors put over

him. It is done like this in the countries where there is mandatory

military service. Where it does not exist, men specially appointed for

the purpose look up men who are for the most part dissipated, but strong

– men who have fallen from the right way and either do not wish, or are

unable to live by honest labor. They are filled with liquor, bribed,

enlisted in the army, similarly shut up in barracks, and subjected to

the same discipline. The chief problem of the superiors consists in

bringing these men to the state of the frog which, when touched,

uncontrollably jerks its leg. A good soldier is he who, like this frog,

unconsciously makes the motion demanded in response to certain shouts of

his superior. This is obtained by making these unfortunate men, who are

dressed in the same motley uniform, for weeks, months, and years, walk,

twist around, and jump, at the sound of a drum and music, and do it all

together, in a body, and by command. Every failure to obey is punished

with the cruelest punishments, even with death. With this, drunkenness,

debauchery, idleness, vulgarity, and murder are not only not prohibited,

but even established. The soldiers are given whiskey, houses of

prostitution are arranged for them, they are taught obscene songs, and

instructed in murder. (Murder is considered a good and praiseworthy

matter to such an extent in this circle of men that, under certain

conditions, the superiors and officers are commanded to kill a friend,

which is called a duel.) And so a meek and peaceable fellow, after

having passed about a year in such a school (before that time the

soldier is not yet ready – he has still some human qualities left in

him), is turned into what he is wanted to be: a senseless, cruel,

mighty, and terrible instrument of violence in the hands of his

superiors.

Whenever I walk past the palace in Moscow in the winter, I see a young

lad, the sentinel, who is dressed in his heavy sheepskin fur coat and is

standing or walking, splashing his enormous overshoes on the sidewalk.

He is supporting a rifle of the latest fashion on his shoulder, with its

bayonet sharpened. I always look into his eyes, and every time he turns

his glance away from me, and every time I think: a year or two years ago

he was a merry village lad, natural, good-natured, who would cheerfully

have talked to me in his good Russian, telling me, with the

consciousness of his peasant dignity, his whole history. Now he looks

maliciously and gloomily at me, and to all my questions knows only how

to say, “Yes, sir,” and, “Can’t know, sir.” If I should enter through

the door at which he is standing – I always feel like doing so – or

should put my hand on his gun, he would stick the bayonet through my

abdomen without a minute’s hesitation, would pull the bayonet out of the

wound, would wipe it off, and would continue to walk, splashing with his

overshoes on the asphalt until the arrival of relief with the corporal,

who would whisper the watchword into his ear. And he is not the only

one. In Moscow alone, I think, there are thousands of such lads, almost

children, who are turned into machines and are armed with guns. There

are millions of them in the whole of Russia and in the whole world.

These unthinking, strong, and agile lads are picked up, corrupted, and

bribed, and, thanks to them, the world is held in subjection. All that

is terrible. What is more terrible is that bad, idle people, thanks to

these deceived men, are in possession of all those palaces and all that

criminally acquired wealth which is produced by the labor of the masses.

But most terrible is that, to do so, they have to bestialize these

simple, good fellows, and in this they have partly succeeded.

Let those who own wealth defend it themselves. That would not be so

disgusting. But what is terrible is that, to rob the people and defend

what has been stolen, they use those very people whom they rob, and for

this purpose corrupt their souls. Thus the soldiers, taken from the

laboring classes, use violence against their own brother laborers,

because there exists a means for making people into unconscious

instruments of murder, and the governments, in drafting or enlisting

soldiers, make use of that means in regard to them.

6

But if that is so, there involuntarily appears the question as to why

people become soldiers. Why do their fathers let them become soldiers?

They could become soldiers and be subject to discipline so long as they

did not see the consequences of it. But, having once come to see what

results from it, why do they continue to subject themselves to this

deception?

This is due to the fact that they consider military service not only

useful, but also unquestionably honorable and good. And they consider it

such because they have been impressed with it by that doctrine to which

they are subjected from their childhood and in which they are maintained

in their adult age.

And so the existence of the army is also not a fundamental cause, but

only an effect. The fundamental cause is to be found in that doctrine

which is inculcated upon people, that military service, which has the

killing of men for its purpose, is not only sinless, but also good,

virtuous, and praiseworthy. Thus, the cause of the wretched condition of

the men lies still farther away than it seems at first.

At first it seems that the whole matter lies in the landowners having

seized the land, the capitalists having taken possession of the

implements of labor, and the government having forcibly taken the taxes.

But when one asks himself why the land belongs to the rich and the

working people cannot make use of it, and why not the working people,

but the capitalists, are in possession of the implements of production,

one sees that this is due to the fact that there is an army which

secures the land to the rich, collects the taxes from the laborers for

the use of the rich, and secures the factories and the expensive

machines to the rich. If one asks oneself how it is that the working

people, who form the army and from whom everything is taken which they

need, attack themselves, their fathers and brothers, one sees that the

cause of it is that the drafted or enlisted soldiers are, by means of

methods specially adapted for the purpose, instructed in such a way that

they lose everything human and are turned into unconscious instruments

of murder, ever submissive to their superiors. When, finally, one asks

oneself why people, seeing such deception, continue to enter the army or

to pay taxes to hire an army, one sees that the cause of it lies in the

doctrine, which is instilled, not only upon those who are taken into the

army, but also upon all men alike: a doctrine according to which

military service is a good and praiseworthy cause, and murder in war is

innocent.

Thus the fundamental cause of everything is the doctrine that is

inculcated upon the people.

From this come poverty, and debauchery, and hatred, and punishments, and

murder.

What is this doctrine?

This doctrine is called Christian, and consists in the following. There

is a God, who six thousand years ago created the world and the man Adam.

Adam sinned, and God punished all men for this, and then sent His Son,

just such a God as the Father, down upon earth to have Him hanged there!

This very hanging serves to men as a means of redemption from their

punishment for Adam’s sin.

If people believe in this, they will be forgiven Adam’s sin; if they do

not, they will be punished cruelly. The proof of all this being true is

found in the fact that all this was revealed to men by that same God,

about whose existence we have learned from those same men who preach all

that. To say nothing of the different variations in this fundamental

doctrine, in accordance with the different denominations, the general

practical deduction from it in all the denominations is the same: that

men must believe in what is preached to them and must obey the existing

authorities.

It is this doctrine that forms the fundamental cause of the deception,

according to which people, considering military service to be useful and

good, enter the army, and, being turned into machines without a will,

oppress themselves. If there are unbelievers among the deceived, these

unbelievers do not believe in anything else, and, in consequence, since

they have no point of support, submit, like the believers, to the

general current, although they see the deception. And so, to destroy the

evil from which men suffer, we need, not the liberation of the land, nor

the abolition of the taxes, nor the nationalization of the implements of

production, nor even the overthrow of the existing government, but the

destruction of that false doctrine, called Christian, in which the men

of our time are brought up.

7

At first it seems strange to people who know the Gospel how it was

possible for Christianity, which preaches the sonhood to God, spiritual

freedom, the brotherhood of men, the abolition of all violence, and the

love of our neighbors to have degenerated into this strange doctrine,

called Christian, which preaches blind obedience to the authorities, and

murder whenever the authorities demand it. But when one stops to think

of the process by means of which Christianity has entered into the

world, one sees that it could not have been otherwise.

When pagan sovereigns such as Constantine, Charlemagne, and Vladimir

accepted Christianity, which was swaddled in pagan forms, and baptized

their nations into it, it did not even occur to them that the teaching

which they accepted disrupted their regal power, the army, and the state

itself – all that without which life could not be imagined by all those

who were the first to accept and introduce Christianity. The destructive

force of Christianity at first was not at all perceptible to men. On the

contrary, they thought that Christianity supported their power.

But the longer the Christian nations existed, the clearer and clearer

the essence of Christianity became, and the more obvious became the

danger with which Christianity threatened the pagan order. The more this

danger became obvious, the more carefully did the ruling classes try to

subdue and, if possible, to put out the fire, which they unconsciously

brought into the world together with Christianity. They used every

possible means for this: forbidding the translation and reading of the

gospels, slaying all those who pointed out the true meaning of the

Christian teaching, hypnotizing the masses by means of the solemnity and

splendor of surroundings, and, above all, substituting shrewd and

refined interpretations of the Christian tenets. As these means were

used, Christianity changed more and more, and finally became a doctrine

that had in itself nothing dangerous to the pagan order of things, and

even justified the pagan order from an apparently Christian point of

view. There even appeared Christian rulers, a Christ-loving army,

Christian wealth, Christian courts, and Christian punishments.

The ruling classes did the same in relation to Christianity that

physicians do in relation to infectious diseases. They worked out a

culture of harmless Christianity, which, when inoculated, makes the real

Christianity innocuous. This ecclesiastic Christianity is such that it

inevitably either repels sensible people, presenting itself to them as a

terrible insipidity, or, being adopted by men, removes them from true

Christianity to such an extent that they no longer see its real

significance and even look upon its true significance with hostility and

fury.

It is this innocuous, false Christianity, which from a sense of

self-preservation has been worked out through the ages among the ruling

classes. The masses are inoculated with it and, as a consequence of its

doctrine, men calmly commit acts that are harmful to themselves and to

their neighbors. These acts are even directly immoral and incompatible

with the demands of conscience, the most important of which, from its

practical consequences, is the entrance into the army and the readiness

to commit murder.

The harm of this innocuous, false Christianity consists chiefly in that

it prescribes nothing and forbids nothing. All the ancient teachings –

like the Law of Moses and the Law of Manu – give rules that demand or

forbid certain acts. Such also are the Buddhist and the Muslim

religions. The ecclesiastic faith, on the other hand, gives no rules

whatever except verbal confession and the recognition of dogmas, fasts,

holy sacraments, prayers – and for these excuses have even been invented

for the rich). It permits everything, even what is contrary to the

lowest demands of morality. Everything is allowed according to this

ecclesiastic faith. It is allowed to own slaves (in Europe and in

America the church has been the defender of slavery). It is allowed to

acquire wealth that is gotten through the labor of our oppressed

brothers. It is not only allowed to be rich amid Lazaruses who crawl

under the tables of the feasting, but it is even good and laudable to do

so, if one-thousandth is contributed for churches and hospitals. The

church gives its blessing to the forcible defense of wealth against the

needy, to the imprisonment of men in solitary cells, to chaining them

up, to fastening them to wheelbarrows, and to executing them. It is

allowed to commit debauchery during one’s whole youth, and then to call

one such debauchery marriage and get the church’s permission for it. It

is allowed to get a divorce and again be married. It is possible, above

all, to kill, not only in one’s own defense, but also in defense of

one’s apples, and as a punishment. Above all else, it is right and

laudable to kill in war by command of the authorities. The church not

only permits, but even commands it.

Thus the root of all is in the false doctrine.

Let the false doctrine be destroyed, and there will be no army. And if

there is no army, all the acts of violence will naturally be destroyed,

together with the oppression and corruption that are now practiced on

the nations. But so long as men shall be brought up in the

pseudo-Christian teaching, which permits everything, including murder,

the army will be in the hands of the minority. This minority will always

make use of this army for the purpose of depriving the masses of the

products of their labor and, what is still worse, for the corruption of

the masses, because without the corruption of the masses it could not

take away from them the products of their labors.

8

The root of all the wretchedness of the masses lies in that false

doctrine which is taught to them under guise of Christianity.

And so it would seem to be obvious that the duty of every man who has

freed himself from the religious deception and who wishes to serve the

masses in words and deeds is to help the deceived men to free themselves

from that deception, which is the cause of their wretched condition. It

would seem that, besides the general duty of every moral man to arraign

the lies and profess the truth which he knows, everyone who wishes to

serve the masses cannot help but wish out of sympathy to free his

brothers from the deception which causes them all kinds of unhappiness,

and in which they abide. These same people, who are free from the

deception, are independent and have been educated at the expense of the

working classes, and for this reason alone are obliged to serve them,

but fail to see this.

“The religious teaching is not important,” say these people. “It is a

matter for each man’s conscience. What is important and necessary is the

political, social, and economic structure of society, and all the

efforts of men who wish to serve the masses should be directed to this.

But the religious teachings are all of no importance, and, like all

superstitions, they will disappear in their time.”

Thus speak the educated people. Wishing to serve the masses, some of

them enter the service of the government, the army, the clergy, or the

parliament and try, without arraigning the religious deception of the

masses. They try to improve the external forms of the life of the

deceived masses by their participation in the governmental activity.

Others, the revolutionists, who just as little touch upon the beliefs of

the masses, enter into a struggle with the governments, trying to take

possession of the power by the same means of deception and violence that

are practiced by the governments. Others again, the socialists,

establish labor-unions, societies, and strikes, assuming that the

condition of the masses can be ameliorated, in spite of their remaining

in the same error of superstition and ignorance that is produced by the

false doctrine. But none of them hinder the dissemination of the false

religion, on which all the evil is based, and when the necessity for it

arises, they even perform those religious rites which they consider to

be false.

They themselves take the oath, take part in divine services and

solemnities which stultify the masses, and do not interfere with the

instruction given to their own children and to those of others in what

is called religion, that very lie on which the enslavement of the masses

is based. This failure to comprehend in what lies the main cause of the

evil (and the cultured people could and should more than any others help

destroy this false doctrine), the failure to comprehend to what all

their efforts ought more particularly to be directed, and the deviation

of their efforts upon false paths are the chief causes why the existing

structure of life is persistently maintained, even though it is

obviously false and pernicious, and in spite of its well-recognized

incompatibility.

All the calamities of our world are due to the concealment of true

Christian teaching, which corresponds to the demands of our time, and

the preaching of false doctrine in its place.

If only the men who want to serve God and their neighbors comprehended

that humanity is not advanced by animal demands, but by spiritual

forces! If only they understood that the chief spiritual force that

moves humanity is religion – that is, the determination of the meaning

of life! If only they understood the distinction between good and evil,

and between what is important and unimportant! If only men understood

that, they would see at once that the fundamental cause of the

calamities of humanity at present does not lie in external material

causes – not in political, nor in economic conditions, but in the

distortion of the Christian religion. It lies in the substitution of a

collection of senseless, immoral insipidities and blasphemies, called

ecclesiastic faith, for the truths needed by humanity and corresponding

to its present age. What is not good is considered good by ecclesiastic

faith, what is unimportant is considered important, and vice versa, what

is good is considered bad and what is important is considered

unimportant.

If only the best, the independent people, who sincerely wish to serve

the masses, understood that it is impossible by any external measures to

improve the condition of a man who considers it bad to eat meat on

Friday, good to punish a guilty man with death, important to show proper

respect for an image or for the emperor, and unimportant to swear to do

the will of other people or to learn to commit murder. If only men

understood that no parliaments, strikes, unions, consumers’ and

producers’ leagues, inventions, schools, universities, academies, or

revolutions can be of any essential value to people with a false

religious world-conception. Then all the forces of the best people would

naturally be directed upon the cause, and not upon the effect – not upon

state activity, revolutions, or socialism, but upon the arraignment of

the false religious doctrine and the establishment of the true teaching.

If men would only act thus, all the political, economical, and social

questions would solve themselves naturally, as they ought to be solved,

and not as we foretell or prescribe.

All these questions will, naturally, not be solved at once and according

to our wish, as we are accustomed to arrange the lives of other people,

caring only that these lives should externally resemble what we want

them to be (precisely what all the governments are doing). Instead,

these questions will certainly be solved only if the religious

world-view of the people shall be changed, and they will be solved the

more quickly, the more we shall apply our forces, not to the effects,

but to the causes of the phenomena.

But the arraignment of false religion and the assertion of true religion

are very distant and slowly achieved goals, we are told. Whether they

are distant or slow, they are the only means, and without them all other

means will be ineffective.

As I look at the structure of human life, which is contrary to reason

and to feeling, I ask myself, “Need it be so?”

And the answer at which I arrive is, that it need not be so.

It need not be, it must not be, and it will not be.

But it will not be, not when men shall in one way or another reconstruct

their relations, but only when men shall stop believing in the lie in

which they are brought up, and shall believe in the highest truth, which

was revealed nineteen hundred years ago, and which is clear, simple, and

accessible to their reason.

Yásnaya Polyána, October 14, 1900