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Title: Rediscovering Anarcho-Perennialism Author: Paul Cudenec Date: 02/01/2012 Language: en Topics: Perennialism, anarchy, mysticism Source: https://network23.org/paulcudenec/2012/01/02/rediscovering-anarcho-perennialism/
An email I received after posting the quotations from Jung the other day
has given me some cause for thought.
In that short blog update I referred to the âperennialistâ tradition and
this, I now realise, needs some clarification.
I had fondly imagined that the Anarchangels booklet explained more or
less what it was and how it fitted in with anarchism, but on re-reading
it, I am not so sure.
I did attempt a more explicit explanation in my talk at the London
Anarchist Bookfair in October, so I have gone back to those notes to try
and provide the ideological context that is perhaps rather elusive in
the pamphlet itself.
One reason why Anarchangels is a little impressionistic is that I am
horribly aware of the provisional nature of everything that I write.
Having been immobilised for many years by what now looks like a very
blinkered sense of certainty as to what I believed, or didnât believe,
my thoughts have recently been pouring out in all sorts of intellectual
directions like floodwaters released by a breached dam.
I know that anything I write today may not be what I would want to write
tomorrow and thus do not want to set in stone any specific arrangement
of ideas that happens to appeal to me at the moment.
Thanks to some interesting correspondence in recent weeks, I have also
become aware of others working in very much the same areas of
contemplation, from whom I realise I have potentially much to learn.
While I make no apologies for the personal nature of the road to
philosophical exploration that I set out here and in the booklets (one
can only really ever know something that one has discovered oneself), I
should point out again that I claim no expertise (in anything!), no
particular credentials and certainly no merit in presenting ideas and
connections between ideas that, inevitably, have already been examined,
and in much greater depth, by so many others over the years.
The starting point of my own foray into this particular forest of
thought was a sense of negativity â or rather, the refusal of a sense of
negativity.
Others were keen to point out to me that I always seemed to be against
everything. Political discussions invariably ended with me concluding
that there was no way of fixing the situation, that the whole lot would
have to go. The screensaver on my computer declared: âThe system is
fucked. Fuck the system!â
For a brief moment, I began to wonder if these people werenât right.
Were my conclusions about the state of the modern world really no more
than manifestations of some kind of malevolent inner essence? Was I
nothing more than a human black hole, sucking away other peopleâs vital
energies by my overwhelming negativity?
Fortunately, it did not take me long to realise that the answer was
ânoâ. I knew that at the root of everything I possessed a love for life.
Not necessarily my particular life, as it was then, but the life force
itself. Was Richard Jefferies (1848-1887), that spiritual worshipper of
eternal nature, not my long-time favourite writer?
Did I not yearn for truth, authenticity, connection with the cosmos?
That didnât sound negative to me.
Moving up from that foundation into the political realm, it struck me
that the reason why I seemed to always be âantiâ everything was that I
was following a powerful personal moral compass.
If I think something is bad, itâs because it doesnât match up to how I
think things should be; it doesnât correspond to my values.
Thereâs nothing negative about feeling animosity towards bankers or arms
dealers if you strongly feel itâs wrong to rip people off or make money
out of killing them.
Itâs not negative to hate advertising and shopping if you can see that
consumerist craving is an addiction that eats away at peopleâs souls.
Itâs not negative to hate the whole capitalist system and to want it to
fall apart as soon as possible if you know that itâs destroying the
planet and you happen to value the planet you live on.
One of the main characteristics of any anarchist, I would say, is having
this strong sense of right and wrong, of being firmly committed to a set
of values â even if those values are the opposite of those laid down by
the prevailing culture.
And, I realised, the alternative values we espouse didnât emerge out of
thin air, or a workshop at the 1888 London Anarchist Bookfair.
Instead, they have arisen from thousands of years of human culture. A
love of nature, an aversion to egotism, to selfishness, to materialism,
to greed, to murder â these are all traditional values, which surface in
cultures and religions all over the world.
Of course, there is an apparent contradiction here, as conventional
thinking tends to have it that âtraditional valuesâ are something
conservative or right-wing .
But this is just a façade, designed to deceive. If you strip down the
generally held notion of âtraditionâ, particularly in this country, all
you will find is a lot of pompous flag-waving, adherence to self-serving
authoritarian religious organisations and nostalgia for some period of
the recent past â Youâve Never Had It So Good, the Dunkirk Spirit,
Victorian Family Values and so on.
And behind all this window dressing, you will find that these modern
âtraditionalistsâ in fact believe in an amoral world, of every man or
woman for themself, of pragmatism and short-term material advantage.
The quest for real values takes us much deeper, into the pursuit of the
ancient wisdom that can be found at the heart of the worldâs religions,
no matter how corrupted their current forms have become.
Perennialism is a search for these hidden values in every corner of
human culture â such as in Hindusim, Sufi Islam, Buddhism, Taoism,
Jewish Kabala, alchemy, indigenous spirituality or the gnostic
scriptures of early Christianity.
It sees there a universal human philosophy which reaches back to time
immemorial but from which we in the modern West have now been completely
cut off.
At the heart of it all is the sense of oneness, of connection to the
organic Whole, which I described in Antibodies. Sometimes this Whole is
described using the word âGodâ and sometimes it isnât. Sometimes people
who worship âGodâ mean this all-inclusive Whole and sometimes they
donât.
I personally stumbled across perennialism when a helpful friend pointed
out to me a copy of RenĂ© GuĂ©nonâs The Crisis of the Modern World in a
secondhand bookshop here in Worthing.
I didnât buy it on the spot, as I seemed a bit expensive for its size,
but awoke the next morning filled with the necessity of returning to the
shop and bringing it home to read.
Some internet surfing on GuĂ©nonâs ideas and connections subsequently led
me to a book by Mark Sedgwick called Against the Modern World â
Traditionalism and the Secret Intellectual History of the Twentieth
Century.
As the second part of title perhaps suggests, this can be a little
sensationalist and over-egged at times and occasionally constructs some
rather desperate âconnectionsâ between completely disparate thinkers.
But, for all its faults, it does provide some useful information about
the development of the perennialist âmovementâ which I can use to
further my explanation.
According to Sedgwick, perennialism was originated by 15thcentury
Italian Renaissance thinker Marsilio Ficino (1433-1499), who suggested
this single perennial, or primordial, origin behind all religions which
had since diversified into apparently separate forms.
The philosophy became popular for a couple of hundred years, then
drifted out of favour in the early 17th century to be revived in a
slightly different form in the 19th and early 20thcentury.
It was popularised by Guénon (1886-1951), who sought universal truth
first in Hinduism and then, when he found it difficult to become a
Hindu, in Sufi Islam. He moved from France to Egypt, where he married an
Egyptian women, had children and lived out the rest of his life.
Guénon himself rejected the political level of action and was certainly
no anarchist, but Sedgwickâs book reveals that anarchists did play a key
role in the early development of perennialism.
There was Ananda Coomaraswamy (1887-1947), for instance, who was a keen
student of the work of both William Blake and William Morris.
Alan Antliff writes: âThe anarchism of Coomaraswamy represents a
compelling instance of cross-cultural intermingling in which a European
critique of industrial capitalism founded on the arts-and-crafts was
turned to anti-colonial ends in a campaign against Eurocentric cultural
imperialism and its material corollary, industrial capitalism.â (From
the essay Revolutionary Seer for Post-Industrial Age, included in I Am
Not A Man, I Am Dynamite â Friedrich Nietzsche and The Anarchist
Tradition, ed John Moore).
Another key figure was Swedish artist Ivan Aguéli (1869-1917) who, with
his lover and anarchist comrade Marie Huot, was involved in the
perennialist and animal rights movements.
His particular claim to fame is that in 1900 he shot a matador in a
protest against the proposed introduction of Spanish-style fatal
bullfighting to France.
Aguéli also lived in Cairo for a while and worked with another anarchist
by the name of Enrico Insabato.
Not only were the two movements â perennialism and anarchism â
intertwined at that stage, but there is a broader overlap of ideas as
well.
Kropotkinâs admiration for the values of the Middle Ages is echoed by
GuĂ©non and even Bakuninâs idea of Natural Law is not so far away from
the perennialistsâ concept of fundamental values (despite his fervent
atheism).
Perennialism particularly chimes with the thinking of the anarchist
Gustav Landauer (1870-1919), who explored the idea of a universal psyche
and wrote: âWe have been satisfied until now to transform the universe
into the human spirit, or better, into the human intellect; let us now
transform ourselves into the universal spiritâ.
There is also a strong connection between perennialism and the growth of
the modern environmentalist movement (which, of course, in turn, feeds
back into contemporary anarchism).
Frithjof Schuon (1907-1998), another of GuĂ©nonâs disciples, left Europe
to live in the USA where he was adopted into the Sioux tribe, was
heavily involved in the promotion of Native American studies in the USA
and influenced American âNew Ageâ thinking.
Perennialism also has the merit of being a profoundly internationalist
philosophy. By appreciating the uniting truth behind different faiths,
it overcomes religious divides by rising to a higher level.
Like anarchism, it is thus totally irreconcilable with nationalism. As
GuĂ©non himself said: âAll nationalism is essentially opposed to the
traditional outlookâ.
I cannot avoid the fact, however, that perennialist philosophy is
sometimes given a bad name by association with the fascist writer Julius
Evola (1898-1974), whose elitist and militarist âTraditionalismâ was a
bastardised offshoot from the movement.
He really does not sit easily with the perennialist tradition. The
anti-industrialist ethic is at the root of GuĂ©nonâs, Coomaraswamyâs and
Schuonâs philosphy, and yet Evola was happy to hob-nob with right-wing
German industrialists and glorifying the conveyor-belt mass slaughter of
20th century warfare.
Aldous Huxley (1894-1963), in his book The Perennial Philosophy,
explains that fascist and other totalitarian ideas are in fact the
complete opposite of perennialism and the values and state of mind it
promotes.
He writes: âExcessive privilege and power are standing temptations to
pride, greed, vanity and cruelty; oppression results in fear and envy;
war breeds misery and despair. All such negative emotions are fatal to
the spiritual life.â
This same contradiction does not exist between the perennial philosophy
and anarchy, as we have seen.
So a combination of the two, an anarcho-perennialism (a specifically
anti-fascist anarcho-perennialism, to finally lay to rest the malevolent
ghost of Evola) is not so much a case of welding two traditions together
as of rejoining two halves of broken ideological bone.
This theoretical healing can, I believe, restore depth and strength to a
contemporary anarchism that sometimes seems a little sterile and
superficial in comparison with its philosophical heyday 100 years or
more ago.
The self-discipline of spiritual focus is also of enormous benefit to
all human beings, among whom anarchists can, of course, be numbered.
The traditional alchemical inner process of self-purification,
dissolution into the Whole and then condensation into the material plane
is an ideal way for any activist to rid themselves of the constraints of
their ego and return to the âreal worldâ refreshed and ready to act out
their part in our collective history, unafraid even of death.
This is the very process I described in Antibodies without fully
realising its antiquity.
As paradoxical as it may seem to some, we only achieve self-fulfilment
through self-sacrifice. Says the Sufi mystic Rumi (1207-1273): âWhen you
give up everything, everything is yours.â