We Have Created a World of ‘Civilised Savages’

IN FOCUS, 14 Jan 2013

Hussein Tahiri – The Sydney Morning Herald

The year 2012 seemed to pass like a flash but in terms of human suffering, it might as well have lasted a decade, leaving a series of enduring problems to be tackled in 2013. The ”Arab Spring” not only did not live up to expectations but has forecast a gloomy future for the Middle East and the world. Civil war in Syria has intensified, according to the United Nations, causing more than 60,000 deaths since Syria’s uprising began in March 2011. Afghanistan and Iraq do not offer any consolations either; security conditions have gotten worse in these countries with no improvements in sight. Sanctions against Iran have intensified; however, it still continues its nuclear program undeterred.

Our humanity is suffering from its misdeeds and the start of 2013 is a prime time to reflect on our global civilisation.

Looking at the status of humanity there are many contradictions, but very few are more prevalent than the concept of civilisation. If by ”civilisation” we mean an advanced state of human society in which human beings have achieved a high level of culture, science, industry and more complex organisational capacity, we might have accomplished some form of civilisation over the millennia.

Yet the concept of modernity may be a better way to describe these accomplishments. Modernity provides human beings with the technological means to establish complex institutions. It offers scientific knowledge and logistical advancement for human beings to dominate nature and exploit their environment. Modernity itself is devoid of morality. Thus, if detached from civilisation, it could provide the means to commit many actions that we would not hesitate to describe as forms of savagery.

Civilisation goes beyond modernity; it is the process of restraining of irrational and anti-social drivers and the gradual elimination of violence from social life. It is a system of social institutions which safeguards social peace and individual security.

In fact, civilisation is a moral force. It entails a behavioral and moral status in which human beings care for their kind and sometimes even for other species; it is about respecting and helping each other. In a civilised society people are valued because they are human beings. Civilised people reach a phase where they avoid violence and resolve their problems through dialogue. If we apply these criteria to civilisation, humanity certainly continues to fail the test.

From ancient history to the present time, human beings have been at war with each other but at no time have we been so ready to destroy each other as in the age of ‘civilisation’.  In recent times, the barbarity of our civilisation has reached its zenith on many occasions. For example, from April to June 1994, in the space of 100 days, an estimated 800,000 Rwandans were massacred. This is only one example of many other massacres we human beings have inflicted on each other in our recent history.

We humans have developed nuclear weapons knowing that one day we might use them to annihilate our opponents. Nuclear weapons might be considered mutual deterrence but there is no doubt that they can also play the role of mutual destruction. We, the ”civilised”, have built enough nuclear weapons to destroy this earth many times over. The Federation of American Scientists estimates that there are more than 19,000 nuclear warheads owned by nine countries. Of these, some 4800 warheads are on high alert, ready for deployment at short notice.

One would expect that civilisation would make us realise our past mistakes and encourage us to get rid of the current nuclear stockpiles that we have built. Regrettably, more countries are joining the nuclear club for the very purpose of deterrence. Our imagination and creativity has never failed us when it comes to building more advanced, sophisticated and destructive weapons to kill each other.

One would expect that our civilisation has taught us to be respectful of other human beings and their rights. However, we have never been short of dictators who have been willing to kill thousands to retain their power, or states that do not hesitate to massacre their own minorities to assert their dominance.

We human beings claim to be the noblest of species and for this very reason many societies believe that God has blessed humanity with guidance through religion. However, we have changed these very religions into an ideology of hatred towards other human beings who do not share our views. We waste no time in declaring other religions false and we do not hesitate to kill those we consider unbelievers. Where in the animal kingdom, apart from us ”civilised” humans, one would explode themselves among their own kinds killing as many as they can.

If caring for others is part of civilisation, then poverty is a curse on humanity. We are the richest people on the planet in the history of mankind. Yet, according to the United Nations, throughout the world more than 2.5 billion men, women and children live in grinding poverty on less than $2 a day. They suffer from chronic hunger and malnutrition, preventable diseases, environmental degradation, low literacy rates and countless other social, public health, economic and political problems.

Civilisation is about collective humanity, caring, forgiveness, respect and love for one’s kind in which advanced culture, industry and technology are employed to achieve this purpose. Alas, a brief look at the way we human beings conduct ourselves entitles us to be seen as no more than ”civilised savages” who have achieved modernity without the underlying moral compass of civilisation itself.

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Dr Hussein Tahiri is adjunct associate professor at the Centre for Cultural Diversity and Wellbeing at Victoria University in Melbourne, Australia.

Go to Original – smh.com.au

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One Response to “We Have Created a World of ‘Civilised Savages’”

  1. satoshi says:

    It is a very well written article. But it presents a series of grave questions.

    Humans on this planet have developed the violence methods – how to kill the fellow humans and to destroy their properties over centuries and millennia. This effort has been enormous. Why were we, human beings, born on this planet? To kill or to be killed? Even Sun Tzu, although some people consider that his book encourages war, says, “But a kingdom that has once been destroyed can never come again into being; nor can the dead ever be brought back to life”. (Chapter 12 Verse 21) Then, how much people today, who discuss war and/or any other types of violence, understand the value of human life?

    One of the mysteries of the human being is that peace studies or something similar studies had not been developed until Prof. Galtung founded it, although there had existed conflict resolution methods in various societies. If there existed some type of peace studies before Prof. Galtung, he would not be called the father of peace studies. For instance, even though how Kant’s contribution to philosophy was great, he was not called, the father of philosophy, because philosophy already existed then. For instance, even though how Ricardo’s contribution to economics was great, he was not called the father of economics because economics already existed then. Even though how Weber’s contribution to sociology was great, he was not called, the father of sociology because sociology already existed then.

    If our previous generations and some of our contemporary generation had created this “world of the civilized savage” until 2012 as the above article discusses, we, the rest of the contemporary generation, must decide to create a “world of the civilized gentle” from 2013.

    “Love” is the answer for that. But “love” must be borderless. “Love” must go beyond any borders, not just geographical national/international borders but also all other borders, including race, sex, nationality, religion, political opinion, social status, or any others. Discuss the global/common human interest, not just one’s national, ethnic, political, economic or religious interest. But it is a long — almost infinitely long — and winding road. “Love” requires endless patience.

    For your information: (Source: The Economist Pocket World in Figures, 2013 Edition)
    – World top five defense spending:
    ($bn, 2010)
    1. USA 693.6
    2. China 76.4
    3. UK 57.8
    4. Japan 54.4
    5. France 52.0

    – World top five arms exporters:
    ($m, 2011)
    1. USA 9,984
    2. Russia 7,874
    3. France 2,437
    4. China 1,356
    5. Germany 1,206

    – World top five arms importers:
    ($m, 2011)
    1. India 3,582
    2. Australia 1,749
    3. Pakistan 1,675
    4. Morocco 1,558
    5. UAE 1,444

    – Global peace index top five:
    (Most peaceful, 2012)
    1. Iceland 1.113
    2. Denmark 1.239
    2. New Zealand 1.239
    4. Canada 1.317
    5. Japan 1.326

    (Least peaceful, 2012)
    1. Somalia 3.392
    2. Afghanistan 3.252
    3. Sudan 3.193
    4. Iraq 3.192
    5. Congo-Kinshasa 3.073

    Human development index:
    Five highest, 2011.
    1. Norway 94.3
    2. Australia 92.9
    3. Netherlands 91.0
    USA 91.0
    5. Canada 90.8
    Ireland 90.8
    New Zealand 90.8

    Five lowest, 2011.
    1. Congo-Kinshasa 28.6
    2. Niger 29.5
    3. Burundi 31.6
    4. Mozambique 32.2
    5. Chad 32.8