Guest Post: Mexico, Africa, Zarqawi?
James R Price and Paul Jureidini’s 1964 Witchcraft, Sorcery, Magic, and Other Psychological Phenomena and their Implications on Military and Paramilitary Operations in the Congo, and Roger D Hughes’s 1984 Emergency in Kenya: Kikuyu and the Mau Mau Insurrection are both of considerable interest here — but it is LSB Leakey, the world-class British archaeologist initiated as a boy into the Kikuyu ways, who has written the most provocative summary of the relationship between political and religious violence and ritual that I’m interested in tracking.
I’m quoting here from the chapter on “The Mau Mau Religion” in Maj. Hughes paper:
Leakey’s original hypothesis in Mau Mau and the Kikuyu: “Mau Mau was nothing more than a new expression of the old KCA … a political body that was banned … because it had become wholly subversive.” Furthermore, “Mau Mau was synomomous with the new body called the in school, Kenya African Union…” However, Leakey admits to a reversal of his original hypothesis in Defeating Mau Mau, and goes on to say, “Mau Mau, while to some extent synonymous with these political organizations, was in fact a religion and owed its success to this fact more than to anything else at all.”<¶>He then proceeds to attribute the origin of Mau Mau to an “ideology transfer,” wherein the religious beliefs of the Kikuyu transitioned from their ancient tribal religion to Euro-Christianity to Mau Mau. The first transition took place artificially, as the missionaries stripped away the traditional beliefs and supplanted them with “20th Century Europe’s concept of Christianity.” The second transition was more natural and evolutionary than the first. A reactionary hybrid of the old and the new developed, because the supplanted concepts would not hold up in their society. There were too many contradictions between the old and the new, mainly due to the 20th Century European “add-ons.”
Most of us have a pretty fixed view of what religion is, should be, or isn’t. Some of my readers no doubt hold to a evangelical Christian position, some are Catholic, some perhaps Buddhist, agnostic or atheist, and some perhaps Muslim. Each of us tends to take our own view of a particular religion as normative, but the reality is that the history of each of the great world religions contains sanctions for both peace-making and warfare — and human nature itself encompasses a range of behaviors that run from the kind of atavistic violence described above to the forgiving and compassionate impulse behind the Beatitudes…
And while economic pressures and political frustrations may be enough to power great struggles, when religious rituals, beliefs and feelings are added into the mix, it can quickly become even more lethal.
3. And Zarqawi?
All of which leaves me wondering how close the parallels are between the Mau Mau in LSB Leakey’s account, La Familia and the other Mexican cartels — and the brutalities of jihadists such as Abu Musab al-Zarqawi.
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historyguy99:
October 28th, 2010 at 5:53 am
Reading this brings to mind what Voltaire observed; that periods of civilization are rare, less than a handful in all of history, which rose and eventually fell into the garbage pit of lost empires.
Rousseau went on to write that this comes when wealth and rank no longer correspond to merit, and disparity becomes an injustice and leads to instability and the eventual disintegration of society. It is for wise men to be viligent.
historyguy99:
October 28th, 2010 at 5:55 am
Reading this brings to mind what Voltaire observed; that periods of civilization are rare, less than a handful in all of history, which rose and eventually fell into the garbage pit of lost empires. Rousseau went on to write that this comes when wealth and rank no longer correspond to merit, and disparity becomes an injustice and leads to instability and the eventual disintegration of society. It is for wise men to be vigilant .
Charles Cameron:
October 28th, 2010 at 2:53 pm
I see you’re vigilant… ; )
david ronfeldt:
October 29th, 2010 at 5:18 pm
it’s awful, and personally painful, to see “méxico lindo y querido” being eaten alive by a monstrous resurgence of “méxico bárbaro”.
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the vulliamy article is excellent on aspects of this. at the risk of repeating citations i’ve mentioned to you before, i’d recommend again “The Spiritual Significance of ¿Plata O Plomo?” by pamela bunker and robert bunker at the small wars blog:
http://smallwarsjournal.com/blog/2010/05/the-spiritual-significance-of/
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also, it’s not just the criminal gangsters who are into “religious magicalism.” it arises on the police side too, as noted by sylvia longmire in her blog post about "Mexican police ask spirits to guard them in drug war":
http://borderviolenceanalysis.typepad.com/mexicos_drug_war/2010/03/mexican-police-ask-spirits-to-guard-them-in-drug-war.html
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there is a veneer of apocalyptic millenarianism in all this. but millenarianism is ultimately concerned with breaching into a new time. what’s going on in mexico is mainly about the conquest and control of space. unfortunately for mexico as a whole, the protagonists have opted for a brutal, demonic, dismissive kind of clannish tribalism as a way to project their identity into that space.
Charles Cameron:
November 1st, 2010 at 5:58 pm
Thanks, David. I’ve got a small folder with the Bunkers’ and Sylvia Longmire’s work stashedx away , and had hoped to write a longer piece about Santa Muerte, Jesus Malverde and perhaps the La Familia "Bible" and John Eldredge a few months back. Sylvia’s piece, as you point out, is particularly interesting for its focus on the possibility of a "magical war". I guess it’s time I re-read DH Lawrence’s book, The Plumed Serpent, too.