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Nonviolence (or non-violence) is a set of assumptions about morality, power and conflict that leads its
proponents to reject the use of violence in efforts to attain social or political
goals. While often used as a synonym for pacifism, since the mid 20th century the
term nonviolence has come to embody a diversity of techniques for waging social conflict without the use of violence, as well as
the underlying political and philosophical rationale for the use of these techniques.
As a technique for social struggle, nonviolence is most often associated with the campaign for Indian independence led by
Mohandas Gandhi. The struggle to attain civil rights for African
Americans, led by Martin Luther King, is another well known
example of nonviolence.
Why nonviolence?
Most advocates of nonviolence draw their preference for nonviolence either from religious or ethical beliefs, or from a
pragmatic political analysis. The first justification for nonviolence is sometimes referred to as principled or
ethical nonviolence, while the second is known as pragmatic or strategic. However, it is not uncommon
to find both of these dimensions present within the thinking of particular movements or individuals.
In the west, nonviolence has been used extensively by the labour, peace, environment and women's movements. Less well known is
the role that nonviolence has played and continues to play in undermining the power of repressive political regimes in the
undeveloped world and the former eastern bloc:
- In 1989, thirteen nations comprising 1,695,000 people experienced nonviolent revolutions that succeeded beyond anyone's
wildest expectations ... If we add all the countries touched by major nonviolent actions in our century (the Philippines, South
Africa ... the independence movement in India ...) the figure reaches 3,337,400,000, a staggering 65% of humanity! All this in
the teeth of the assertion, endlessly repeated, that nonviolence doesn't work in the 'real' world.
- (Walter Wink, as quoted by
Susan Ives in a 2001 talk)
Nonviolence scholar Gene Sharp, in his book The Politics of Nonviolent
Action, suggests that the conspicuous absence of nonviolence from mainstream historical study may be due to the fact that
elite interests are not served by the dissemination of techniques for social struggle that rely on the collective power of a
mobilised citizenry rather than access to wealth or weaponry.
How does nonviolence work?
The nonviolent approach to social struggle represents a radical departure from conventional thinking about conflict, and yet
appeals to a number of common-sense notions.
Among these is the idea that the power of rulers depends on the consent of the populace. Without a bureacracy, an army or a
police force to carry out his or her wishes, the ruler is powerless. Power, nonviolence teaches us, depends on the co-operation
of others. Nonviolence undermines the power of rulers through the deliberate withdrawal of this co-operation.
Also of primary significance is the notion that just means are the most likely to lead to just ends. When Gandhi said that
“the means may be likened to the seed, the end to a tree,” he expressed the philosophical kernel of what some refer
to as “prefigurative politics”. Proponents of nonviolence reason that the actions we take in the
present inevitably re-shape the social order in like form. They would argue, for instance, that it is fundamentally irrational to
use violence to achieve the end of a peaceful society.
Some proponents of nonviolence advocate respect or love for opponents. It is this principle which is most closely associated
with spiritual or religious justifications of nonviolence, as we may see in the Sermon on the Mount when Jesus urges his followers to
“love thine enemy,” or in the Buddhist principle of metta, or loving-kindness towards all beings. Respect or love for opponents also has a
pragmatic justification, in that the technique of separating the deeds from the doers allows for the possibility of the doers
changing their behaviour, and perhaps their beliefs.
Finally, the notion of Satya, or
truth, is central to the Gandhian conception of nonviolence. Gandhi saw truth as something that is multifaceted and unable to be
grasped in its entirety by any one individual. We all carry pieces of the truth, he believed, but we need the pieces of
others’ truths in order to pursue the greater truth. This lead him to a belief in the inherent worth of dialogue with
opponents, and a sincere wish to understand their drives and motivations. On a practical level, willingness to listen to
another’s point of view is largely dependent on reciprocity. In order to be heard by one’s opponents, one must also
be prepared to listen.
The methods of nonviolent action
Hunger strikes, pickets, vigils, petitions, sit-ins, tax refusal, go slows, blockades, draft refusal and demonstrations are
some of the specific techniques that have been deployed by nonviolent movements. Throughout history, these are among the
nonviolent methods used by ordinary people to counter injustice or oppression or bring about progressive change.
To be effective, tactics must be carefully chosen, taking into account political and cultural circumstances, and form part of
a larger plan or strategy.
Walter Wink points to Jesus Christ as an early nonviolence strategist. Many of his teachings on nonviolence are revealed to be
quite sophisticated when the cultural circumstances are understood. For example, among the people he was speaking to, if by
collecting debts one drove someone to be naked, great shame fell on oneself, not the naked man. So Jesus' suggestion - that if
someone ask you for your coat you give him your clothes as well - was a way bring shame upon the debt-collector and symbollically
reverse the power relation.
This kind of creativity is typical of nonviolent movements. Aristophanes' Lysistrata gives the
fictional example of women withholding sexual favours from their husbands until war was abandoned.
A useful source of inspiration, for those seeking the best nonviolent tactics to deploy, is Gene Sharp’s list of 198
methods of nonviolent action, which includes symbolic, political, economic and physical actions.
There are also many other great nonviolence leaders and theorists who have thought deeply about the spiritual and practical
aspects of nonviolence: Lech Walesa, Starhawk, Petra Kelly, Barbara Deming, Thich Nhat Hanh, Julia Butterfly Hill,
Dorothy Day, Albert
Einstein and Cesar Chavez, to name just a few.
Criticism
Leon Trotsky, Frantz
Fanon, and Malcolm X were fervent critics of nonviolence, arguing variously
that nonviolence and pacifism are an attempt to impose the morals of the bourgeoisie upon the proletariat, that violence is a
necessary accompaniment to revolutionary change or that the right to self-defence is fundamental.
In the midst of violent repression of radical African Americans
in the United States during the 1960s, Black Panther George Jackson said of the nonviolent tactics of Martin Luther King, Jr.:
- "The concept of nonviolence is a false ideal. It presupposes the existence of compassion and a sense of justice on the part
of one's adversary. When this adversary has everything to lose and nothing to gain by exercising justice and compassion, his
reaction can only be negative."
Malcolm X also clashed with civil rights leaders over the issue of nonviolence, arguing that violence should not be ruled out
where no other option remained:
- "Concerning nonviolence, it is criminal to teach a man not to defend himself when he is the constant victim of brutal
attacks."
The US academic Ward Churchill, in his book Pacifism as
Pathology, argues that revolutionaries must not exclude any tactics which help them to achieve their goal. The efficacy of
nonviolence was also challenged by anti-capitalist protestors advocating a "diversity of tactics" during street demonstrations
across Europe and the US following the anti-WTO protests in Seattle, Washington in 1999.
Advocates of nonviolence have argued that many critics of nonviolence focus their critique on the moral justifications for
nonviolence while neglecting to examine the practical political advantages of nonviolence as a technique for social struggle.
Some critics falsely characterise nonviolence as passivity, and tend to ignore the historical success of nonviolence against
dictators and repressive governments, they say.
Living nonviolence
The embeddedness of violence in most of the world's populous societies causes many to consider it an inherent part of human
nature, but others (Riane Eisler,
Walter Wink, Daniel Quinn) have suggested that violence - or at least the
arsenal of violent strategies we take for granted - is a phenomenon of the last five to ten thousand years, and was not present
in pre-domestication and early post-domestication human societies.
For many practitioners, practicing nonviolence goes deeper than withholding from violent behavior or words. It means caring in
one's heart for everyone, even those one strongly disagrees with. One implication of this is the necessity of caring for those
who are not practicing nonviolence. Of course no one can simply will themselves to have such care, and this is one of the great
personal challenges posed by nonviolence - once one believes in nonviolence in theory, how to live it?
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