As we commemorate the end of the Evil Empire, we remember its victims and pledge: Never again.
By
Lee Edwards
History often seems to move slowly —
like sand through an hourglass – until, also like the sand, at the last
moment, it suddenly speeds up and runs out.
The Berlin Wall had
stood, solid and ugly, since 1961 when President Ronald Reagan went to
Germany 27 years ago today, and stood there and challenged Mikhail
Gorbachev to “tear down this wall!” Just two years later the Wall was, itself, pounded to sand.
Communism,
the dark tyranny that controlled more than 30 nations and was
responsible for the deaths of more than 100 million victims during the
20th century, suddenly collapsed, without a shot’s being fired.
The Soviet Union disintegrated, and Marxism-Leninism was dumped on the ash heap of history.
There
was dancing in the streets and champagne toasts on top of the Wall, and
then the world got on with living without bothering to consider such
questions as: Why did Communism collapse? Why did a totalitarian system
that appeared to be so strong, militarily and economically, give up
almost overnight? What are the lessons to be learned from the fall of
the Wall?
Over a decade ago, I was privileged to edit a collection of essays by several of the world’s leading authorities on Communism. Here are some of the things they wrote.
Zbigniew
Brzezinski argued that Marxism-Leninism was “an alien doctrine” imposed
by an imperial power culturally repugnant to the dominated people of
Eastern Europe. Disaffection, he said, was strongest in the cluster of
states with the deepest cultural ties to Western Europe, including
Poland, East Germany, and Hungary.
Richard Pipes wrote that there were incidental causes of the Soviet dissolution, like the Afghan invasion, the Chernobyl nuclear disaster,
and Gorbachev’s vacillating personality. There were also more profound
causes, like economic stagnation, the aspiration of national minorities,
and intellectual dissent, but “the decisive catalyst,” Pipes said, was
the utopian and coercive nature of Communism.
Marxism was the
decisive factor in the collapse of Communism, Martin Malia wrote.
Marxism, he said, presented “an unattainable utopia as an infallibly
scientific enterprise.”
Two often-unremarked reasons for the end
of Communism, Michael Novak said, were atheism’s effects on the soul and
on economic vitality. Communism set out to destroy the “human capital” on which a free economy and polity are based, and in so doing sowed the seeds of its own destruction.
Soviet
economics, Andrzej Brzeski stated, was fatally flawed from the
beginning. Replacing private-property rights with state ownership gave
rise to a huge class of functionaries committed only to preserving their
domains and pleasing their political bosses.
In my essay, I
suggested that when Communists in Eastern and Central Europe admitted
they no longer believed in Communism, they destroyed the glue of
ideology that had held together their façade of power and authority.
Communists
also failed, literally, to deliver the goods. They promised bread but
produced perennial food shortages and rationing — for everyone except
party members and the nomenklatura.
And the Communists could not
stop the mass media from sustaining and spreading the desire for freedom
among the people. Far from being a fortress, Eastern Europe was a
Potemkin village easily penetrated by electronic messages from the West
about democracy and capitalism.
Joshua Muravchik has written that
“if we cannot get straight the rights and wrongs of the struggle between
Communism and anti-Communism, itself perhaps the greatest moral
struggle of the [20th] century, then it is hard to see what other issues
we will ever be able to address intelligently.”
It is to help
separate the rights and the wrongs, the facts and the fictions, the
myths and the realities about the collapse of Communism that the Victims
of Communism Memorial Foundation is dedicated. This is the theme of our
annual ceremony on Capitol Hill,
at which the representatives of some 25 foreign embassies and ethnic
communities lay wreaths and offer a moment of silence for those who died
under Communism in their homelands.
Our Jewish brothers and sisters
understand what is at stake. They understand that history must not be
forgotten lest it be repeated. Even so, we cannot, we must not, we will
not forget the victims of Communism. We will continue to tell the truth
about Tiananmen Square and the Gulag and the Isle of Pines and the
killing fields of Cambodia and the boat people of Vietnam and all those
who still live, and not by their choice, under Communism.
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