<h2 class="new-h2">XII</h2>
<p>I had only just despatched the last of the preceding
pages of this paper when the dreadful news came of a
new iniquity committed in regard to the Russian people
by those light-minded men who, crazed with power,
have appropriated the right of managing them. Again
coarse and servile slaves of slaves, dressed up in various
dazzling attires—varieties of Generals wishing to distinguish
themselves, or to earn the right to add one
more little star, fingle fangle, or scrap of ribbon to
their idiotic glaring get-up, or else from stupidity or
carelessness—again these miserable men have destroyed
amid dreadful sufferings thousands of those
honorable, kind, hard-working laborers who feed them.
And again this iniquity not only does not cause those
responsible for it to reflect and repent, but one hears
and reads only about its being necessary as speedily
as possible to mutilate and slaughter a greater number
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_38"></SPAN></span>
of men, and to ruin still more families, both Russian
and Japanese.</p>
<p>More than this, to prepare men for fresh iniquities
of this kind, the perpetrators of these crimes, far from
recognizing what is evident to all—viz. that for the Russians
this event, even from their patriotic, military point
of view, was a scandalous defeat—endeavor to assure
credulous people that these unfortunate Russian laboring
men—lured into a trap like cattle into a slaughterhouse,
of whom several thousands have been killed and
maimed merely because one General did not understand
what another General had said—have performed an
act of heroism because those who could not run away
were killed and those who did run away remained
alive. As to the fact that one of these immoral and
cruel men, distinguished by the titles of Generals,
Admirals, drowned a quantity of peaceful Japanese,
this is also described as a great and glorious act of
heroism, which must gladden the hearts of Russians.
And in all the papers are reprinted this awful appeal
to murder:—</p>
<p>“Let the two thousand Russian soldiers killed on the
Yalu, together with the maimed <i>Retvisan</i> and her
sister ships, with our lost torpedo-boats, teach our
cruisers with what devastation they must break in upon
the shores of base Japan. She has sent her soldiers to
shed Russian blood, and no quarter should be afforded
her. Now one cannot—it is sinful—be sentimental;
we must fight; we must direct such heavy blows that
the memory of them shall freeze the treacherous hearts
of the Japanese. Now is the time for the cruisers to
go out to sea to reduce to ashes the towns of Japan,
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_39"></SPAN></span>
flying as a dreadful calamity along its shores. No
more sentimentality.”</p>
<p>The frightful work commenced is continued. Loot,
violence, murder, hypocrisy, theft, and, above all, the
most fearful fraud—the distortion of religious teachings,
both Christian and Buddhistic—continue. The
Tsar, the chief responsible person, continues to review
the troops, to thank, reward, and encourage them; he
issues an edict for the calling out of the reserves;
his faithful subjects again and again lay down their
property and lives at the feet of him they call, only
with their lips, their adored Monarch. On the other
hand, desiring to distinguish themselves before each
other in deeds and not in words only, they tear away
the fathers and the bread-winners from their orphaned
families, preparing them for slaughter. The worse the
position of Russia, the more recklessly do the journalists
lie, transforming shameful defeats into victories, knowing
that no one will contradict them; and they quietly
collect money from subscriptions and sales. The more
money and labor of the people is devoted to the war,
the more is grabbed by various authorities and speculators,
who know that no one will convict them because
every one is doing the same. The military, trained for
murder, having passed years in a school of inhumanity,
coarseness, and idleness, rejoice—poor men—because,
besides an increase of their salary, the slaughter of
superiors opens vacancies for their promotion. Christian
pastors continue to invite men to the greatest of
crimes, continue to commit sacrilege, praying God to
help the work of war; and, instead of condemning, they
justify and praise that pastor who, with the cross in
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_40"></SPAN></span>
his hands on the very scene of murder, encouraged men
to the crime. The same thing is going on in Japan.
The benighted Japanese go in for murder with yet
greater fervor, owing to their victories; the Mikado
also reviews and rewards his troops; various Generals
boast of their bravery, imagining that, having learned to
kill, they have acquired enlightenment. So, too, groan
the unfortunate working people torn from useful labor
and from their families. So their journalists also lie and
rejoice over their gains. Also probably—for where
murder is elevated into virtue every kind of vice is
bound to flourish—also probably all kinds of commanders
and speculators earn money; and Japanese theologians
and religious teachers no less than the masters in
the techniques of armament do not remain behind the
Europeans in the techniques of religious deceit and
sacrilege, but distort the great Buddhistic teaching by
not only permitting but justifying that murder which
Buddha forbade. The Buddhistic scientist, Soyen-Shaku,
ruling over eight hundred monasteries, explains
that although Buddha forbade manslaughter he also
said he could never be at peace until all beings are
united in the infinitely loving heart of all things, and
that, therefore, in order to bring into harmony that
which is discordant it is necessary to fight and to kill
men.<SPAN name="FNanchor_2" href="#Footnote_2" class="fnanchor">[2]</SPAN></p>
<div><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_41"></SPAN></span></div>
<p>It is as if there never had existed the Christian and
Buddhistic teaching about the unity of the human spirit,
the brotherhood of men, love, compassion, the sacredness
of human life. Men, both Japanese and Russians,
already enlightened by the truth, yet like wild animals,
nay, worse than wild animals, throw themselves upon
each other with the sole desire to destroy as many lives
as possible. Thousands of unfortunates groan and
writhe in cruel sufferings and die in agony in Japanese
and Russian field hospitals, asking themselves in bewilderment
why this fearful thing was done with them,
while other thousands are already rotting in the earth
or on the earth, or floating in the sea, in swollen decomposition.
And scores of thousands of wives, fathers,
mothers, children, are bemoaning their bread-winners;
uselessly destroyed. Yet all this is still too little; new
and newer victims are being prepared. The chief
concern of the Russian organizers of slaughter is that
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_42"></SPAN></span>
on the Russian side the stream of food for cannon—three
thousand men per day doomed to destruction—should
not be interrupted for one minute. The Japanese
are preoccupied with the same thing. The locusts are
incessantly being driven down into the river in order
that the rows behind may pass over the bodies.</p>
<p>When will this cease, and the deceived people at last
recover themselves and say: “Well, go you yourselves,
you heartless Tsars, Mikados, Ministers, Bishops, priests,
generals, editors, speculators, or however you may be
called, go you yourselves under these shells and bullets,
but we do not wish to go and we will not go. Leave
us in peace, to plough, and sow, and build,—and also
to feed you.” It would be so natural to say this now,
when amongst us in Russia resounds the weeping and
wailing of hundreds of thousands of mothers, wives,
and children, from whom are being snatched away their
bread-earners, the so-called “reserve.” These same
men, the majority of the reserve, are able to read; they
know what the Far East is; they know that war is going
on, not for anything which is in the least necessary to
Russia, but for some dealings in strange land, leased
lands, as they themselves call them, on which it seemed
advantageous to some corrupt speculators to build railways
and so gain profit; also they know, or might
know, that they will be killed like sheep in a slaughterhouse,
since the Japanese possess the latest improvements
in tools of murder, which we do not, as the
Russian authorities who are sending these people to
death had not thought in time of furnishing themselves
with the same weapons as the Japanese. Knowing all
this, it would indeed be so natural to say, “Go you,
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_43"></SPAN></span>
those who have brought on this work, all you to whom
war is necessary, and who justify it; go you, and face
the Japanese bullets and mines, but we will not go,
because we not only do not need to do this, but we
cannot understand how it can be necessary to any one.”</p>
<p>But no, they do not say this; they go, and they will
continue to go; they cannot but go as long as they fear
that which ruins the body and not that which ruins both
the body and the soul. “Whether we shall be killed,”
they argue, “or maimed in these chinnampos, or whatever
they are called, whither we are driven, we do not
know; it yet may happen that we shall get through
safely, and, moreover, with rewards and glory, like
those sailors who are now being feasted all over Russia
because the Japanese bombs and bullets did not hit
them, but somebody else; whereas should we refuse,
we should be certainly sent to prison, starved, beaten,
exiled to the province of Yakoutsk, perhaps even killed
immediately.” So with despair in their hearts, leaving
behind a good rational life, leaving their wives and
their children,—they go.</p>
<p>Yesterday I met a Reservist soldier accompanied by
his mother and wife. All three were riding in a cart;
he had had a drop too much; his wife's face was swollen
with tears. He turned to me:—</p>
<p>“Good-by to thee! Lyof Nikolaevitch, off to the
Far East.”</p>
<p>“Well, art thou going to fight?”</p>
<p>“Well, some one has to fight!”</p>
<p>“No one need fight!”</p>
<p>He reflected for a moment. “But what is one to do;
where can one escape?”</p>
<div><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_44"></SPAN></span></div>
<p>I saw that he had understood me, had understood
that the work to which he was being sent was an evil
work.</p>
<p>“Where can one escape?” That is the precise expression
of that mental condition which in the official and
journalistic world is translated into the words—“For
the Faith, the Tsar, and the Fatherland.” Those who,
abandoning their hungry families, go to suffering, to
death, say as they feel, “Where can one escape?”
Whereas those who sit in safety in their luxurious
palaces say that all Russian men are ready to sacrifice
their lives for their adored Monarch, and for the glory
and greatness of Russia.</p>
<p>Yesterday, from a peasant I know, I received two
letters, one after the other. This is the first:—</p>
<p>“Dear Lyof Nikolaevitch,—Well, to-day I have
received the official announcement of my call to the
Service; to-morrow I must present myself at the headquarters.
That is all. And after that—to the Far
East to meet the Japanese bullets. About my own
and my household's grief I will not tell you; it is not
you who will fail to understand all the horror of my
position and the horrors of war; all this you have long
ago painfully realized, and you understand it all. How
I have longed to visit you, to have a talk with you!
I had written to you a long letter in which I described
the torments of my soul; but I had not had time to
copy it, when I received my summons. What is my
wife to do now with her four children? As an old
man, of course, you cannot do anything yourself for
my folks, but you might ask some of your friends in
their leisure to visit my orphaned family. I beg you
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_45"></SPAN></span>
earnestly that if my wife proves unable to bear the
agony of her helplessness with her burden of children
and makes up her mind to go to you for help and
counsel, you will receive and console her. Although
she does not know you personally, she believes in your
word, and that means much. I was not able to resist
the summons, but I say beforehand that through me
not one Japanese family shall be orphaned. My God!
how dreadful is all this—how distressing and painful
to abandon all by which one lives and in which one is
concerned.”</p>
<p>The second letter is as follows: “Kindest Lyof
Nikolaevitch, Only one day of actual service has passed,
and I have already lived through an eternity of most
desperate torments. From 8 o'clock in the morning
till 9 in the evening we have been crowded and knocked
about to and fro in the barrack yard, like a herd of
cattle. The comedy of medical examination was three
times repeated, and those who had reported themselves
ill did not receive even ten minutes' attention before
they were marked ‘Satisfactory.’ When we, these two
thousand satisfactory individuals, were driven from
the military commander to the barracks, along the road
spread out for almost a verst stood a crowd of relatives,
mothers, and wives with infants in arms; and if you
had only heard and seen how they clasped their fathers,
husbands, sons, and hanging round their necks wailed
hopelessly! Generally I behave in a reserved way and
can restrain my feelings, but I could not hold out, and
I also wept. [In journalistic language this same is
expressed thus: “The upheaval of patriotic feeling is
immense.”] Where is the standard that can measure
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_46"></SPAN></span>
all this immensity of woe now spreading itself over
almost one-third of the world? And we, we are now
that food for cannon, which in the near future will
be offered as sacrifice to the God of vengeance and
horror. I cannot manage to establish my inner balance.
Oh! how I execrate myself for this double-mindedness
which prevents my serving one Master and God.”</p>
<p>This man does not yet sufficiently believe that what
destroys the body is not dreadful, but that which
destroys both the body and the soul, therefore he cannot
refuse to go; yet while leaving his own family he
promises beforehand that through him not one Japanese
family shall be orphaned; he believes in the chief law
of God, the law of all religions—to act toward others
as one wishes others to act toward oneself. Of such
men more or less consciously recognizing this law, there
are in our time, not in the Christian world alone, but
in the Buddhistic, Mahomedan, Confucian, and Brahminic
world, not only thousands but millions.</p>
<p>There exist true heroes, not those who are now being
f�ted because, having wished to kill others, they
were not killed themselves, but true heroes, who are
now confined in prisons and in the province of Yakoutsk
for having categorically refused to enter the ranks of
murderers, and who have preferred martyrdom to this
departure from the law of Jesus. There are also such
as he who writes to me, who go, but who will not kill.
But also that majority which goes without thinking,
and endeavors not to think of what it is doing, still
in the depth of its soul does now already feel that it is
doing an evil deed by obeying authorities who tear men
from labor and from their families and send them to
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_47"></SPAN></span>
needless slaughter of men, repugnant to their soul and
their faith; and they go only because they are so entangled
on all sides that—“Where can one escape?”</p>
<p>Meanwhile those who remain at home not only feel
this, but know and express it. Yesterday in the high
road I met some peasants returning from Toula. One
of them was reading a leaflet as he walked by the side
of his cart.</p>
<p>I asked, “What is that—a telegram?”</p>
<p>“This is yesterday's,—but here is one of to-day.”
He took another out of his pocket. We stopped. I
read it.</p>
<p>“You should have seen what took place yesterday
at the station,” he said; “it was dreadful. Wives,
children, more than a thousand of them, weeping.
They surrounded the train, but were allowed no further.
Strangers wept, looking on. One woman from
Toula gasped and fell down dead. Five children.
They have since been placed in various institutions; but
the father was driven away all the same.… What
do we want with this Manchuria, or whatever it is
called? There is sufficient land here. And what a
lot of people and of property has been destroyed.”</p>
<p>Yes, the relation of men to war is now quite different
from that which formerly existed, even so lately as the
year '77. That which is now taking place never took
place before.</p>
<p>The papers set forth that, during the receptions of
the Tsar, who is travelling about Russia for the purpose
of hypnotizing the men who are being sent to murder,
indescribable enthusiasm is manifested amongst the
people. As a matter of fact, something quite different
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_48"></SPAN></span>
is being manifested. From all sides one hears reports
that in one place three Reservists have hanged themselves;
in another spot, two more; in yet another, about
a woman whose husband had been taken away bringing
her children to the conscription committee-room and
leaving them there; while another hanged herself in
the yard of the military commander. All are dissatisfied,
gloomy, exasperated. The words, “For the Faith,
the King, and the Fatherland,” the National Anthem,
and shouts of “Hurrah” no longer act upon people as
they once did. Another warfare of a different kind—the
struggling consciousness of the deceit and sinfulness
of the work to which people are being called—is more
and more taking possession of the people.</p>
<p>Yes, the great strife of our time is not that now taking
place between the Japanese and the Russians, nor
that which may blaze up between the white and yellow
races, not that strife which is carried on by mines,
bombs, bullets, but that spiritual strife which without
ceasing has gone on and is now going on between the
enlightened consciousness of mankind now waiting for
manifestation and that darkness and that burden which
surrounds and oppresses mankind.</p>
<p>In His own time Jesus yearned in expectation, and
said, “I came to cast fire upon the earth, and how
I wish that it were already kindled.” Luke xii. 49.</p>
<p>That which Jesus longed for is being accomplished,
the fire is being kindled. Then do not let us check it,
but let us spread and serve it.</p>
<p>13 May, 1904.</p>
<p>I should never finish this paper if I were to continue
to add to it all that corroborates its essential idea.
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_49"></SPAN></span>
Yesterday the news came in of the sinking of the
Japanese ironclads; and in the so-called higher circles
of Russian fashionable, rich, intellectual society they
are, without the slightest conscientious scruples, rejoicing
at the destruction of a thousand human lives. Yet
to-day I have received from a simple seaman, a man
standing on the lowest plane of society, the following
letter:<SPAN name="FNanchor_3" href="#Footnote_3" class="fnanchor">[3]</SPAN></p>
<p>“Much respected Lyof Nikolaevitch, I greet you with
a low bow, with love, much respected Lyof Nikolaevitch.
I have read your book. It was very pleasant
reading for me. I have been a great lover of reading
your works. Well, Lyof Nikolaevitch, we are now in a
state of war, please write to me whether it is agreeable
to God or not that our commanders compel us to kill.
I beg you, Lyof Nikolaevitch, write to me please
whether or not the truth now exists on earth. Tell
me, Lyof Nikolaevitch. In church here a prayer is
being read, the priest mentions the Christ-loving
army. Is it true or not that God loves war? I pray
you, Lyof Nikolaevitch, have you got any books from
which I could see whether truth exists on earth or not?
Send me such books. What they cost, I will pay. I
beg you, Lyof Nikolaevitch, do not neglect my request.
If there are no books then send me a letter. I will
be very glad when I receive a letter from you. I will
await your letter with impatience. Good-by for the
present. I remain alive and well and wish the same to
you from the Lord God. Good health and good success
in your work.”</p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />