Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn
and the Moral Foundations of Democracy

Dr. Daniel Mahoney

David Remnick, the editor of The New Yorker, has recently written that "in terms of the effect he has had on history," the Russian Nobel Laureate Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn "is the dominant writer of the twentieth century. Who else compares? Orwell? Koestler?" Yet Remnick went on to add that when Solzhenitsyn's name comes up today in many academic and journalistic circles, "it is more often than not as a freak, a monarchist, an anti-Semite, a crank, a has-been."

 

The man who more than any other living figure is responsible for exposing the totalitarian nature of communism in such masterpieces as The First Circle and The Gulag Archipelago is accused by some of wanting "new Gulags, new Ayatollahs." And yet, as Remnick adds, Solzhenitsyn has been a determined critic of Russian and Soviet imperialism, an advocate of strong, local self-government, a critic of the extremist nationalism and anti-Semitism of the Russian demagogue Valdimir Zhirinovsky (whom he has called "an evil caricature of a Russian patriot"), and the first to label the post-communist government of Russia an "oligarchy."
As I point out in my forthcoming book Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn: the Ascent from Ideology, the source of these systematic misrepresentations of Solzhenitsyn's thought can be found in a misunderstanding of the ideas presented in his Harvard Address of 1978. Solzhenitsyn's critics have never sufficiently appreciated his admiration for the West's "historically unique stability of civic life under the rule of law." Solzhenitsyn's real target at Harvard, one reiterated in numerous speeches and essays, was never constitutional government or political democracy per se, but rather the diminution of "man's sense of responsibility to God and society." Solzhenitsyn believes that the United States and other Western democracies are torn between two competing conceptions of liberty. The first, and traditional understanding of "liberty under God," upholds that "all human rights were granted on the ground that man is God's creature." The second understanding, "anthropocentric humanism," sees man as the center of the universe.
Solzhenitsyn is, as I attempt to show in my book, a principled moderate-a critic of all political fanaticism. His hero-the hero of his great cycle of novels on the Russian Revolution, The Red Wheel, is Pyotr Stolypin, the prime minister of Russia between 1906 and 1911. A world-class statesman, Stolypin desired reform with revolution and introduced far-reaching land reform, which was the scourge of both the revolutionary Left and the autocratic Right. In his recently published October 1916, Solzhenitsyn writes eloquently of the difficulties of pursuing a "middle line" of social development, particularly in an age of ideological politics. "The loud mouth, the big fist, the bomb, the prison bars are of no help to you as they are to those at the two extremes. Following the middle line demands the utmost self-control, the most inflexible courage, the most patient calculation, the most precise knowledge."
Solzhenitsyn, then, is no extremist. But, in addition to
having exposed the terrible evils of totalitarianism in our century, he is a forceful critic of moral
relativism and radical individualism. Together, these emancipate human beings from the requirements of conscience or from humility before a "Supreme Complete Entity," that restrains human irresponsibility. Solzhenitsyn rightly sees that nihilism erodes a free political order. Liberty must be ordered freedom-liberty under God and the law. In his view, Russia needs to cultivate the school, church, and local self-government as the seedbed for a reconstituted civil society. Some see in this a "reactionary" nostalgia for an older, religious Russia. Others, such as myself, see only good sense for Russia and the West alike.

By Dr. Daniel J. Mahoney

DR. DANIEL J. MAHONEY is associate professor of Political Science at Assumption College. He is the author of The Liberal Political Science of Raymond Aron (1992), and the editor and author of an introductory essay to Pierre Manent: Modern Liberty and Its Discontents (1998). His book, DeGaulle: Statesmanship, Grandeur, and Modern Democracy, will be released in paperback by Transaction Publishers in April of this year. His essays and reviews have appeared in First Things, The Wall Street Journal, The National Interest, and Perspectives on Political Science, among other publications. His book, Solzhenitsyn: The Ascent from Ideology will appear from Rowan & Littlefield in the summer of 2001.