Live Not by Lies

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Live Not by Lies Page 20

by Rod Dreher


  3. Milan Kundera, The Book of Laughter and Forgetting, trans. Michael Henry Heim (NY: Viking, 1987), 187.

  4. Paul Connerton, How Societies Remember (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1989), 3.

  5. Leszek Kołakowski, Is God Happy? Selected Essays (NY: Penguin Classics, 2012), 60.

  6. Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger, “Homily Pro Eligendo Romano Pontifice,” April 18, 2005, vatican.va/gpII/documents/homily-pro-eligendo-pontifice_20050418_en.html [inactive].

  7. Connerton, Societies Remember, 73

  8. Oliver Bullough, The Last Man in Russia: The Struggle to Save a Dying Nation (NY: Basic Books, 2013), 42, or loc. 788 of 5895, Kindle.

  9. Václav Benda, The Long Night of the Watchman: Essays by Václav Benda, 1977–1989, ed. F. Flagg Taylor IV, trans. Barbara Day (South Bend, IN: St. Augustine’s Press, 2017), 218.

  10. Roger Scruton, Notes from Underground (NY: Beaufort Books, 2014), 54–55, or loc. 760 of 3188, Kindle.

  CHAPTER SEVEN: FAMILIES ARE RESISTANCE CELLS

  1. Václav Benda, The Long Night of the Watchman: Essays by Václav Benda, 1977–1989, ed. F. Flagg Taylor IV, trans. Barbara Day (South Bend, IN: St. Augustine’s Press, 2017), 222–32.

  2. Benda, Watchman, 225.

  3. Benda, Watchman, 225–26.

  4. Benda, Watchman, 226.

  5. Benda, Watchman, 228.

  CHAPTER EIGHT: RELIGION, THE BEDROCK OF RESISTANCE

  1. Silvester Krčméry, MD, This Saved Us: How to Survive Brainwashing (self-pub., 1996), 81.

  2. Krčméry, This Saved Us, 100.

  3. Bullough, The Last Man in Russia, 85 or loc. 1594 of 5895, Kindle.

  4. George Calciu, Interviews, Homilies, and Talks (Platina, CA: St. Herman of Alaska Brotherhood, 2010), 187.

  CHAPTER NINE: STANDING IN SOLIDARITY

  1. Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn, The Gulag Archipelago 1918–1956, trans. Thomas P. Whitney and Harry Willetts; abr. by Edward E. Ericson Jr. (NY: Perennial, 1983), 86.

  CHAPTER TEN: THE GIFT OF SUFFERING

  1. Carrie Dann, “‘A Deep and Boiling Anger’: NBC/WSJ Poll Finds a Pessimistic America Despite Current Economic Satisfaction,” NBC News, August 25, 2019, nbcnews.com/politics/meet-the-press/deep-boiling-anger-nbc-wsj-poll-finds-pessimistic-america-despite-n1045916.

  2. Søren Kierkegaard, Provocations: Spiritual Writings of Kierkegaard (Farmington, PA: Plough Publishing, 1999), 85.

  3. Kierkegaard, Provocations, 88.

  4. Silvester Krčméry, MD, This Saved Us: How to Survive Brainwashing (self-pub., 1996), 56.

  5. Krčméry, This Saved Us, 163.

  6. Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn, The Gulag Archipelago 1918–1956, trans. Thomas P. Whitney and Harry Willetts; abr. by Edward E. Ericson Jr. (NY: Perennial, 1983), 313.

  7. “Testimony of Rev. Richard Wurmbrand before the US Senate (1966): Communist Exploitation of Religion,” May 6, 1966, Joseph Smith Foundation, josephsmithfoundation.org/testimony-of-rev-richard-wurmbrand-before-the-u-s-senate-1966-communist-exploitation-of-religion/.

  8. Wurmbrand, US Senate.

  9. Richard Wurmbrand, The Midnight Bride (Bartlesville, OK: Living Sacrifice, 2009), loc. 713 of 3025, Kindle.

  10. George Calciu, Interviews, Homilies, and Talks (Platina, CA: St. Herman of Alaska Brotherhood, 2010), 109.

  11. Calciu, Interviews, 110.

  12. Calciu, Interviews, 111.

  13. Calciu, Interviews, 112.

  14. Calciu, Interviews, 131.

  15. Richard Wurmbrand, In God’s Underground (Bartlesville, OK: Living Sacrifice, 2004), loc. 661, Kindle.

  CONCLUSION: LIVE NOT BY LIES

  1. Aldous Huxley, Brave New World, Huxley, accessed May 18, 2020, huxley.net/bnw/seventeen.html.

  2. Lubomir Gleiman, From the Maelstrom: A Pilgrim’s Story of Dissent and Survival in the Twentieth Century (Bloomington, IN: Author House, 2011), 103.

  3. Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn, “Live Not by Lies!,” in Orthodoxy Today, accessed June 2, 2020, orthodoxytoday.org/articles/SolhenitsynLies.php.

  ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ

  INDEX

  accepting change, 206

  accepting suffering, 210, 211

  admirers

  disciples contrasted with, 188–91

  Kierkegaard on, 190

  The Age of Surveillance Capitalism (Zuboff), 76

  A Hidden Life (2019), 188–89

  Alexandrovich, Vladimir, 123–24

  all-powerful state, 71–72

  Amazon, 77–78

  American dream, 53

  American elites, 29, 115

  anthropological errors, 65

  Applebaum, Anne, 28

  Arendt, Hannah, 7–8, 33, 36

  on elites, 34–35

  on propaganda, 37, 38

  on totalitarianism, 30–31, 32, 39, 42, 45–46

  atomization, social, 31–32

  authoritarianism, 7, 84

  banks, 80, 89

  Baptists, 102–3, 145–46

  Bartulica, Nicholas, 209

  Beijing, China, 85, 86

  Benda, Kamila, 69–70, 129, 134–35, 137–38, 140, 149–50

  Benda, Patrik, on, 144

  on common goals, 142

  Benda, Klara, 144

  Benda, Marek, 136, 137, 212–13

  Benda, Marketa, 141, 144

  Benda, Martin, 137

  Benda, Patrik, 28, 136, 138–39, 140–41, 142

  on Benda, Kamila, 144

  on Charter 77, 143

  Benda, Philip, 138

  Benda, Václav, 120–21, 129, 135, 144–45, 149–50

  Benda, Marketa, on, 141

  Benda, Patrik, on, 136

  on families, 130–32, 133–34

  letters from, 140–41

  Benda family guide to child-raising, 135–45

  hospitality and, 143–45

  moral courage and, 136–37

  moral imaginations in, 137–39

  role of stories in, 138

  sacrifices for greater good in, 140–41

  service to others in, 143–45

  wider movements and, 142–43

  Benedict Option project, 135

  Benedict XVI (pope), xiii

  the Bible, 172, 173

  Big Brother, 14, 76

  Big Business, 72, 73, 74, 75, 93

  bitterness, suffering without, 191–93

  Bolshevik Revolution, xv, 21, 27, 66, 117

  Bolsheviks, 21, 22, 27, 42–43, 152

  brainwashing, 87–88

  Bratislava, Slovakia, 3–4, 6, 66, 90, 165, 169

  Brave New World (Huxley), 10, 184, 212

  Budapest, Hungary, 183

  Bullough, Oliver, 157

  Bush, George W., 50–51

  Butovo Shooting Range, 100, 123, 124

  Calciu, George, 159–60, 201–4, 206

  Camus, Albert, 158

  cancel culture, 40

  Candle Demonstration, 66, 155, 168, 171

  capitalism, ix

  surveillance, 75–79, 93

  woke, 71–75

  The Captive Mind (Miłosz), 9

  Cardijn, Joseph, 5

  Čarnogurský, Ján, 171, 174–75

  Catholic Worker movement, 64

  change, accepting, 206

  Charter 77 (dissident community), 142–43

  child-raising. See Benda family guide to child-raising

  China, 84–88

  Beijing, 85, 86

  social credit system of, 86–87

  surveillance in, 84, 85–86

  Chinese Communist Party, 84–85

  Christakis, Erika, 62–63

  Christakis, Nicholas, 62–
63

  Christian dissidents, 18–19, 93–94, 156

  Christian father, 133–34

  Christian home, 134

  Christian hope, 52, 66, 151, 155, 157, 172

  Christianity, xiii, 55–56, 126–27

  . See also specific topics

  for days to come, 204–5

  Sipko on, 173

  social justice and, 63–65

  solidarity and, 174–77, 181

  Christians, 67–68

  . See also specific topics

  of Czechoslovakia, 4

  inner peace of, 151–52

  Christian values, 211

  church, 118

  . See also underground church

  Cicero, 113

  cigarettes, miracle of, 160–61

  cities, sanctuary, 120–22

  civic trust, 32

  civil rights, 51

  civil unrest, 26

  classical liberalism, 29, 50

  Clinton, Bill, 72

  clothing, 139

  Cold War, ix, 13, 71, 72, 112

  collective action, 18

  commands of Christ, 191

  commitments to marriage, 129

  commitment to Christ, 4–5

  common goals, 142

  communal witness to future generations, 123–26

  communism, ix, x, xi, 4, 16–17

  appeal in Russia, 24–27

  conditions of, 119–20

  heroes of resistance to, 67

  ideologies of, 116

  Sályi on, 49

  society under, 97–98

  Soviet, 7, 22, 28–29

  surveys on, 112

  Communist Manifesto, 97

  communities

  individuals rescued by, 169–71

  Romaszewska, Zofia, on, 180

  comradeship, 178, 181

  concentration camps, 84

  conditions of communism, 119–20

  confessions, 196, 198

  conformity, 97–98

  confronting lies, 108–9

  Connerton, Paul, 114, 115, 116

  consciences, 212

  conservatives, 8, 63, 72

  conservative views, xii–xiii

  consumerism, 76, 88, 133

  control, social, 89–90

  corporate social responsibility, 73–74, 75

  corporations, 72–73, 74–75

  courage, 136–37, 168, 170

  COVID-19, 29–30

  the crowd, life apart from, 100–103

  cult of social justice, 9–10, 42–43, 59–60

  cultural discernment, 149

  cultural memory, 114, 115, 116, 117, 126–27, 145

  culture, pre-totalitarian, 36, 38, 44, 93

  culture war, 73

  Cummins, Jeanine, 40

  current events, xvi

  Czechoslovakia, 3, 4, 122, 129–30

  data, 77–79, 81, 83, 85–86, 89

  Day of Remembrance (Russia), 123

  death row, 195–96

  definitions of totalitarianism, 30

  democracy, ix, xiv–xv, 51

  Deng Xiaoping, 84

  Derrida, Jacques, 121

  Der Spiegel (magazine), 70

  desires for transgression and destruction, 34–35

  destruction, desire for, 34–35

  Diaghilev, Sergei, 47–48, 66

  dictatorship, 7, 48, 136, 148

  of Big Brother, 14

  of lies, xiv, 16, 107–8, 122

  of relativism, 116

  difficulties

  marriage, 133

  of young people, 183, 184

  dignity of individual, 131–32

  discernment, cultural, 149

  disciples, admirers contrasted with, 188–91

  discourses, 62

  dissidents, Christian, 18–19, 93–94, 156

  . See also specific topics

  diversity, 143

  The Diversity Delusion (Mac Donald), 73–74

  divine revelation, 197, 198

  doctrines, 58

  doublethink, 14, 15, 103–5

  Dudko, Dmitry, 156–57

  Durkheim, Émile, 33

  Eich, Brendan, 40

  elites, xi, 41, 42, 82, 93

  American, 29, 115

  Arendt on, 34–35

  intellectual, 37

  liberal, x

  Mounk on, 34

  equality, 54

  errors, anthropological, 65

  evading lies, 18

  Evangelicals, 172, 173, 174

  evangelism, 156

  evangelization, 5, 27–30

  executions, 187–88

  exile, 55

  existence, postmodern mode of, 10–13

  expectations, 199–201

  expertise, society and, 39–41

  Facebook, 77–78, 80

  facial recognition technology, 86

  faith, 185, 186, 206

  Calciu on, 159–60

  in God, 153

  in hierarchies and institutions, 32–34, 44

  families, 118, 129

  Benda, V., on, 130–32, 133–34

  “see, judge, act” motto and, 149–50

  social importance of, 145–48

  totalitarianism and, 130–35

  traditional, 132–33

  The Family (Catholic group), 5, 6, 19, 210

  “The Family and the Totalitarian State” (Benda, V.), 130

  fatalism, futuristic, 44–46

  fear, 139, 168, 188

  fellowship, small-group, 150, 182

  fidelity, 176

  Figes, Orlando, 117

  fighting for free speech, 103–5

  Fink, Larry, 74–75

  fortresses of memory, 117–20

  free consciences, 212

  freedom, 13, 69, 131, 168, 173, 210–11

  free speech, 103–5

  the future, 54, 66

  future generations, communal witness to, 123–26

  futuristic fatalism, 44–46

  Gallup, Inc., 33

  gathering of data, 83, 85–86, 89

  gathering storm, shelter from, 93–94

  gentleness of soft totalitarianism, 9–10

  Germany, 32–33, 52, 70, 71

  gifts

  of marriage, 131–32

  suffering as, 193–99

  Girard, René, 10

  globalization, 72–73

  God

  faith in, 153

  saboteurs of, 212–14

  Goldberg, Zach, 37

  Google, 77–78, 79, 81–82

  Gordimer, Nadine, 21

  Grand March, 49–50, 68

  Gray, John, 53

  greater good, sacrifices for, 140–41

  greengrocer metaphor, 97–99

  grief, 177–79, 193

  Grygorenko, Vladimir, 103–4

  The Guardian (newspaper), 77

  guilt, 35, 42, 57, 59

  Gulag Archipelago (Solzhenitsyn), xiv, 165, 193–94, 199

  gulags, 85, 111, 113, 158, 195, 206

  habits, 30, 66, 78–79, 90, 112, 115

  Hanby, Michael, 64

  The Harvard Crimson (magazine), 112

  Havel, Václav, 97–100, 108–9, 134

  heresy-hunters, 56–59

  heroes of communist resistance, 67

  hierarchies, faith in, 32–34, 44

  High Noon, 137

  historical memory, 113, 124

  history, 126–27

  honoring sacrifices, 210

  hope,
22, 48, 51, 67, 127, 214

  Christian, 52, 66, 151, 155, 157, 172

  for the future, 54

  of religion, xv

  hospitality, 143–45, 149–50

  How Societies Remember (Connerton), 114

  human condition, 207

  Hungarians, persecution of, 106, 107

  Hunt, Gus, 83

  Hunter, James Davison, 41

  Husák, Gustáv, 113

  Huxley, Aldous, 10, 88, 184, 185, 205, 212

  hymns, 154

  hypocrisy, 16, 185

  idealists, 38

  identity politics, 61, 65

  ideologies, xii, xiv, 7, 101

  of communism, 116

  of language, 119–20

  mania for, 38–39

  of social justice, xv, 94

  soft totalitarianism and, 15

  imaginations, moral, 137–39

  individualism, 71–72, 89, 133

  individuals

  dignity of, 131–32

  small communities rescuing, 169–71

  information technology, 71, 125

  inner peace, Christians experiencing, 151–52

  institutions, faith in, 32–34, 44

  intellectual elites, 37

  intellectuals as revolutionary class, 41–43

  intersectionality, of social justice, 62

  inward dissent (ketman), 14, 16–17, 108

  Jägerstätter, Franz, 189

  Jesus Christ, 64, 158–60, 173, 190, 192, 198

  commands of, 191

  commitment to, 4–5

  freedom connected to, 168

  service to, 134

  Jocists, 5

  John of Kronstadt (priest), 178

  John Paul II (pope), 65

  journalism, 18, 37

  Kaleda, Kirill, 100, 101, 102, 124, 125, 194–95

  Kęska, Paweł, 147–48, 176–77

  ketman (inward dissent), 14, 16–17, 108

  KGB (Russian secret police), 159, 198

  Kierkegaard, Søren, 189–90

  kindness, 176

  Kolaković, Tomislav, 3–4, 5–6, 7, 19, 207

  Kołakowski, Leszek, 114, 115

  Komáromi, Mária, 148, 178–79, 186–87

  Komsomol (communist youth league), 101, 195

  Korec, Ján Chryzostom, 169

  Krčméry, Silvester, 45, 191, 207

  solidarity of, 192–93

  spiritual exercises of, 152–55

  Križka, Petra, 90–91

  Križka, Timo, 90, 209–11

  Krylenko, N. V., 39

  Kundera, Milan, 47, 49, 91, 112–13

  laborers, 22

  Lanchester, John, 85

  language, 127

  ideological abuse of, 119–20

  reality created by, 62–63

  Latsis, Martin, 58–59

 

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