Saturday 17 July 2021

730 things — Day 118 of 365

This is the feast day of the Holy Royal Martyrs of Russia — Tsar Nicholas II, his wife Tsarina Alexandra, Crown Prince Alexis, and the Grand Duchesses Olga, Tatiana, Maria and Anastasia — as well as those martyred with them. They were shot and bayoneted to death by Bolshevik revolutionaries, and taken to the Koptyaki Forest where their bodies were stripped and mutilated and buried in unmarked graves.

Tomorrow is the feast of Grand Duchess Elizabeth Feodorovna, another of Russia's new martyrs.

Elizabeth was married to Grand Duke Sergei Alexandrovich, whose policies were very conservative, even reactionary. Grand Duke Sergei was responsible for the expulsion of Moscow's 20,000 Jews; not a great start to his tenure to say the least.

He was assassinated by a terrorist bomb in 1905. His wife Elizabeth rushed to the scene of the explosion, and knelt in the snow to gather up the scattered remains of his body and his scattered medals, so he could be borne away with dignity.

Elizabeth then made some changes to her life. She became vegetarian, sold her jewellery and began to live as a religious. She opened (and became abbess of) a convent dedicated to the saints Martha and Mary, from where she dedicated herself to helping the sick and poor in Moscow.

In 1918 Lenin ordered her arrest, and she was taken first to Perm then Yekaterinburg where she was housed in a school. She spent her days there planting vegetables in the garden and living out the observance of her faith.

But in the summer of that year she and her companions were taken out to a disused mine 20 metres deep, blindfolded and with their hands tied behind their backs. The journey, in horse-drawn carts, took two hours; Elizabeth and her companions sang hymns. When they reached the pit, first Elizabeth was throw in, then the others. There was water at the bottom, and the intention was that they would drown, but some — including Elizabeth — caught on the projections at the side of the pit. She could be heard talking to the person thrown in after her. The Bolsheviks then threw in hand grenades, but still not everyone died. After the explosions, they could still hear people singing. So they stuffed the pit with wood and set fire to it.

A few months later when the bodies were uncovered, they were still in relatively good condition, so it is thought they may have died of starvation.

Elizabeth's sister Alix and her family were murdered on the previous day.

Grand Duchess Elizabeth was canonised in 1981 by the Russian Orthodox Church Outside of Russia, and in 1992 by the Moscow Patriarchate. Today is her holy feast.




Her last words are said to have been, "O Lord forgive them, for they know not what they do."

I grew up in a politically Conservative family. My father and mother and sister (and I think my sister's children too) have all been staunch Conservatives. But ever since I reached voting age, mine has been a  socialist vote. I have changed to a Green vote, but that is also socialist. Most of the people I know cast their votes to advance the political interests of themselves and others like them — the workers vote for those who will advance the cause of the workers, the landowners vote for those who will protect their rights, and so on. But I think when we vote it is meant to be not for 'me' but for 'us'. I am a resourceful person, and I hope I will always be able to figure out some kind of solution under any government. There is nothing to take from me, nothing to defend, because I live very simply and own little. So when I vote, I look for administrations I hope will lift up the poor and broken, who will help those members of society (and their families) who either cannot or will not help themselves. My vote is for the common good, an expression of my belief that we're all in this together.

In recent years, watching with horror the development of the political landscape in my country under the Conservative government — I am especially ashamed of its treatment of refugees, its corruption and its progressive decimation of the health service — I have been completely bewildered by Christians voting Conservative. 

Especially when Jeremy Corbyn, whose politics are almost a perfect match with the New Testament and the Old Testament prophets, was vilified by Christian people and undermined by his own party, I felt so grieved, heartbroken even.

I have lived since then with pain and bewilderment I didn't know how to process. I felt so bitterly disappointed in my Christian brothers and sisters voting for these people who want to turn their backs on the poor and let desperate people fleeing torture drown in the sea.

But the stories of Grand Duchess Elizabeth's death have given me some understanding and insight, and that has brought comfort. She was a gentle and most courageous woman of profound faith, devoted to prayer and helping the poor, and she was put to death in the most horrific manner — by socialists.

In my own life, it's also the case that the most vile man I ever met was married to one of my aunts; and he was a trades union rep, a staunch and active socialist. He was also opportunistic and cruel.

I have reached a temporary working conclusion that it doesn't matter one jot what your politics are — the country could be run equally successfully on socialist or Conservative lines. In fact, on balance and in general, I think I favour the Conservative approach.

But what brings a country down is greed and corruption, indifference to the wellbeing of creation, cruelty and callousness, merciless indifference to the poor and sick, the homeless and the refugee.

And almost any political system could be turned to political advantage if good people operated it — if those in hard times were lifted up, if nature was protected and regenerated, if kindness and restraint and honesty and simplicity and humility were the determinants of our way of life.

I am ashamed to the depths of my soul when I see Priti Patel working to have refugees left to drown at sea and turn the gypsies off their stopping places and deport people born overseas who work and live here in peace. But if the alternative is throwing bound people down a mine, then when that doesn't kill them chucking down hand grenades, then when that doesn't finish them off stuffing the outlet with wood and setting it on fire, then leaving the survivors to starve — well, I don't think much of that either.

I have come to believe that humanity is neither saved nor guided by politics — it has to be the other way round. We can learn from such leaders as the Dalai Lama, and Jigme Khesal Namygyel Wangchuck (the present Druk Gyalpo of Bhutan). 

If things do not change radically and quickly, we shall succeed in poisoning and suffocating the entire planet — our greed, our myopic consumerism, our selfishness; these all have to stop.

All I know to do is live quietly and simply, and let change begin with me.


Today's things to go from my accumulation of bits and pieces are a collection of hooks to hang things from the picture rails in Victorian houses. 




Our house is Victorian and has picture rails, but we prefer pictures hung lower and don't like looking at the string, so we tend to put a screw in the wall when we want to put up a picture.


9 comments:

Suzan said...

Good morning. Politics can be a dreadful thing. I lean more toward the socialist side of Australian politics.

How I love high ceilings, picture rails and all those things that do not exist in more modern homes. Our home is. small bungalow and suits us well but it doesn't have many pretty features that exist older homes.

Pen Wilcock said...

I love bungalows — our house is a tall Victorian building, and the associated maintenance costs are considerable. I love it that in a bungalow you can do small repairs and keep the gutters clear and so forth, for yourself — all you need is some know-how, the right tools and a ladder. The Victorian houses need expert help! But in the UK bungalows are very desirable as homes, so tend to be comparatively expensive to buy; the Victorian houses are usually more affordable (ours was) if you want a big house — which we did, for five adults.
Something I love in our house is that even in the hottest summer the downstairs north-facing living room stays cool. The windows were all replaced by the previous occupants with modern PVC-framed styles; since we came we have been slowly putting back (very expensive) traditional sash windows. They work with the high ceilings to keep houses cool, because the gap top and bottom when open gives the circulation of air you need. I am lucky that my own room is one of those where we've reinstated the traditional windows, and these hot summer nights I am loving it. My bed is alongside the window, right next to it, and I sleep so much better in the fresh air.

Buttercup said...

I appreciate your post. I would, however, comment that Elizabeth was killed by the Bolsheviks, whose "politics" were more revolutionary violence than socialism. May her memory be for a blessing.

Anonymous said...

Oh wow Pen, such a heartbreaking and poignant post - I barely made it to the end through my somewhat teary vision. My mum always said
“ be kind” and I think that just sums it up. Very simply.
And I agree, I couldn’t even contemplate closing a window at night! Deb x

Pen Wilcock said...

Hi Buttercup — Yes, indeed. I think it would equally be possible to argue that our present UK government is not the best representation of what 'Conservative' can mean. What I intended to communicate is that 'Left is good, Right is bad' (or vice versa) cannot give us the overview we need to live wisely.


Hi Deb — waving! Yes, what human beings will do to one another is unbearable sometimes. I think the first calling of the Gospel is to be kind — it's what grace *is*. x

Rebecca said...

For what it's worth, I share your "temporary working conclusion"!

I am here catching up on you--think of you frequently (for some reason) as my husband and I make our way through the Brother Cadfael series...He's one book ahead of me and I'm currently waiting for him to finish so I can begin it. :)

Pen Wilcock said...

Waving from England! I hope all is well with you. x

Anonymous said...

Pen, you have said a great number of very wise things in the time I've followed you. One thing I will never understand is how people can view the carnage, the millions of corpses, the devastation that results from socialism and still support it. Your own bible confers one explanation of human evil and iniquity. That will always be injected by the very nature of it into any human system. Flawed people create flawed creations. That's the problem we all live with. And the truth of the matter is that capitalism, for all its inherent failings, has lifted more people out of dire poverty than any other. Has it made some people filthy rich--yes. But it also affords more people the ability to be generous and participate in philanthropy. That's the fact. Nobody wants a world where junkies are poking their arms or children are malnourished. But the truth of humans is that some are lazy, some are less smart, some are flat-out grifters--no matter how many verses of kumbayah get sung. One in every FIVE people is an amoral psychopath who will work a cooperative system to cheat others and benefit themselves without one minute's shame. That's the actual social science. The goal is the best for everyone, but the reality is the best for the most.

Pen Wilcock said...

Hiya.

I wrote a different comment here but wasn't happy with it. It may have been emailed through to you, but it wasn't really what I wanted to say. Not only that but it was long and I had to edit two or three times for typos, so my apologies if you get notifications on this post and an email blitz has flooded your inbox.

What I (think I) want to say is that my vote is for a nation that has free education available for all, free healthcare for all, old age pensions, financial assistance for disabled people, relief for the short-term sick, publicly owned trains and buses, housing for the homeless, publicly owned utilities accountable to health regulators and government not shareholders, regulation of all public services to ensure good practice, and recognition of and respect for human rights.

If that can be done by a Conservative government, then I think I would cheerfully vote Conservative, because I do believe in certain core Conservative values like freedom to choose, family life, trade rather than aid (where possible) and the opportunity to better oneself financially. I am not comfortable with collectives, and while I am in favour of equality I am also leery of the tendency to utilitarianism and mundanity that can come with socialism.

However, every single one of those things I said I want to see in a nation is being eroded in Great Britain at the present time by our right-wing government, which has handed out not millions but billions of pounds in tax-payers' money during this last (pandemic) year, in crony deals to corrupt and incompetent people. So my vote remains socialist unless and until the type of Conservatism we once used to have returns to oust the people currently at the helm.

On capitalism, it's worth bearing in mind that it is by its very nature a Ponzi scheme requiring an ever widening circle of resource for its method of wealth creation, and is directly responsible for the ecological destruction ever deepening all around us at the present time. Though I like freedom, and would like to be able to create security and stability for my family, I think the ecological crisis trumps all other considerations at present.

About the Bible, thinking particularly of the gospels, I remember that Jesus helped people regardless of whether they were good or worthy or not at all. He healed both the mentally and physically sick, and he charged no money at all, employed no staff, gave it all freely not on the basis of merit but need. It would be very difficult indeed to sustain an argument to convert a socialist to capitalism on the basis of the life of Jesus. It is a religion of grace. The OT prophets also unite in advocating a social duty to care for the poor and needy, the widow and the orphan, etc. I take the point that this can be done by philanthropists, and as long as it is done I don't really mind how or by whom. But here in Great Britain at the moment we have a government that wants to let people fleeing torture and rape drown in the sea, and send anyone who helps them to prison. I don't think that sits very well with the principles of the Bible, and I am very keen to vote this government out and get a better one.

I hope that expresses my thoughts better and more fully than what I commented (and deleted) before.

Just also to add, I find it helpful if people add their names to comments so I know who you are. Sometimes people who comment think their name will get added automatically, but I think that depends which internet body your ID belongs to.