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Perils of "Progressivism"
John Walker Lindh's search for Truth
 

by James Hitchcock
December 21, 2001

The revelation that a young American named John Walker Lindh has been fighting for the Taliban in Afghanistan adds yet another twist to the issue of religious fundamentalism, which "enlightened" opinion insists is a dangerous phenomenon.

In the case of Walker (as apparently he calls himself) the most interesting question -- still unanswered -- is what drew him to Muslim extremism. He had what enlightened opinion would consider a model upbringing, completely insulated from religious fanaticism. He was raised in ultra-trendy Marin Country in California, his father a Catholic, his mother a Buddhist, and attended a self-consciously "progressive" school which tried to teach its students "to think for themselves".

Somehow Walker "thought" his way into what is perhaps the most extreme religious movement in the world today, one which negates everything his upbringing taught him. The Taliban believe that they alone posses all relevant truth, and they are utterly intolerant, even to the point of killing those who reject their doctrine. Part of their religious system is the most extreme subjugation of women.

One would thus assume that, when Walker's recent history came to light, his parents and former teachers would have asked themselves plaintively "where did we go wrong?" Instead they have rushed to be "supportive". Like a father in a television comedy, Walker's father's only complaint is that his son left home without saying where he was going. The principal of his former school is pleased that Walker showed the kind of "independence of mind" which the school seeks to cultivate, and some of the residents of Marin County are likewise gratified that Walker followed his own path.

These seeming contradictions can be explained in two related ways. One is that Walker sided with America's enemies, and we are still suffering from a legacy of the l960s, which says "my country is always wrong". The other, also a legacy of the l960s, is the belief that any extreme position, so long as it is personally chosen, is to be respected as a sign of courage and authenticity.

But it is not quite that simple. Suppose Walker had joined an extremist Christian sect and had begun bombing abortion clinics, proclaiming that the United States embodies the culture of death. Then, I strongly suspect, his parents and former teachers would not be nearly so understanding or admiring. Then indeed they would ask "where did we go wrong?" It would not even be necessary for Walker to engage in acts of violence. Joining the Christian Coalition would be enough to raise alarms.

It is not true that enlightened opinion condemns all forms of extremism and violence. Some liberals have offered only perfunctory condemnations of the bombing of the World Trade Center, the main lesson they want to teach us greater "understanding" of groups other than our own.

In the midst of the turmoil which followed the September ll attacks, a woman in California was on trial for terrorist acts she engaged in decades ago. There was an outpouring of liberal sympathy for someone who was idealistic, at best perhaps a little too intense. There is a modern intellectual tradition of approving acts of violence as demonstrating the seriousness and "commitment" of the perpetrators.

Predictably, a journalistic commentator warned that Walker's case shows "the danger of a life lived by absolutes", which indeed it does. But that still leaves unsolved the riddle of how Walker's sanitized upbringing brought him to the place he now occupies. If religious "indoctrination" can lead to these results, apparently so can a determined system of non-indoctrination.

Walker's development is unusual in that he gravitated toward an extreme religious group with a resolutely pre-modern outlook. But it is possible that, like the "Unabomber" who sent explosives through the mails in the name of environmentalism, and like the privileged young people who at one time joined terrorist groups like the Weathermen, his life also shows the dangers of complete "openness", of the rejection of all absolutes, of unlimited "pluralism".

There is something basic to human nature which longs for truth, and if people are denied access to it in traditional ways, they may look for it in unexpected and possibly dangerous places.


James Hitchcock, professor of history at St. Louis University, writes and lectures on contemporary Church matters. His column appears in the diocesan press. His two-volume book on religion and the Supreme Court has just been published by Princeton University Press. E-Mail: Dr. James Hitchcock


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