For almost sixteen years, Bill Vallicella, dba The Maverick Philosopher, has served as one of my reliable sources for good reading suggestions. Some of the books he recommends are over my head, philosophically speaking. I don’t have the training necessary to pursue them. Some are no longer my cup of tea – Jack Kerouac, for instance, a writer dear to Bill. But a handful of books he praises have gone into heavy rotation. Chief among them is Theodor Haecker’s Journal in the Night (trans. Alexander Dru, Pantheon, 1950). I first read it at Bill’s urging in 2007. Earlier this week, under the heading “Readings for Dark Times,” he again recommends the Journal, along with three other titles, all new to me.
Haecker (1889-1945) was a writer,
Catholic convert and Kierkegaard scholar placed under house arrest in Munich by
the Nazis. He was forbidden to write or speak publicly. His house was destroyed
in 1944 by Allied bombing. Diabetes claimed his vision, his son was killed on
the Russian front and Haecker died less than a month before Hitler’s suicide
and Germany’s surrender. He kept his journal a secret, writing at night. His
was an emblematic twentieth-century life. I pulled Haecker from the shelf again
and wasn’t disappointed. He writes in brief passages, often aphoristically:
“The paradoxical state of
the world can be seen from the fact that scoundrel helps scoundrel more than
the good, the good.”
“That things first of all
sound right, and that dissonance comes afterwards—is the first principle of my
philosophy. And so: Good comes before evil, Truth before the lie, and the
beautiful before the ugly. That is my whole philosophy.”
“All in all, the best
things that God has given me are my nights of solitary writing. An occasion for
eternal thankfulness.”
And this, with wonderful implications for the books we choose to read and how we decide to remain loyal to them despite their failings:
“I really have to like an author before I can
take up his faults in any detail: all that he might have done better, and so
on. In most cases I leave them entirely aside.”
I borrowed from the
library another book recommended by Bill: Paul Roubiczek’s Across the Abyss:
Diary Entries for the Year 1939-1940 (trans. George Bird, Cambridge University
Press, 1982). Roubiczek (1898-1972) was born in Prague to a Jewish family and served
in the Austrian army during World War I. That experience led him to convert to Christianity
and emigrate from Germany in 1933, eventually settling in England, where he
taught philosophy and German literature at Cambridge University.
Thus far I’ve only browsed
in Across the Abyss. Here is a passage from the entry Roubiczek made on this
date, November 13, in 1939:
“This constant news of the
deportation of Jews from Germany to the Polish reserve is terrible. Now
apparently the Vienna Jews are being transported to Lublin. Human imagination,
human strength does not suffice to picture all the suffering and all the
destruction embodied in that brief statement! At one time the talk is of 22,000—then
out of 2,000, approximately 600 have disappeared—then eighty-two have committed
suicide—those figures, even if exaggerated for propaganda purposes, are
unthinkably dreadful, and in Vienna alone there are still 100,000 Jews! To make
the thought bearable at all, there is really nothing for it but to hide away
behind these inanimate figures and not attempt to bring them to life.”
The twentieth century
taught us how to juggle otherwise unthinkable numbers – statistics as anesthesia
for the conscience.
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