Riots of Passage
When rites of passage disappear from public life, civilization does as well, and one result is young men running amok.
By Roger Scruton
Τhe riots in British cities over the
summer have been assimilated by our opinion-formers into the easy categories
that govern their thinking. Leftwing writers have cited urban deprivation,
poverty, and racism--in other words, factors for which the rioters cannot be
blamed. Right-wing writers have pointed their fingers at multiculturalism, the
welfare trap, and the breakdown of family life -- again, factors for which the
rioters cannot be blamed. The fact is, however, that those responsible for the
riots were those who took part in them. Rioting is natural to human beings, and
is a frequently observed effect of our inherent savagery. Young men are
particularly prone to riot: and in the conditions of the hunter-gatherer it is
to be assumed that, between sleeping, copulating, and eating, they didn't do
much else. Young men lapse into riot as soon as there issomething to be gained
from doing so, and whenever there is nothing serious to be lost. What needs
explaining is not the fact that they riot, but rather the far more
extraordinary fact that on the whole they don't. What is it, down the ages,
that has contained the energies of our youth, and ensured that they respect the
lives and property of others?
The answer is
"civilization." But that answer repeats the question. What exactly
makes a civilization? What is it that lifts human beings out of their savage
condition and endows them with the respect for order, the consideration for
others, and the habits of obedience without which the claim of humanity for a
special place on our planet is no better than the claim of rats, toads, or
mosquitoes?
In the 19th and early 20th
centuries, anthropologists had the chance to observe societies that had neither
writing nor formal institutions of government, but which were nevertheless in
possession of the precious thing that herds, packs, and riots lack, namely
perpetuity. Those "primitive" societies existed from generation to
generation, and each new generation absorbed the customs and acknowledged the
obligations that were passed on by its parents, unconsciously preparing itself
in turn to pass those benefits to its offspring. Although there were disputes
and rivalries, and although violence would erupt from time to time, and
sometimes exist in ritualized and repeated forms, the normal condition was one
of peaceful association, in which each member of the tribe felt bound to every
other in a web of obligations that could not be guiltlessly transgressed. The
many "I's" were subsumed in a single "we," and what made
this possible, more than any other factor, was the interest that the tribe took
in the critical transitions on which its perpetuity depended. Each birth was
acknowledged as an event in the life of the tribe, as well as an event in the
life of the parents. The transition from childhood to adult responsibility was
not, as now, a private accomplishment, to be achieved anyhow or not at all, but
a public concern, to be given ceremonial recognition. In the ceremony of
initiation obligations would be solemnly assumed and the interest of the tribe
acknowledged as greater than the interests of any individual. Marriage was
likewise a public rite, and when, at last, the individual was laid to rest
among his ancestors, that passage too was marked out as the concern of
everyone.
Rites of passage (as Arnold van
Gennep named them a hundred years ago) still exist here and there in our world,
notably in societies untouched by modern communications. But nobody can deny
that they are disappearing from Europe in general, and from Britain in
particular. When the right-wing commentators complain of the breakdown of
family life, they don't really mean that homes are now fungible and troubled.
That has been the case from the beginning of civilization. I was raised in such
a home. What the commentators mean, or ought to mean, is that the crucial
institution on which children depend for their security, namely marriage, is
disappearing. Out of wedlock births are now the norm in Europe, and the only
people who urgently seek to get married are homosexuals, anxious for a
recognition that is rapidly losing its real significance. The absence of this
crucial rite of passage means that birth, too, is a private matter, no longer
an event in the life of a community but a private passion of the mother, who is
helped through her ordeal (should she choose to go through with it) by the same
welfare system that will take charge of the child.
But perhaps the most important loss
is that of the rite of passage out of childhood. Coming of age was a formal
welcome offered by the community. In response to this welcome the adolescent
assumed the benefits and burdens of membership: maturity ceased to be a
biological phenomenon and was recreated as a social gift. In complex societies
like ours this transformation was not marked by a single ceremony, although
here and there the old ceremonies existed. It was marked by a multitude of
small-scale undertakings: local offers of membership and conferrals of
responsibility that were looked on with pride by the participants and by those
in charge.
Teams, scout troops, schools, and
clubs all offered their local rites of passage; Bar-Mitzvah, Confirmation, and
first Communion were religious icons embossed on the same ready currency. In a
hundred ways adults maintained the boundary between childhood and maturity, and
offered maturity on terms -- terms that involved the whole community, and which
could be accepted only by conceding the right of the community to obedience in
the things that mattered most to it.
I GUESS WHAT I AM SAYING HERE is
plain common sense. If so, however, why should we be surprised if our societies
lose the precious gift of perpetuity, when the great transitions in which
membership can be publicly acknowledged no longer exist? Children stumble into
adulthood today, unprepared and unendorsed. Little or nothing protects them
from the spectacle of adult disorder. The traditional goals, such as marriage
and family, are no longer held out as stages on life's way. And the
proliferation of sexual imagery and temptation destroys both the innocence of
childhood and the responsibility of adult life, so that the boundary between
the two is erased. In a very real sense children are left to fend for
themselves, to forge out of the debris that they witness the only kind of
membership that can be rescued from it, which is that of the gang.
The essence of the gang is that it
lives in antagonistic relation to its surroundings. The world around the gang
belongs to others, to those who have no claim to membership and whose property
and lifestyle mark them out as alien. Hence the gang emerges into a world
already closed to it, and it must do something to make its presence known.
Various avenues suggest themselves. One is to vandalize the public space and
leave a rival mark on it. This is the real meaning of graffiti, which are the
signatures of gangs, designed both to deface the public space and to privatize
its meaning.
Other self-made rites of passage are
available. The violent confrontation with other gangs is one of them, and in
British cities this form of initiation is quite common, leading in recent years
to many deaths through knife attacks. Riot too can be a rite of passage -- a
way of "joining in" that offers both membership and liberation, and
which fulfils the longing for vengeance against a world that has hitherto
offered nothing but the sign of others' ownership. It does not normally
escalate to the extent that we have witnessed in Britain this last summer. But
riot is there in the background of adolescent life, as everyone knows who lives
close to one of our large inner city schools.
It is not only in Britain that these
effects are witnessed. Every public space in Germany has been defaced by
graffiti, and little or nothing is done to punish those responsible--after all,
punishment belongs to the authoritarian way of life that the Germans are trying
so hard to forget. At the same time, this freedom to deface does not satisfy
the hunger of young Germans for membership or their anger against a world that
has failed to provide it. Every Friday night for the past four years
automobiles have been set alight in Berlin, and an article in Die Welt am
Sonntag recently compared the situation in the German capital with that in
Tottenham, where the British riots began. Nor is the German obsession with
neo-Nazism entirely absurd. Deprive young people of a rite of passage into the
social order and they will look for a rite of passage out of it. That, in my
view, is the true explanation of the Norwegian mass murderer Breivik, a man
whose father had rejected him, who found no society that would include him, and
who took his revenge on young people who seemed to be enjoying the very
membership that he lacked.
It is one thing to acknowledge the
need for rites of passage, another to propose a way of rediscovering them. So
far the efforts of politicians in Europe and America have been negative. The
effect of current policies has been to subsidize out-of-wedlock births, to
remake marriage as a contract of cohabitation, and to drive religion, which is
the true guardian of rites of passage, from the public sphere. Those policies
have been embarked on with the best of intentions, but with a remarkable
indifference to what we know of human nature. The way back to perpetuity will
be long and painful, but it is surely evident that the first step must be to
stop subsidizing the alternative.
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