t ♦ Class Book Author Title Imprint. IB— 47372-1 oro CT' :mmi. I A Serbian's Vision of America Bishop Nicholai Bishop of Ochrida, Serbia A Serbian's Vision of America 15 y Bishop Nicholai xBishop of Ochridi'Sy Serbia «< ^■5,* l^ FOREH'ORD Bishop Xicholai has just rctiniiitl to his itionst- of Orhrida. in sttulh- ern Serbia, after traveUing for three months thritutih the Uniteil States. He did not come to this country to ask for ani/ funds or relief, and he has taken nothing material hack with hiin. lie tidd me the dag after hi* arrival in New York that he had come to learn whether there e.rists in America that moral strength xchirh should be the accompaniment of great physical strength. "If so," he said, '•/ will plead with America to spend it as generously in changing the moral misery of Europe as she has spent her wealth in helping Europe's physical misery." In the folloTinng article Bishop Xicholai describes briefly what he has learned here. It is based on notes made during several long talks with him, as well as on a statement written by him for the Xew York Kx'enintf Post. It seemed to me that what Buihop Xicholai saiil regardim/ the xcorld situation and the implications that would follow .hnerica's adopt i^nt of any long-continued policy of self-interest and attempted isH East 36th Street, Xexv York. May la, 19;^1. •'•. • A Serbian's Vision of America w 'E Europeans have been living in the greatest Imaginable anxiety to see what would be the first step of the new American Govern- ment, what substitute the new Administration would give the world for the League of Nations which it has rejected. Exhausted and crip- pled by the latest of many wars, we are afraid of new and worse things, in Europe as well as elsewhere, and yearn for some new in- stitution to lead humanity towards peace. The idea of the League of Nations having been abandoned by America and misused by Europe, there remains at present only one organized system, living and working by day and night for its ends, and that is Communism. At the mo- ment the chief propaganda argument of the Communists is that they are the only peacemakers, the only idealists, the only real workers, the only ones who are willing to go to all lengths in order not to see the world drift back to its old standards and habits. What is there to do in this situation? If the League of Nations is not acceptable, what is acceptable? If Communism is the only scheme in existence to-day which is being pressed vigorously, we must organize another scheme to combat it. I am amazed that nobody seems to think it necessary to propose a substitute immediately. One cannot talk of isolation. In every high school there are clubs whose members make speeches about humanity and study international af- fairs. Over the doorway of one school in the West I saw written rhe legend: "For the Service of Humanity." The world has become small, but it waits to be proclaimed a united being. Europe has ex- plored the world. Can America organize it? Organization! Organization! is the watchword of our time, but few seem to guess that organization of anything must begin at the beginning — with the organization of my soul and yours. The great religious teachers are foolishly called idealists and dreamers. In reality they are the only practical men in history. They did not care for any social organization while they still savv^ the human soul disorganized. It is the patent of modern statesnien to try and build a house upon sand — to try and organize the twigs and leaves while at the root the tree stands disorganized and unbalanced. Nowhere in the world is there at present a full and harmonious manhood. On A SERBIAN'S VISION OF AMERICA the continent of Europe the Slavs are in the main dominated by the power of emotionalism, the Latino-Germans by the power of intel- lectualism, and the Anglo-Saxons by the power of will. Nowhere is there a harmony of the three. Can America be this harmony, this plero/na of manhood? America is more than a nation. Technically speakinji, it is pan-liumanity, for all races and nations have a larger or smaller rep- resentation of their own blood and soul in this neu- ortjanism. I'he Anglo-Saxon powerful will and stern moralit\ are directing it. Yet America is not Anglo-Saxon. It is pan-human. After battling with each other at home, nations, embittered and exhausted, come to Amer- ica, there to become friends and take up constructive work. That is why the world has been saying that America now is going to surprise them with some great new scheme, something more democratic and constructive than anything they have ever known, something more helpful, something more American. Hut the eyes of humanity are getting tired and dim looking for the coming of the good messenger from America. And instead we hear murmurs of safety and trade routes and mid- Pacific islands. I divide the history of the white race into the history of three great "Internationales": rhe iirst was the Roman, or Jupiterian. It was frankly an inter- national system of subjugation and exploitation. The second has been the European, or quasi-Christian. In actions it differs from the Roman hardly at all, but it is less frank in that it uses pleasant phrases as a cloak — democracy, and libert\, ' and even Christianity. Its words are the words of Christ, hut its acts follow the law of Rome. The third "Internationale" should be tlie American. It sliould come before the worhl with a new scheme. Christian principles have often been proclaimed, but never \et used as the basis for a concrete procedure, as the basis for all relations, both at home and with other nations. That is what we now must try, for otlierwise I do not see the existence of the present civilization. You ask what induces me to think that America can proclaim this new scheme and can force its trial. I say that spontaneously in- stinctively, Pro\ identially. this continent has been developing two main tendencies. Charity and Constructiveness, which are the modern forms of the deepest principles of Christianity I am not blind to many American faults and b\ -tendencies. Hut since I came to this country I have been trying to find the main tendency, and that. I find, is very different from what it is in Europe. In F^irope when we dislike our neighbor, when we are envious of the five-stor\ house A SERBIANS VISION OF AMERICA which he has built to overtop ours, we go out and burn that house down ; in America you try to build a ten-story house. Such is the European revenge, and such is yours. We, in Serbia, built a ridiculous small cottage. Austria looked at it enviously, and burnt it down. The same is true of (lermany and France. Burn down ! I think 1 have demonstrated not only the need for a helpful con- structive scheme but America's ability to evolve one and set it to work. So much for my introduction. Even if the proposal I am about to make is of no value it may at least spur better brains than mine to find a better plan than mine to oppose the peril that confronts us. Why not found a World Construction Committee, in the formation of which America shall take a leading part, but which two or three of the other most rich and powerful nations also should be asked to support, each setting aside for that purpose a certain fraction of its piesent war budgets? Perhaps the fust three members might be America, England, and Japan. Let all of them divert an equal part of their war budgets from work of destruction to work of construction. Let their committee send out (as America has by herself sent out, though on an inadequate scale in view of the immense undertaking), engineers and doctors and financiers and builders to bring water to lands where no water is, to bring health to lands ravaged by disease, to bring financial order to lands disor- ganized and impoverished, to build up where all has been torn down, or where nothing worth building has ever been built. There is hardly a part of the world but has been exploited and crippled and is now reaching a stage of desperation and chronic dissatisfaction — Poland, Albania, Calabria, Armenia, China, Russia, Austria, Persia, Ireland, Senegal, Palestine, and the Congo, to mention just the first that come to mind. Turn the best thought, of the world to the task of curing these festering sore spots, turn its best energies for once to something positive and constructive and practical. I would not cut down the war budgets of the nations. I would turn them to better uses. Men must be^ taxed in order to be taught to give. It is very easy to teach men to be selfish and indolent; it is very hard to teach them to work and to be charitable. Since the world began men have been forced to give to war and destruction. They now should be forced to gi\'e to peace and construction. A European gentleman who has spent some time in England dis- cussing a great world political scheme has lately come to America. When he complained to me the other day that the United States is very materialistic, that the people over here will not listen to what he has to say, I told him that America knows only two things: Char- ity and business, or as Carnegie put it, the two G's — Get and Give. A SERBIAN'S VISION OF AMERICA Americans will listen if the_\ are talked to along those two lines, but to purely political schemes they will pay very little attention, re- m.embering that political schemes have ruined Europe and knowing themselves to be mere children beside the politicians of Europe. They are rightly wary of diplomatic wise men coming from the East. But the scheme I propose is based on charity and business, both in equal degree — on charity, because the world needs help frantically and our civilization will die without it; on business, because thou- sands of men sent by thousands of firms and vast accumulations of material would go out from this country and the other producing countries to establish prosperity and health and a system of self- supporting work in all the waste places of the world, ^'ou say that politics would creep in. Undoubtedly it would try. but the world is waiting for some constructive action with an eagerness and impatience of which vou can hardly conceive, and it would not tolerate political meddlitig once the scheme was proposed clearly and firmly. Wilson did one great service at least. He introduced America to the world in a new and truer and better light. Had not .'\merica come to be seen in this new light there would not now exist in the world the great expectation and hope of which I have been speaking. If America hadi remained out of the war. if she had not come in for the reasons whiih she did. Communism would have swept across the world without let or hindrance. So, from the first, there has been this conflict between what I have called the idea of the American Internationale and the idea of Communism. 'I'he battle must not now be allowed to go by default, and that is what a return to the old European Internationale would be, because ^hat system is finished and even now counts its last days. Surely you are not going to resume the old role I vised to hear assigned to America — "the dollar-making country." That would mean that you withdraw from the fight. lea\ing us nothing to hope in save the hopeless hope of Moscow. I do not believe you will do that. America is. indeed, a money-making countrw but is not that far better than a money-saving country? An American makes money enthusiastically, but does he not just as enthusiastically give it away? In some other parts of the world one saves rather than makes money, which positively is a greater curse. The war has indeed dis- covered America in a new light. America helped to finish a pro- lunged slaughter (how many millions of human lives she saved by throwing a way her fifty thousand!) and got no war booty. That is one thing. America prohibited drinking. That is another thing. America extended unprecedented charity indiscriminately to allies and enemies in order to help crippled Europe. Three feats, three A SERBIAN'S VISION OF AMERICA honors, three new revealed qualifications! Therehy she lias deserxed new attention from the five continents and a new definition. What is this new definition of America? It ou^ht to he: A pan-human society of men intoxicated with the constructive and charitahle spirit. Those who say "we are tired of giving" do not speak as real Americans (^n the old continent charity has had about the same meaning as tipping, hut in America charity has for the first time in history become a seriously organized affair. Are you really tired? Are you tired, then, of being Christians? Your charity to all suffering nations has surpassed the charity of many other countries, but it has not yet surpassed your war budget. If the expenses of killing human beings are greater than the gifts for saving them, where, then, is charity? What is a penny given to Christ as to a dollar given to Mars? The poor widow in the Temple is still punishing Empires with shame. After an earthquake, when your house catches fire, you cannot say: "I will now rest a little from the shock of the earthquake." America cannot rest, she cannot stop, she must go on — one way or the other, she must go on. She is at the crossroads. On one hand lies the way Europe has alwaA's gone — the negative, quasi-Christian way; the other is the way of human salvation, with new principles strongly affirmed, the way of charity and energetic constructive effort. I am not proposing Utopia. It is not impractical to say that in a time of staggering need men should join together to meet that need. A healthy conception of life must be offered at once to oppose and offset the unhealthy and unnatural internationalism of Moscow. It must not be imagined that Bolshevism is altogether weak and negative. Bolshevism expresses, though stupidly, two things — the pro- test of men against the double-faced politics of Europe and the world need for a world policy. That cannot be fought by silence, by stunned brains, by a vacuum, but by proposing something better and by strug- gling and fighting for it continually. In education patterns are more important than precepts. Na- poleon and Bismarck and Lenin are all patterns — patterns of Kaiser- ism. Europe is not suffering from Kaisers, but from Kaiserism, and it can be cured only by a system based not on nations or classes or individuals, but on pan-humanity. Your providential task is to be a pattern of pan-humanity and a proponent of its principles. The ignorance of the educated is a Chestertonian subject. It is a wonderful subject, but Chesterton is disappointing when he enlarges upon it because he does not know that the real ignorance, the fatal ignorance of Europe to-day, is that no positive scheme of life can he built upon the old. outworn negative procedure which rejects A SERBIAN'S VISION OF AMERICA Christianity as a motive force. I talked the other day with Tesla, the great scientist, who is also my countryman, and at the end of it he said: "I have studied all processes and all religions. The most practical scheme, the most practical religion, is Christianity." The most practical! There lies the real ignorance of the educated in Europe — they do not know that Christianty is a practical scheme, and have refused ever to try it. They have even failed to find practical words to interpret it. I think those words are the two words that America loves, Charity and Constructiveness — to do, to construct, to organize, to put in order, to give. From what causes have races and civilization gone down except from extreme impoverishment or extreme prosperity? If Europe is in danger of perishing from the first cause, America is in no less danger of perishing from the second. Is she going to care for herself only, to attend to her own interests only, to enrich and strengthen herself still more, and in all these matters to imitate Europe? If so, then the end of the world is not before us, hut be- hind us, and humanity is not existing only in a Paradise lost, but in a Life lost too. Well, my vision of the future of America is different. America is not going merely to repeat Europe. The main tendency of America throughout her history has been to exceed Europe in every con- structive work. In less than the span of a human lite America has in this become a super-Europe. Slie is going to become a super-Asia also. The light of the East and the light of the \Vest will rest at their noon on the continent which lies between East and West. The spirit of the East is of a synthetic and inner tendency; the spirit of the West is of an analytic and external tendency. America will be neither West nor East, but both in unity, a harmony of elevated emo- tional, intellectual, and will-power. The last-born child of History, like Joseph, is going to save all its brethren from starvation and 'Ic-pair. Therein lies America's glory and her own salvation. Bishop Nicholai. LIBRARY OF CONGRESS m m