ERIC HOBSBAWM APOLOGIST FOR MASS MURDER


During the 1970’s history was dominated by Marxist historians such as Christopher Hill, E P Thompson and Eric Hobsbawm; some, like Hobsbawm never left the Communist Party. Being politically educated by Orwell this meant that I could never, as we used to say, ‘get into’ Hobsbawm, a funny smell came of his books for me and consequently I tended to steer clear of him as an historian. I am perfectly willing to concede that I have been the poorer for it, still one has one standards and I draw the line at apologists for mass murder. Now he is dead and the eulogies have commenced, starting last night on Radio 4 with a tribute headed up by a nauseatingly gushing Simon Scharma.


One of the most chilling parts of this, at times embarrassing love fest, was a clip from Desert Island Discs when Hobsbawm is confronted by Sue Lawley about his failure to leave the Communist Party in the face of the horrors of Stalinism. At first he trots out the old lie, we didn’t know, then more truthfully, we didn’t want to know and finally, with the chilling ‘well the dead are dead!” Certainly there is no disputing this last profound fact; when Sue Lawley breaks of her line of questioning with, “your next record please,” you can hear in her voice, a basically decent British journalist, that the atmosphere in the studio has changed profoundly.

When it is time for Scharma to confront the old apologist for Stalin with the same question he is audibly reluctant to do so, whilst Hobsbawm admits that he wishes the question would just go away, (I bet he did), before stating that “to Hell with all of them, let them take responsibility for what went on in their watch.”[1] This is a bit rich from someone who never took responsibility for his own tawdry apologia for murder.

I am sure many will argue his merits as an historian and lover of jazz and that my position is too severe. So be it, for whatever other qualities he may have possessed Mr Hobsbawm has been rewarded by a dignified death in his own bed, something that his Marxist intellectual contemporaries who sought refuge in Soviet Russia, not to mention the other millions of innocents, were denied.



[1] One wonders to what he refers, Vietnam, the Congo, Chile, Nicaragua, the post fascist South American dictatorships, it may have escaped Mr Hobsbawm’s notice that it was possible to fight against these evils whilst still opposing soviet communism, as even the most compromised followers of Trotsky could have informed him.  
 
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