Sydney M. Williams
“Burrowing into
Books”
Reviews of Selected
Readings
“All Quiet on the
Western Front”
Erich Maria Remarque
December 20, 2016
This is the quintessential novel
of World War I. Re-reading this book after an absence of years is revealing. In
my opinion, it is among the most realistic pieces of war-time writings, like
Stephen Crane’s The Red Badge of Courage, or E.B. Sledge’s With the
Old Breed. It is a heartbreaking story told from the perspective of Paul
Baumer, who enlisted at 18 and served with three buddies in the German Army
during the Great War. His three friends’ dead, Båumer “…fell in October 1918, on a day that was so quiet and still on the
whole front, that the army report confined itself to the single sentence: ‘All
quiet on the Western Front.’”
This is a novel which all
Presidents should read. War, while necessary at times, should be avoided
whenever possible; as those who suffer most are not politicians who make war,
nor generals who conduct it. It is the foot soldier and innocent civilians who most
often pay the ultimate price. My father, having returned from Italy where he
served with the 10th Mountain Division, used to say that wars should
be fought by those who declare it, a sentiment with which Remarque agrees: “Then in the arena the ministers and
generals of the two countries, dressed in bathing drawers and armed with clubs,
can have it out among themselves. Whoever survives, his country wins.” Two
years into the war, Båumer, musing about his age and place in life and
comparing his situation to older soldiers with families of their own, ponders:
“We young men of twenty, however, have
only our parents, and some, perhaps, a girl – that is not much, for at our age
the influence of parents is at its weakest and girls have not yet got a hold
over us.”
Back at Camp Carson in October
1945, waiting to be mustered out and, with relief from knowing there would be
no invasion of Japan, my father – at age 35 one of the older soldiers – wrote
to my mother, venting the fear he had hidden from her when in combat: “I become more and more surprised that I ever
lived through it all. There would have been very few of us left if it had
lasted any longer. Somehow now I feel as if you had been helping me all the
time.” Remarque has Båumer speak to the fear made bearable by the
camaraderie that develops among soldiers. “It
is, he writes, “a great brotherhood…”
So, how to avoid war, and the
suffering we see today in Aleppo? There are only two possibilities: One is to
retreat from the world, to live within one’s borders, to avoid “foreign
entanglements,” to not get involved. But that risks encouraging aggressive behavior
by leaders who take advantage of another’s passivity. We cannot forget that,
like Shakespeare’s Othello, man remains an untamed animal. The better option is
to be economically strong and militarily powerful, to show that we and our
allies will not be bullied. The United States is unique. No other nation, so
inherently good, has ever dominated the globe as we do today. We are not
flawless. There are things we have done wrong and things we can do better, but,
would the world be better if Russia or China were dominant? The world will
never be rid of evil men and women. And war cannot always be avoided, but we
should never forget what it does to the individuals condemned to fight it.
All Quiet on the Western Front
is haunting. You (the reader) want to escape, but cannot. The pages turn. The
book teaches us that, for the foot soldier, the good die along with the bad.
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