The importance of nationality (the Albanian case) and the danger of utopianism according to Sir Roger Scruton by Albert Bikaj
Language, territory, culture, tradition, and
history are elements that unite individuals, transforming them into a community
that shares common interests, rights, and obligations. This social
connection, developed as a political concept throughout the history of human
civilization since its genesis has been and continues to this day to remain
closely connected with the desire for freedom and self-government of a
people. This desire, transformed throughout history into political ideas,
has been and remains the source of the ancient virtue of patriotism – a virtue
developed especially in the Greco-Roman civilization, from antiquity, the
Middle Ages to the present day.
The majority agreed with this opinion, but after
the catastrophe of the middle of the 20th century, continuing until today, the
views on the nation and patriotism have changed radically.
A significant number of intellectuals and
influential politicians share diametrically opposed opinions regarding the
concept of the nation. The part that wants the new spirit, seeing the
nation-state as deficient, as anomalous and constantly promoting ideas and
policies supposedly in the name of peace and cosmopolitanism, the concept of
the nation and especially the nation-state want to replace it with a system of
new utopian–multinational–global.
As a result, today the concept of the nation in
the Western world is very much in danger, and together with the West, in
different forms, the other nations of Europe, including ours, are facing it.
This is also the reason for the selection,
translation, and publication of this book in the Albanian language, in which
Sir Roger Scruton, from the English perspective, although taking a critical
stance towards nationalism, eloquently defends the concept and the important
role of patriotism and nationality, as well as warns of the fatal consequences
in case of the destruction of this concept. According to him, utopian
cosmopolitanism is as dangerous as chauvinistic nationalism.
For the English conservative philosopher, the
nation is the successful achievement of Western civilization, which he defends
as the cornerstone of the state and contemporary society, arguing that the
nation-state has historically proven to be the most stable social organization
in terms of the order, freedom, justice, and modern democracy. Proven also
in the case of Albanians, with our nation based on the renaissance concept of
Albanianism - which remains an irreplaceable cornerstone of unity, and freedom
of the nation and the Albanian state. The concept of the Albanian
revivalists has impressed Scruton, who has not left it unaddressed, saying:
This is a country where Christians and Muslims
have lived for most of the time in understanding, and sharing their love for the
country and the will to protect it. In the village cemetery they rest side
by side, their religious differences etched in small symbols on their
tombstones. This was one of the first countries in the world where
national identity replaced religion as the source of social order, a fact which
should surely be a source of guidance on how to survive a new world of
religious tensions. Albania has its own difficulties; but in the
young people, I saw the hope and commitment that will bring this country fully
into the flow of European life, a symbol of 'unity in diversity', which has
been the hallmark of our common culture since the Enlightenment. [1]
Precisely the concept of Albanianism has begun to
be attacked and despised, calling for its change or replacement with other
experimental concepts which may have serious consequences not only for the
culture, and identity of the two Albanian states but also for the social order
and fundamental freedoms. Among them, the freedom of belief and religious
harmony that are characteristic and priceless treasures of our
nation. These freedoms have their roots in our traditional concept of
Albanianism - which remains the best guarantor of the exercise of their rights.
Religious harmony and Albanianism stand as a
counterweight to radical tendencies of any kind. Therefore, while reading
this book, the reader can learn from the English philosopher that patriotism
and the nation, especially in our case Albanianism, should not be taken for
granted, much less as outdated ideas.
The utopian alternative offered to us, as always
in the past of humanity, remains an extremely dangerous
experiment. Indeed, history teaches us that precious things are created
with difficulty, but can be lost very easily; the consequences of
experiments of such magnitude are very expensive for civilization, freedom, and
above all human lives.
-Albert Bikaj
*excerpted from Need for Nations translator Roger
Scruton.
[1] See: Roger Scruton, Filozofia moderne:
nga Aristoteli te filozofia analitike, përkth. Spartak Ngjela (Tiranë: UET
Press, 2017).
Hello! is your Albanian Latin Mass website still active? Are you still following it? I am writing from Italy.
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