Sigmund Freud was in denial about the
central drama of family life, and perhaps the dirtiest secret of
human civilization. Freud claimed that children essentially all
wanted to kill their parents—kill Dad, sleep with Mum, or kill Mum,
sleep with Dad. But the plain message of both history and story is
just the reverse: parents essentially all want to kill their
children.
Goya: Saturn devours his children. |
Freud missed this even in the Oedipus
cycle. In the story, after all, Oedipus has no desire whatever to
either kill his father or sleep with his mother. Both happen by
mistake, and he is utterly appalled. But Freud entirely glosses over
the fact that Oedipus's father deliberately tried to kill Oedipus in
the first place—leaving him exposed to die on a mountainside.
And, while parricide was essentially
unheard of, then or now, and considered unspeakably evil, the
exposure of unwanted infants was perfectly acceptable, then and, in
the form of abortion, now. It was standard practice not only in
Greece, but in pre-modern China and Japan. The ritual killing of
children was everywhere among the nations surrounding Israel in the
Hebrew Scriptures; the Romans report is as prevalent later in
Carthage. It seems to have been the standard everywhere before the
advent of ethical monotheism (Judaism, Christianity, and Islam). We
see survivals and echoes in the story of Abraham and Isaac, or indeed
of Jesus as the sacrificed Son of God.
Rembrandt: Abraham and Isaac |
In Greek mythology, the motif is
absolutely primordial: Kronos/Saturn devoured his children. Tantalos
sacrificially killed his son Pelops. Jews were suspected of killing
Christian children in order to make their Passover matzohs. Herod
killed all the male children; and so did Pharaoh. Atreus murdered the
children of Thyestes and fed them to him. Agamemnon sacrificed his
daughter Iphigenia. Romulus and Remus, founders of Rome, were left
exposed to die, but rescued by a she-wolf. Everywhere, the motif of
child-killing is present, and primordial, at the beginning of every
story.
Moloch |
We are all looking the other way on
this, and have been most of the time for millennia. But it simply
makes sense. It is not just that we all want unrestricted access to
sex without having to worry about the responsibility and expense of
children. It is not just that children can sometimes be annoying. The
child represents the mortality of the parent—it represents life
going on without him or her. And so there is a kind of sympathetic
magic that says, if you kill the child, you will live forever. If the
child lives, his life replaces yours. This is a sort of existential
truth, and so ever in the back of our minds. And it is explicitly the
math propounded by Gilles de Rais,who killed an uncounted number of
children in late Medieval France.
Gilles de Rais, Satanist. |
It is perhaps also behind the many
“hazing” or “coming of age” rituals of many cultures, which
seem unnecessarily cruel. Circumcision is the least of them. The long
years of schooling are perhaps the worst. If they do not kill and eat
them, adults at least seek to punish the young for their existence,
to get a bit of their own back.
To be clear, most parents are good to
their children, and self-sacrificing. There are maternal and paternal
instincts, thankfully, that work against this dark urge, not to
mention the influence of religion and conscience. But I would feel a
great deal more confident about our treatment of children generally
if we openly acknowledged this dark history and tradition. It seems
sinister in itself that we do not. It is perhaps the great cause, not
only of our time, but of all time.
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