Selfless
Action
By Matt Koehl
(2006)
We espouse a Cause.
It is a Cause far greater than our individual selves. It is one of Life. It is
one of Right and Truth – of our fundamental being.
Few today recognize the
awesome dimensions of that which we represent. Fewer still have come to act
upon that recognition.
Many, disturbed by the
baleful unfolding of events in an increasingly corrupt and chaotic world, grasp
for panaceas and palliatives with which to alleviate the inner pain and anguish
they feel. Some do take action to assuage the pain; but the ineffectiveness of
the remedy or the enormity of the problem soon leads most to abandon the
effort.
There is, of course, one
correct, logical, rational solution to our contemporary dilemma. If everyone
concerned were to embrace this solution and act upon it with dedication and
consistency, the issue could certainly be mastered, albeit against great odds.
The unhappy fact is that
most of those concerned lack even a modicum of staying-power. Too quickly do
they grow weary and give up, without committing themselves unreservedly to the
struggle, win or lose.
In a declining West
today, most people – to greater or lesser degree – are infected by decadence
and spiritual sickness. Instead of being active participants in their own
destiny, they have become idlers and spectators. And so, after a set duration –
depending in each case upon the moral stamina and steadfastness of the
particular individual – the struggle is abandoned by those who should know
better, with the excuse that the Cause is hopeless.
Hopeless, yes, perhaps
for that one individual in his own subjective judgment. But not
objectively hopeless for a Cause whose triumph is reserved exclusively for
those worthy of it.
At the root of this lame
attitude is the expectation of quick, easy, painless results. If a certain
outcome is not realized within a set period of time within one’s own mortal
lifetime, one gives up and the whole enterprise is abandoned. Forgotten
completely are earlier protestations of concern about the condition of the
world and the need for a better one.
Ironically, it is this
very focus on fixed results, rather than on fulfillment of duty, which obscures
the vision and blinds one to those possibilities which might otherwise open up
as a by-product of correct thinking and acting, and thus lead to that
very victory we all seek. Amidst all the anxiety about the existing state of
affairs, this fixation on outcome quickly leads to frustration and despair when
success is not easily and readily achieved.
But this attitude – this
mental posture – is wrong and self-defeating. It is therefore prudent that we
put all of that aside, detach ourselves, and take a fresh look at reality.
Ancient Wisdom
The ancient Aryan
warriors of India called it nishkâma karma – action without attachment,
action without personal desire. It is selfless endeavor, efficient action
without fear or favor, and may be defined as the performance of one’s duty
without desire for the fruits of one’s actions.
In its distinctive contribution
to moral insight, that great holy book of spiritual wisdom, the Bhagavad-Gîtâ
puts it this way: “Set thy heart upon they work, not upon the fruits
thereof. Work not for a reward; but never cease to do they work.” (II:47)
In a word, the Gîtâ
commends the ideal of selfless action, of duty done for its own sake
alone, not out of desire for, or attachment to, its consequences.
Here there is no regard
for personal reward or self-aggrandizement of any kind. One might say that it
is simply a matter of doing the right thing. Nothing more, nothing less.
Put another way, selfless
action is disciplined action directed toward a goal greater than one’s own
personal whims and interests. Understood correctly, it is acting – not
for the results, not out of desire or for the pleasure of the moment, nor from
attachment to anything or to the outcome of a particular activity – but solely
in concert with that Will which permeates this universe, pursuing its higher
purpose.
Personal Detachment
There are two components
to the concept of selfless action: selflessness, or detachment,
and action. While, on the one hand, it calls for non-desire and
selflessness, it also call for action – for doing.
The first component, detachment,
is simply the removal of the mind from all extraneous distraction and the
devoted, disciplined, single-minded concentration of the will toward a higher
spiritual and moral purpose.
Selfless action
insists on the exclusion of all personal inclination and desire – all consideration
of pleasure or pain, success or failure – from the moral equation. The sole
focus of its concern are the objective values of loyalty and honor
in the service of a higher cause. Indeed, genuine moral life consists in giving
up egoistic and acquisitive instincts and embracing such values.
The converse of
selfishness, of course, is selfishness, or personal attachment. Because
of its attachment, action so undertaken tends to be flighty and fickle. And
because it cannot be sustained, it cannot offer the prospect of victory in a
protracted struggle.
When the mind is attached
to objects of the senses and to that which lies without, mental focus and
rational stability are impaired, as is concentration of the will. As a result,
such attachment leads to unreliability and inconstancy.
As the Gîtâ
teaches: “When one dwells on objects of the senses, attachment to them
grows; from attachment, desire is born; from desire comes anger; out of anger,
confusion arises; through confusion, memory lapses; from lapse of memory,
understanding is lost; from the loss of understanding, one is destroyed.”
(Ibid., II:62-63)
But when the mind is
withdrawn from sense-objects and given moral direction, this fleeting flux of
desires vanishes and moral fixity is established. Acquiring such disciplined
mental discrimination is an essential prerequisite for the development of an attitude
which alone will enable one to practice selfless action.
It is through disciplined
discrimination that the individual comes to realize his true nature as
well as his true purpose. Without personal attachment but with
indifference to material distraction, the person of understanding transcends
the dualism of hope and fear, gain and loss, joy and sorrow, hate and personal
desire.
If one’s senses are
withdrawn from their objects, wisdom is firmly set. Material desire is replaced
by the desire of the soul and the realization of this inner self – one’s true
being – as part of a greater Whole, which is the proper goal of all one’s
striving.
Those who are endowed
with the knowledge of selfless action – renouncing all motives of
self-interest – perform their actions without attachment to their consequences.
They are not carried away by success or depressed by failure, but enjoy mental
equanimity. Neither the usefulness of an act nor its futility can affect their
will.
Thus, they have achieved
sovereign control of the mind and through it that inner freedom, which
provides for unity of thought, word and deed – which is the hallmark of Aryan
moral consciousness.
No longer are they slaves
to the senses but have attained that sovereignty, which we may describe as consciousness
of the soul. The mind – having acquired an attitude of concentration and
equipoise – is thus balanced, and the will is now free to establish its
sovereignty and moral authority.
And so, they are immune
to the blandishments and temptations of the enemy.
Without such moral
autonomy and self-control, one is susceptible to the wiles and snares of the
adversary. When we are subservient to the senses and material things, we create
vulnerabilities, which the enemy can exploit to corrupt and destroy for his
purposes. In this way alone does he gain power over us.
Beyond this, when a man
stakes a claim to the fruits of his actions, he thereby supplants his original
purpose. And so, without detachment, it is as though he had not acted in the
first place.
Action as Duty
The other component of selfless
action is action itself, which derives from the imperative of duty.
This imperative does not derive from selfish considerations, but is
disinterested and categorical. It eliminates the influence of personal
inclination and implies respect for practical reason, which excludes all
motives of the senses, just as it rejects the impetuous claims of egoism.
Nishkâma karma
is the dynamic power of duty exalted by inner detachment. It is freedom in
action, not freedom from action. As such, it is an expression of deepest
religiosity. But whereas the inducements of punishment and reward are
indispensable in the Judeo-Christian moral scheme, Aryan spirituality rejects
such selfish considerations as something alien to the instincts of our race.
Everyone has a station in
life – actually, a core identity – set by birth and blood, and one is
called to perform the duties of that station in a disinterested spirit of
detachment.
The advantage that flows
from the performance of selfless action may be summarized quite briefly.
No longer is one subject to the senses or to that which lies without. Rather,
the imperative of morality as disinterested duty now reveals its own intrinsic
values of dignity, purity and sublimity.
It must be emphasized
that selfless action does not suggest unconcern for a given goal or
purpose. Indeed, implicit in the very concept is the idea of a cause, or
purpose, beyond the interests of the individual, which provides the necessary
field for action.
And there can be no
higher cause than that embodying the ultimate Will of this universe, which was
disclosed anew in modern time by a most extraordinary figure. His was the
highest moral mission; and by his very appearance, he has summoned us to action
– to duty.
Savitri Devi referred to
the doctrine/practice of selfless action as karma yoga, which she
defined in this way:
“Karma yoga
is one of the teachings of the Bhagavad-Gîtâ Not only of the Gîtâ;
you get it in National Socialism. I’ll tell you what karma yoga is. Karma
yoga is: Act with your body for the interest of the universe, according to
the scheme of the universe, the divine scheme, and without passion, without any
personal attachment or disgust or enthusiasm or anything. Just do it because
it’s your duty. Act in the name of duty alone. That’s karma yoga.” (And Time
Rolls On, Black Sun, Atlanta, 2005, p.124)
Quoting a Brahmin sage,
Savitri Devi went on to remark:
“ … Work for your cause,
work for whatever you love. But work in detachment. Try not to feel upset if
you are unsuccessful. Try not to feel pride if you are successful. If people
blame you or insult you, be indifferent. If they praise you, don’t feel pleased.
Feel indifferent. ‘All right, they praised me.’ Don’t feel exalted if people
are praising you.” (Ibid., 125-126)
Pflichterfüllung
and Heroism
The concept of duty and
its inner law lies at the hear of selfless action. It provides the moral
premise for all higher human existence. The Führer has explained its
significance:
“Our own German language
possesses a word which magnificently designates this kind of activity:
Pflichterfüllung (fulfillment of duty), which means not to be self-satisfied
but to serve the greater whole. The basic attitude from which such activity
arises we call – to distinguish it from egoism and selfishness – idealism. By
this we understand simply the individual’s capacity to make sacrifices for the
whole, for his fellow men.” (Mein Kampf, I:11)
(In speaking of idealism,
the reference here to “selfishness” is an allusion to the self as
synonymous with ego, as the term is commonly understood in Western
parlance. It is not a reference to the inner soul itself, which is distinct
from the ego.)
Racial idealism is the
practical expression of selfless action. It establishes the moral
framework for Aryan conduct. The duty which it obligates is, at the same time,
part of a larger concept of honor. And heroism is its highest manifestation.
In his book, the Führer
speaks of heroism in terms of karma yoga: “… He who first demands of
Fate a guarantee of success thereby renounces all idea of an heroic deed.”
(Ibid., II:2)
Appealing to the Aryan
sense of honor and heroism, the Führer instructs us further with these
words: “We must not ask whether it is possible, but whether it is necessary.
If it is impossible, then we shall try our best and perish in the attempt.”
In these two statements
is contained the quintessence of selfless action. Not for the fruits –
not for the results or personal gain or the promise of success – but out of
moral obligation to the inner law commanding performance of one’s duty.
In the Heroic Age of
pre-Christian Europe this idea was well understood. Men did not demand a guarantee
of success before they acted to do what had to be done. Rather, they proceeded,
bravely and unflinching, from an inborn sense of honor in the face of Fate,
that inexorable causal force and arbiter of all things. The underlying
perception was that they were acting within the context of a greater whole and
for the greater good of kindred and kind.
This idea was also
expressed in the Anglo-Saxon epic poem, “The Battle of Maldon”: “Soul shall
be more stalwart, heart the higher, courage the greater, the more our might
diminisheth.” Absent here is any thought of retreat or escape; there is
only the iron resolve to face death with courage, dignity, and head held high.
Not for the fruits, but
for the doing and duty itself.
Selfless Action versus Ascetism
The concept of selfless
action is not to be confused with ascetism, which involves the renunciation
and cessation of all activity.
According to the ascetic
outlook, activity entails endless work and worry and, if one’s aspirations are
not crowned with fulfillment, discontent and depression are inevitable. And so,
in consequence, the ascetic withdraws from the fuss and fury of life to seek
inner peace through disengagement and contemplation.
By contrast, the man of
action does not withdraw and turn inward, but cheerfully embraces struggle and
toil as the ideal in life. For him, selflessness consists of the renunciation
of personal desire, not of action itself.
Restraint and discipline
of the senses must, accordingly, not be seen as selfish ends in themselves,
enabling one to escape from the rigors of life. Rather – along with action
itself – they are to be considered a means by which one is able to
discharge one’s duty in the service of a higher cause.
Thus, selfless action
does not suppress the senses, but merely sublimates them – spiritualizes
them – for a higher purpose.
Examples
The concept of nishkâma
karma is best described, of course, in the celebrated Bhagavad-Gîtâ,
where in the lead-up to the battle of Kurukshetra, the hero Arjuna is
instructed by the divine avatar as to his moral responsibilities.
The teachings set forth
in the Gîtâ were intuitively understood by all Aryan peoples in ancient
time, including the much-maligned Philistines – descendants of those Sea
Peoples who settled in coastal Palestine in the 13th century BC. Facing
daunting odds against overwhelming Israelite might, their battle-cry became: “Now
be strong, and be men, that ye be not slaves of the Hebrews. Be men, and
fight”! (1 Sam. 4:9)
As it turned out, not
only did these Bronze Age vikings fight, but they triumphed, slaying
30,000 of the enemy and capturing its most sacred totem, the ark housing the
Torah!
A similar attitude
inspired Leonidas and his 300 Spartans at the Thermopylae pass, when they were
besieged by the vast host of Xerxes. When informed that Persian arrows were so
numerous and thick that they were darkening the sky, one of the Spartans replied
laconically: “Good, then we shall fight in the shade.” They stood their
ground and fell to the last man – thereby buying precious time and saving not
only all of Hellas, but the entire European world.
Graphically, the concept
of selfless action is nowhere better illustrated than in Albrecht
Dürer’s famous woodcut, “Ritter, Tod und Teufel,” in which the Knight proceeds
along his appointed path, unperturbed and undeterred, despite the menacing
displays of Death and Devil, and all their minions.
During the Seven Years’
War, the spirit of selfless devotion to duty was exemplified by Frederick the
Great, as he faced down virtually every European power to create a state which
became the nucleus for a future Reich. Similar Aryan virtu
prompted Robert E. Lee to resign his Union commission and leave his beloved
Arlington home to lead the armies of the South in an ill-fated struggle for the
sovereignty and freedom of his native land.
And again, the same Aryan
code was upheld at the Alamo, when a handful of frontier riflemen – without
consideration for their personal fate – stepped across a line in the sand, to
cast their lot for honor against Santa Anna’s besieging hordes.
In our own modern time,
the Aryan spirit of honor and loyalty unto death was reaffirmed by the heroes
of the Waffen-SS and the Hitlerjugend, as well as by their
immortal Leader, as they fought to the very last against hopeless odds amidst
the flaming ruins and rubble of an embattled Reich capital – in the full
knowledge that the battle was already lost.
And as an epilogue to
that precious blood sacrifice, we have the further example of the man who stood
closer to the Führer than anyone else and who was to be martyred for his
faithfulness. Known as the “conscience of the Movement,” Rudolf Hess was a
lifelong practitioner of karma yoga. In life, he acted with
single-minded loyalty and devotion; in death, he gave new meaning and eloquence
to those words, spoken at the great rally in 1934, to stand by the Führer
and his Cause – “in good days and bad.”
In Summary
For the individual Aryan
warrior there can be no promise of success. That, by definition, would rob him
of the opportunity for the heroic deed. Without selfless action and the
moral freedom it bestows, however, no Aryan victory can be achieved.
What we fight for is the
holiest of causes. It is this alone, and the moral obligation which it compels,
that should inspire our thoughts and actions. Let us, therefore, heed these
words from Chapter 2, Verse 31, of the ancient Gîtâ: “Look to your own
duty; do not tremble before it; nothing is better for a warrior than a battle
of sacred duty.”
Today our race faces the
supreme challenge of the ages, beside which our own mortal existence and all
selfish pursuits are of no consequence.
The issue is a simple
one: TO-BE-OR-NOT-TO-BE. Life or death for our kind? Are we worthy of
life on this Earth, or do we deserve extinction and oblivion?
The subjective means
given to us for deciding the issue and determining our worthiness is struggle.
Struggle does not necessarily guarantee success; but without it, no victory is
possible. And the summons to struggle is called – duty.
The struggle before us is
one of protraction extending over decades and generations. It cannot be
sustained by ephemeral passions or the whims of the moment, but only by focused
and unrelenting WILL which is unaffected by the vagaries of success and
setback.
Therefore, let us
cultivate the yoga of struggle. Through the practice of selfless action,
we achieve what Savitri Devi spoke of fondly as efficiency. It is this
efficiency of all those working in concert for the common cause which is the
prerequisite for victory.
It shall be. The Will shall
triumph. It shall triumph, because it is eternal and all-powerful. The only
question is whether we ourselves – as individuals – choose to become
instruments of this Will, and so become part of a higher destiny.
A New Order awaits.
Therefore, obey the inner law. Do your duty. Let your life become one with the
Cause of the greater whole. That, and that alone.
Amor fati.