Tolstoy's Messages In Hadji Murat example essay topic
The structures that are not completely destroyed are defiled by the Russian troops, including the village's mosque. Even the well is fouled. The village chosen by the Russians was the same that gave hospitality to Hadji Murat at the beginning of the novel. Sado, the man who offered his home to Hadji Murat returns to find it destroyed and his son dead, bayoneted in the back by the Russians. The outrage that Tolstoy must have felt in writing this is palpable, played out in the unimaginable hatred that the Chechen villagers feel towards the Russians.
To Tolstoy, this feeling of hatred towards the Russians was just as natural a feeling a feeling as the feeling of self-preservation (Tolstoy p 85). Like the thistle in the opening of the novel these people would not submit until destroyed. These villagers are left with task of rebuilding and then choosing to continue to resist and have the same thing occur again, or to submit to the destroyers and defilers of their home. They decide to ask Shamil for help, revealing one of Tolstoy's messages in Hadji Murat; that oppression and violence will only breed more dissent.
The brutal attacks by Russian soldiers can also be likened to Nicholas I's suppression of dissent in the rest of the Russian empire, particularly political dissent. When he was deciding on the public punishment of a Pole who had attacked his academy professor the Tsar stated that; "It " ll be good for them. I'll stamp out this spirit of revolution, I'll tear it out by the roots... (Tolstoy p 76)".
The crime had nothing to do with politics, but the Tsar saw it as an opportunity to control his subjects through fear. This was the policy of the Russian General Tsitsianov, whose brutal policy of ruling the Caucasus through fear was a major cause in the mountaineers' rebellion. The protagonist of the novel, Hadji Murat, became caught between the two despotic leaders Nicholas I, and Shamil. Murat is eventually destroyed because of this. In Hadji Murat Tolstoy depicts the two despots as sharing some similar characteristics. Tsar Nicholas I is depicted in a most unfavorable manner.
He delights in causing terror to those around him, in one case an army officer and his female companion at a masquerade (Tolstoy p 71). In the same scene Nicholas is portrayed as a lecherous man, having liaisons with various women (Tolstoy pp 70-71). This portrayal of the Tsar is problematic as he is considered by historians to have been a family man and devoted to his wife, with whom sexual intercourse was impossible due to her health problems (Moss p 357). Tolstoy obviously finds this unacceptable. Nicholas is stupid and egotistical as well, taking credit for the successes of the raids on Chechen villages when he had advocated a completely different policy. Tolstoy also accuses Tsar Nicholas I as not being a serious Christian when he depicts him saying his prayers "without attaching any significance to the words he was saying (Tolstoy p 72)".
This is unlikely as historians like Moss argue that Tsar Nicholas was actually a dedicated Christian whose "religious convictions and high sense of duty, not any love of his work, that kept him laboring at the increasingly difficult job of running his empire (Moss p 375)". Tolstoy's Shamil, however, strikes a much more impressive image than the Tsar; "The imam wore nothing shiny, no gold or silver whatsoever, and his tall, erect, powerful figure created that very impression of greatness that he wished and knew how to create among the people (Tolstoy p 90). ' Having taken Hadji Murat's family hostage as a punishment for disloyalty, Shamil calmly considers alternative tortures for them, and how best he may trap and murder their father as calmly as Tsar Nicholas contemplates sentencing a man to run a gauntlet of "a thousand men, twelve times (Tolstoy pp 76-77)". While the visual images of the two men differ, they share some in common between their personalities. The army is also not safe from Tolstoy's literary criticism.
He presents the Russian army as ready to falsify reports if the truth might be problematic. The casualties suffered by a Russian column ambushed by the Chechens in chapter five are later transformed into heroes of an overwhelmingly victorious offensive. The letter that Petrukha's mother receives informing her of his death reads; "he had been killed in war, 'defending the Tsar, his homeland, and the Orthodox faith (Tolstoy p 41)". This is the autocracy, nationality and orthodoxy that Nicholas I promoted so fervently during his reign. In addition to presenting a literary viewpoint of the Caucasian War, Hadji Murat also shows many elements of Russian culture.
Many of his characters, be they low or high-born provide examples of certain aspects of Russian life. Tolstoy paints a vivid literary picture of the lifestyle that many Russian nobles led during the mid-nineteenth century. His nobles are educated in Western fashion, with numerous instances where they speak French instead of Russian. When Prince Sem yon Mikhaylovich Vorontsovo speaks to a Russian soldier soon after meeting Hadji Murat he speaks the words slowly, and with an English accent (Tolstoy pp 30). Count Tolstoy was in prime position to experience this aspect of Russian nobility, and it naturally appears in his novel. One of the nobility's favorite pastimes, gambling, is evident in the character of Butler, who has on several occasions gambled in excess of his means, further emphasizing the lifestyle that nobles often led.
Details about the life of the peasantry can also be gleaned from Tolstoy's work even though the chapter about the peasant family is only a few pages long. The patriarchal system in which the father was the absolute head of the household is clearly evident in the domineering character of Petrukha Avdeyev's father. This family is also indicative of the lack of education present among the peasantry. Petrukha's mother needed to dictate her letter to him to someone who could write, and when his father wanted to know what the letter contained he had to find someone to read it for him. Literacy among the peasantry was still very low and Tolstoy makes that lack of knowledge apparent in his novel. The views of the peasantry concerning the army are also expressed in Hadji Murat when Petrukha's father thinks to himself; "Soldiering was like death (Tolstoy p 40)".
For a Russian peasant, conscription into the army was essentially a death sentence. The term of service was fifteen years, and if battle didn't kill you, it was likely that disease would. Tolstoy also provides insight into the nature of Russian autocracy in the section about Tsar Nicholas. The strong centralization of the Russian government is evident in Tsar Nicholas when he is meting out punishment for various crimes (Tolstoy pp 73-77). None of these, however, is terribly serious and would have been handled further down the chain of command in any Western monarchy. This shows just how much power was concentrated in the hands of the autocrat and minute details of governance with which he had to concern himself with.
Tsar Nicholas I is remembered for his heavy-handed suppression of dissent in the Russian empire, and Tolstoy certainly does not fail to include this in Hadji Murat. In chapter fifteen Nicholas makes the punishment for a Pole who assaulted his teacher public and orders that the other students be present in order to stamp out any revolutionary thoughts they might be harboring. Later, he sentences a newspaper editor who published information about the transfer of several thousand state peasants to the crown to be sent into the army as a private (Tolstoy p 77). This fictional scene is supported by Nicholas's actual censorship policies, which were furthered by his creation of the Third Watch, a police organization dedicated to "prevent, or at least ferret out, subversive elements (Moss p 361)". Elements of Russian culture common to the nobility and the peasantry also make an appearance in Hadji Murat.
The love of the Russian peasantry and aristocracy for vodka and other spirits makes appearances many times in the novel. There are several incidents in the fortified town of Vozdivizhenskaya and Tiflis where aristocrats drink themselves silly, and Petrukha's brother Akim had apparently done the same the night before the chapter he appears in takes place. Being a work of fiction, the characterization of people and events in Hadji Murat is largely a product of Tolstoy's own imagination. This does not, however, take away from his message, from the story, or from truths about Russian culture found in the novel. Tolstoy believed strongly in nonviolence, which is evident in his message about oppression; that it only breeds more dissent and resentment. The thistle in the opening sold its life so dearly in its attempt at self preservation, and the Chechen villagers' hate of the "Russian dogs" is said by Tolstoy to be just as strong, they would fight just as hard as that simple thistle did.
Aside from Tolstoy's message and any biases he had against any of the historical figures in his novel, his book is a wealth of information about stratified Russian society from the top to the bottom, making it very valuable in the study of Russian history and culture.
Bibliography
Moss, Walter G... A History of Russia, Volume I: To 1917 (Second Edition).
Wimbledon Publishing Company, London. 2002.
Tolstoy, Leo. Hadji Murat. Hesperus Press Limited, London. 2004.