The
five islands called (St Kilda), were eventually abandoned in August 1930 when
the last 36 inhabitants were evacuated to Morvern on the Scottish mainland at
their own request. Four years earlier (1926), four men had died from influenza
and in January 1930, a young woman called Mary Gillies, died of appendicitis.
There had also been a series of crop failures in the 1920s. The islanders
cultivated barley and potatoes.
The
islands problems stem from depopulation through emigration, natural disasters
and contact with tourists and visiting ships, who brought disease. The tourists
tended to see the islanders as curiosities. The inhabitants lived mainly on sea
birds and their eggs but also had sheep. Although the inhabitants of St Kilda
had boats, the seas around St Kilda were said to be far too treacherous for
fishing. It must have been hard a life on St Kilda but it's said the islands
were inhabited for 2000 years. The inhabitants must have all been related
genetically.
Their
way of life and the society that they lived in, would have fascinated a social
anthropologist like Margaret Mead. There's no such thing as government,
lawyers, crime, money, employers, a police force, or social classes. But the
islanders did have rules and codes of behaviour. Although fines could be issued
for misdemeanours, there is no recorded case of a serious crime occurring on St
Kilda in four centuries. The islanders had a daily 'parliament' that was held
after prayers, in the street every morning and which was attended by all adult males.
By all accounts these meetings could be boisterous but they never led to
discord and social division. No one led the meeting and all men had the right
to speak. This meeting decided the day's activities.
Although
the islands were historically owned by the MacLeod's of Harris, who's steward
collected rents in kind, once a year, there's really no private property as
such, but there was personal property - possessions. It's not a competitive
society but a society based on mutual aid, reciprocity, and co-operation. This
is a kind of anarchist society that we're told is impossible to construct
because it doesn't accord with human nature.
In
1667, a man called Martin Martin, described a vibrant community and noted that:
"The inhabitants of St Kilda, are much happier
than the generality of mankind, as being almost the only people in the world
who feel the sweetness of true liberty, simplicity and mutual love and cordial
friendship, free from solicitous cares, and anxious covetousness, and the
consequences that attend them."
William
Morris, wrote about an idealised non-governmental socialistic society in his
novel called 'News from Nowhere’, published in serial form in the journal
'Commonweal' in 1890. In the novel, a character called Old Hammond, tells the
narrator of the story William Guest, that they've turned the House of Commons
into place for storing dung. I couldn't think of a more appropriate use for
that building.
1 comment:
fascinating
Tony Greenstein
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