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NORMAN
COUSINS: EDITOR AND WRITER
1915-1990
By Ken
Read-Brown
Minister of Old Ship Church, Hingham, Massachusetts
"Inevitably,
an individual is measured by his or her largest concerns."
-from Human Options, by Norman Cousins
The
lifelong concerns of Norman Cousinswriter, editor,
citizen diplomat, promoter of holistic healing, and unflagging
optimistwere large indeed: world peace, world governance,
justice, human freedom, the human impact on the environment,
and health and wholeness. During a lifetime which spanned
most of the twentieth century, these central concerns of
Cousins's life were also among the most important issues
facing the human race. His primary platform for promoting
his views was as editor of Saturday Review for the
better part of forty years. He was also the author of a
dozen books and hundreds of essays and editorials. Besides
having been notably active in a variety of peace organizations,
he was, in his in later years, on the faculty of the University
of California at Los Angeles School of Medicine.
Though not a member of any Unitarian congregation, Cousins
did at times attend services at the Unitarian Church in
Westport, and he donated the pulpit of that church "In
memory of Albert Schweitzer." Cousins had written two
books about Schweitzer and had spent time with him at his
hospital in Lambarene. In conversation with the current
minister of the Westport congregation, Rev. Frank Hall,
Cousins said that for him "the pulpit represented the
importance of the spoken word, and the ongoing search for
truth and justice."
Norman Cousins was born in Union Hill, New Jersey, on June
24, 1915. Growing up, he was both a fine athlete and a fine
writer. He graduated from Columbia University Teachers College
in 1933 and began his career as writer and editor with brief
stints at the New York Evening Post and Current
History. In 1940 he became executive editor of the Saturday
Review of Literature (later Saturday Review),
becoming editor just two years later at the age of twenty-seven.
In the course of his tenure Saturday Review grew from a
small and struggling literary magazine to a weekly forum
of ideas with a circulation of over 600,000.
At Saturday Review, Cousins not only spoke his own
mind as editor, he also encouraged other writers and critics
in a collective effort, "not just to appraise literature,
but to try to serve it, nurture it, safeguard it."
Cousins believed, "There is a need for writers who
can restore to writing its powerful tradition of leadership
in crisis."
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During
his almost four decades with the magazine he came to feel
that his readers were a second family: "Nothing in my
life, next to my family, has meant more to me than the Saturday
Review," he once said. "To work with books and
ideas, to see the interplay between a nation's culture and
its needs, to have unfettered access to an editorial page
which offered, quite literally, as much freedom as I was capable
of absorbingthis is a generous portion for anyone."
Cousins
used that editorial freedom to speak his mind on a wide variety
of the issues of the day, none more important to him than
issues of war and peace.
During
World War II Cousins was a member of the editorial board for
the Overseas Bureau of the Office of War Information and was
cochairman of the 1943 Victory Book Campaign. He also came
to believe that enduring world peace could only be achieved
through effective world governance. The use of atomic weapons
to end the war further galvanized his thinking and writing.
In Saturday Review, Cousins affirmed that "The
need for world government was clear before August 6, 1945,
but Hiroshima and Nagasaki raise that need to such dimensions
that it can no longer be ignored." His editorial "Modern
Man is Obsolete," exploring the implications of the atomic
age was widely quoted and in its expanded book form was briefly
on the bestseller list. When the United World Federalists
was founded in 1947 Cousins served as one of its vice presidents
and later as president. To generate support for world government
he made more than 2,000 speeches both in the United States
and around the world.
In Who Speaks for Man?, published in 1953 following
extensive travels in Europe and Asia, Cousins expanded his
arguments for world federalism and for a world no longer based
on the supremacy of nationalism and other superficial differences:
"The
new education must be less concerned with sophistication than
compassion. It must recognize the hazards of tribalism. It
must teach man the most difficult lesson of allto look
at someone anywhere in the world and be able to see the image
of himself. The old emphasis upon superficial differences
that separate peoples must give way to education for citizenship
in the human community. "With such an education and with
such self-understanding, it is possible that some nation or
people may come forward with the vital inspiration that men
need no less than food. Leadership on this higher level does
not require mountains of gold or thundering propaganda. It
is concerned with human destiny. Human destiny is the issue.
People will respond." He
concluded the book with this hopeful affirmation: "War
is an invention of the human mind. The human mind can invent
peace with justice."
Cousins's
concern for peace and human well-being was more than an
abstract idea. His concern, for example, for the victims
of Hiroshima, following a postwar visit to that devastated
city, became quite personal. He arranged, with funding from
Saturday Review readers, for medical treatment in the
United States for twenty-four young Japanese women who came
to be known as the "Hiroshima Maidens." Saturday
Review readers also supported the medical care of 400
Japanese children orphaned by the atomic bomb. In the 1950s
Cousins and his wife legally adopted one of the "Maidens."
A few years later, again with the support of Saturday
Review readers, Cousins helped create a program for
the "Ravensbrueck Lapins," thirty-five Polish
women who had been victims of Nazi medical experiments during
the war.
During
the 1950s Cousins was outspoken in his criticism of atmospheric
nuclear testing. In 1957 he was among the founders and became
the first cochairman of the National Committee for a Sane
Nuclear Policy (SANE). In the early 1960s he became an unofficial
citizen diplomat, facilitating communication between the
Vatican, the Kremlin, and the White House which helped to
lead to the Soviet-American nuclear test ban treaty. Upon
ratification of the treaty in 1963, President Kennedy publicly
thanked Cousins for his help with the treaty, and Pope John
XXIII awarded Cousins his personal medallion. Cousins was
also the recipient of the Eleanor Roosevelt Peace Award
in 1963, the Family of Man Award in 1968, and the United
Nations Peace Medal in 1971.
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During
the sixties and seventies Cousins was a leading voice among
those opposed to the American role in Vietnam; he continued
to oppose the nuclear arms race, and he continued to argue
for a strengthened United Nations leading to world government.
As he wrote: "The essential lesson most people still
resist is that they are members of one species. It is this
that we all sharethe emergence of a common destiny
and the beginning of the perception, however misty, that
something beyond the nation will have to be brought into
being if the human race is to have any meaning." Cousins
believed that this was both essential and possible. He affirmed
over and over again with typical optimistic spirit that
human beings could do better, be better, and create better
societies.
And he believed that the path to a better world began with
the individual. In a democratic society it is, he affirmed,
ultimately the individual who makes a difference: "freedom's
main problem is the problem of the individual who takes
himself lightly historically."
One of Cousins's own great strengths was that he did not
take himself lightly historically. He believed in the power
of the written and spoken word to make a difference in the
world. His commitment to Saturday Review was rooted
in this belief. As he wrote in The Healing Heart"The
description of the Saturday Review that pleased me
most during the years of my editorship was that it never
tried to gloss over the seriousness of the issues it discussed
but that at the same time it never wavered in its belief
that solutions were within reach." This
was true whether he and the magazine were taking on global
issues of war and peace, justice, and the environment, or
national issues such as the dangers of cigarette advertising
or violence in the media.
In addition to his writing, public speaking, and service
with a variety of organizations, Cousins consistently made
an effort as editor of Saturday Review to experience
events in the making. He believed that the editorial page
should be an encounter with the present." In
this spirit he observed an atomic test at Bikini, visited
postwar Germany, reported from a plane during the Berlin
airlift, traveled to disputed Kashmir in 1954, to the Gaza
Strip in 1956, and to war torn Laos in 1961. Following a
visit to the Soviet Union in 1960, he initiated a series
of cultural exchanges between Americans and Russians from
many fields of endeavor that became known as the Dartmouth
Conferences. And over the years he met and often became
friends with a wide variety of some of the preeminent figures
of the mid-twentieth century from many fields, among them
Pablo Casals, Winston Churchill, Albert Schweitzer, Adlai
Stevenson, Albert Einstein, Buckminster Fuller, Pope John
XXIII, U Thant, Jawaharlal Nehru, Helen Keller, and most
of the U.S. presidents beginning with FDR.
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In the
1960s Cousins had an experience that changed his life and
that, at the same time, reinforced some of his deepest convictions
concerning the nature of the human being. Stricken with a
crippling and life-threatening collagen disease, Cousins followed
a regimen of high doses of vitamin C and of positive emotions
(including daily doses of belly laughter), all in consultation
and partnership with his sometimes skeptical physicians. He
chronicled his recovery in the best-selling Anatomy of
an Illness as Perceived by the Patient: Reflections on Healing
and Regeneration, published in 1979. In the book, generalizing
from his own experience and research, he affirmed that "the
life force may be the least understood force on earth"
and that "human beings are not locked into fixed limitations.
The quest for perfectibility is not a presumption or a blasphemy
but the highest manifestation of a great design."
When Cousins had a heart attack fifteen years following his
earlier illness, he wondered whether it would be possible
to recover from two life-threatening conditions in one lifetime,
but he was determined that he would. As he was brought into
the hospital on a stretcher following the attack, he sat up
and said, "Gentlemen, I want you to know that you're
looking at the darnedest healing machine that's ever been
wheeled into this hospital." Once again Cousins recovered,
and once again he chronicled his experience in a book, The
Healing Heart: Antidotes to Panic and Helplessness. And
once again he generalized from his experience with life-threatening
illness to the experience of life threatened humanity. He
was struck by the irony that all of his books on the ills
of nations did not have the total readership of his one book
describing his personal experience of disease and recovery,
Anatomy of an Illness. Yet his concern, as he wrote
in The Healing Heart, was "that everyone's healthincluding
that of the next generationmay depend more on the health
of society and the healing of nations than on the conquest
of disease." He concluded the book with a call to conquer
war, affirming that "the health and well-being not just
of Americans but of the human race are incompatible with war
and preparations for war."
The last years of Cousins' life, following his retirement
from Saturday Review in 1978, were spent as a faculty
member of the University of California at Los Angeles School
of Medicine. There he taught ethics and medical literature
and continued his research into the relationship of attitude
and health; yet he never lost sight of the larger goals of
global peace and justice. Just as belief is, Cousins affirmed,
an integral ingredient in personal healing, so did he affirm
that belief was integral to global healing. And in all this,
he believed that communication was also essential: "The
starting point for a better world is the belief that it is
possible. Civilization begins in the imagination. The wild
dream is the first step to reality. Visions and ideas are
potent only when they are shared. Until then, they are merely
a form of daydreaming."
During
the last year of his life, Cousins received additional awards,
including the Albert Schweitzer Prize for Humanitarianism
and the Japan Niwano Peace Prize.
Norman Cousins died on November 30, 1990, following cardiac
arrest, and having lived years longer than doctors more
than once had predicted: ten years after his first heart
attack, sixteen years after his collagen illness, and twenty-six
years after his doctors first diagnosed heart disease.
In American National Biography, Cousins's life is
summarized in the following words:
"In
June 1983 Cousins told the graduating class of Harvard Medical
School that the "conquest of war and the pursuit of
social justice... must become our grand preoccupation and
magnificent obsession." These certainly were the concerns
that obsessed him throughout his life, and over the years
he battled through his writings and actions to make them
matters of more general concern. Driven by the shock and
portent of Hiroshima, he worked to combat unchecked nationalism,
promote federalism, and build a sense of world citizenship,
in the belief that people as a whole might yet construct
a new world order of peace and justice. His optimism, intellectual
curiosity, and commitment to the preservation of human life
were equally unquenchable."
Cousins's
own words, from his 1980 book Human Options: An Autobiographical
Notebook, perhaps best capture how he strived to live
his life:
"I
can imagine no greater satisfaction for a person, in looking
back on his life and work, than to have been able to give
some people, however few, a feeling of genuine pride in
belonging to the human species and, beyond that, a zestful
yen to justify that pride."
Recommended Reading
Anatomy of an Illness as Perceived by the
Patient by Norman Cousins (New York: W.W. Norton, 1979).
The Healing Heart, by Norman Cousins (New York: W.W.
Norton, 1983)
In God We Trust edited by Norman Cousins (New York:
Harper, 1958).
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