[blind-chess] THE ROLE OF JOHN J. PERSHING AND CHESS DIPLOMACY

  • From: Eddyz69@xxxxxxx
  • To: blind-chess@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
  • Date: Tue, 1 Jan 2013 00:04:03 -0500 (EST)

The Immortal Game: A History of Chess, or How 32 Carved Pieces on a Board  
Illuminated Our Understanding of War, Art, Science and the Human Brain by 
David  Shenk (Hardcover - September 5, 2006)
 
**** THE ROLE OF JOHN J. PERSHING AND CHESS DIPLOMACY ****
 
John J. Pershing is special to chess history, although few people know of  
the occasion when Pershing used the game of chess to negotiate peace 
treaties  with Moro tribesmen of the Philippines.
 
Spain had ceded the Philippines to the U.S. following the Spanish-American  
War of 1898, where Lieutenant Pershing had led the Tenth Calvary, a black 
troop.  The dismounted Tenth excelled in the attack up San Juan Hill, in 
which Pershing,  cool under withering fire, led his troops.
 
Transferred after to the Philippines as a Lieutenant, Pershing committed  
himself to educating himself to the situation. Many in the American military 
and  state department viewed the Moros as barbaric. For certain, they were a 
warrior  people who honored bravery with respect. They were also Muslim, 
and polygamous.  Their culture had been connected to Mecca since the 13th 
Century. The Moros  hated Christians, and especially Christian Filipinos. 
Ferdinand Magellan had  raised the Spanish flag over the Philippines in 1521. 
Hostilities had existed  ever since. Three hundred years of Spanish 
colonization 
had left little that  could be called modern.
 
The American Army had mostly been restricted to a "Coastwise Colonization." 
 Little contact with the interior had been ventured. A military governor 
was  appointed, but the Moros had practiced slavery, piracy and banditry for  
centuries. The Moro mind was a different world from that of the American  
military. In Moro culture, (1) things written, would be, and (2) Infidels and  
their doings were irrelevant. With such a mind set both the colonial 
regulations  and military officers would be flouted. Moros would simply refuse 
to 
acknowledge  the power held by the infidel. With such extreme polarization 
of culture,  Pershing realized that there would be massive bloodletting if 
working  relationships with Moro tribes were not developed.
 
What the American military ceded as merely a problem of suppression of the  
"Insurrections," Pershing saw as a human problem. The Moros reminded him of 
the  Apache and Sioux warriors of the American continent. Ever the 
professional,  Pershing began educating himself in Moro culture. He studied 
Moro 
language and  customs. He read the Koran. Moros of different tribes and regions 
were led by a  headman called a "Datto." If religious taboos could be 
by-passed, Pershing held  some hope for relationships of trust. Pershing 
learned 
that the Moros played  chess.
 
Pershing walked into the center of a virtually deserted Moro village and  
set up a chess board. After a wait, the Muslim headman appeared, willing to 
play  a game. Over the course of hours, a mutual respect was developed, the 
opponents  learning much of each other. By this method, Lieutenant Pershing 
was able to  establish relationships of understanding with many Moro headmen, 
and treaties  often formed, saving many lives on both sides. For his 
success, Pershing was  promoted to permanent captain in 1901. In 1903, 
President 
Roosevelt addressed  the U.S. Congress, naming Pershing as an officer 
deserving promotion on  merit.
 
The Denver Chess Club used to meet at the VFW at 9th & Bannock Streets,  
where a small museum was kept on the first floor, dedicated to the Colorado  
volunteers in the Phillipine campaign. This was the very first Veterans of  
Foreign Wars chartered in the continental United States, VFW POST #1. There 
were  swords, ammo displays, pictures, and Moro weapons. I do not think any 
of us made  the connection at that time, between our chess play in Denver, 
Colorado and the  winning chess diplomacy of John J. Pershing.
 
In Denver Colorado, the Adams City High School Chess Coach, Larry Grohn, a  
social studies teacher, will not be in bed before midnight on Tuesday, 
because  he drives his students to the Denver Chess Club's Tuesday night 
meeting. It is  the best way to acquaint his students with strong competition. 
The 
next morning,  Larry Grohn must teach school again. He needs chess clocks 
and equipment, for  which there is no funding; but Larry Grohn prevails 
through sheer determination.  His dream is to give his players a chance in 
life, a 
chance which might be found  through the lessons of chess.
 
To the extent that David Shenk can make the world more aware of the  
satisfaction to be found in chess, of the friendships to be made, of the 
rewards  
of developing mind and soul, we shall all be much in his debt. Many people 
could  handle life better, I think, if only they had developed only a little 
of the  qualities of character that chess teaches; how to handle conflict, 
how to think  'out-of-the-box' and how to develop a genuine respect for those 
who seem to  oppose us in daily life. Indeed, there is an ancient maxim: 
THINE ADVERSARY IS  BECOME THINE INSTRUCTOR.
 
Chess is, dollar for dollar, one of the most affordable of all pastimes. It 
 brings people together in bonds of friendship. It can teach deep lessons 
about  life and mankind. It can free us from worry and care, and assuage the 
feeling of  being alone and 'not-fitting-in'. It is a most excellent 
stepping stone to  connecting to the basics of life, in a world where many 
people 
are utterly  bereft, not knowing which way to turn or where to go.
 
Most importantly though, people need to get rid of the delusional notion  
that the game is only about "winning."

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