Scott McConnell writes:
Arrived in Paris Tuesday with few intentions
beyond watching some tennis (French Open qualifying, the inexpensive and
crowd-free formula for spectating a high level of the sport), eating well, and
hanging out with my wife after her several hectic weeks of preparing our
daughter’s wedding.
But it was soon clear that the European civilizational crisis
(cf. Death
of the West) while often easy to ignore, is very much with us. In a
suburb of Stockholm, some immigrant youths have fought the police four
successive nights (“youths
acting youthy,” summarized Steve Sailer, sardonically), while in London yesterday
two African Islamists hacked
a soldier to death with a machete. In Paris on Tuesday afternoon a
78-year-old far-right activist and historian, Dominique Venner, entered the
sanctuary at Notre Dame, deposited a suicide note at the altar, and shot
himself in the mouth.
Venner was a serious figure in France’s extrême-droite,
a phrase with different and far richer connotations than “extreme-right” in
America. A major current of French intellectuals opposed the Revolution, quite
understandably, and kept at it, rhetorically, throughout the 19th century. A
French Right standing for traditional authority, order, aristocracy, the nation
(and skeptical about fraternity, equality, and the various French republics)
has been a constant and serious force, able sometimes to speak for nearly half
the country.
The far right hasn’t been violent since the early sixties—when
right-wing officers of the Organisation de l’Armée Secrète tried to spark
a coup against De Gaulle for letting go of Algeria—but as a current in French
political life, it is always there. Today its main concern is immigration,
particularly Muslim immigration, and in its current political incarnation, the
Front National, led by Marine Le Pen, has jettisoned the party’s submerged but
never absent anti-Semitism for a militant pro-Zionist and anti-Muslim line.
Le
Pen garnered 18 percent of the vote in last year’s presidential election, and
the FN is a fairly serious minor party, receiving 13 percent of the first-round
votes in the legislative elections and holding quite a few local offices.
Hostility to immigration is a “populist” cause, and many of the FN’s voters
used to vote communist; nevertheless there is an aristocratic and intellectual
aura to the far right dating to the Revolution, and not entirely absent from
today’s FN. It is this of which Dominique Venner was a part.
The goals of the suicide are easy enough to
imagine. Part is surely vanity—Venner’s blog, I’m sure, has received more
attention in the past two days than its entire previous existence, and every
intellectual wants to be read. He was old and recently diagnosed with a grave
unspecified illness. His concrete goal was to pull together two disparate
groups of disaffected conservatives, the opponents of gay marriage (as in the
U.S. a sizeable, somewhat shell-shocked minority) and the opponents of
immigration. In his
suicide note he tries to connect the two causes:
I protest against poisons of the soul and the
desires of invasive individuals to destroy the anchors of our identity,
including the family, the intimate basis of our multi-millennial civilization.
While I defend the identity of all peoples in their homes, I also rebel against
the crime of the replacement of our people.
In any case, no one in Paris is treating Venner
as some kind of lone nut. He has fought for his beliefs, long after they were
no longer fashionable. In 1954, you could not find a single major French
politician supporting Algerian independence, and De Gaulle had to maneuver
against the entire political system to bring France to accept it. Venner was
one of several who never would, who believed that Algeria was eternally part of
France and was willing to fight for it, even so far as plotting against his
head of state.
Like many high-ranking French officers, he plotted and lost and
spent time in prison. Upon release he then carved out a career as an activist
theoretician and, later in life, as a serious historian. Marine Le Pen, the
third ranking French presidential candidate, honored him after his death.
I am not entirely without sympathy—there is part
of the French Right which has a certain appeal. But it has a knack for
making very bad choices at critical moments, for being unable to recognize when
to fight, when to retreat to more sensible ground.
Charles De Gaulle, in my
view probably the greatest man of the 20th century, was able to incarnate
much of the right’s virtues and sensibilities, but with a much sounder sense of
blending these virtues into the politics of a modern democratic republic.
De Gaulle, often accused of being a fascist (in many cases ignorantly, by
Americans) opposed Hitler in 1940 and understood that Algerian independence was
inevitable in 1958. (I would be curious if Venner ever reflected upon what the
effect of keeping Algeria would have been on the current
demography of France.)
I too would oppose what Venner called “the
replacement of our people,” but I suspect the reality is something different.
Throughout Paris you can see groups of French lycéeans, flirting,
smoking cigarettes, having their coffee in their cafes, huddling on their
motorbikes. They now come in all colors. To some extent then, the demographic
of old France is not being replaced so much as supplemented. It’s of course a
question of balance and of numbers.
I would trust De Gaulle to chart the right
course, but sadly there is little evidence he has any true heirs in France’s
political class.
What the OAS types failed to realise, blinded as they were by their racism, was that their dear slogan, "Algerie Francaise!", carried with it as a corollary demanded by an inexorable Cartesian logic a counterpart slogan, namely, "France Algerien!" For if France stretches from Dunkirk to Tamanrasset, then if the revolutionary slogan is to be true, then France is both Indo-European and Afro-Asiatic, both Christian and Muslim, both European and African. If Camus had lived, he might have tried to make this point.
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