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Julius Evola's Political Testament
By Nigel
Jackson
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Julius Evola - *1898 † 1998 - here anno 1940 (left)
and 1973 (right) |
In 1950, Julius Evola
wrote Orientations, a pamphlet for a number of his young political
associates, intended as a compendium that would set down the most important core
values of a traditional rightist group. This pamphlet then led to the writing of
Evola's main political book, Men Among the Ruins (1953).
Dr. H. T. Hansen, in his
100-page introduction to this first English translation of Evola's work,
explains that Men Among the Ruins was written in the hope of influencing
Italian politics of the time, but was not successful in that regard. Despite
that, it was reprinted several times in Italy and was Evola's most commercially
successful book.
Hansen's claim
that "it probably was and has remained the only 'practical' handbook for a truly
traditional right wing" may be an excessive claim. It is as much theoretical as
practical; and an abundance of books of a traditional conservative bent have
appeared in the same period, such as Russell Kirk's The Conservative Mind[1]
and Eric Voegelin's The New Science of Politics.[2]
Hansen states that Evola
himself felt that Men Among the Ruins was a failure. At much the same
time he also wrote a companion book, Riding the Tiger, in which he
preached a gloomy doctrine of apoliteia (withdrawal from active
politics). "Today there is no idea, no object, and no goal that is worth
sacrificing one's own true interest for," he declared.
Hansen, who rarely
intrudes his own views in his brilliantly researched analysis of Evola's life
and intellectual career, finally lets loose a severe judgment about the
impracticality of Men Among the Ruins:
"Evola's
Traditionalism cannot be used by modern political movements."
According to Hansen,
Evola's teachings "are too aristocratic, too demanding, and too much directed
against progress and modernity." In the 1930's and early 1940's Evola strove in
vain to influence Italian Fascism and German National Socialism, which provided
more "fertile ground" than the postwar era.
"Traditionalists must
hold on to ideas and principles, not institutions," Hansen adds. He suggests
that Evola would probably have held that his Traditional doctrines should serve
as centers of intelligence, around which groups might slowly form which
in the future might be nuclei in a providential transformation of society.
In the 20th
century Australian right-wing political movements have enjoyed little success
and sometimes proved to be fiascoes. Senator George Hannan's 1970's National
Liberal Party[3]
never got off the ground. More recently, Graham Campbell's Australia First[4]
has sunk amidst a cruel media silence, while Pauline Hanson's One Nation,[5]
although enjoying a degree of media puffing and some electoral successes, never
lost the unhappy image of a slightly tawdry political circus. Perhaps a study of
Men Among the Ruins might help the Australian Right achieve something
more fruitful in the future. This article is offered as a contribution to that
end.
First we will look
briefly at Evola's life and the kind of person he was. Next we will survey his
intellectual career, relying on Hansen's substantial and succinct introduction.
Finally we will study the 175-page text of Men Among the Ruins itself and
consider how it might be practically applicable in the Australian political
arena today.
Evola the Man
Baron Julius Evola
was born into a family of the Sicilian gentry on 19th May 1898, about
a year and a half after Prince Giuseppe di Lampedusa, author of the plangent
historical novel The Leopard,[6]
whose theme is the decay of the Sicilian aristocratic class.
He received a strict
Catholic upbringing which he soon discarded. "His was not the spirituality of
piety and mysticism," comments Joscelyn Godwin in a brief foreword, "but the
aspiration to what he understood to be the highest calling of man: the identity
of Self and Absolute."
Evola also developed "an
unconditional and militant antipathy toward everything bourgeois," Hansen tells
us:
"The fact that he
never married, never wanted children, never had a middle-class job, and
broke off his engineering studies before the last exam in spite of his
excellent record (so he would not be a Doctor or Professor) can be traced
back to this sentiment."
There was plainly an
austerity in Evola's make-up. It could be seen in his personal style of
impeccable suits and monocle (reminiscent of the defiant wearing of dinner suit
and bow tie in the Soviet Union amidst the "Red terror" by another of his
contemporaries, the novelist Mikhail Bulgakov). It can equally be noted in his
extraordinary reticence about his upbringing and personal life, which are hardly
mentioned even in his autobiography, and in his attitude to personal property
(all his life he owned very little and even habitually gave away his books and
paintings). It would be tempting to view him as a partly repressed personality
with an unduly negative attitude to femininity; but there is evidence against
this. For example, we learn from Hansen that, after the fall of Rome to the
Allies in 1943, his mother kept their secret service operatives at bay while he
made his escape. He evidently enjoyed good relations with her, despite having
renounced Catholicism in his teens. Evola also wrote a whole book on Eros and
the Mysteries of Love. Moreover, the second last chapter of Men Among the
Ruins (The Problem of Births) shows that he did not have a
puritanical attitude towards sexuality.
Evola seems to
have been a knightly man with leanings towards the brahminic lifestyle. On March
12, 1945, he was seriously wounded during an air strike on Vienna and his spinal
cord was damaged. He remained paralyzed from the waist down for the rest of his
life. This disability was not allowed to curtail his dedication to Tradition and
his prodigious literary career. He wrote twenty-five books (Men Among the
Ruins being the ninth to appear in English), around three hundred long
essays and over a thousand newspaper and magazine articles. He translated into
Italian many notable works including Oswald Spengler's Decline and Fall of
the West,[7]
the Taoist classic, the Tao Te Ching,[8]
and René Guénon's The Crisis of the Modern World.[9]
Evola also introduced
many notable European writers to the Italian public, including Gabriel Marcel,
Ernst Jünger and Gustav Meyrink. Close personal friends from youth onwards
included comparative religion authority Mircea Eliade and Tibetologist Giuseppe
Tucci. After spending a year and a half in hospital in Austria, Evola returned
to Rome and thenceforth rarely left his apartment. He was arrested in 1951 on
the preposterous charge of "glorification of Fascism," detained for six months,
proved innocent and acquitted. His famous Autodifesa (self-defence
testimony) is included as an appendix in Men Among the Ruins.
He chose to die
standing upright (as much as he could), since he wished to emulate forebears
like Roland of France. (It will be recalled that Zorba the Greek died in the
same fashion in Nikos Kazantzakis's novel.[10])
Plainly there was much that was heroic in Evola's life; but was there also
something of the quixotic?
Intellectual Career
Hansen points out
that for Evola, from his mid-twenties onwards, the centre of all things was not
man but rather the Transcendent, the eternal "One without a second." Evola was a
Traditionalist in the sense made famous by Guénon, father of the "Perennialist"
school.[11]
Everything had to be appraised from the standpoint of the principles which form
the foundation of our world and remain forever the same - that is to say,
Tradition.
Evola's awareness of the
vertical dimension of human existence was based on personal experience
which gave him keys to the mysteries of self-transformation. As Guido Stucco
noted in his translator's preface to Evola's masterwork, Revolt Against the
Modern World (1995), Evola was not first and foremost a right-wing,
reactionary political thinker, but an esoterist. His socio-political views
sprang from his religious and metaphysical convictions. Evola upheld the primacy
of Being (as did Martin Heidegger). For him there was an immortal nature as well
as a mortal nature, a superior world of being as well as an inferior
world of becoming.
Evola considered human
beings to be fundamentally and inherently unequal, so that they do not have and
should not have, nor should they enjoy, the same dignity and rights. Therefore a
sociopolitical hierarchy is best suited to express the differentiation between
them.
Evola tended to reject
dialogue with the apostles of modernity as a waste of time. He favored
self-questioning and the cultivation of one's soul. Stucco viewed Evola's whole
oeuvre as a quest for, and as an exposition of, the means employed in
Western and Eastern traditions to accomplish that noble task.
The titles of Evola's
other books available in English, but not yet mentioned, support this claim:
The Doctrine of Awakening (analyzing Buddhism), The Yoga of Power
(investigating Hinduism), The Hermetic Tradition, Introduction to
Magic, The Mystery of the Grail and Meditation on the Peaks.
An apologetic tone
appears periodically in Hansen's introduction, denoting a strong conviction that
he has to deal with a largely
uncomprehending if not downright hostile
readership. So, for example, he states that Evola's mindset was formed in "a
relatively recent intellectual climate that seems to belong to a whole other
world in its incisive questioning of what we regard today as self-evident
'humanism': a different world whose utterances seem barely publishable today."
However, perhaps modernity is only standing tall on feet of clay - as its
well-known tendency to discourage and even suppress antithetical political and
historical theses testifies.
Important early
influences on Evola's thought were the mediaeval Christian mystics Meister
Eckhart and Jan van Ruysbroeck. Hansen includes pertinent quotations from
Eckhart, whom Evola respected throughout his life:
"Being is God.
[...] God and existence
are identical. Should I then be able to recognize God in an immediate way,
then I must become he and he must become I, pure and simple [...] so
completely at one, that this he and this I are one and will become and be
one. [...] Coarse-natured
people must simply believe this, but the enlightened must know it."
Plainly this is
equivalent to the Hindu doctrine tat twam asi, which proclaims the
ultimate identity of the Self and the Divine Source.
A number of secular
writers also influenced Evola in his youth. From Carlo Michelstaedler
(1887-1910) he learned the vital importance of personal authenticity, of
following "the path of conviction, which has no road-signs or directions that
one can share, study or repeat," of not "surrendering to contentment with what
has been given to one by others."
From Otto Weininger
(1880-1903), author of Sex and Character, Evola derived his sense of the
importance of manliness, his attitude towards woman as the metaphysical and
political opposite of man, his dislike of populist "Caesars" and his hostility
to the decadence of modernity.
Plato played an
important role in arousing Evola's antidemocratic views, as did Nietzsche,
although Evola always cautioned against the hubris implicit in
Nietzsche's ignoring of transcendence.
Oswald Spengler alerted
Evola to the fundamental decadence of modernity, despite its boasts about
"progress" and "the advances of science." From Spengler he learned that it is a
sure sign of corruption of the body politic when the economy wins the upper
hand. He agreed with Spengler's analysis of the onslaught of money against the
spiritual in Western culture: "Only high finance is completely free, completely
unsusceptible to attack. Since 1789, the banks and thus the stock exchanges have
come into their own as a power, feeding off the credit needs of an industry
growing into monstrous proportions. Now they, and money, want to be the sole
power in all civilizations."
From The Crowd
by Gustave Le Bon[12]
(1841-1931) Evola absorbed a pessimistic attitude towards the masses, whose
natural tendency is to follow strength rather than virtue. And from Johann Jakob
Bachofen came the identification of the age of female rule with the age of
earthbound, chthonic deities, against which Evola proposed the superiority of a
solar, manly and Olympian rule. There is definitely error in Evola's analysis
here, as anyone who appreciates Robert Graves' The White Goddess[13]
and Starhawk's The Spiral Dance[14]
will agree. There is a Graeco-Roman bias in Evola which leaves inadequate room
for the Celtic.
Evola was deeply
influenced by texts of the non-dogmatic Eastern religions, including Buddhist
Pali scriptures and the Hindu Bhagavad Gita.[15]
From Taoism he derived his understanding of the nature of power. The Tao Te
Ching tells how "the awakened one" achieves self-fulfillment because he is
selfless, and praises the superior man who "leads and yet does not lord it over"
his fellows.
Thus Evola
differentiated power from mere brute force.
"Superiority does
not rest on power, but power rests on superiority.
[...] The path of renunciation can
be a condition for the way to the highest power. [...]
A true ruler has access to this higher
quantity of being, a different quality of being, and imposes himself through
his mere presence."
Evola was twenty-four
when Mussolini entered Rome at the invitation of King Victor Emmanuel III. He
thus lived the years of his prime under Fascism and naturally had hopes of
influencing it, correcting it and steering it into aristocratic channels.
In 1927 in his first
political book, Imperialismo Pagano, he expressed concern at the
direction Fascism was taking:
"Caught up in the
struggles and worries of concrete politics, Fascism does not seem to be
interested in creating a hierarchy in the higher sense, based on purely
spiritual values and knowing only disdain for all pollutions due to
'culture' and modern intellectualism, so that the centre might again shift
to a position that lies beyond secular and religious boundaries alike."
His critique applied to
Western nations generally:
"In the same way
that a living body stays alive only when a
soul is present to govern it, so
every social organization not rooted in a spiritual reality is outward and
transitory, unable to remain healthy and retain its identity in the struggle
of the various forces; it is not really an organism, but more aptly
something thrown together,
an aggregate.
The true cause for
the decline of the political idea in the West today is to be found in the
fact that the spiritual values that once permeated the social order have
been lost, without any successful efforts to put something better in their
place. The problem has been lowered to the plane of economic, industrial,
military, governmental, or even more sentimental factors, without
considering that all this is nothing more than matter: necessary if you
like, but never enough by itself, and unable to create a healthy and
reasonable social order."
Relying on Dante's De
Monarchia and other authorities, Evola saw a monarchy as the "natural
gravitational and crystallizing point" of the true Right:
"This ideal implies
the affirmation not only of the concept and right of the nobility, but
also of the monarchy.
[...] It must be renewed, strengthened, and dynamized as an organic,
central, absolute function that embodies the might of power and the light of
the spirit in a single being; then the monarchy is truly the act
of a whole race, and at the same time the point that leads beyond all that
is bound by blood and soil.
Only then is one
justified to speak of an
Imperium. When it is awakened into a glorious, holy, metaphysical
reality, the pinnacle of a martially ordered political hierarchy, then
the monarchy once again occupies the place and fulfils the function that it
once had, before being usurped by the priestly caste."
As Hansen observes, with
this emphasis on a spiritual monarchy presiding over an imperial order, Evola
stood in sharp contrast to the principle of the leaders of Fascism and National
Socialism, both of whom derived their legitimacy, they claimed, from the people.
Inevitably he remained without political influence on either movement.
He saw Fascism as "a
degenerate child of Tradition." It appeared to him as "the last chance of the
West." From his standpoint, the visible alternatives were much worse, explains
Hansen.
"There were only
liberalism paired with capitalism ('Anything goes!') and communism, both of
which worshipped a world of machines and limitless materialism.
[...] Fascism at least strengthened
the State and the hierarchical concept [...]
and praised honour, bravery and loyalty."
Evola believed that it
was Italy that had failed Fascism, rather than the other way around. The nation
"did not have enough
men on the necessary plane of certain higher qualifications and symbols
[...],
capable of further developing the positive possibilities that could have
been contained in the system."
Hansen explains how
National Socialism came to have greater appeal to Evola, partly because of its
concept of a State ruled by an Order, which he felt was embodied in the SS. Yet
he strongly warned against the inadequate respect for the transcendent:
"National Socialism
has forsworn the ancient, aristocratic tradition of the Empire. Being
nothing but a semi-collectivist nationalism and equalizing in its
centralism, it has not hesitated to destroy Germany's time-honoured division
into duchies, counties and cities that all enjoyed a measure of
independence."
An extract from a
lecture he gave in Berlin in 1937 shows how Evola saw Hitler's National
Socialism as a caricature of a true conservative order:
"According to the
Aryan primordial conception, the
Reich
is a metaphysical solar reality. The Nordic heritage is not
semi-naturalistic, only conceivable on a blood-and-soil basis, but rather
constitutes a cultural category, an original transcendent form of the
spirit, of which the Nordic type, the Aryan race, and the general
Indo-Germanic moral being are only outward manifestations.
Race is a basic
attitude, a spiritual power, something primal and creative.
[...]
This is the true level to which the motifs and symbols that the new Germany
has called forth must be elevated if it really wants to stand at the
forefront of the resistance and attack against the dark powers of world
revolution."
Hansen stalwartly
presents and assesses Evola's attitudes to race and to the Jewish question -
intellectual minefields over which he steps delicately and honorably. He
stresses that Evola's position regarding race was a consequence of his
worldview. Evola wrote:
"Our racial doctrine
is determined by Tradition. Thus the traditional view of the human being is
our foundation, according to which this being has a tripartite nature; that
is, it consists of three
principles, spirit, soul and body. [...]
Race is a deeply embedded force that
reveals itself in the biological and morphological realm (as race of the
body), the psychical (as race of the soul), as well as in the spiritual (as
race of the spirit)."
And in 1928 he stated
that races deteriorate when their spirits deteriorate.
"That is why for us
the return to the race cannot be merely the return to the blood - especially
in these twilight times in which almost irreversible mixtures have taken
place. It must mean a return to the spirit, not in a totemistic sense but in
an aristocratic sense, relating to the primordial seed of our 'form' and our
culture."
As Hansen remarks, Evola
not only fought vehemently against a purely physical racism, but also understood
the term 'race' differently from its general usage. His studies of Buddhist
scriptures that continually mention the arya and understand the arya
as "the noble" affected his employment of the word "Aryan." The Sanscrit
word arya has a fourfold meaning:
-
spiritually, "the
awakened ones";
-
aristocratically,
membership of a higher caste;
-
racially, as of the
light-skinned Nordic conquerors. (Varna, caste, originally meant
color.);
-
stylistically, as of
a crystalline clarity, lack of passionate emotion, ascetic manner, and
detached attitude.
Hansen condemns
some of Evola's obsessions and utterances critical of Jewry, especially an
appendix he wrote to the Protocols of the Elders of Zion,[16]
which demonstrated "sheer carelessness, a lack of serious research, and the
reckless assimilation of prejudices that happened to coincide with his own
views."
On the other hand,
Hansen points out that Evola's writings never spoke out against orthodox,
religious Judaism. "There are elements and symbols in the Old Testament,"
Evola commented, "that possess metaphysical and therefore universal value." He
also praised Kabbalah as one of the few initiatory paths that can still be
followed successfully in the West today.
His attacks were
directed against the Jews as a symbol of the rule of economic-materialistic
individualism and the hegemony of money. A Jewish critic, Adriana Goldstaub,
agreed that Evola did not deem all Jews, or the Jews exclusively, as responsible
for the decline of the modern world.
It is true, Hansen
notes, that Evola was attracted to the theory of a 'global conspiracy' by Jewish
and Freemasonic circles, with the intention of toppling Christian and
traditional state institutions; but he considered such circles not so much
movers as instruments of other forces, not necessarily human.
In summary, Evola
'engaged' himself for almost sixty years in the fight to defend his principles.
He embodied, says Hansen, the 'legionary spirit', which was a phrase he took
both from the greatness of the Roman army and the Legionary movement of one of
his most admired heroes, the Rumanian Corneliu Codreanu.[17]
Evola defined the legionary spirit as "the attitude of him who can choose the
hardest life, who is able to continue fighting even when he knows that the
battle is materially lost, who holds to the ancient precept that 'loyalty is
mightier than fire' and who carries the traditional idea of honour and dishonour
within."
Evola was something of a
universal man. Amongst other pursuits, he found time as an alpinist for several
difficult climbs; he felt at home among the mountains; and the mountain remained
a potent and inspiring symbol for him of an arena where direct experience of the
transcendent can occur.
He requested in his will
that after his death the urn containing his ashes be deposited in a glacial
crevasse on Monte Rosa; and this was faithfully carried out by his executors and
friends.
Beyond doubt Baron
Julius Evola was a man of destiny and a great man. The closest figure for
comparison in the English-speaking world is surely the Traditional poet,
dramatist and essayist, T. S. Eliot.[18]
It seems likely that Evola will exert more influence on the world after his life
than in it.
Conservative Revolution
In Men Among the
Ruins Evola begins by considering what needs to be preserved (or
re-instated) by a truly authentic counter-revolution; he identifies his enemy as
"the subversion introduced in Europe by the revolutions of 1789 and 1848."
In a passage
remarkably reminiscent of words of T. S. Eliot in his 1917 essay "Tradition and
the Individual Talent,"[19]
Evola defines the Tradition that needs to be defended: "Tradition is neither
servile conformity to what has been, nor a sluggish perpetuation of the past
into the present.
"Tradition, in its
essence, is something simultaneously meta-historical and dynamic: it is an
overall ordering force in the service of principles that have the chrism of
a superior legitimacy (we may even call them 'principles from above')."
Thus, as Eliot, Russell
Kirk and others also did, he warns against the error of a worldly, but
short-sighted and partial, conservatism, involving merely the defence of the
"sociopolitical positions and the material interests of a given class, of a
given caste."
He stresses, too, the
need to be faithful not so much to past forms and institutions as to the
principles of which they were particular expressions.
"New forms,
corresponding in essence to the old ones, are liable to emerge from them as
if from a seed."
In Australia,
undoubtedly, imperfect forms and movements have come into being since Federation[20]
(of which One Nation is currently the most notorious), which were not
sufficiently rooted in traditional principles because their leaders lacked
adequate understanding.
"The conservative
revolution must emerge as a predominantly spiritual phenomenon," Evola insists.
In Australia some movements have paid insufficient attention to this fundamental
(Graham Campbell's Australia First fatally lacked such vision, for all its
pragmatic and sensible socio-political positions).
Others have been
too closely attached to outdated and inadequate religious forms, such as the
National Civic Council[21]
and National Action[22]
(to different strands of Catholicism) and the Australian League of Rights[23]
(to an Anglicanism mediated through the particular mind of Major Clifford
Douglas, founder of Social Credit).
Evola, naturally,
focuses especially upon Italy, as he looks for historical forms that might be
the "basis for an integration that will immediately leave them behind." For him,
these are the "ancient Roman world" (the world of Cato, not of Nero!) and
"certain aspects of mediaeval civilization" (mainly the Ghibelline movement
which supported the Holy Roman Empire).
This prompts the
question of what forms we in Australia should seek as supports; and immediately
it must be stressed that for us Australian history cannot be viewed as beginning
with the brave seamen who discovered our continent only a few centuries ago.
For us, despite the
barrage of contemporary propaganda to the contrary, Australia remains a
fundamentally British nation (it retains the British Crown, a
constitution and laws essentially inspired by Britain, and the language of the
British people).
Thus our history extends
back to the foundations of Britain itself, and its four kingdoms of England,
Scotland, Wales and Ireland (the best Irish tradition is that of Tara and the
High Kings). Our supports will be found from a period of two millennia.
The Basis of Sovereignty
Evola's second chapter
("Sovereignty, Authority, Imperium") is one of his most important. He proceeds
from the conviction that the principle of the "true State" (a principle
expressed as sovereignty, authority and law) is itself founded upon
transcendence.
As soon as Evola moves
downwards from this metaphysical point of origin, his formulations require
careful critical examination. For example, he admires
"the pure power of
command, the almost mystical power and
auctoritas inherent in one who had
the function and quality of Leader: a leader in the religious and warrior
order as well as in the order of the patrician family, the gens."
Here, already, is
a possible weakness in Evola. Himself by nature a kshatriya (knightly man
of honor), he tends (in my view) to wrongly annex for his caste the superior
authority of the brahmins (the sages, those who know) - just as,
in places, he demeans the brahmins by confusing them with "priests" who he sees
as usurpers of the original royal authority.[24]
Of the principle of
sovereignty, Evola writes that "it is also necessary to recognize its attribute
of absoluteness." Such an absoluteness can only belong to the One Divine
Source ("There is no God but God."), irrespective of what name is given to this
source ("God," "Allah," "Brahman," "The Goddess" or whatever).
Evola tends, however, at
times, to transfer this absoluteness to forms which appeal to his strongly
masculine, knightly and warrior temperament. Yet, no matter how valuable they
may be, such forms remain contingent and limited, not universal. This tendency
to absolutize the contingent is the "occupational hazard" of the modes of
dogmatic religion which have proceeded from the Middle East.
We can observe
among the three "Peoples of the Book" three forms of this error: the
absolutization of a people (Judaism), of a prophet (Christianity) and of a
sacred scripture (Islam). (We may compare the theological mistake, noted by
Maurice Nicoll and Frithjof Schuon, of absolutizing Hell, an error deriving from
the mistranslation of the Greek word aionios as "eternal" instead of
"age-long."[25]
Just as "there is no God but God," so there is no eternity but eternity.)
Evola correctly
identifies the principle of sovereignty as "the point of stability" and "the
natural centre" of the entire organism. The essential political task in
Australia at the present time is to safeguard and then strengthen and even
re-establish the only centre we possess, which is the monarchy, Christian
and British, which we currently share with the mother country and some other
nations.
The republican
presidency which is being vigorously promoted by powerful (and sometimes
sinister) influences, as well as by numerous wiseacres (sincere as well as
opportunistic), cannot provide such a centre, because it is not authorized by a
transcendent origin.
Princeps a legibus
solutus ("the law does not apply
to the one who acts as Leader") is a maxim quoted approvingly by Evola; but it,
too, needs qualification.
Strictly, it
applies only to the leader, or monarch, who lives and governs "in accordance
with the mandate of Heaven," as Chinese tradition puts it.[26]
Royal dynasties,
emperors, houses can lose their te; and then it becomes right that they
be replaced by fresh blood. Unlucky the generation on whom the burden of
replacement falls, however, as such transitions are fraught with instability and
danger.
Evola rejects
emphatically the modern heresy that the State is the expression of 'society'.
"The anagogical end
(namely, of a power drawing upward) of the State is
[...]
completely denied by the 'social' or 'communal' view of its formation."
Nor, he argues, is
it the chief purpose of the State to bring worldly happiness or pleasure (as
Aldous Huxley showed in Brave New World[27]).
Evola places much store
on the theory of 'the regression of the castes' and the claim that we are living
in the last phase of the fourth and darkest age. He sees the decline as having
begun when the rulers lost their authorizing link with the worlds above.
"Later in history,
this line leads, if not to the imperium, to the divine right of kings; where
there were no groups created by the power of a rite, there were orders,
aristocracies, political classes defined by disciplines and dignities.
[...] Then the line was
broken, and the decadence of the State idea [...]
ended with the inversion through which the world of the demos and the
materialized masses emerged on the political horizon, engaging in the
struggle for power."
This picture of
deterioration is important for us, because it reminds us that even the
monarchical political orders of the period of European greatness and expansion
were themselves seriously deficient. This suggests that Australian
monarchists today need to recover a concept of royalty that exceeds in dignity
anything recorded in British history. It may be that such a concept can be found
in the ancient cultures of Egypt,[28]
India and China.
Much more questionable
is Evola's attempt to unite his image of the State to manliness.
"The State is under
the masculine aegis, while 'society' and, by extension, the people or
demos
are under the feminine aegis."
Evola's attempt to
justify this from mythology appears to depend on a selective approach to ancient
myths.
His approach
parallels that espoused by Melbourne psychologist Ronald Conway in The Great
Australian Stupor and Land of the Long Weekend.[29]
Conway takes over from historian of sexuality Gordon Rattray Taylor[30]
the model of four psychological modes into which human beings, their behaviors
and communities formed by those behaviors, can be classified. He idealizes the
patrist-conservative at the expense of the patrist-authoritarian, the matrist-permissive
and the fraternalist-anarchic.
It seems likely,
however, that a fifth mode should be included, which I designate as the matrist-creative;
and that normality (in the sense of rightness and good health) should be seen to
reside in the wedding of the patrist-conservative and matrist-creative.
Both Conway and Evola
are clearly very aware of the gulf between the Higher Masculine (the sage, the
warrior) and the Lower Masculine (the profiteer, the mobster), but each, through
some fault of temperament, has failed to acknowledge a corresponding dichotomy
between the Higher Feminine (well symbolized by the goddesses in many pantheons)
and the Lower Feminine (the nymph, the courtesan).
Thus, when Evola asserts
that "both democracy and socialism ratify the shift from the masculine to the
feminine and from the spiritual to the material and the promiscuous," he has in
mind the Lower Feminine only and has temporarily forgotten the comparable
imperfection of the Lower Masculine (which is clearly just as much implicated in
"the revolt of the masses").
Evola also warns against
an insufficient kind of patriotism. "The notions of nation, fatherland and
people, despite their romantic and idealistic halo, essentially belong to the
naturalistic and biological plane and not the political one." He contrasts "the
masses," who can be easily mobilized by patriotic motifs, with "men who
differentiate themselves [...] as bearers of a complete legitimacy and
authority, bestowed by the Idea (of the true State) and by their rigorous,
impersonal adherence to it. The Idea...must be the true fatherland for these
men."
Evola tends to disparage
adherence "to the same land, language or blood." Perhaps stock and "blood" are
more important than he admits, being the bodies in which the 'soul of the State'
can incarnate. Even Evola, writing only eight years after the end of World War
II, may have been traumatized by the intense anti-Nazism of that time.
His rejection of
democracy is trenchant:
"When a sovereignty
is no longer allowed other than one that is the expression and the
reflection of the 'will of the nation', it is almost as if a creature
overtook its creator."
He traces the
"inconsistency and, most of all, the cowardice" of those who in our time
constitute the political class to the shift from monarchical and aristocratic
orders to "demagogues and to the so-called 'servants of the nation' [...] who
presume to 'represent' the people and who acquire various offices or positions
of power by flattering and manipulating the masses."
Then occurs the
phenomenon of action through pseudo-myths, "formulas lacking any objective truth
and that appeal to the sub-intellectual dimension and passions of individuals
and the masses." The current campaign for "Aboriginal reconciliation" is an
example.[31]
Fantasy novels,
such as The Lord of the Rings[32]
and Terry Goodkind's "Sword of Truth" series,[33]
represent a yearning in the souls of modern people to escape from democratic
degradation back to the clear air of the true State. Russell Kirk also noted the
importance of modern fantasy literature in Enemies of the Permanent Things.[34]
Evola also noted
the attempt to create a counter-State by the forces of subversion: "A
realization of the Idea is already present on the other front." He had in mind
the recently formed United Nations Organization, which he correctly saw as
lacking authorization by transcendence. Half a century later the danger of the
"New World Order" is much greater, as Australia's ratification of the
International Criminal Court has just recently shown.[35]
Those who will not be ruled by kings will end up being ruled by tyrants.
Person, Justice, and Freedom
Evola names liberalism
as the origin of the various inter-connected forms of global subversion. He sees
the essence of liberalism as individualism. "It mistakes the person for the
individual." The nonsensical theory of egalitarianism depends upon this
confusion.
Evola defines a person
as "an individual who is differentiated through his qualities, endowed with his
own face, his proper nature, and a series of attributes that make him who
he is [...] that make him fundamentally unequal."
This leads to a
consideration of "natural rights" or "human rights." Evola points out that "the
principle according to which all human beings are free and enjoy equal rights
'by nature' is truly absurd, due to the very fact that by nature they are not
the same."
There may be such a
thing as "the dignity of the human person," but it "admits to different
degrees." Thus, justice means "to attribute to each and every one of
these degrees a different right and a different freedom." Evola is a champion of
discrimination, a just discrimination that recognizes the ancient principle "to
each his own."
Defence of personhood
against the atomization of humanity into faceless individuals requires the
recognition that man comes before society and not the reverse. Evola also places
personhood as superior to membership of a nation.
"The perfection of
the human being is the end to which every healthy social institution must be
subordinated. [...]
This perfection must be conceived on the basis of a process of individuation
and progressive differentiation."
At the top of the
pyramidal structure of the true State Evola rather vaguely imagines 'the
absolute person', the "supremely realized person who represents the end, and the
natural centre of gravity, of the whole system [...] a dominating
super-personality." Here he is in danger of forgetting the pre-eminence of the
transcendent. The lives of sages such as Sri Ramana Maharshi[36]
and Sheikh Alawi[37]
indicate that the "top of the pyramid" lies outside this world.
Evola upholds the
right of the nation over 'humanity', over and against "all the forms of
individualistic disintegration, international mixture and proletarization." As
regards the question of property, he castigates economic liberalism for
engendering "various forms of capitalist exploitation and cynical, antisocial
plutocracy," but also castigates the French revolutionaries' attack on the
ancien régime[38]
because it broke the organic connection "between personhood and property, social
function and wealth, and between a given qualification or moral nobility and the
rightful and legitimate possession of goods."
These developments
enabled the communist attack on the very principle of private property,[39]
since "whenever there is no higher legitimization of ownership, it is always
possible to wonder why some people have property and others do not, or why some
people have earned for themselves privileges and social pre-eminence [...],
while lacking something that would make them stand out and above everybody else
in an effective and sensible manner."
By contrast, "ancient
and primitive man essentially obeyed [...] those in whom he perceived a
saturation of mana (that is, sacred energy and life force)." The lesson
from this part of Evola's book is that the Australian Right must courageously
champion discrimination, hierarchy, caste and personhood - and find ways (a
rhetoric, a discourse) of showing ordinary persons how a society based on such
principles will bring them more real benefit than the utopian dreams of
egalitarians.
Totalitarianism
Evola points out the
fundamental distinction between the traditional, organic State, based upon
transcendent authority, and the modern totalitarian state.
A State is traditional
and organic "when it has a centre that shapes the various domains of life in an
efficacious way [...] when, by virtue of a system of hierarchical participation,
every part within its relative autonomy performs its function and enjoys an
intimate connection with the whole."
Such a state is
sympathetic to pluralism and decentralization, which "can be accentuated in
proportion to the degree to which the centre enjoys a spiritual and even
transcendent character, a sovereign equilibrating power and a natural prestige."
In such a State there is
"an inner order of single freedoms, an immanence of general law that guides and
sustains people without coercing them." Evola notes the importance of oaths in
traditional societies. "The oath of loyalty [...] was regarded as a true
sacrament [...] in the feudal world."
By contrast, a
totalitarian state is a counterfeit of the organic ideal. Unity is imposed from
the outside by a power that is exclusively and materially political. There is a
tendency towards uniformity and intolerance of any partial form of autonomy and
any degree of freedom, for any intermediate body between the centre and the
periphery.
This in turn engenders
"a kind of sclerosis [...] a monstrous hypertrophy of the entire
bureaucratic-administrative structure," leading to "an insolent intrusion of the
public sphere into the private domain." A super-organized, centralized economy
makes totalitarianism "a school of servility," in which there is "a sort of
intrinsic and gloomy enjoyment of this relentless levelling process."
Thus, totalitarian rule
destroys "quality, articulated forms, castes and classes, the values of
personhood, true freedom, daring and responsible initiative and heroic feats."
Democrats tend to
publicize an alleged antithesis between liberal democracy and totalitarianism;
whereas the truth appears to be that such democracy is a phase in the decline
from the true State into the tyranny of totalitarianism.
Thus, democrats
(and their hidden promoters) are happy to give much publicity to George Orwell,
whose Animal Farm and Nineteen Eighty-Four[40]
brilliantly expose the evil of totalitarianism; but they tend to be much less
enthusiastic about Alexander Solzhenitsyn, whose series of great novels
culminating in The Red Wheel (parts of which are still, mysteriously,
unavailable in English) not merely rivals Orwell's depiction of the horror, but
also advocates a return to traditional verities including religious orthodoxy.[41]
The Australian Right needs to note the difference between the two writers (for
Orwell never recovered from his early rebellion against Tradition) and to stress
that the Sovereign, acting in the service of God, is a better protector from
tyranny than the democratic politician.
"Sons of the People"
Evola sees another
extreme consequence of democracy to be Bonapartism,[42]
which he defines as "a despotism based on a democratic view, which it denies
de facto while fulfilling it in theory." Many a modern dictator, large or
small, comes under this heading.
The danger of such
figures is well indicated by Evola:
"Since he
personifies the will of the people, which is conceived as the political
ultima ratio,
the leader ends up claiming for himself an unlimited authority and regarding
all the intermediate political bodies and all the branches of government as
completely dependent on the central power, which alone is believed to
legitimately represent the people."
Orwell's portrait of Big
Brother attacked this kind of dictatorship.
Evola further
distinguishes the true king from the Bonapartist despot by considering their
relationships with those whom they rule:
"While the
traditional view of sovereignty and authority sees it characterized by
distance from the people, and the feeling of distance induces in the
inferiors a sense of veneration, a natural respect and disposition to
obedience and loyalty towards the leaders
[...], the Bonapartist despot is
[...] enslaved to the complex of 'popularity' and [...]
appeals to the lowest levels of human beings."
Bread and circuses - or
the modern equivalents!
In considering
dictatorship, a mode of rule he finds but rarely justified in history, Evola
points out that, according to traditional thought, "what matters is that a man
be valued and recognized in terms of the idea and the principle he upholds, and
not vice-versa."
Thus, within a properly
constituted aristocratic order, we should admire a noble "for being one in whom
a tradition and a special 'spiritual race' shine forth [...] whose greatness is
due not to his human virtues, but rather to the principle, the idea and a
certain regal impersonality that he embodies."
In this context Evola
dismisses Machiavelli's prince as one whose authority no longer comes from
above, its foundation being mere worldly strength.
"Here the leader
does not consider the higher faculties that can be reawakened in his
subjects; he harbours contempt and a fundamental pessimism towards people in
general, on the basis of an alleged political 'realism'."
Such a leader also lacks
a true respect for himself and his own dignity.
In Australia, the
kind of adulation felt in some quarters for people as diverse as Paul Keating,[43]
Pauline Hanson, and Sir William Deane[44]
reminds us of the temptations the general populace may experience to draw
towards themselves the "son" or "daughter" of "the people."
Evola does not, by the
way, neglect to pay respect to the military genius and achievements of Napoleon
Bonaparte, but associates these with the heroism of the dux or
imperator, a figure carefully distinguished in ancient Rome from the rex.
The lesson for the
Australian Right here is that it must seek a national leader who embodies the
aristocratic sense of quality that comes hand-in-hand with a sense of humility
before the awesome presence of God. A populist leader will be insufficient.
A Demonic Economy
"Nothing in excess!" (the
Delphic Oracle)
"Substine et abstine!"
("Stand firm and hold back!")
These are two of the
traditional sayings Evola invokes in his examination of the modern glorification
of work in our demonized economy.
In traditional societies
"individuals still lived in the station allotted to them by life. In those
societies an individual contained his need and aspirations within natural
limits; he did not yearn to become different from what he was, and thus he was
innocent of that alienation decried by Marxism."
Evola also refers to the
Thomist and Lutheran teaching that the acquisition of goods should be restricted
and that work and the quest for profit are justifiable only in order to acquire
a level of wealth corresponding to a person's status in life.
He compares this
traditional lifestyle of restraint and modesty with the pathological behavior of
the modern world in which the importance of the economy is grossly exaggerated,
so as to exercise a hypnotic tyranny over consumers whose appetites have been
artificially inflamed.
"The true antithesis,"
Evola insists, "is between a system in which the economy rules supreme [...] and
a system in which the economy is subordinated to extra-economic factors, within
a wider and more complete order, such as to bestow a deep meaning upon human
life and foster the development of its highest possibilities."
Evola counters the
utilitarian argument that the development of modern commerce and industry has
improved the standard of living by pointing out that "the qualities that matter
the most in a man and make him who he is often arise in harsh circumstances and
even in conditions of indigence and injustice, since they represent a challenge
to him, testing his spirit."
Evola sees the
task ahead as being "to deproletarize the view of life" and calls for a
metanoia,[45]
an inner transformation that will strike at the heart of the hegemony of work
and regain for man his inner freedom.
As regards the State
itself, he suggests that autarchy may be an ethical precept.
"It is better to
renounce the allure of improving general social and economic conditions and
to adopt a regime of austerity than to become enslaved to foreign
interests."
This, of course,
was a key position taken by the great Portuguese leader Dr. Oliveira Salazar,
whose life and philosophy deserves careful study.[46]
The overthrow of his successor, Dr Marcello Caetano, by the Spinola coup in 1974
was one of the tragedies of modern Europe - and of southern Africa. The full
story has perhaps not yet been told in English.
Evola also makes an
important distinction between work and action. It is action that is
performed by those of the kshatriya class - by ascetics, rulers, artists,
explorers, warriors, scientists, diplomats, philosophers and theologians.
The challenge for the
Australian Right, in the context of this tyranny of a mercantile outlook, is to
articulate a comprehensive vision for Australians which will have the capacity
to win their hearts away from hedonism and the lust for wealth, which is
currently symbolized so effectively by the domination of gambling facilities of
all kinds.
History and its Misuse
Evola attacks a
tradition of historicism, originating with Hegel, which has given an abnormal
emphasis to history, to the advantage of subversive forces.
He laments "the
disastrous shift from a civilization of being (characterized by
stability, form and adherence to super-temporal principles) to a civilization
of becoming (characterized by change, flux and contingency)." He also points
out that the ideas of History, progress and evolution have been closely
associated.
Monarchists will enjoy
his observation that "the anathema of being 'anti-historical' and 'outside
history' is cast against those who still remember the way things were before and
who call subversion by its name, instead of conforming to the processes that are
precipitating the world's decline."
From this discussion,
Evola moves to a consideration of the "different histories" that exist within
the history of nations. What is required is a wise choice of traditions.
Evola condemns a pseudo-patriotic historiography in Italy which, "due to its
partisan spirit, suggestions and catchphrases, precludes the objective
comprehension of many aspects of the past." He even writes of fabricated
history: "the alibi that revolutionary liberalism, democracy and the
thinkers of Freemasonry and the Enlightenment have created for their own
benefit."
The Australian Right
needs to rescue much from the history of the British and of Australia which has
been overlooked, while contending intelligently with partisan accounts of (for
example) the treatment of the Aborigines, which are designed to enable political
change leading to a republic (in name) which will be a province (in fact) of the
New World Order.
Warrior and Bourgeois
Evola's most
self-revealing chapter is his study of the different ways of looking at war and
the role of the warrior found in traditional "heroic" societies and in modern
bourgeois societies. It was only in reading it that I realized how much I myself
am a product of mercantile politics, and why men like Sir Walter Scott and Sir
Arthur Conan Doyle wrote novels like Quentin Durward and Sir Nigel.[47]
Evola points out that
"militarism" is the bête noire of many democrats - and that it is a word
at times misapplied to noble warrior behavior. His account, in this context, of
modern democracies seems, in the light of September 11, to be remarkably up to
date!
He notes that their view
"is that in society the primary element is the bourgeois type and the bourgeois
life during times of peace." Such a life "is dominated by the physical concern
for safety, well-being and material wealth, with the cultivation of letters and
the arts serving as a decorative frame." The military is a mere instrument.
Democratic ideology proclaims that armies should be used "only as an
international police force" to maintain "the peace." Evola dryly comments that
"in most cases this amounts to allowing wealthy nations to live undisturbed."
The armed forces are used "to impose or retain an economic hegemony; to gain new
markets and to acquire raw materials; and to create new space for capital
seeking investment and profit." This explains "the deep, widespread mistrust
toward the ideological background of the recent wars, a background shaped by
many lies and much propaganda."
In short, the
bourgeois-democratic lifestyle leads to hypocrisy and deceit: corruption on the
grand scale.
Evola contrasts such a
civilization with that of which the ancient Order of Teutonic Knights and the
Prussian tradition were recent examples. In such a world the warrior (as opposed
to the mercenary soldier) was not at the service of the merchant class but ruled
over it.
His lifestyle had its
own spirituality and ethics:
"love for hierarchy;
relationships of obedience and command; courage; feelings of honour and
loyalty; specific forms of active impersonality capable of producing
anonymous sacrifice; frank and open relationships from man to man, from one
comrade to another, from leader to follower."
In such a climate of
heroic integrity war did not have a merely negative meaning. Evola points out
that there is an identity between spirit and superior civilization and the
warrior's role.
"In the traditional
world we encounter the interpretation of life as a perennial struggle
between metaphysical powers, between Uranian forces of light and order
[...] and telluric, dark
forces of chaos and matter. [...]
Traditional man yearned to fight this battle and to triumph in both the
inner and outer worlds."
Evola adds that there is
an interdependence between the warrior idea and that "of a certain 'asceticism',
inner discipline and superiority toward or control of one's self." This was "the
foundation of a specific 'style' that has largely been lost."
He also reminds us that
in many civilizations "even the hierarchies with a spiritual foundation either
relied on hierarchies that were more or less warrior [...] or reproduced their
form." Then, "when the original spiritual level could not be maintained,
hierarchical structures of a warrior type constituted the armature of the major
States, especially in the West."
Thus, "since the
sensibility for purely spiritual values and dignities has become mostly
atrophied among Western populations [...], the model of a military hierarchy
[...] is almost the only one that can still supply the basis" for an
upwardly striving lifestyle. "That model still retains a certain prestige,"
since "there is a heroic dimension in the Western soul that cannot be
extirpated."
One advantage of a
heroic, as opposed to a bourgeois, civilization is its readiness to fight. There
is "a certain continuity of spirit and attitude, a common denominator in peace
and in war that facilitates the shift from one state to the other." Thus, "when
a war breaks out, a nation is ready for it, and fights with a sufficient number
of men who reproduce in a new form the warrior type."
Evola also
addresses the question of what role can be played by the heroic spirit in
modern, "total" wars, in which science and technology have so drastically
changed the human conditions of combat. Here he writes with a bleakness that he
probably absorbed in part from Ernst Jünger.[48]
Essentially, he calls
for a quality of endurance through warfare that is comparable to "elementary and
unavoidable natural phenomena." Man must "remain spiritually upright" through
"extreme trials and destructions" by developing in himself "a new inner
dimension [...] of cold, lucid and complex heroism" including "a sacrificial
disposition."
It seems clear that in
Australia an effective movement of the Right will need to honor the warrior
lifestyle in both its deeds and its words. Ways must be found to rouse our
manhood from "the great Australian stupor" that has perhaps resulted primarily
from the bourgeois atmosphere.
Ronald Conway
pointed out that Australia most nearly approached an aristocratic political
order in the two decades before World War I, when there was a society of quality
that Martin Boyd (a member of it) captured well in his novels, which merit close
study.[49]
Religious Restoration
Hindu tradition teaches
that there are four states in which human beings can exist: deep sleep, sleep,
awakening and enlightenment or attainment. What we normally think of as our
waking state is in fact sleep; and what we regard as sleep is deep sleep.
It was in this
tradition that Gurdjieff[50]
told those who came to his lectures that they were machines which "could do
nothing," because they were asleep.
Evola does not
mention this tradition in Men Among the Ruins, although he no
doubt discusses it elsewhere. It is vital to an understanding of religion and,
most especially, initiation - the processes of esoteric sacred tradition
designed to wake initiates up. In my view, initiation is the prerogative
of the brahmin caste; and René Guénon was correct to state that "the modern
disaster" had befallen Western Europe because the Church had lost its power to
initiate.[51]
That loss is the greatest difficulty with which modern Europeans and Australians
who seek to restore traditional society must contend. It has created a void
which can only be filled by a new impulse from the "worlds above."
In another very
important chapter ("Tradition / Catholicism / Ghibellinism") Evola begins by
stressing that by Tradition he does not refer to religious traditions in general
or to the Catholic Christian tradition in particular, but "to something wider,
more austere and more universal than mere Catholicism."
He acknowledges that in
the past some conservative forces have been inspired by Catholicism, which "gave
a special chrism to the principles of authority and sovereignty." However, "the
true traditional spirit acknowledges a superior, metaphysical unity beyond the
individual religious traditions."
That position has
been most succinctly and effectively expressed by Frithjof Schuon in The
Transcendent Unity of Religions.[52]
Representatives of Catholicism (such as James McAuley, the Australian poet, in
The End of Modernity) and of Orthodoxy (such as Monk Damascene
Christensen in Not of This World) have tried in vain to disprove this
perennialist thesis.[53]
Evola correctly warns
that foolish persistence in religious exclusivity will impede efforts to engage
in the restoration of traditional political order. Evola needs to be quoted at
length here, as too many Australian Christians are resisting the essential
metanoia (not "repentance," but fundamental change of orientation - as
Maurice Nicoll stressed).
"Despite the fact
that every religious form has the right to a certain exclusivity in the area
of its pertinence, the idea of this higher unity
[...]
should be acknowledged by its most qualified representatives.
The exclusivist
position may not be maintained without the danger of discrediting the
traditional Catholics (and other Christians) who rigidly adhere to it.
[...] Nobody with a
higher education can really believe in the axiom: 'There is no salvation
outside the Church.' This is a matter not of 'faith', but of either
knowledge or ignorance. [...]
The current state of knowledge in matters of comparative religion, mythology
and even ethnology requires a revision and an adequate widening of the
intellectual horizons."
Muslims should heed
this warning as well as Christians.
Evola also gives his
attention to "the problem of the relationship between the principle of
sovereignty and the religious principle in general," but his adherence to the
Ghibelline cause may have led him astray. He argues that, according to
Ghibelline theology, the Holy Roman Empire was "an institution of supernatural
origin and character, like the Church."
During the Middle Ages
"the dignity of the kings themselves had an almost priestly nature (kingship
being established through a rite that differed only in minor detail from
episcopal ordination)."
The Ghibelline emperors
opposed the hegemonic claims of the clergy and claimed to have only God above
themselves. The realization of the human person was believed to consist either
in the path of action (represented by the Empire) or in the path of
contemplation (represented by the Church). This was Dante's view. Thus,
knighthood and the great knightly orders stood in relation to the Empire in the
same way in which the clergy and the ascetic orders stood in relation to the
Church.
Evola also points out
that the title of Pontiff, originating from the Latin word pontifex
("bridge-builder") and denoting one who mediates transcendence into this world,
was the title of Roman emperors.
Thus, in the first few
centuries of the current era, as well as in the Byzantine Empire, the clergy
were subjected to the Emperor in the theological domain, as is proved by the
fact that it was to the Emperor that the formulas of the church councils were
submitted for their final decision and ratification.
Evola clearly prefers
this pre-eminence of Empire over Church to the model of the Guelph opposition,
which sought to ensure that the Church was the supreme power. In my view,
however, neither faction was completely right.
By nature, the
brahmin is superior to the kshatriya. The latter needs the guidance
of the former, not vice-versa. Unfortunately, the Church (as noted above) lost
its brahminic capacity and thus forfeited any right to give directions to kings
and emperors.[54]
Nevertheless, kshatriyas continue to need guidance; an Arthur needs his
Merlin, an Aragorn his Gandalf.
It is very doubtful
whether the Byzantine and Ghibelline emperors were initiated men; in which case
their claims to "have only God above them" were of very dubious standing.
The probable truth
is that both Church and Empire were "shells," in the sense in which Idries Shah
uses the term in his book The Sufis.[55]
That is to say, they preserved forms from former initiatory groups without
possessing the capacity of initiation itself.
Hence in the world of
European kingdoms that emerged out of the Middle Ages there was no perfect
solution to the dilemma over which institution should have supreme power, Church
or State; and, inevitably, there was a continuing tug-of-war.
Evola also developed
further his critique of the Catholic Church, arguing that its "capability of
providing adequate support for a revolutionary-conservative and traditionalist
movement must be resolutely denied." He enumerated various failings of
Catholicism and concluded that the direction it has taken "is a descending and
anti-traditional one, consisting of modernization and coming to terms with
democracy, socialism and progressivism."
Thus, "the norm that
must be followed [...] is to travel an autonomous way, abandoning the Church to
her destiny, considering her actual inability to bestow an official consecration
on a true, great, traditional and super-traditional Right."
My own view is that
Australians of the Right should be a little more magnanimous in their attitude
to the Catholic Church and other churches and even other religions. These may
have their faults, but we will have our faults too; for we cannot at present
claim to be initiates, to be awakened men. All of us are like travelers
lost in the dark; we can use what intelligence we have to help each other, but
must remain honestly aware of the tentative nature of our own efforts. Let us
pray that Heaven will send down some future light to us or our descendants!
Finally, Evola
comments on the apparent discrepancies between what he misguidedly calls "the
nihilist teachings" of Jesus in the Gospels and the kind of understanding
necessary for effective rule of a kingdom or empire. Here, he seems to give
insufficient weight to the obvious initiatory nature of much of the Gospel
message, tending to respond to texts as though they are to be taken
literally when beyond doubt they are to be taken symbolically.[56]
For example, he objects
to the famous exhortation: "Render unto Caesar what is Caesar's and unto God
what is God's." He sees this as promoting a separation between human
institutions and supernatural order which the Guelph faction was able to
exploit. However, it surely refers to the fundamental difference between this
world (Caesar's world, the world of those asleep) and the worlds above
(those of the awakening and the enlightened). The essential message is that the
two worlds should not be confused.
It is only if the
profound initiatory teaching of the Gospels is taken literally that it tends to
conflict with practical common sense in our ordinary conduct in this mundane
world!
Unreal "Realisms"
In his eleventh chapter
Evola considers a variety of unsatisfactory responses to the unappealing and
conformist world of the bourgeois.
He rejects
neo-realism as "the mistake of those who regard only the inferior degrees of
reality as real" and condemns psychoanalysis as "a doctrine that divests
and brands as unreal the conscious and sovereign principle of the person,
considering as 'real' instead the irrational, unconscious, collective and
nocturnal dimension of the human being, every higher faculty being seen as
derived and dependent."
He gives a particularly
adroit and succinct summary of existentialism. It "proclaims the primacy
of 'existence' over 'being', instead of acknowledging that existence acquires a
meaning only when it is inspired by something beyond itself. [...] In
this philosophy, 'existence' is identified with the most shallow forms of life;
this kind of existence is separated from any superior principle, made absolute
and cherished in its anguished and lightless immediacy."
That is an apt
diagnosis of Albert Camus' interesting but poisonous novel The Outsider,
but would not be fairly applied to the nobler novel The Plague, in which
the failed Algerian metaphysician struck a truly tragic note.[57]
Evola also notes that
the bourgeois pettiness can even infect monarchs, churchmen and communist
demonstrators. Another inappropriate response to the bourgeois mentality that he
identifies is an exaggerated appreciation of culture and intellectualism,
associated with "the growing, hypertrophic cerebralization of Western man," who
has given too privileged a position in recent centuries to conceptual thought.
In response to these
false alleys, Evola calls for "a more realistic opposition to the bourgeois
spirit" which is "oriented upward" and includes "a revival of the heroic and
aristocratic virtues."
We must "remain upright,
feeling the presence in life of that which leads beyond life." We need to
recover a worldview based on "an inner form and a sensibility endowed with an
innate character" which expresses "instinctive certainty" and a sense of "a sure
meaning of life." This is the premise for "the emergence of new men and leaders"
capable of establishing a new political climate.
This suggests that any
effective political movement of the Right in Australia will need to promote
inner exploration in its followers - not merely pious prayer, but deeper
forms of meditation and contemplation.
The Corporative Workplace
As a necessary step to
the reassertion of control over the economy by the State, Evola recommends an
end to "classism" and class struggle.
His ideal is a
corporative principle involving "a community of work and productive solidarity,
based on the principles of competence, qualification and natural hierarchy, with
the overall system characterized by a style of active impersonality,
selflessness and dignity." He recalls the mediaeval artisan corporations, guilds
and craft fraternities, whose members "enjoyed the status of free men and
also were very proud of belonging to their association." Such men "felt love for
their work, which was regarded as [...] an art and an expression of one's
vocation." They readily upheld "the code of honour of their corporations."
That world was turned
upside down by the industrial revolution, which went hand-in-hand with the rise
to power of usurious financial groups. Thus, says Evola:
"today the truly
relevant and serious problem is that of the restraint that needs to be
placed on the wild and unscrupulous struggle among various monopolies, and
especially among the monopoly of goods and materials (co-operatives), the
monopoly of money (banking, finance, stock speculations) and the monopoly of
labour (trade unions)."
Evola is certain that
"only the State can effectively [...] limit the power of these groups" and that
this can only happen "where the State appears as a super-ordained power, capable
of facing and defeating any subversive force." Australians should note here the
overwhelming case for the retention of our monarchy. Yielding to the agitation
for a republic will mean handing ourselves over to those who control these great
monopolies - the "barons" or "giants" of the age. Our task, then, must be to
breathe life back into the monarchy, by finding ways to rekindle heartfelt
loyalty to the Crown, and later in our history to effect the inauguration of a
truly Australian monarchy, seeded, as it were, from the parent tree in Britain.
Evola is emphatic that
the struggle against a degenerate and arrogant capitalism must be waged "from
above." As regards solutions, he is opposed to forms of worker co-ownership,
which he sees as tending to fatal inefficiency, particularly in the management
of large companies, which are like large armies. However, he suggests that "ways
should be devised through which the worker could gradually become a small
'owner,' by making him possessor of non-transferable stocks of his company
corporation."
Evola calls for the
suppression of "the worst type of capitalist, who is a parasitical recipient of
profits and dividends." Instead, in a new corporative system, the owner of the
means of production should "assume the function of responsible leader, technical
manager and capable organizer of the business he runs, being surrounded by loyal
workers who are free from trade union control."
Evola understands well
that "in the varieties of what is essentially mechanical work it is very
difficult to retain the character of 'art' and of 'vocation' and for the results
of production to show any signature of the personhood of those who worked to
manufacture them." This poses a problem similar to that encountered earlier in
the phenomenon of "total war" caused by modern scientific, technological and
industrial advances.
Evola adopts a similar
solution, seeking "the emergence of a new type, characterized by a certain
impersonality" who will incarnate "new forms of the anonymity and unselfishness
that characterized ancient corporativism." Clearly such a phenomenon could only
appear in a noble and just State whose population as a whole had faith in the
goodness and purposes of that State.
Evola also favored a
reconstructed parliamentary system in which the Lower House is filled with
representatives of the business, professional and trades corporations, whose
task would mainly be the management of the State's economic affairs.
Political concerns would
largely be dealt with by the Upper House, which would consist of men who
embodied and could defend spiritual and national interests of prestige and
power. One should belong to this superior House "by designation from above and
for life, almost as if it were an Order, on the basis of one's natural dignity
and inalienable qualification."
Such discussions will
make Australian men and women of the Right aware of the magnitude of the
challenge that lies before them; but certainly we cannot rest content with the
current political structures as they operate.
Occult Politics
In his thirteenth
chapter, in which Evola rightly acknowledges his considerable debt to René
Guénon,[58]
the question is asked whether "it is necessary to identify influences of a
higher order" behind the disastrous collapse around the world of traditionally
articulated societies.
Evola reminds us of how,
for example, Catholic historiography "used to regard history as [...] the
unfolding of divine Providence, to which hostile forces are opposed [...],
"forces of evil" [...], "forces of the Antichrist" [...], forces of the
cosmos against forces of chaos."
This is potentially
sensational copy! However, Evola does not develop any kind of detailed and
documented enquiry into the mystery of iniquity. Many readers may agree
with me on the basis of their own personal experience that there does seem to be
active in our world a superhuman being of evil, whose presence can be
felt on occasions as not merely one of enormous and elemental power, but also
one of a devastating hatred and conscious malignity. Evola carries out no
research into this matter, perhaps preferring to keep metaphysics out of what is
largely just a primer for political action.
Instead, he uses the
Protocols of the Learned Elders of Zion, of whose authenticity he is clearly
very skeptical, to allow him to raise another question, that of "whether or not
the disorder of recent times is accidental, since it corresponds to a plan, the
phases and fundamental instruments of which are accurately described in the
Protocols."
Thus, he focuses wholly
on the question of whether or not there has been a worldly political
conspiracy behind the world's calamities. He produces a fairly convincing
case that there has been, but avoids the cliché of placing blame on "the Jews"
and "Masonry." Rather, he surmises that these groups themselves may have been
used by a more concealed source.
Evola also considers
carefully the various instruments by which "occult war" appears to be waged:
"scientific suggestion and positivist propaganda, the tactic of replacement, the
tactic of counterfeits," the encouragement of a useless traditionalism (the
tares and chaff of Tradition), the tactic of inversion, the tactic of ricochet,
the scapegoat tactic, the tactic of deliberate misidentification of a principle
with its representative and the tactic of replacement infiltrations (in
"shell-like" organizations which have, as it were, lost their soul and so can
become possessed by alien forces).
Evola sensibly warns us
against quixotic gallantries in this dangerous situation.
"Those movements of
the past that intended to react against and stem the currents of national,
social and moral dissolution
[...] often upheld dangerously
unilateral positions, due to the lack of adequate discernment; this was a
weakness that [...]
played into the enemy's hands."
He concludes this
chapter by adding:
"There is little
hope that anything may be saved when among the leaders of a new movement
there are no men capable of integrating the material struggle with a secret
and inexorable knowledge, one that
[...] stands [...]
on the side of the luminous principle of traditional spirituality."
The Roman Ideal
Related to Evola's
discussion of the need for a choice of traditions within a nation's history is
his comparison of the two dominant temperaments within the Italian soul: the
Roman and the Mediterranean. A discussion interesting in itself, it also
suggests that the Australian Right may need to undertake a comparable analysis
of the Australian soul.
Evola begins by
presenting two unexpected historical perspectives. He first argues that the
"heroic-sacred" world of early Rome and Sparta "was not perpetuated in the
following 'Classical' civilization, from which, in turn, the 'Latin spirit' and
the doctrine of the 'unity of the peoples of Latin civilization' derived."
Next, he replaces the
"democratic" image of the Axis pact between Italy and Germany (a little clown
joining a big devil) with a much more dignified interpretation. Arguing that
Germany retained aspects of the "heroic-sacred" world longer than Greece or
Italy, he suggests that the Axis could have spiritually strengthened both
peoples with a "reciprocal integration," if it had not been sabotaged - partly
by elements in Italy itself, even Fascist cadres misled by the myth of the
Risorgimento.
Evola's depiction of
"the original Roman spirit" deserves to be quoted at length, since it clearly
reflects his own personal ideal and the temperament which gave him his
perspective on life. Australians might be wise to draw up a similar inventory of
"the British spirit" as the better part of their own national soul.
Evola saw the Roman
spirit as based on a human type characterized by "self-control, an enlightened
boldness, a concise speech and determined and coherent conduct, and a cold,
dominating attitude exempt from personalism and vanity.
"To this Roman style
belong virtus, in the
sense not of moralism, but of virile spirit and courage; fortitudo
and constantia, namely spiritual strength; sapientia, in the
sense of thoughtfulness and awareness; disciplina, understood as love
for a self-given law and form; fides, in the specifically Roman sense
of loyalty and faithfulness; and dignitas, which in the ancient
patrician society became gravitas and solemnitas,
a studied and moderate seriousness."
The Roman spirit
preferred
"deliberate actions,
without grand gestures, a realism that is
[...] love for the essential
[...], clarity [...], an inner equilibrium and a healthy suspicion
of every confused form of mysticism; a love for boundaries; the readiness to
unite, as free human beings and without losing one's identity, in view of a
higher goal or for an idea [...]; religio and pietas,
which [...] signify an attitude of respectful and dignified
veneration for the gods and [...]
of trust and re-connection with the supernatural, which was experienced as
omnipresent and effective."
By contrast, Evola
characterized the Mediterranean style much less favorably, seeing it as
consisting of
"love for outward
appearances and grand gestures; concern to be noticed by others and to make
an impact on them; the choreographic-theatrical and spectacular, comparable
to the French grandeur and gloire; the tendency toward a restless, chaotic
and undisciplined individualism; intolerance of any general and strict law
of order; the fireworks of a creativity disjoined from any higher meaning
and tradition; the pseudo-genial hypercritic, expert in eluding a law; the
cunning and malicious fooler of others; a gesticulating, noisy and
disordered exuberance; a manic effusiveness; excitability and verbosity; a
flaunted and conventional sense of honour; immediacy of desire or affection;
and a public cheeriness masking an inner hopelessness."
There is an
element of caricature, of course, in this comparison of two poles; and Evola's
"ideal Roman" is not the only fruitful way of being human: it is not a universal
requirement of man. Nevertheless, Evola's discussion can alert us to the ways in
which propagandists and agitators promote various stereotypes of "the typical
Australian " or "the Aussie bloke and Sheila"[59]
which may, in fact, be inadequately attuned to reality as well as psychosocially
demeaning. The Australian Right needs to determine its own modes of "the ideal
Australian character," based on scrupulous examination of our history and
culture; and to promote these coolly and calmly in the public forums.
As Evola also
noted, there is no need to suppress passion; rather, we should heed Nietzsche's
warning "against every morality that tends to dry up every impetuous current of
the human soul instead of channeling it."[60]
What matters is "to organize one's being in an integral way around the
capability of recognizing, discriminating and adequately utilizing the impulses
and the lights that emerge from one's deep recesses."
For Evola, the "myth of
Rome" was Italy's most desirable model. "In the rectifying and formative action
the key role will always be played by the political myth [...] a galvanizing
idea-force. The myth reacts on the environment, implementing the law of elective
affinities: it awakens, frees and imposes those possibilities of single
individuals and the environment to which they correspond."
Sex and Population
Evola believes in the
need for humanity to control the world's population growth.
"Overpopulation
exacerbates the problem of how to employ the workforces; it also unavoidably
intensifies production processes, which in turn, due to their determinisms,
strengthen the demonic nature of the economy. The result is the increasing
enslavement of the individual and the reduction of free space and of any
autonomous movement in modern cities."
Evola also
mentions the "congestion that in turn produces critical international
solutions," a theme that Jean Raspail later took up in his novel The Camp of
the Saints[61]
and a reality that now poses headaches for the Australian Government as regards
immigration policy.
Evola takes up a number
of controversial and uncompromising positions. In the first place, he endorses
the view that some peoples are superior to others and that the political order
of the State should appropriately reflect this.
"Every true empire
is born from a race of conquerors who overcame lands and peoples
[...] on the basis of a higher
calling and qualification, which allowed them to rule as a minority in
foreign lands [...] the
Romans, the Achaemenids, the Franks, the Spaniards, the early Islamic hosts
and the British."
In the second place, he
rejects as outdated and in fact immoral the Catholic religion's embrace of the
biblical principle of the multiplication of the human species and the Church
teaching that sexual union and marriage are legitimate and sanctified only when
they are aimed at procreation.
Evola acknowledges the
good sense of a Vatican II declaration that love, too, may be a legitimate
foundation of marriage. In referring also to the libertine, "who elevates
pleasure to an art," and the Dionysianism "that in antiquity enjoyed a religious
sanction," Evola clearly insists that birth control measures should be widely
employed so that sexual satisfaction of various intensities can be obtained
without worsening the population problem.
A third controversial
position (very personal to Evola himself) concerns the identification of "the
cult of children" with the bourgeois spirit. Evola calls for men to join the
revolutionary-conservative movement who should almost look upon creating a
family as a betrayal of the cause. He perhaps mistakes a personal preference for
an ideal. Such men are not necessarily to be ascetics.
"I believe that in
the personal domain the right to an ample degree of sexual freedom for these
men (the warriors) should be acknowledged, against moralism, social
conformism and 'heroism in slippers'."
A degree of personal
feeling has clearly entered the discourse here, confirmed by Evola's approving
quotation of Nietzsche's infamous dictum that "man should be trained for war and
woman for the recreation (or rest) of the warrior."
At the same time Evola
must be commended for his courage and frankness in tackling such difficult
subjects in defiance of taboos old or new. The Australian Right will need to
show similar integrity in determining policy on immigration and population
issues for our future.
A True European Union
Evola's last chapter
considers the daunting task of bringing about a united Europe in accordance with
the principles of Tradition. This is of great interest in a time when a quite
different kind of European Union is being more or less forced on the peoples of
the traditional European nations; and when Britain is moving towards its fateful
referendum on whether or not to accept the Euro as its unit of currency.
Evola begins by
outlining the organic character that his ideal Europe would possess.
"Fatherlands and
nations may exist. [...]
What should be excluded are
nationalism, imperialism, chauvinism - every fanatical absolutization of a
particular unit."
Such a European
Empire would safeguard the principles of both unity and multiplicity.
"Individual states
would have the character of partial organic units, gravitating around a one
that is not a part."
Transcending the
political sphere would be an idea, a tradition and a spiritual power.
"The limitations of
the sovereignty of the single national units before an eminent right of the
Empire will have as their sole condition this transcendental dignity of the
Empire [...] an organism
composed of organisms."
Thus, "the elementary
presupposition of an eventual united Europe appears to be the political
integration of the single nations." A healthy whole cannot be made up of
unhealthy parts.
In such integrated
nations, quite different from the current bourgeois democracies, the elites of
each nation "could understand one another and co-ordinate their work," rather in
the manner of the royal houses and their supporting aristocracies in the Old
Europe.
Evola does not fudge the
"disheartening magnitude" of the task, which seems almost utopian. He notes that
the problem of finding a spiritual foundation for such a European Empire is
quite unresolved. Neither Catholicism nor "a generic Christianity" (which would
be too weak and diffuse) would serve the purpose. Moreover, Europeans have
largely lost contact with the highest meaning of Europe itself; and "European
tradition" and "European culture" are too confused and too contaminated by false
ideas.
Evola is aware that the
"general leveling of cultures" of the world has been used as an argument by
those "who do not want a united Europe but rather a unified world, in a
supernational organization or World Government." Today's European Union, brought
about by massive deceit in recent decades, is perhaps a step in that direction.
It would, of course, lead to an anti-traditional world in which the majority of
human beings would be drugged and driven serfs.
Evola adds that "a
radical European action finds its major obstacle in the lack of something that
could represent a starting point, a firm support and a centre of
crystallization." He proposes the creation of an Order whose members would work
in the right direction in the various nations.
Such an order could
include members of ancient European families, warrior types (especially those
trained in elite combat units) and other persons in whom a distaste for "the
modern disaster" has aroused a yearning for a traditional political order,
together with the will and character to strive for it.
"The personality of
an authentic leader at the centre and head of the Order is of the utmost
importance."
No such person was
visible to Evola in Europe as he wrote those words. For members of the
Australian Right, this chapter reminds us of the kind of political order in
Australia towards which we should work, together with the attendant
difficulties. To date it seems that no suitable leader arose during the five
decades after the Japanese collapse; but perhaps that reflects the fact that
individuals and groups on the Australian Right lacked the wisdom and
understanding to create the necessary atmosphere in which such a leader could
appear and act.
Envoi
The most arresting
question to be asked of Evola is whether or not he ever wrote as an initiate, as
an awakened man, as a brahmin. Judging by Men Among the Ruins, I
believe the answer to be no.
A not altogether
friendly critic of Evola, Richard Drake, in Chapter 7 ("Children of the Sun") of
his Revolutionary Mystique and Terrorism in Contemporary Italy (Indiana
University Press) has written of Evola's period of magical studies with the Ur
group in the 1920's as follows: "Evola proposed a philosophy of utter
wakefulness and vigilance on this plane of existence, the only one with which he
was seriously concerned." This was after Evola had left the Ur group.
And Dr H. T. Hansen, in
"A Short Introduction to Julius Evola" published in Theosophical History
noted of Evola: "Since he does not regard himself as master, he can recognize no
student."
Evola's behavior in 1945
is also inconsonant with that of a wise initiate. Hansen reported:
"During air attacks,
Evola had the habit of not going to the bomb shelters but instead went on
working in his office or walked about the streets of Vienna. He wanted, as
he said, 'calmly to question his fate.'"
In fact it was foolish
negligence - and he suffered terribly for it.
Robin Waterfield, the
biographer of Guénon, published "Baron Julius Evola and the Hermetic Tradition"
in Gnosis Magazine. About the Ur phase, he tersely commented:
"Their attempts to
form a 'magical chain' in order to exercise supernatural influence on others
were soon abandoned."
Waterfield felt that
Evola had, however, performed a service by bringing back to European attention
the concept of theosis, personal deification - that level of attainment
known as jivanmukta in Hinduism, "the superior person" in Chinese
tradition, "the liberated one" in Buddhism and the saint or sage in Christian
tradition.
"This notion has
been fiercely opposed by the hierarchical Christian Church, whose clergy
have seen unmediated access to divine grace as a threat to their influence
and power."
They have also, of
course, found it at odds with the Pauline doctrine of the "one atonement" by the
blood of the crucified Jesus.
In my view Evola
is a man of very similar character and achievements to the great Russian writer
P. D. Ouspensky (1878-1947), who searched diligently (or thought he did) for a
school of initiation, but never succeeded in becoming initiated.[62]
There seems to have been a degree of gloom at the end of each man's life, the
gloom of hamartia, of having had one's arrow fall short of the target.
Yet, in the world of us ordinary men, the unawakened, each of these writers is a
towering figure of integrity, independent thought and intellectual achievement.
Their work has to
be read critically, however. British psychiatrist and devotee of the
Cathar tradition, Dr. Arthur Guirdham,[63]
would surely have diagnosed each man as a typical modern obsessive. Obsession is
indeed a psychological failing, but it can drive its victims to lifetimes of
intense labor and magnificent achievements. In my case, my main criticism of
Evola is his undue depreciation of the feminine side of human nature, his unfair
identification of femininity with the will-to-sleep, to give up the struggle to
achieve wisdom. Evola appears to me to have been a very highly strung person;
and his adherence to a "path of virility" was a means by which he kept his own
nature from collapsing. It was a noble path, but it is not the only path.
Further Reading
Books by Julius Evola
available in English and published by Inner Traditions, Rochester, Vermont, USA,
unless otherwise indicated, are:
- Eros and the Mysteries of Love
(1983)
- The Yoga of Power
(1992)
- Revolt against the Modern World
(1995)
- The Hermetic Tradition
(1995)
- The Doctrine of Awakening
(1996)
- Meditation on the Peaks (Feral
House) (1997)
- The Mystery of the Grail
(1997)
- Introduction to Magic
(2001)
- Men among the Ruins
(2002)
The Author
Nigel Jackson was born
on September 4, 1939, in Melbourne, Australia. He holds a Master of Arts degree
in English from the University of Melbourne and has been a secondary school
teacher for thirty-five years. He published four books of poetry in the 1970's
and The Case for David Irving in 1994. For two decades he has publicly
defended the principle of intellectual freedom and, consequently, the right of
revisionist historians to publish in national forums without defamation,
harassment or punishment. This review-article on Julius Evola's Men Among the
Ruins was accepted for publication in three parts by the Australian New
Dawn Magazine and the first part appeared in its September-October 2002
edition. Mysteriously, the other parts never appeared and the magazine was deaf
to several letters of enquiry by the author.
Notes
|
[1] |
Russell Kirk, The
Conservative Mind, Faber, London, 1954. |
|
[2] |
Eric Voegelin, The New
Science of Politics, University of Chicago Press, USA, 1966. |
|
[3] |
George Hannan was a Liberal
Party Senator in the Australian Parliament from 1956 to 1964 and 1970 to
1974. A staunch Catholic and politically conservative, he endeavoured to
form his own party in 1974, after being deprived of party preselection.
|
|
[4] |
Graham Campbell was the
Australian Labour Party Member for Kalgoorlie in the House of
Representatives of the Australian Parliament from 1980 to 1995 and then
held his seat as an Independent from 1995 to 1999. Uncorrupt, outspoken
and fearless, he made many admirable public statements that disconcerted
both major parties, such as his open criticism of the Zionist Jewish
lobby for its attack on free speech during the parliamentary debate on
the 1994 Racial Hatred Bill. See Graham Campbell and Mark Uhlmann,
Australia Betrayed, Foundation Press, 65 Oats Street, Carlisle,
Western Australia 6101, Australia, 1995. |
|
[5] |
Pauline Hanson was an
Independent Member for Ipswich in the House of Representatives of the
Australian Parliament from 1996 to 1998. She was a frank but simplistic
populist who espoused some politically incorrect policies of a generally
old-fashioned conservative nature, especially concerning nationalism (as
opposed to globalism), immigration and Aboriginal affairs. She formed
the One Nation Party, which attracted a moderately substantial protest
vote for a few years. |
|
[6] |
Giuseppe di Lampedusa, The
Leopard, Fontana, London, 1984. |
|
[7] |
Oswald Spengler, Decline and
Fall of the West (2 vols.), Alfred A. Knopf, New York, 1986. |
|
[8] |
The Tao Te Ching, Unwin,
London, 1985. |
|
[9] |
René Guénon, The Crisis of
the Modern World, Luzac, London, 1942. |
|
[10] |
Nikos Kazantzakis, Zorba the
Greek, Faber, London, 1977. |
|
[11] |
The Perennialists include René
Guénon, Ananda Coomaraswamy, Frithjof Schuon, Titus Burckhardt, Martin
Lings, Marco Pallis and Leo Schaya. See, inter alia, Jacob Needleman
(ed), The Sword of Gnosis, Arkana, London, 1986, which contains
an anthology of their writings, and Martin Lings, The Eleventh Hour,
Quinta Essentia, Cambridge, 1987, which lists the majority of their
important publications. Aldous Huxley wrote a study of Traditionalism in
his The Perennial Philosophy, Chatto and Windus, London, 1946.
|
|
[12] |
Gustave Le Bon, The Crowd,
Penguin, London, 1977. See also Ortega Y Gasset, Revolt of the Masses,
Unwin, London, 1972. |
|
[13] |
Robert Graves, The White
Goddess, Faber, London, 1961. |
|
[14] |
Starhawk, The Spiral Dance,
Harper and Row, New York, 1979. |
|
[15] |
The Bhagavad Gita, ed.
Radhakrishnan, Allen and Unwin, London, 1960. |
|
[16] |
World Conquest through World
Government - The Protocols of the Learned Elders of Zion, ed. Victor
Marsden, Britons, UK, 1972. |
|
[17] |
On Corneliu Codreanu see Prince
Michael Sturdza, The Suicide of Europe, Western Islands, Boston,
USA, 1968, pp. 31-41. |
|
[18] |
T. S. Eliot, The Sacred Wood,
1920, repr. Methuen, London, 1960; The Idea of a Christian Society,
1939, repr. Faber, London, 1954; Notes Towards the Definition of
Culture, 1948, repr. Faber, London, 1962; On Poetry and Poets,
1957, repr. Faber, London, 1961. |
|
[19] |
In Selected Essays,
1932, repr. Faber, London, 1958. |
|
[20] |
On 1 January 1901 Australia
became a federation, the six self-governing colonies into which the
continent had previously been divided becoming States of an
"indissoluble Federal Commonwealth." |
|
[21] |
Founded in 1957, the National
Civic Council grew out of the earlier "Movement" which had been largely
sponsored by elements in the Catholic Church as a means to diminish
Communist influence in Australia's trades unions. Its president, B. A.
Santamaria, one of Australia's most distinguished intellectuals and
political commentators, died in 1998. See his books: The Price of
Freedom, The Hawthorn Press, Melbourne, 1964; Point of View,
The Hawthorn Press, Melbourne, 1969; and Against the Tide, Oxford
University Press, Melbourne, 1981. |
|
[22] |
National Action was a small
political movement, based partly on the political philosophy of the
Spanish Falangist and Catholic Jose Primo de Rivera. It was republican,
hostile to non-European immigration and prone to provocative public
demonstrations. In the 1990's its chief spokesman was Michael Brander. |
|
[23] |
The Australian League of Rights
was founded in 1960 and grew out of earlier state leagues founded to
oppose federal nationalisation of banking. Its first national director,
Eric D. Butler, was a convert to the Social Credit philosophy of Major
Clifford Douglas (1879-1952). The League's program is Christian,
royalist and pro-British. Like Douglas himself, it has been critical of
Zionist Jewish influence in modern politics. Regularly defamed in the
media and by politicians of all major parties, it has struggled to avoid
pariah status. See Clifford H. Douglas, Social Credit, Institute
of Economic Democracy, Vancouver, Canada, 1979; The Brief for the
Prosecution, Veritas, Western Australia, 1983; and The
Development of World Dominion, KRP Publications, London, 1969. |
|
[24] |
On the important topic of
castes see Frithjof Schuon, Castes and Races, Perennial Books,
UK, 1981. |
|
[25] |
Maurice Nicoll, Living Time,
Vincent Stuart, London, 1961, p 123; Frithjof Schuon, Understanding
Islam, 1963, repr. Unwin, London, 1981, pp 71-78. |
|
[26] |
On Chinese tradition see René
Guénon, The Great Triad, Quinta Essentia, Cambridge, UK, 1991. |
|
[27] |
Aldous Huxley, Brave New
World, Penguin, London, 1975. |
|
[28] |
On ancient Egyptian culture see
the works of René Schwaller de Lubicz, including The Temple in Man,
Inner Traditions, USA, 1981. |
|
[29] |
Ronald Conway, The Great
Australian Stupor, Sun Books, Melbourne, 1971; Land of the Long
Weekend, Sun Books, Melbourne, 1978. |
|
[30] |
Gordon Rattray Taylor, Sex
in History, Thames and Hudson, London, 1953. |
|
[31] |
See I. C. F. Spry, QC, "The
Hypocrisy of Aboriginal Claims," National Observer (PO Box 751,
North Melbourne, Victoria 3051, Australia), No. 45, Winter 2000, pp
6-10. Dr Spry writes, inter alia: "The regrettable and pervasive
dishonesty of the Aboriginal lobby can now be seen almost every day in
newspaper reports. The so-called 'stolen generation' claims provide
regular examples. [...the lobby] is continuing to promote extreme
results under the guise of 'reconciliation'. In effect, the approach is
to say 'we should be "reconciled" with you' but 'we will be reconciled
only if you provide us with all that we demand, including (and
especially) large amounts of money, a treaty favouring us and so on..."
|
|
[32] |
J. R. R. Tolkien, The Hobbit,
Unwin, London, 1995; The Lord of the Rings, Harper Collins,
London, 1992. |
|
[33] |
Terry Goodkind, Wizard's
First Rule, Gollancz, London, 2001, is the first of the series. |
|
[34] |
Russell Kirk, Enemies of the
Permanent Things, Arlington House, New York, 1969, pp 109-124. |
|
[35] |
See Nigel Jackson, "The Queen's
Justice and the International Criminal Court" (speech to the Australian
League of Rights National Seminar, October 2002), M. E. A., PO Box 248,
East Caulfield, Victoria 3145, Australia. |
|
[36] |
See Mouni Sadhu, In Days of
Great Peace, Allen and Unwin, London, 1952. |
|
[37] |
See Martin Lings, A Sufi
Saint of the Twentieth Century - Shaykh Ahmad-al-Alawi, Allen and
Unwin, London, 1973. |
|
[38] |
On the French Revolution see
Nesta Webster, The French Revolution, 1919, repr. Christian Book
Club of America, Hawthorne, CA 90250, USA, 1969; World Revolution,
1921, repr. Britons, UK, 1971, pp 13-93; and Spacious Days,
Hutchinson, London, 1949, pp 185-191. |
|
[39] |
On communism/bolshevism see P.
D. Ouspensky, In Search of the Miraculous, Routledge and Kegan
Paul, London, 1950, pp 344-345; Letters from Russia 1919,
Routledge and Kegan Paul, London, 1978. |
|
[40] |
George Orwell, Animal Farm,
Penguin, London, 1989; Nineteen Eighty-four, Penguin, London,
1975. |
|
[41] |
Alexander Solzhenitsyn, The
Red Wheel, comprising (to date) August 1914, The Bodley Head,
London, 1989, and November 1916, Jonathan Cape, London, 1999. Two
further volumes in the series are to follow. |
|
[42] |
See Pieter Geyl, Napoleon:
For and Against, 1949, repr. Peregrine Books, London, 1965. |
|
[43] |
Paul Keating, an ardent
republican of Irish extraction, was Prime Minister of Australia and
Leader of the Australian Labour Party from 1991 to 1996. |
|
[44] |
Sir William Deane was a Justice
of the High Court of Australia from 1982 to 1995 and Governor-General of
Australia from 1996 to 2001. During his vice-regal phase he politicised
the office of Governor-General in an unprecedented manner, expressing
left-liberal views on sensitive topics such as Aboriginal affairs and
immigration. |
|
[45] |
On metanoia, often
mistranslated as "repentance," see Maurice Nicoll, The Mark,
Robinson and Watkins, London, 1973, p 207. |
|
[46] |
On Dr Salazar see Hugh Kay,
Salazar and Modern Portugal, Eyre and Spottiswoode, London, 1968.
Also recommended are the books by his Ambassador to the United Nations
and Foreign Minister, Dr Franco Nogueira, Portugal and the United
Nations, Sidgwick and Jackson, London, 1961, and The Third World,
Johnson, London, 1967. |
|
[47] |
Sir Walter Scott, Quentin
Durward, Collins, London, 1951; Sir Arthur Conan Doyle, Sir Nigel,
Wordsworth, UK, 1994. |
|
[48] |
Ernst Jünger, The Storm of
Steel, Chatto and Windus, London, 1929, repr. 1942. |
|
[49] |
Martin Boyd (Australian
novelist, 1893-1972), The Cardboard Crown, Penguin, Melbourne,
1984; A Difficult Young Man, Penguin, Melbourne, 1988;
Outbreak of Love, Lansdowne Press, Melbourne, 1976; When
Blackbirds Sing, Lansdowne Press, Melbourne, 1972. |
|
[50] |
On George Ivanovich Gurdjieff
(1877?-1949) see James Moore, Gurdjieff, Element, UK, 1991. |
|
[51] |
See Robin Waterfield, René
Guénon and the Future of the West, Aquarian Press, London, 1987. |
|
[52] |
Frithjof Schuon, The
Transcendent Unity of Religions, Theosophical Publishing House, USA,
1984. |
|
[53] |
James McAuley (Australian poet
and Catholic intellectual), The End of Modernity, Angus and
Robertson, Sydney, 1959, pp 8 -16; Monk Damascene Christensen (Russian
Orthodox priest), Not of This World, Father Seraphim Rose
Foundation, PO Box 1656, Forestville, CA 95436, USA, 1997, pp 60-84 and
997-999. |
|
[54] |
See Robin Waterfield, op.
cit. (note 51), pp 130-131 and René Guénon, The
Lord of the World, Coombe Springs Press, UK, 1983. |
|
[55] |
Idries Shah, The Sufis,
Star Books, London, 1977; "The King's Hawk and the Owls," in The
Hundred Tales of Wisdom, Octagon Press, London, 1978. |
|
[56] |
See P. D. Ouspensky,
"Christianity and the New Testament" in A New Model of the Universe,
Kegan Paul, Trench, Trubner, Co. Ltd., London, 1931, repr 1938.
|
|
[57] |
Albert Camus, The Outsider,
Penguin, London, 1974; The Plague, Penguin, London, 1976. |
|
[58] |
René Guénon,
The Reign of Quantity and the Signs of the Times, Sophia Perennis,
New York, 1995, Chapters 30, 36, 38 and 39. |
|
[59] |
Sheila is a colloquial
Australian term for a girl or woman, probably derived from Ireland,
where feminine carvings from ancient times, known as shelagh-na-gigs,
are common. |
|
[60] |
Friedrich Nietzsche, Thus
Spake Zarathustra, Penguin, London, 1961. See also Martin Heidegger,
Nietzsche (2 vols.), Harper San Francisco, USA, 1991. |
|
[61] |
Jean Raspail, The Camp of
the Saints, Ace Books, Grosset and Dunlap, New York, 1977. |
|
[62] |
P.D. Ouspensky, op. cit.
(notes 39, 56), and Tertium Organum: The Third Canon of Thought,
1921, repr. Routledge and Kegan Paul, London, 1957; The Fourth Way,
Routledge and Kegan Paul, London, 1957; Talks with a Devil,
Turnstone Press, London, 1972. |
|
[63] |
Arthur Guirdham, Obsession,
Neville Spearman, London, 1972. |
Source: The
Revisionist 2(2) (2004), pp. 187-203.
Reproduced from:
http://www.vho.org/tr/2004/2/Jackson187-203.html
|