| Editor's Note
On 20 February 1949, Savitri Devi
was arrested in Cologne for distributing National Socialist propaganda. She
was tried on 5 April 1949 before a military tribunal in Düsseldorf and
sentenced to three years imprisonment in Werl prison. (She was released on
18 August 1949 by the British, in response to a request from Indian Prime
Minister Nehru.) On 31 May 1949, her cell was searched and the manuscripts
of her unfinished books Gold in the Furnace (the "lost manuscript" to
which she refers) and The Lightning and the Sun, as well as the
finished manuscript of Impeachment of Man, were seized. She was told
that if they contained anything objectionable to the authorities, they would
be destroyed.
-- RGF |
On the next day, Sunday,
the 5th June, I remained in bed.
I was wide-awake -- I had
hardly slept. And I was not tired. But having nothing to do, nothing to read, I
did not feel urged to get up. So there I lay thinking, as always, about my lost
manuscript; hoping, for a while that they would not destroy it, and then,
refusing to hope; not daring to hope; and dreaming of the days when all these
and worse memories of the long persecution would appear to me, and to us all, as
a nightmare forever ended.
As every Sunday, in the
corridor of the D wing, at the corner of the A wing, the church services were
taking place: first the Catholic, then the Evangelical. From, my cell, I could
hear the other prisoners singing hymns. And again I was shocked, as I always had
been from the beginning -- I who, consistently, had never attended those
services -- at the thought of my true comrades of the D wing singing Christian
hymns and listening to sermons about the adventures of some Jews two thousand
years ago or more, in illustration of so-called virtues, most of which [are]
utterly foreign to our ideals. The explanation that H.E. [Hertha Ehlert] had
once given me, namely that the few real National Socialists of the D wing like
herself attended the church services out of sheer boredom, did not satisfy me. I
could understand how one of us could put up a show in the interest of the cause,
but not just out of "boredom." Or did these women want to give the authorities
the impression that they were "reformed" or at least reformable, so as to be
released, if possible, a little sooner? That was perhaps the reason why
they went through the church farce with such stupendous regularity. And H.E. had
not wished to tell me, lest I might, within my heart, censure such opportunism.
Yet, I would have preferred to see a woman like her attend church services for a
definite practical reason of that nature, rather than out of boredom ...
I heard a noise in the
key-hole, and turned my head towards the door. To my delight, it was Frau S.
"In bed still, our vanguard
fighter?" (Unsere Vorkämpferin) said she, considering me with a kind,
although somewhat ironical smile.
I made a move to get up.
"No, no; stay in," insisted Frau S, "I was only teasing you. I know you need
rest. I have brought you ... a cup of real coffee ..."
I gazed at her intently. I
was moved, happy. Tears filled my eyes. "Even if they do send me back to India,
as they say, I shall not stay there for ever," said I. "One day, when I come
back, when everything is in order, I shall meet you again. It will then be sweet
to remember the times of persecution." I spoke with enthusiasm, as though I
could visualise the staggering future of our dreams through the mist of the
depressing present.
"In the meantime, drink
your coffee," said Frau S., "or it will get cold." I sat up and sipped the hot,
strong, sweet, lovely coffee, while Frau S., after pulling the door behind her,
seated herself upon the stool, near my bed.
"What did the Governor tell
you, the day before yesterday?" she asked me, after a silence. "And what did you
tell him?"
"He promised me he would
not have my manuscript destroyed before seeing me and giving me it chance to
defend it." replied I; "and I begged him to let me keep, it merely as a
remembrance of my life in jail. I told him that I do not intend ever to publish
it ..."
A mischievous smile
brightened Frau S's stern, energetic face. I looked at her enquiringly. And she
answered the question which I had not explicitly put to her, but that she had
guessed. "No need to ask me why I am smiling," said she:
"You know it well enough."
"I don't; I really don't,"
replied I. I loved Frau S. But somehow, I was not willing to disclose my secret
thoughts, even to her. I was so afraid that the slightest indiscretion of mine
would destroy, in the invisible, the effect of my studied lies, that I kept on
lying, to her also. I even tried myself to believe what I had told the Governor,
knowing that, in the invisible, belief as such has a potency, even if it be the
belief in a lie. I wanted Frau S's belief -- and my own, if that were possible
-- to strengthen that of the Governor, in some mysterious way, and thus to
influence his decision in favour of my book. I was afraid that the truth, once I
expressed it, even once I admitted it to myself, would, somehow, in the
invisible, destroy that belief. So I added: "I meant it when I told the Governor
that I did not wish to publish my book about Germany." But Frau S. saw through
me. She smiled more mischievously than ever.
"I don't know whether the
Governor will believe you," said she; "but I certainly don't. Assuming he
gives you back your manuscript, you might not publish it at once, for that would
be downright impossible. But you will publish it as soon as you can -- as soon
as you know it is possible to do so without endangering any of us. I know you
will, because I know you."
"Do you think you know me
enough to be able to tell when I lie and when I speak the truth?" asked I.
"I can guess your natural
reluctance to lies," replied Frau S. "But I know, also, that you are a genuine
Nazi. That is, enough. In the interest of the cause, you are capable of
anything. You have proved it, now, once more."
She had analyzed me well. I
felt a gush of pride and joy swell my breast. Had I, during the great days, in
front of everybody, been given a decoration für treue Dienst ["for loyal
service"], I could not have been happier. "Frau S.," exclaimed I, "you have
explicitly conferred unto me the highest title of glory to which a twentieth
century Aryan can aspire. May I never cease to deserve it!"
I paused for a minute to
think, to feel all that her words meant to me. "Whether they destroy my writings
or not," reflected I, "may my life remain, in true, unrecorded history, the
first living tribute of allegiance of the outer Aryan world to the Führer, the
Savior of the Race, and to his predestined Nation! Oh, I am happy! Whether I lie
remembered or forgotten, I want these words: echte Nationalsozialistin
["genuine (female) national socialist"], to remain true of me, for ever and ever
..." Frau S. smiled at me once more. "I have not paid you a false compliment,"
said she. "I simply told you what I know. You might deceive these people. You
cannot deceive me."
"I don't really want to,"
said I, smiling in my turn. And I added, handing back to her the cup that I had
just emptied: "I thank you for the coffee. It was lovely!"
"I'll bring you some more
this afternoon."
"There is one thing I would
like you to bring me -- if you can," said I; "that is to say, if they, have
given it back to you ..."
"What?" "That book,
Menschen Schönheit ["Human Beauty"], that you lent me before they searched
my cell. I have nothing to do, nothing to read: and I love that book."
"They have given it back to
me," replied Frau S. "You shall have it." And in fact, she went and fetched it
for me before taking leave of me.
Thus, after washing and
dressing, I once more admired those pictures of German youths and maidens,
mothers and children, of the days of pride and prosperity, as perfect as the
masterpieces in stone or color of which the editor had placed the photographs on
the opposite pages. And once more I felt, in contemplating them: "That is
what I have been longing for, all my life; that, the beauty of the
perfect Aryan"'
There was not a word of
"politics" in the whole book. There was no need to be. The pictures alone
proclaimed, more forcefully than all possible comments, the eternal glory of the
National Socialist regime. For what justifies a regime, if not the quality of
the human élite of which it forwards the growth and the domination?
I
looked at the photograph of a blond adolescent, with regular, thoughtful, manly
features, and an athletic body, leaning against a stone parapet. On the same
page, was the picture of a young German warrior, taken from a Roman bas-relief:
the same face as that of the modern Hitler-youth -- glaring proof of the sacred
continuity of blood, from the soldiers of Hermann whom the Romans dreaded, to
the companions of Horst Wessel. On another page were two beautiful young men of
the purest North German type, wielding the bow; opposite, an ancient Greek
bowman exactly like them -- glaring proof of the unity of the Aryan race in its
original purity. I recalled in my mind a sentence of my lost book -- the
explanation of my whole admiring attitude to the Hitler regime; the expression
of the fact that I found in it the perfect answer to my life-long quest of
all-round beauty in living mankind: "I know nothing, in the modern world, as
beautiful as the Nazi youth." Beautiful, not only physically, but in character,
also; the embodiment of those great Aryan virtues which alone can lift the
natural élite of men to super-manhood. And for the millionth time, I thought:
"Glory to the Man, glory to the regime who, out of the enslaved Germany of the
early 'nineteen twenties,' has brought forth that!" [Image: "Bronze Age
Warrior" -- NS Art.]
I also thought -- and that,
too, for the millionth time: "For the establishment, the maintenance, the
defense of such a regime, anything is permissible, nay, anything is commendable,
contrarily to that which the believers in the 'equal rights of man' preach from
morning to night in the interest of the human parasites who thrive on the
corruption and degeneracy of their betters." How I had always hated that type of
preaching! How I had, from my childhood, always opposed my morality to that of
the upholders of I know not what mysterious "dignity of the human person" of
which I failed to see any evidence in real life, and which I refused to admit as
a dogma!
I remembered how, when I
was twelve the teacher in the French school where I used to go had once made me
stand for a whole hour in the corner, my face to the wall, as a punishment for
having declared openly that the so-called 'ideals' of the French Revolution
disgusted me. And how, another time in the same school, I had been punished for
pulling out my tongue at the plaster bust of the French Republic that stood in
the corridor -- the symbol of all I hated -- and how I had cared little for the
punishment, so glad I was to feel that I had insulted and defied the detested
symbol. And how I reacted to the poems of Victor Hugo, whom I was told I 'must'
admire -- but whose idiotic equalitarian sentimentalism and belief in 'progress'
through learning alone, merely succeeded in irritating me beyond bearing, and in
setting me fanatically, and definitely, against all silly morality centered
around 'man' as such -- that morality which all expected me to accept as a
matter of course.
I did not know, then, that
this thoroughly Pagan, thoroughly Aryan scale of values which [had] already
rendered me so unpopular would become, in a few years' time, thanks to the
makers of the Nazi regime, the scale of values of a new civilization. Now, I
knew that the new civilization would impose itself in the long run and that,
along with my German comrades and a few other non-German Aryans like myself. I
was already a part and parcel of it.
It was, no doubt, in a way,
"new," thought I. But it was also not new. It was, as the Führer had himself
said, "in harmony with the original meaning of things" (Mein Kampf, II,
Chap. II, p. 440) -- eternal. It aimed at stemming the physical and moral decay
of modern, technically "advanced" humanity by forcing it -- by forcing its
racial élite, at least -- to live in accordance with the ultimate purpose of
Nature, which is not to make individuals "happy," nor even to make nations
"happy," but to evolve supermankind -- living godhead -- out of the existing
master races, first of all, out of the Pure Aryan. Happiness is a bourgeois
conception, definitely. It is not our concern. We want animals to be happy --
and inferior men, also, to the extent their happiness does not disturb the New
Order. We believe higher mankind has better things to do. The Aryan world,
remolded by us after our final triumph, will no longer think in terms of
happiness like the decadent world of today. It will think in terms of duty --
like the early Vedic world, the early Christian world, the early Islamic world;
like the world at the time of any great new beginning. But it will, in spirit,
resemble the early Vedic world far more than either the Christian or the
Islamic. For the duty it will live for will not be the duty to love all men
as one's self, nor to consider them all as potential brothers in faith;
it will be the duty to love the integral beauty of one's race above one's self
and above all things, and to contribute to its fullest expression, at any cost,
by any means, because such is the divine purpose of Nature.
A former SS man had once
told me: "The first duty of a National Socialist is to be beautiful,"
(physically, and on all planes) -- words worthy of an ancient Greek; words of an
Aryan of all times. And my comrade Herr A -- who without having served in the
Waffen SS is just as devoted a follower of Adolf Hitler as any of those who have
-- had once told me: "A National Socialist should have no weaknesses" -- words
that I had remembered so many times since my manuscript, into which I bad put so
much love, had been in danger of being destroyed. And I reflected that, indeed,
unless one had "no weaknesses," one could not be perfectly beautiful;
that every weakness is a flaw in the steel of one's character; a tendency to
sacrifice beauty to happiness, duty to individual ties, the future to the
present, the eternal to the illusory; that it is a definite possibility of
decay. Only out of flawless elements can living gods emerge. The man whose life
is a thing of integral beauty, the man with no weaknesses is the man with no
ties, who performs duty with ruthless thoroughness and with serenity.
And I asked myself: "Am
I really without ties? Am I serene?' If I were, I would not worry over the
possible destruction of my manuscripts, after having done all I could to save
them.
I
recalled my visit to Godafoss, in northern Iceland, in June, 1947.
I had been told that, some
time after the year 1000, a man named Thorgeir, who was a "godi" -- a priest of
the Nordic Gods -- in the region of Ljosvatn, in North Iceland, became a
Christian. And, that as a spectacular demonstration of his allegiance to the new
foreign faith -- and perhaps, in his mind, as "an example" -- he had taken the
images of the old Gods and thrown them publicly into the waterfall of the river
Skjalvantaflyot, known ever since as Godafoss: the Waterfall of the Gods.
Deeply moved, I had gone
myself to the spot, and stood by the Waterfall and thought of those Gods --
Odin, and Thor, and Baldur the Fair and the others, whom my own Viking ancestors
once worshipped -- lying, for more than nine hundred years at the bottom of the
icy waters of the Skjalvantaflyot, waiting for the dawn of the new times, for
the great Heathen Renaissance; waiting for us -- for me. I had
brought with me a paper on which I had copied the words that the French poet
Leconte de Lisle puts in the mouth of a Norse god addressing the meek Child
Jesus, come to overthrow his power:
"... Thou shalt die in
thy turn!
Nine times, I swear it, by the immortal Runes,
Thou shalt die like I, god of the new souls!
For man will survive. Twenty centuries of suffering
Will make his flesh bleed and his tears flow,
Until the day when thy yoke, tolerated two, thousand years,
Will weigh heavily upon the necks of rebellious races;
When thy temples, standing in their midst
Will become an object of mockery to the people;
Then, thy time will be up ..."
("... Tu mourras à ton
tour:
J'atteste par neuf fois les Runas immortelles.
Tu mourras comme moi, Dieu des âmes nouvelles,
Car l'homme survivra! Vingt siècles de douleurs
Feront saigner sa chair et misseler ses pleurs
Jusqu'au jour où ton joug, subi deux mille années
Fatiguera le cou des races mutinées;
Où tes temples, dressés parmi les nations,
Deviendront en risée aux générations;
Et ce sera ton heure."
--Leconte de Lisle,
Poèmes Barbares, "Le Runoïa.")
My right arm outstretched
towards the East, I had recited those verses, and then, thrown the paper into
the roaring cataract. And then -- although I had not yet recovered hope;
although disaster had, in my eyes, postponed, perhaps for years and years, the
great Heathen renaissance of my dream -- I had spoken to the old Gods. "Gods
of the North, brothers of the Vedic Gods that India still reveres," had I
said, "Aryan Gods, Gods of my race, you know that I have all my life upheld
the values that you once embodied in the hearts of your worshippers. Oh,
whatever be the destiny to which you call me, you whom my mother's ancestors
invoked in the midst of lightning and thunder, upon the furious waves of the
North Sea, help me never to cease fighting for our great ideals; never to
cease fighting for the cult of youth, of health, of strength, for the cult of
the Sun -- for Your truth, our truth -- wherever it be in the world, until I
die!"
|
 |
Woodcut: Thorgeir Thorkelsson, the
heathen priest of Ljosawater, throws carved images of the ancestral Norse
gods into the falls.
And having said that, I
had felt a cold thrill run along my spine, and I had been overwhelmed by a
consciousness of infinite solemnity, as though I had just become the
instrument of a long-prepared and long-expected rite; as though the Norse
Gods, discarded by their priest Thorgeir, had really been waiting for my
symbolical gesture. It was 10:30 p.m. but broad day-light, as it is natural in
June, at that latitude. And I had suddenly remembered that it was the 9th of
June, the seventh anniversary of the day on which, also at 10:30 p.m., a
Brahmin, representative of easternmost Aryandom, had held my hand in his over
the sacred fire and given me his name and protection. And I had felt that my
visit to the Waterfall of the Gods, and my symbolical gesture on such a day
had a meaning in the invisible; that there was there more than a mere
coincidence. Now, I remembered that episode, which took, in the, light of in
history during these two Years, a greater symbolical value than ever. "Gods of
the North. Gods of the strong," thought I, "Aryan Gods, teach me that
detachment without which there is no real strength, no, lasting efficiency!
Make me a worthy witness of your truth -- of our truth. Rid me of all
weaknesses!"
I
spent that day and the next, and the rest of the week, meditating upon the way
of absolute detachment which is the way of the strong, in the light of the
oldest known summary of Aryan philosophy -- the Bhagavad-Gîta -- and in
the light of all I knew of the modern Ideology for the love of which I was in
jail. And more I thus meditated, more I marveled at the accuracy of the
statement of that fifteen year-old illiterate Hindu lad who had told me, in
glorious '40': "Memsaheb [Hindi for "White lady"], I too admire your
Führer. He is fighting in order to replace, in the whole West, the Bible by the
Bhagavad-Gîta." "Yes," thought I, "to replace the equalitarian and
pacifist philosophy of the Christians by the philosophy of natural hierarchy and
the religion of detached violence -- the immemorial Aryan wisdom!" [Image:
Krishna and Arjuna observe the armies on the Battlefield of Kurukshetra, the
Field of Justice.]
I recalled in my mind verses of the old
Sanskrit Scripture -- words of Krishna, the God incarnate, to the Aryan warrior
Arjuna:
"As the ignorant act from attachment to
action, O Son of Bharata [India], so should the wise act without
attachment, desiring only the welfare of the world" (Bhagavad-Gîta,
III, verse 25).
"Without attachment, constantly
perform thou action which is duty" (Bhagavad-Gîta, III, verse
19).
"Surrendering all actions to Me, with
thy thoughts resting on the supreme Self, freed from hope and egoism, cured
from, excitement, engage in battle" (Bhagavad-Gîta, III, verse 30).
"Whose works are all free from the
molding of desire, whose actions are burnt by the fire of wisdom, him the wise
call a Sage" (Bhagavad-Gîta, III, verse 19).
"Hoping for naught, his mind and self
controlled, having abandoned all greed performing action by the body alone, he
doth not commit sin" (Bhagavad-Gîta, IV, verse 21).
"As the burning fire reduces fuel to
ashes, O Arjuna, so doth the fire of wisdom reduce all actions to ashes" (Bhagavad-Gîta,
IV, verse 27).
"He who acteth placing all actions in
the eternal, abandoning attachment, is unaffected by sin, as a lotus
leaf by the waters" (Bhagavad-Gîta, V, verse 10).
And I thought: "All is permissible to him
who acts for the cause of truth in a spirit of perfect detachment -- without
hope of personal satisfaction, without any desire but that of dutiful service.
But the same action becomes censurable when performed for personal ends, or even
when the one who performs it mingles some personal passion with his or her zeal
for the sacred cause. That is also our spirit."
I pondered over that one-pointedness,
that absolute freedom from petty interests and personal ties that characterizes
the real National Socialist.
I remembered the story a comrade had
once related to me about a man who had had a family of Jews sent to some
concentration camp in order to settle himself in their comfortable six-room
flat, which he had been coveting for a long time. "He was wrong," my comrade had
stated (and his words rang clearly in my memory); "he was not wrong to report
those Jews, of course -- that was his duty as a German -- but he was wrong to
think at all about the flat; wrong to allow the lust of personal gain to urge
him in the least to accomplish his duty. He should have had the Yids packed off,
by all means, but simply because they were Yids, because it was his duty,
and without caring which German family -- his or someone else's -- occupied the
six rooms."
"He acted as many average human beings
would have acted in his place, had I answered, not exactly to excuse the man,
but to say something in his favor, for after all, he was one of us.
And I remembered how my comrade had
flared up saying: "That is precisely why I blame him! One has no business to
call one's self a National Socialist if one acts for the self-same motives as
'average human beings.' One of us should act for the cause alone -- in the
interest of the whole nation -- never for himself."
"... without attachment, desiring only
the welfare of the world." thought I once more, recalling the words of the
Bhagavad-Gîta in connection with that statement of a man who had never read
it, but who lived according to its spirit, like all those who, today, share in
earnest the Hitler faith "The interest of the nation, when that nation is
the militant vanguard of Aryan humanity, and the champion of the eternal Aryan
ideals, is 'the welfare of the world.'" And I thought, also: "Violence --
not 'non-violence'; but violence with detachment; action -- not inaction, not
flight from responsibility, not escape from life; but action freed from
selfishness, from greed, from all personal passions; that rule of conduct laid
down for all times by the divine Prince of Warriors, upon the Kurukshetra Field,
for the true Aryan warriors of all lands, that is our rule of
conduct -- our violence; our action. In fact, the true Aryan
warrior of today, the perfect Nazi, is a man without passion; a cool-minded,
far-sighted, selfless man, as strong as steel, as pure (physically and morally)
as pure gold; a man who will always put the interest of the Aryan cause -- which
is the ultimate interest of the world -- before everything, even before his own
limitless love of it; a man who would never sacrifice higher expediency to
anything, not even to the delight of spectacular revenge."
I asked myself: "How far have I
gone along that path of absolute detachment, which is ours? A German woman who
has struggled and suffered for the cause has done me the honor to consider me as
'a genuine National Socialist.' How far do I deserve that honor in the light of
our eternal standards of virtue?"
I
closed my eyes, and brought before my mind the nightmare vision of the ruins of
Germany; and I tried to imagine the hell that had preceded that desolation of
hundreds and hundreds of miles; and the terror of the German people -- of my
comrades, of my brothers in faith -- in the midst of that man-made hell. And I
brought before my eyes the Occupation, in and since 1945, in all its horror: the
dismantling of the factories, the starvation of the people, the massacre of the
holy forests; and the long-drawn systematical attempt at crushing the people's
very soul -- at "de-nazifying" them, through fear and bribery; the monstrous
trial of Nuremberg -- and all the subsequent iniquities and cruelties; the
wholesale persecution of National Socialism by gloating Jews and debased Aryans
in the service of international Jewry, themselves lower than Jews if that be
possible. I thought of all that, and felt in my heart that same devouring thirst
for vengeance which had been, from 1945 to 1948, the only feeling for the sake
of which I had clung to life. Those appalling ruins were the ruins of our New
Order -- of the one thing I had lived for. That endless suffering, that
unheard-of humiliation, were the suffering and humiliation of people who
believed in Hitler -- the only people I looked up to, the only people whom I
loved, in the modern world. Those men, fluttering convulsively, each one at the
end of a rope, on that dismal morning of the 16th October, 1946, were the
martyrs of Nuremberg, to the memory of whom I had dedicated my lost book, the
closest collaborators of my Führer. In Europe, in America, people had gloated
over them. "Oh, to see them avenged a hundred millionfold!" thought I, once
more. "To see whole cities former strongholds of the anti-Nazi forces, changed
into blazing and howling furnaces, and to gloat in my turn! ..." And at the
thought of this, I smiled. [Image: An Aryan loyalist salutes the Sun rising
behind the rubble of bombed-out Germany -- Savitri's own cover art for
Defiance.]
But I then said to myself: "And what if
those who watch and wait for our Day in the full knowledge of factors of which I
know nothing; what if those who are preparing in silence the resurrection of
National Socialist Germany, consider it expedient for us to ally ourselves, one
day, for the time being, with this or that side of the now divided enemy camp?
What if I had to renounce revenge, to give up the pleasure of mocking, of
insulting, of humiliating at least one fraction of our enemies, in the ultimate
interest of the Nazi renaissance?"
I realized that no greater sacrifice
could be asked of me. Yet I answered in my heart: "I would! Yes. I would keep
quiet, if that were necessary. I would even praise 'our great allies' of the
East or of the West, publicly if I were ordered to; praise them, while hating
them, for the sake of highest expediency. I would -- in the interest of Hitler's
people; in the interest of regenerate Aryandom: in the interest of the world
ordained anew according to the true natural hierarchy of races and individuals;
in the interest of the eternal truth which Adolf Hitler came to proclaim anew in
this world."
I remembered more words of Krishna, the
God incarnate, upon the Kurukshetra Field: "Whenever justice is crushed;
whenever evil rules supreme, I Myself, come forth. For the protection of the
righteous, for the destruction of the evil-doers, for the sake of firmly
establishing the reign of truth, I am born from age to age" (Bhagavad-Gîta,
IV, verses 7-8). And I could not help raising my mind to the eternal One, the
Sustainer of the universe, by whatever name men might choose to call Him, and
thinking: "Thou wert born in our age as Adolf Hitler, the Leader and Savior of
the Aryan race. Glory to Thee, O Lord of all the worlds! And glory to Him!"
A feeling of ecstatic joy lifted me
above myself, like in India, nine years before, when I had heard the same fact
stated for the first time in public, by one of the Hindus who realized, better
than many Europeans, the meaning and magnitude of our Führer's mission.
Never had I, perhaps, been so vividly
aware of the continuity of the Aryan attitude to life from the earliest times to
now; of the one more-than-human truth, of the one great ideal of more-than-human
beauty, that underlies all expressions of typically Aryan genius, from the
warrior-like piety of the Bhagavad-Gîta, to the fiery criticisms of
misguided pacifism and the crystal-clear exhortations to selfless action in
Mein Kampf.
I recalled the words: "Living in
truth," the motto of King Akhnaton of Egypt -- perhaps the greatest known
thinker of early Antiquity outside India. And I remembered how, according to
most archaeologists, there is "no sense of sin" in the
Religion of the Disk as Akhnaton conceived it;
that it is "absolutely unmoral" (J. D. S. Pendlebury, in Tell-el-Amarna
(1935), 156. Also Sir Wallis Budge in Tutankhamon, Amenism, Atenism and
Egyptian Monotheism [1923], 114).
And I thought: "It is to be expected. To
'live in truth' is not scrupulously to avoid lies and deceit and all manner of
'unfair' dealings, if these be expedient in the service of a higher purpose; it
is not to mould one's conduct upon Moses' Ten Commandments and the nowadays
accepted standards of Christian morality -- the only morality that most people,
including archaeologists, can think of. It is to live in perfect accordance with
one's place and mission in the scheme of things; in accordance with that which
is called, in the Bhagavad-Gîta, one's svadharma, one's own
duty. And another remark, of Professor Pendlebury, came to my memory, namely
that this 'unmoral' character of King Akhnaton's solar religion "is enough to
disprove any Syrian or Semitic origin of his movement." Others have seen in the
young Pharaoh's reaction against the death-centered formalism typical of ancient
Egypt before him and since, the proof of a definite Aryan influence from the
kingdom of Mitanni. No one can yet tell whether such is the case. But
undeniably, Akhnaton himself was partly Mitannian -- partly Aryan.
I recalled the reverence in which the
ancient Persians, who were Aryans, held the idea of truth for the sake of truth.
And I thought: "There is only one
morality in keeping with that cult of truth, which is also the cult of integral
beauty; and that is the morality of detached action. The ethics of individual
happiness, the ethics of the 'rights of man -- of every man -- are
untrue. They proceed, directly or indirectly, from the ethics of
Paul
of Tarsus who preached that all nations had
been created 'out of one blood' (Acts 17.26), by some all-too-human heavenly
father, lover of all men. They proceed from the Jewish ethics -- that mockery of
truth -- that put the inferior in the place of the superior and proclaim the
Jewish race 'chosen' to rule the world, if not materially, at least in spirit.
They are a trick of the cunning Jew, with a view to reverse for his own
satisfaction, and ultimately for his own selfish ends, the divine order of
Nature in, which men, as all creatures are different and unequal; in which
nobody's 'happiness' counts, not even that of the highest men.
"We have come to expose and to abolish
those ethics of equality and of individual happiness which are, from time
immemorial, the glaring antithesis of the Aryan conception of life.
"It is the superior man's business to
feel happy in the service of the highest purpose of Nature which is the return
to original perfection -- to supermanhood. It is the business of every man to be
happy to serve that purpose, directly or indirectly, from his natural place,
which is the place his race gives him in the scheme of creation. And if he
cannot be? Let him not be. Who cares? Time rolls on, just the same, marked by
the great Individuals who have understood the true meaning of history, and
striven to remold the earth according to the standards of the eternal Order,
against the downward rush of decay, result of life in falsehood -- the Men
against Time.
"It is a man's own duty in the general
scheme of creation that defines what are his rights. Never are the so-called
'rights' of his inferiors to define where lies his duty.
"It is a race's own duty, its place and
purpose in the general scheme of creation, that defines what are its rights.
Never are the so-called 'rights' of the inferior races to define the duties of
the higher ones.
"The duty of the Aryan is to live
consciously 'in truth,' ruling the rest of men, while raising himself, through
detached action, to the state of supermanhood. The duty of the inferior races is
to stay in their places. That is the only way they can also live 'in truth' --
indirectly. Aryan wisdom understood that, long ago, and organized India
according to the principle of racial hierarchy, taking no account whatsoever of
'individual happiness' and of the 'value of every man as such.'
"Alone in our times, we National
Socialists militate in favor of an organization of the whole world on the basis
of those self-same eternal principles; of that selfsame natural hierarchy. That
is why our cause is the cause of truth. That is why we have the duty -- and
therefore the right -- to do anything which is in the interest of our
divine cause."
In a flash, I remembered my lost
manuscript, and I continued thinking: "Yes, I can do anything provided I
do it solely for the cause, and with detachment -- with serenity. Then -- but
only then -- I am above all laws; or rather, submitted to one law, namely, to
the law of obedience: of blind obedience to anyone who has authority over me in
the National Socialist organization, in the case I am acting under orders; and
in any other case, of absolute obedience to the commands of higher expediency,
to the best of my own understanding of them. "
Presently, if I am absolutely detached
-- if I am free from all desire of personal recognition; free from all personal
delight in deceiving our enemies; free from all personal pride, from all sense
of personal importance as the author of my book -- then, and only then, I have
the right, nay, the duty, to lie, to crawl, to make the otherwise most
contemptible exhibition of myself, in order to, try to save my manuscripts from
destruction ....
"I must not feel 'clever' and be pleased
with myself for deceiving the Governor. It is not my cleverness that did
it: it is, through my agency, the unfailing, invisible Powers that watch over
the interest of the cause of truth. I am, in all that, as it is written in the
old Sanskrit Writ, nimitta matra -- nothing but an instrument.
"I must, also, not feel sorry to break
my word, and to repay the enemy's leniency with what the Democrats would call
'cynical ingratitude.' I am a fighter for the Nazi cause, openly at war with
these people for the last ten years, and, from the day I was able to think, at
war with the values that they stand for. All is fair in war. All is fair
in our dealings with that world that we are out to remold or to destroy. There
is only one law for us: expediency. And I am right, in the present
circumstances, to act accordingly, not for myself, but in the interest of the
sacred cause, remembering that I am an instrument in the service of truth; as it
is written in the old Sanskrit Writ, nimitta matra -- nothing but an
instrument.
"And if I by some miracle, my book is
saved, I must not feel happy in the expectation that one day, in a free Germany,
my comrades will read it and think: 'What a wonderful person Savitri Devi
Mukherji is, and how lucky we are to have her on our side!' No; never; it is I,
on the contrary, who am privileged to be on the side of truth. Truth remains,
even if people of far greater talent than I ignore it, deny it, or hate it. It
is I who am honored to be among the élite of my race -- not my comrades, to have
me among them. Any of them is as good as I, or better.
"As for my book, without the inspiration
given me by the invisible Powers I would never have been able to write it. The
divine Powers have worked through me, as through thousands of others, for the
ultimate triumph of the Nazi Idea. I have not to boast. I have but to thank the
Gods for my privileges, and to adore. As it is written in the old Sanskrit Writ,
I am nimitta matra -- nothing but an instrument in the hands of the
immortal Gods."
I also thought: "It is difficult to be
absolutely detached. Yet it is the condition without which the right action
loses its beauty -- and perhaps, sometimes also, a part of its efficiency. It is
the condition without which the one who acts remains all-too-human; too human to
be a worthy National Socialist.
"It is, however, perhaps, even more
difficult for a woman than for a man to remain constantly detached -- a serene
instrument of duty and nothing else, day after day, all her life."
From the depth of my heart rose the
strongest, the sincerest craving of my whole being; the culminating aspiration
of my life: "Oh, may I be that! In the service of, Hitler's divine Idea, may I
be that, now, tomorrow, every day of my life; and in every one of my future
lives, if I have any!"
Then again I thought of my other
manuscripts; and I tried to maintain, with regard to their fate, that attitude
of absolute detachment which is the attitude of the strong. "I have done my best
to save them," reflected I. "I have lied; I have acted, without regretting it
nor boasting inwardly of my cleverness." If I remain detached, surrendering "the
fruits of action" -- the fate of my writings -- entirely to the higher invisible
Powers, then and then alone I shall be worthy of the sacred Tradition of
Aryandom; worthy of our Ideology, which is inspired by the same spirit. Nay then
and then alone I shall be training myself to act with absolute detachment in the
future, whatever I might be called to do for our cause: then and then alone,
being selfless, I shall have the right to condone anything, and to do anything."
On Friday the 10th June I did not seek
an interview with the Governor, although I knew be would come to the "Frauen
Haus" ["Women's Wing" of the Werl Prison] on his weekly visit. I thought I
would refrain from all further intervention in favor of my manuscripts. But when
the Governor actually passed before my open cell in company of Fräulein S., Frau
Oberin's assistant, and of the unavoidable interpreter, I somewhat could not
help expressing the desire to speak to him.
"My time is eleven o'clock," answered he
roughly; "I cannot stop and speak to each prisoner according to her whims." And
he walked past.
But after a few minutes I was called and
ushered into the recreation room where the three people I have just mentioned
were standing.
"Well, what is it you wish to tell me?"
said Colonel Vickers before whom I stood, looking as dejected as I possibly
could.
"I only wished to ask you whether,
perchance, you can give me any hope concerning the fate of my manuscripts," said
I: "I have already told you that I do not intend to publish them. Yet the
anguish at the thought that they might be destroyed allows me no rest, no sleep
at night. I have put so much of my heart in these writings that I want to keep
them, be they good or bad, as one wants to keep an old picture of one's self
..."
Colonel Vickers gave me a keen glance
and interrupted me: "You told me all that stuff the other day," said he. "I know
it. And can't be always busying myself with your case and listening to your
pleas. You don't seem to realize that you are no longer a free woman. You have
forfeited your freedom by working to undermine our prestige and our authority in
this conquered country -- a very serious offence, I would say a crime, in our
eyes. Moreover, you despise us and our justice, in your heart. You had the cheek
to tell me, the other day, to my face, that you hold the war-criminals to be
innocent, after they were duly tried and duly sentenced by British courts, the
fairest in the world. In this prison, in spite of your offence and of the heavy
sentence pronounced against you -- the heaviest a British judge has given a
woman for a political offence of that nature -- you were treated leniently. And
you have repaid our kindness by writing things against us.
"Do you think I am in a mood to read
your damned Nazi propaganda for the sake of telling you how much I dislike it? I
have more important things to do. I told you -- I gave you my word -- that I
would call you to my office when I have read it. I shall read it when I please
-- not when you tell me to. And that might be in three months' time, or in six;
or in a year. You are here for three years. You must not imagine that we are
going to release you without first being sure that you can harm us no longer. In
the meantime, if you come bothering me again in connection with that manuscript
of yours, I shall destroy it straight away. Why on earth should I be lenient
towards you, may I ask you? I have seen two wars, both of them the outcome of
that German militarism that you admire so wholeheartedly. Why should I show
mercy to you who in your heart despise mercy, and mock humanity? To you, who
sneer at the most elementary decent feelings and who have nothing but contempt
for our standards of behavior? To you, the most objectionable-type of Nazi whom
I have ever met?"'
I kept my eyes downcast -- not to let
Colonel Vickers see them shining with pride. Not a muscle of my face moved. To
the extent that it was possible, I purposely thought of nothing; I tried to
occupy my mind with the pattern of the carpet on which I stood, so that my face
would remain expressionless at least as long as I was in the Governor's
presence. But within my heart, irresistibly, rose a song of joy.
"You can go," said Colonel Vickers
addressing me after a second's pause. I bowed, and left the room.
On the threshold of my cell, unable to
contain myself any longer, I turned to the wardress who accompanied me. "You
would never guess what a glorious compliment the Governor has just paid me!"
exclaimed I. And a bright smile beautified my tired face.
"No." She was astonished that the
Governor could pay me any "compliment" after all that had happened, and
specially after the recent search in my cell.
"He told me," said I, "that I am the
most objectionable type of Nazi that he has ever met " And I added, as she
smiled in her turn at the sight of my pride: "When I was on remand, Stocks, who
used to call me down to his office now and then, for a chat, once confided to me
that, in 1945, there were eleven thousand SS men imprisoned here in Werl. It is
not too bad an achievement, you know -- and specially for a non-German -- to be,
in the eyes of a British officer, more 'objectionable' than eleven thousand SS
men ... What do you think?"
"I think you are unbeatable," replied
the wardress, good-humoredly.
In my cell, I pondered over the
Governor's words.
I now had almost the certitude that my
manuscripts would be destroyed. Still, for a while, I forgot all about them in
the joy and pride that I experienced as I weighed in my mind every sentence
Colonel Vickers had addressed me: "You despise us and our justice, in your heart
..." "You sneer at the most elementary decent feelings, and have nothing, but
contempt for our standards of behavior ..." There was at least, after the Public
Prosecutor who had spoken at my trial, a man from the enemy's camp who seemed to
understand me better than most people did outside Nazi circles. Far from telling
me that I "surely did not mean" the "awful things" I said -- as the hundreds of
intellectual imbeciles I met both in the East, and in the West -- this soldier
did not even need to, hear me say the "awful things" in order to be
convinced, that I meant them none the less. An intelligent man. He might not
have wished to understand that the responsibility for this war rests with
England rather than with Germany. But at least, he understood me. He seemed [no]
longer to believe, as he had so naively a week before, that I "cannot but" look
upon any human life as more sacred than that of a cat. Perhaps he had read
enough of my book to lose his illusions on that point. Or perhaps someone --
Miss Taylor, or some other person connected with my trial -- had been kind
enough to enlighten him. Anyhow, I felt genuinely grateful to him for his
accurate estimation of me, for there is nothing I hate as much as being mistaken
for a person who does not know what she wants. He understood me. And his words
flattered me. His last sentence: "You are the most objectionable type of Nazi
that I have ever met," was, in my eyes, the greatest tribute to my natural
National Socialist orthodoxy yet ever paid to, me by an enemy of our cause.
It occurred to me that Colonel Vickers
had been in Germany since the Capitulation. Someone had told me so. Then, he
must have met quite a number of my brothers -- in faith, even apart from the
eleven thousand SS men that Mr. Stocks had mentioned. No doubt, he exaggerated a
little when he declared me the "most objectionable" type of all. With the
exception of my unfortunate collaborator Herr W. [Gerhard Wassner], who got
caught for sticking up my posters in broad daylight, other Nazis are, as a rule,
far more practical, and more subtle -- i.e., more intelligent -- than I. In
which case they should be more "objectionable" than I, in a Democrat's eyes.
But reflected I, most of them are
Germans; and many have had the privilege of being brought up in a National
Socialist atmosphere. That is somewhat of an excuse in the conception of the
Democrats who have such a naïve confidence in the power of education. I, a
non-German Aryan who never had the benefit of a Nazi training, came to Hitler's
Ideology by myself, of my own free will, knowing, at certain of its fundamental
traits, that I would find in it the answer to my strongest and deepest
aspirations. And not only did I welcome the leadership of National Socialist
Germany in Europe before and during the war, but I came and told the Germans
now, after the war, after the Capitulation, after all the efforts of the
victorious Allies to inculcate into them the love of parliamentarism, of
everlasting peace, and of Jewish rule; "Hope and wait! You shall rise and
conquer once more. For still you are the worthiest; more than ever the
worthiest. And no one will be happier to see you at the head of the Western
world. Heil Hitler!" In other words, repudiating, defying, reducing to naught my
Judeo-Christian democratic education -- feeling and acting as though it had
never existed -- I identified myself entirely with those who proclaimed the
rights of Aryan blood, myself a living challenge to the defilement of the Aryan
through education; a living proof of the invincibility of pure blood.
And in addition to that, I pointed out
how our National Socialist wisdom is nothing else but the immemorial Aryan
Wisdom of detached violence, thus justifying in the light of the highest
Tradition, all that we did, all that we might do in the future.
From the democratic standpoint, perhaps
that is, after all, more dangerous and therefore more "objectionable" than the
so-called "war-crimes" that I had not the opportunity to commit. Perhaps Colonel
Vickers had merely made a statement of fact, implicitly recognizing the meaning
of my attitude, the meaning of my whole life. For which, again, I thanked him
within my heart
But, as I said, I now felt sure that my
precious book, my "best gift to Germany," would be destroyed.
And although, on the evening of that
day, Fräulein S. came to my cell to ask me to sign a paper in connection with my
possible release, I soon outlived the joy that the Governor's words had provoked
in me. In fact, my awareness of being so "objectionable" from the enemy's
stand-point, made me deplore all the more the loss of my manuscripts, specially
of Gold in the Furnace. I felt more than ever -- or imagined -- how much
indeed I could, one day, on the eve of Germany's liberation, contribute to stir
up National Socialist enthusiasm, through those pages, written with fervor. And
the thought that I would be no longer able to do so distressed me.
But then again I recalled the words of
the ever-returning Savior, in the Bhagavad-Gîta: "Seek not the fruits of
action ..." And I concentrated my mind on the teaching of serene service of
truth regardless of success or failure; and I bent all my efforts on the
renunciation of my book.
"Break that last Lie that hinds you to
the realm of consequences, and you will be free!" said the clear, serene voice
within me, the voice of my better self. "Win that supreme victory over yourself,
you who fear nothing and nobody, and you will be invincible; accept that supreme
loss inflicted upon you by the enemies of the Nazi cause, you who have nothing
else to lose but your writings; accept it as thousands of your comrades have
accepted the loss of all they loved, and you will be worthy of your
comrades, worthy of your cause. Remember, you who have come to work for the
resurrection of National Socialist Germany, that only through the absolute
renunciation of those who serve them to all earthly bondage, can the forces of
Life triumph over the forces of death."
And I recalled in my mind the beautiful
myth of the visit of the Goddess Ishtar to the netherworld, as it is reported in
the old Sumerian epic of Gilgamesh.
To bring back to life her beloved, the
God Tammuz -- the divine Youth Who dies every winter and rises in glory from the
dead every spring -- Ishtar-Zarpanit, Goddess of love and war-Goddess of the
double forces of creation: fecundity and selection -- went down to the
netherland, attired in all her jewels. At the first gate, she left her
ear-rings; at the second, she left her armlets; at the third, her bejeweled
girdle; at the fourth, her necklaces, and so forth, until she reached the
seventh and last gate. She left there her last and most precious jewel, and
entered naked into the Chambers of the dead ... Then alone could she bring back
to life the young God Tammuz -- invincible Life -- prisoner of the forces of
death.
"The price of resurrection is absolute
renunciation, sacrifice to the end," thought I. "Inasmuch as they have retained
something of the more ancient wisdom under their Jewish doctrine, even the
Christians admit that."
I felt an icy cold thrill run up my
spine and an unsuspected power emerge from me. My mind went back to the unknown
man of vision who wrote down the myth of Ishtar, seven thousand years ago, thus
helping me to realize, today, in captivity, that unless I willingly despoiled
myself of everything mine -- unless I looked upon nothing as mine -- I
could not work for our second rising.
I felt that I had come so that, through
me, as through every true National Socialist, the eternal Forces of Life might
call from the slumber of death the modern Prototype of higher mankind; the
perfect god-like Youth, strong, comely, with hair like the Sun and eyes like
stars and a body surpassing in beauty the bodies of all the man-made gods. I
identified in my heart that creature of glory with the élite of Adolf Hitler's
regenerate people. And I knew that the ever-recurring call to resurrection
resounded today, through us, through me, as our battle-cry in the modern phase
of the perennial struggle Deutschland erwache! ["Germany Awake!"].
And the voice of my better self told me:
"Unless, you have sincerely, wholeheartedly, unconditionally, put aside your
last and most precious treasure -- snapped your last tie with the world of the
living -- the Prisoner of the forces of death will not come forth at your call.
Come: free yourself once and for all of all regret, of all attachment: give tip
your writings in sacrifice to the divine cause; and be, you too, a force of
resurrection!''
Tears rolled down my cheeks.
I pictured within my mind the face of
our Führer -- stern, profoundly sad, pertaining to the beauty of things eternal
-- against the background of his martyred country, first in flames and then in
ruins; also against the background of those endless frozen white plains where
snow covered the slain in battle, while the survivors of the Wehrmacht, of the
SS regiments, of the Leibstandarte ["Body-guard"], that élite among the
élite, driven further and further east as prisoners of war, went their way to a
fate often worse than death. And I burst out sobbing at the memory of that
complete sacrifice of millions, offered as the price of the resurrection of real
Germany -- of Aryan man, the god-like youth of the world.
I looked up to the Man who inspired such
a sacrifice, after having, himself, sacrificed everything to the same great
impersonal purpose; to Him, Who never found the price of resurrection too high.
And once more I recognized in Him the Savior Who comes back, age after age, "to
establish on earth the order of truth."
I gave up all regret of my lost book.
"Let them destroy it, if they must," thought I.
And in an outburst of half-human
half-religious love -- exactly as when faced with the threat of disfiguring
torture, on the night of my arrest -- I uttered in my heart the supreme words:
"Nothing is too beautiful, nothing is too precious for Thee, my Führer!"
And again, as on that night, I felt
happy, and invincible.
The preceding text is excerpted from
chapter 12 of of Savitri Devi's Defiance (Calcutta: A.K. Mukherji, 1951).
Savitri's footnotes have been incorporated in parentheses within the text;
editorial additions appear in brackets.
Reproduced With Deep Gratitude From:
http://library.flawlesslogic.com/1d.htm
Go to Savitri Deva Page
I with many of her articles and pictures
Go to Savitri Deva Page
II with many of her articles and pictures
Go to "The Lightning and
the Sun" by Savitri Deva (The entire book)
Go to HITLERIAN
ESOTERICISM AND THE TRADITION by Savitri Deva
1949: PROPHETESS OF THE SAUCERS (About
Savitri Devi from UFO web site)
Lengthy well written
article!
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