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“Man must sacrifice his life” – interview with Dominique Venner
Sezession im Netz ^ | 21. Mai 2013, 23:00 | Götz Kubitschek

Posted on 06/02/2013 1:04:38 PM PDT by annalex

“Man must sacrifice his life”

– interview with Dominique Venner

Götz Kubitschek

On May 21, 2013 Dominique Venner , a French historian, shot himself in the Notre Dame Cathedral of Paris to protest against the introduction of gay marriage in France. Only a week before that, Secession magazine interviewed Venner scheduled for the August issue. The occasion was Venner's new book: Le Choc de l'Histoire - The shock of the History. During the conversation Venner suggested that our time was ripe for symbolic actions and personal sacrifice. Questions by Benedict Kaiser.

SECESSION: Le Choc de l'Histoire treats questions that you have investigated for a long time. So what is the purpose of your new book?

VENNER: This book presents a synthesis in the dynamic form of interviews. The perception of historical upheaval has long been the focus of my work and ideas as a historian. It covers the relationship between religion and identity, continuity and renaissance of cultures, which are interpreted as an expression of the identity of the people over a long period of time. So Europe in its very long history found many answers that have their source in the Homeric poems, which are an expression of its several thousand year old Indo-European heritage.

SECESSION: Why did you choose the title “Shock of the History” - and what should it mean?

VENNER: We are experiencing a shock of the history without realizing it. It has always been so. Only with the passage of time one can apprehend the range of the changes. Many eras before us have experienced historical shocks and struggled with immense challenges: the Persian Wars to the ancient Greeks, the decline of the Roman Republic before Augustus. In the course of the "modern times" and contemporary centuries historical shocks have caused ideological changes. Machiavelli, for example, is the result of the turmoil of Florence and Italy in the late 15th Century, Montaigne is the result of the religious wars in France, Hobbes, the first English Revolution, Martin Heidegger, the perception of the influence of technology, Carl Schmitt, the German catastrophe in the wake of the Versailles Treaty, Samuel Huntington, the new world after the Cold War - where Huntington, did not see things as the Europeans would, but rather as the Americans see them.

SECESSION Where is here the precise difference between American and European point of view?

VENNER: The 20th Century was for the United States in an era of continuous advancement towards dominance and control of the world - including the cultural space. The same period - especially after 1945 - was that of collapse, the submission and the unprecedented demoralization in Europe.

SECESSION: And how manifest is this new shock of the history?

VENNER: With the beginning of the 21st Century, we have entered a new historical era that will liberate the Europeans from the consequences of the year 1945. From the two major forces that divided Europe in 1945 in Yalta, one already vanished, which is something that no one could have imagined. Communism (the future of the world!) Imploded, and a new Russia has risen from the rubble. And this national Russia will become a continental partner of Europe vis-a-vis the United States. As for the United States, they must reckon with China, Islam, South America and a fluid world even now. The heroes of yesterday will become the accursed of tomorrow ...

SECESSION: If you are talking about Europe as the partner of a new Russia, you are unlikely to think within the structures of the European Union in its current form.

VENNER: I think not of any current political structure, but of our millennial culture, our identity, of our certain "European" way to think, to feel, to live, which has stood the test of time.

SECESSION: You write that the great cultures do not represent different regions on a planet, but are themselves different "planets". What do you mean?

VENNER: The people only exist thanks to what distinguishes them: clan, tribe, city, nation, culture, civilization, and not by what they have in common and is purely animalistic: sexuality or the need for food. Their human quality is rooted in traditions and spiritual values that endure over time. For example, while the simple sexuality is an universal action, such as the action to consume food, but love is different in each culture, as different as the perception of femininity, the perception of the body, the culinary art or the music. These traits are the reflections of a certain morphology of the soul, which was transmitted through atavism, as well as through experience. You know that the influence of new religions can change the ideas and behavior. But the traditions of a people also converts the imported, forced from outside religions. In Japan, Buddhism has received a certain martial character, which is not known in China. You could say that every nation has its own gods, who come by themselves, and continue to exist even when they seem to have been forgotten.

SECESSION: You write and speak of a "morphology of the soul, which was transmitted by atavism, as well as by experience." This applies, in our context, also for European-born Americans, does it not? How do you explain that Americans of a genuinely European origin have broken with the European tradition in order to establish a new tradition that is opposite to their old European one?

VENNER: I would refer to an observation by Austrian geopolitician Baron Jordis von Lohausen. He noted that the Germans who resettled to stay somewhere else in Europe, for example in Russia, always remained German, even several centuries after they had emigrated. On the other hand, a single generation is already enough for Germans who emigrated to the United States to stop being German and instead feel Americans, the same as any the other. This raises a serious question. It also includes the observation that not everything is based on the "race", as was once supposed. The Americans had come from Europe and have retained the "animal" qualities of their origins: energy, combative and enterprising vigor, ingenuity ... But their "ideas" (their worldview) have been transformed by their relocation to the New World. It is the result of the biblical utopia of the "Promised Land," the dream of a new world away from Europe. The founder's beliefs contributed to embody the new "chosen people", which was chosen to bring the world the "spirit of capitalism" if we were to pick a formulation of Max Weber. Let us not forget that the daily portion of the Bible is prescribed as mandatory in the American schools as the oath to the Stars and Stripes. The messianic "message" of the founders has become he mission also of the majority of the immigrants. And this political religion implied a break with the whole tragic and aristocratic European tradition.

SECESSION: This applies to Europe and the United States. But the world is home to undoubtedly more cultures.

VENNER: Yes, and elsewhere, things are perceived in ways that can be thought of neither by the Americans nor by the Europeans. To capture this fact, I bring in my book conclusions drawn from the French experience. For example, I speak of that example of Dalil Boubakeur, the head of the Paris Mosque. Islam, he says, is "both a religion, a community, a law and a culture. [...] Muslims are not only those who practice the five pillars of Islam, but those who belong to this community as identity. " The operative word here is "identity". Islam is therefore not just a religion. It goes beyond religion and is "a community, a law, a culture."

If someone is influenced by the Christian culture, universalistic and individualistic, that is surprising to him. But many other religions, including not only Islam or Judaism, but also Hinduism, Shintoism or Confucianism, are not only religions in the Christian or secular sense of the word , that is a kind of personal relationship with God, but they form identities, laws, communities.

SECESSION: Could a new perception of identity help the Europeans to rediscover themselves, to create new?

VENNER: I certainly think that it can help Europeans find their own authenticity - beyond a personal religion or its absence.

SECESSION: How do you define then their own "authenticity"?

VENNER: First, as an awakening to the memory of identity. A memory that is capable of rearming the Europeans morally, so that they could resist their disappearance into the abyss of great world-wide miscegenation and globalization. As well as others recognize themselves as sons of Shiva, Mohammed, Abraham or Buddha, it is not wrong to know ourselves as sons and daughters of Homer, Odysseus and Penelope.

SECESSION: In an editorial of the Nouvelle Revue d'Histoire you converted the famous formula "politics first" and stressed that one would say today: "Mysticism first, politics later." What you wanted to say to the reader with this unconventional slogan?

VENNER: Our age no longer demands a "taking power," as was often said earlier. It grants no more room to the dream of the "Day of Change". Politics is no longer the ligature that gives meaning to life. Notwithstanding the strengths of political action, it is not the politics that will give back to the Europeans the consciousness of what they are, and likewise politics cannot provide guidance to their lives. This belief can only come through a strong perception of identity. In other words, any political action of a high level is unthinkable without the precondition of an identitarian memory, which is alone capable of directing it. But mere words are not enough. You must be able to affirm words by deeds, you must use the life, and this must go as far as to the willingness to sacrifice life, if it seems necessary.


TOPICS: Culture/Society; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: culture; europe; globalism; venner
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To: annalex

A good interpretation, and I think Our Lord - and certainly Our Lady - understand.


21 posted on 06/02/2013 2:01:51 PM PDT by livius
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To: skeeter

Still not wrong...


22 posted on 06/02/2013 2:02:45 PM PDT by annalex (fear them not)
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To: livius
I don’t think we have to go back to that!

Yes. This shows that while it is important and even vital to have a cultural identity, it is also important to have the right identity. The purpose of any nation is like any family to lead her children to Christ, not merely to have identity.

23 posted on 06/02/2013 2:06:35 PM PDT by annalex (fear them not)
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To: andyk

Read “Atlas Shrugged” if you haven’t, it is the source of the quote. You’ll love it.


24 posted on 06/02/2013 2:06:42 PM PDT by gorush (History repeats itself because human nature is static)
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To: annalex

> agnostic? That is a shame. No rational man should be.

Agnostic; Noun
A person who believes that nothing is known or can be known of the existence or nature of God or of anything beyond material phenomena.

Being an Agnostic would not preclude having faith in something or someone that has not manifested materially.


25 posted on 06/02/2013 2:08:40 PM PDT by soycd
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To: gorush

The original Mass was in Greek in the East, — we don’t know whether it was in Latin form the very start in the West. English today has sufficient power to express the thoughts of the Gospel. I, too, regret many things about Vatican II but I would not put forth the abandonment of Latin as the foremost complaint.

Existence of God is certainly provable. The physical universe proves existence of the Father; the Gospels prove the salvific power of Christ, and the two thousand years of the Catholic Church prove the existence and power of the Holy Ghost. The problem of agnosticism is not the lack of proofs, but the lack of faith in assessing the evidence in front of them.


26 posted on 06/02/2013 2:11:29 PM PDT by annalex (fear them not)
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To: gorush
I read it as “I will enslave no man and will allow no man to enslave me”

That is not what it says.

27 posted on 06/02/2013 2:12:45 PM PDT by annalex (fear them not)
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To: soycd
Being an Agnostic would not preclude having faith in something

Yes, exactly. Agnosticism is a superstition, in other words.

28 posted on 06/02/2013 2:14:01 PM PDT by annalex (fear them not)
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To: annalex

I know all that...it was a joke. Yes, the gospels were in greek, sometimes with aramaic words included.


29 posted on 06/02/2013 2:14:12 PM PDT by gorush (History repeats itself because human nature is static)
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To: annalex

Having read Atlas Shrugged, and therefore associating the quote in context, it is what I take the meaning to be. But, as I said, I’ve been wrong before.


30 posted on 06/02/2013 2:18:00 PM PDT by gorush (History repeats itself because human nature is static)
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To: annalex
"Existence of God is certainly provable. The physical universe proves existence of the Father; the Gospels prove the salvific power of Christ, and the two thousand years of the Catholic Church prove the existence and power of the Holy Ghost."

I think we have different definitions of the term "proof".

31 posted on 06/02/2013 2:20:20 PM PDT by gorush (History repeats itself because human nature is static)
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To: annalex
http://www.joelskousen.com/Philosophy/conservation.htm

Food for thought.

We must remember who we were, not just as defined by our U.S. Constitution, but who we were in our relationship with God and our culture. Not to demean others, but to have a grateful heart to God for what he has given us who are the descendants of Western Civilization, and to not ever be ashamed of that but to once again be proud of it.(Proud, not in a haughty type of way, but in a grateful and gracious way of remembering and keeping alive and bringing back to leadership what is very close to being lost)

(Skousen is a Mormon, I am most definitely not, but his thoughts on political philosophy do not reflect Mormonism at all. Rather, they seem to clarify a lot of ideas that were common knowledge and have fallen into confusion and disarray in our country in the last 100 years.)

For unto whomsoever much is given, of him shall be much required. Luke 12:48

32 posted on 06/02/2013 2:20:28 PM PDT by boxlunch (Conservative, reformed protestant Christian, homeschooling mom)
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To: annalex; gorush
Greater love than this no man hath, that a man lay down his life for his friends.

There is a big difference between laying down your life for your friends (or loved ones, or perhaps your church) by choice; and living your life for the sake of (in other words, AT THE BEHEST OF) some powerful or charismatic third party.

Granting "another man" control over the direction of your life isn't any more Christian than it is Randian.

33 posted on 06/02/2013 2:22:02 PM PDT by Fightin Whitey
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To: Fightin Whitey

Seems so simple, doesn’t it? :{)


34 posted on 06/02/2013 2:27:39 PM PDT by gorush (History repeats itself because human nature is static)
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To: annalex

Interesting.


35 posted on 06/02/2013 3:05:09 PM PDT by OldNewYork (Biden '13. Impeach now.)
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To: annalex

So this interview turned out to be Venner’s swan song.
How much better, even with the EU, the life and social situation of Europeans would be without the open invitation
they felt it necessary to make to Islam.
Venner has a classic, long-term synoptic view of things which is hard for me not to grasp, but to take issue with. His view is so resolutely philosophical he rendered himself a martyr
to his own beliefs. Much like, I shouldn’t have to mention, a radical Islamist.


36 posted on 06/02/2013 6:08:56 PM PDT by supremedoctrine
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To: supremedoctrine

I’ve been puzzling over his wake up call to France.

The Christian way is very clear. Paul lays it out. We do not own our bodies. We did not make them and we did not get them to play with as we see fit.

But - Venner’s thougths echo my own on this issue.


37 posted on 06/02/2013 9:53:26 PM PDT by JCBreckenridge (Texas is a state of mind - Steinbeck)
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To: St_Thomas_Aquinas

Are you saying that you think Jesus was referring to suicide, or do I grossly misunderstand you?

When a person voluntarily takes themselves out of the picture, they forfeit any control they might have had over the outcome from that point. I value the views he held on gay marriage. He got my attention while simultaneously losing my respect for not sticking around to “fight the good fight”. There has got to be more at play here than just making a stand that is likely to be a mere footnote in history. I suspect clinical depression.

Where would the human race be if all of our heros decided that the most effective defense was to check out on us.


38 posted on 06/02/2013 10:10:26 PM PDT by mom of young patriots
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To: mom of young patriots
Are you saying that you think Jesus was referring to suicide, or do I grossly misunderstand you?

My post wasn't very clear. The principle doesn't apply in this case. I was responding to a specific post that quoted Ayn Rand.

39 posted on 06/03/2013 3:23:14 AM PDT by St_Thomas_Aquinas
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To: annalex
Very true. It reminds me of the recent (Norwegian?) mass-murderer.

Europe is entering a post-Christian era. C.S. Lewis predicted that post-Christian paganism would be worse than pre-Christian paganism, since the former would represent an explicit rejection of Christ.

This may sound absurd to modern ears, since we tend to define progress technologically. But Western culture, at the highest levels, is rejecting the natural order itself. Men and women are now considered absolutely equal. Gender is a 'social construct.' And human nature is equated with animal nature, and sometimes even valued less than the earth as a whole.

This can only end in disaster.

40 posted on 06/03/2013 3:32:55 AM PDT by St_Thomas_Aquinas
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