Free Republic
Browse · Search
News/Activism
Topics · Post Article

Skip to comments.

The Camp of the Saints
email | Michael Gilson De Lemos

Posted on 02/25/2003 7:13:48 PM PST by Sir Gawain

The Camp of the Saints

by Michael Gilson De Lemos

When I was a young man in Europe there was a vogue for what was called “invasion literature.” Several underground science fiction epics explored what would happen if the unthinkable occurred and there were mass invasions of Europe and America. It turn this gave rise to the survivalist stories of the '70s, and translated to Hollywood with end of the world and survivor epics from the Poseidon Adventure on up (or perhaps on down).

Suppose State Socialism were run by a crazed computer? Suppose Blacks revolted? Or bureaucrats invaded from within, culling the herd with chilling efficiency? Suppose Red Russia invaded America—and America welcomed it? Suppose the Intellectuals rebelled and started snuffing out corrupt politicians? Suppose Whites fought back? Suppose we are missing something and this is all an ideological invasion created by polarities in people’s character playing out over centuries? Suppose all turned out OK and people took a weakened if triumphant West at its word, and emigrated from the wretched socialism and religious despotisms created by Western diplomacy en masse to more prosperous climes?

Student Underground

Thus 16 year olds devoured and discussed such books as This Perfect Day, State of Siege, Triage and A Clockwork Orange, Vandenberg, Trio, The Turner Diaries, The Wanting Seed, and The Camp of the Saints—many translated on-the-spot from their native languages in group readings at 2 AM by students who had set aside their Homer or the tear-jerking “message” novels of the day.

Many of these books were by Americans and Brits, but one, The Camp of the Saints, was by a Continental, detailed an immigration invasion, and stuck in everyone’s mind. I recall heated debates that it couldn’t happen, that it could, that it was racist, that it was realist, that only socialism and government could solve the problem, that socialism and government were the problem.

In subsequent years the book has gone underground, to be resurrected by racist loonies—and people soberly concerned about how to mediate the clash of cultures, and even if Europeans will survive as a culture. Some years ago I met an ex-Soviet planner who assured me that it was read avidly in Russia by those convinced that it spoke to those who thought after Capitalism the real enemy was Islam—an enemy hard to fight because fanatical, oddly liberal in many areas and offering a conservative polygamist vision not seen in Europe for Millennia. Russia feared being overwhelmed by internal Islam, and remembered bitterly its suffering under Islamic invaders and the sad Fall of Constantinople as if it were yesterday. And after Islam, the burgeoning and untutored masses of Asia and Africa.

The book was even banned in a Swiss school.

What in a book could create such reaction from Lausanne to Moscow, from Madrid to West Berlin—and cause the book to be almost banned in France?

The book tells a simple story. One day, people fed up with the regimes in Africa and Asia begin simply boarding vessels from large ships to rowboats and head for Europe and America. Focused primarily on Europe for dramatic reasons, it details how governments committed to support socialism and collectivism and the increasing coercive power they bring are unable to either cut it or wield it as people vote with their feet. Paralyzed by political slogans of guilt, egalitarianism, and tax money everywhere but the taxpayer’s pocket, a new barbarian invasion begins.

Now there is nothing far-fetched about this. All it takes is for the spread of secular ideas of freedom to get out of sync in third world countries with the West and it is inevitable. And the leaders of Europe and the US were not exactly trying to create Democracies a Jefferson could admire abroad. They were advocating Big Brother policies just as at home, except developing countries lacked the wealth and history to buffer them. It took very little to create simultaneously burgeoning population and starvation, armies of frustrated and mostly Marxist intellectuals convinced they should be leaders with no free enterprise creating anything to lead, and vast weapon arsenals handed to hick dictators whose idea of attaining political consensus was judicious use of the firing squad.

A Spanish View

The book particularly upset people on a subconscious level: Germans and French are continually annoyed when the Italians, Spanish, Greeks and Portuguese remind them of how they themselves were recently civilized and in the process almost extinguished civilization. French say the Pyrenees begins Africa, and the Spanish retort that north of it begins Mongolia. The book just hit below the belt for some. More: American Latin countries and their immigration policies (which so upsets many people here in the US) are viewed in Spain as a bulwark against the potential fall of the US into omnipotent government worse than anything seen in Latin America and also as a forward movement over the Pacific against China.

If this sounds odd to US ears, in Spanish minds Spain’s Legionnaires stiffened the Franks and saved Rome from Chinese and Hungarian invaders on its very soil in the Battle of the Catalunia Plains, and then pushed back Islam and massive African armies (thought to have come from Nigeria) from the middle of France and on to Vienna culminating in Lepanto.

Many in Spain remember how its knights fell with its erstwhile Hungarian adversaries and then allies at Mohi Plain before the Mongols. Spanish readers of Camp were proud of Spain’s relatively laid back border policy—which in contrast to the US makes entry easy and bases citizenship on family, but kicks people out at the slightest misbehavior—and wondered what would happen if the Arabs started marching north again—with Nigerians again not far behind.

Tell many Spaniards Northern Europe is going soft and next thing you know they’ll all be wearing Mao suits instead of Flamenco and they’re all ears. Unsurprisingly, Camp was a bigger hit than reflected in sales figures in Spain, being read to aghast mass audiences in theaters, villages, churches, and schools.

Conversely, US readers could only smile at Latins discomfited by waves of illegal immigrants. We’ll never have to worry about blowback from the Arabs or the whosis on our shores, why no siree.

The book was dismissed as fantasy. These things were childish nightmares. Socialism overcame all class consciousness and cultural difference. Islamic Socialists were our friends. Recently I mentioned to someone that this book was widely read by teenagers then. Only racist fantasy, I was assured. Never happened.

Abre los Ojos

Well, it is happening. Spain has announced that it has organized a multinational naval patrol under its leadership within the EU to halt what officials now admit has been a growing invasion of Boat People. Vessels from several nations, including Italy, Portugal, France and even an increasingly nervous Britain in "Operation Ulysses" are using the latest detection equipment to form an electronic barrier in moving rectangles some six by eighty miles wide. Co-ordinate Operations "Rio" and "Visa" will involve others such as Greece. The operation was being kept without much publicity until it was discovered by the staff of a Spanish Senator last year—and only now, months later, is it appearing in even normally tell-all papers in the English speaking press such as the UK Telegraph.[1]

Spain, unlike Europe, has no historical complexes on its cultural integrity, if not superiority. When an Arab diplomat recently said Muslims should think about reoccupying Cordoba, Spanish radio callers retorted that maybe the Spanish husbands should get busy with the wives so the next generation will see Spaniards engulf Cairo.

Most of Europe lacks this Spanish panache, and is willing apparently to pretend this is all somehow a Spanish matter while Spanish naval vessels discreetly patrol, I am told, the French Rivera, where some of the most dramatic incidents in the Camp of the Saints occur—the difference being the contemporary Spanish are for the moment showing some sort of decisiveness, lacking in the novel.

Now I’m not saying this is all good; I’m not saying this is all bad. I’m saying once again a manageable situation is becoming something out of a Science Fiction novel thanks to Our Wizards in the Capital—now, it seems, of every Western country.

For thirty years we were piously told by government academics and journalist supporters that it was all impossible and anyone who thought different or even raised the question of how the Cold War was creating a post-Cold War series of government monsters and cultural paralysis was a hate-monger —and possible racist if they even read That Awful Book, so close your eyes.

As the Spanish saying goes, Abre los Ojos—open your eyes already. And see that suddenly, out of the blue, deny though it has been denied, there it is.


Reference

1. El Dia, October 24, 2002 ‘Spain will co-ordinate European control of immigration at ports and by sea’ http://www.eldia.es/2002-10-24/vivir/vivir2.htm

But see also January 29, 2003, Daily Telegraph, "EU Fleet is Launched to Head off Immigrants" (login at http://www.dailytelegraph.co.uk/portal/main.jhtml?&_DARGS=%2Fcore%2FlowerHeaderBarFrag.jhtml.)


Michael Gilson De Lemos ("MG") is on the National Committee of the US Libertarian Party, and also co-ordinates the Libertarian International Organization. Retired as a Fortune 100 management consultant, he is working on books on management and libertarian philosophy. His email address is gilsondelemos@msn.com.



TOPICS: Editorial; Foreign Affairs; Government
KEYWORDS:

1 posted on 02/25/2003 7:13:48 PM PST by Sir Gawain
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | View Replies]

To: AAABEST; Uncle Bill; Victoria Delsoul; Fiddlstix; fporretto; Free Vulcan; Liberty Teeth; Loopy; ...
-
2 posted on 02/25/2003 7:14:34 PM PST by Sir Gawain
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: Sir Gawain
"French say the Pyrenees begins Africa, and the Spanish retort that north of it begins Mongolia."

Interesting viewpoint...Sir Alphadog

3 posted on 02/25/2003 7:37:22 PM PST by alphadog (die commie scum)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: Sir Gawain
"The Camp of the Saints" by Jean Raspail is a must read. It, ironically by today's events, deals with an invasion of France by a armada of untouchables from India. Their invasion spells he death knell of Western Civilization. Despite the threat posed by this armada, no country has the courage to do the unthinkable and sink these ships even though their invasion will be the downfall of Western Civilization.
4 posted on 02/25/2003 7:57:10 PM PST by The Great RJ
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: Sir Gawain
Spain, unlike Europe, has no historical complexes on its cultural integrity, if not superiority. When an Arab diplomat recently said Muslims should think about reoccupying Cordoba, Spanish radio callers retorted that maybe the Spanish husbands should get busy with the wives so the next generation will see Spaniards engulf Cairo.

I must say, on first glance, I like the ATTITUDE of the Spaniards!

5 posted on 02/25/2003 7:59:37 PM PST by Mr. Thorne (Where's the global warming?! I'm cold NOW!)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: The Great RJ
Raspail's book is indeed fascinating. It's also racist crap.
6 posted on 02/25/2003 7:59:51 PM PST by ArcLight
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 4 | View Replies]

To: Mr. Thorne
The Spanish know what Islamic conquest means for a country, unlike the rest of Western Europe.

It wasn't pleasant, even when Islam was relatively more enlightened and tolerant than it is now. And it still took eight hundred years to evict them.

7 posted on 02/25/2003 8:10:13 PM PST by Loyalist
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 5 | View Replies]

To: ArcLight
I found it boring and never got page ten.
8 posted on 02/25/2003 8:11:36 PM PST by dts32041 (Do not attend a gunfight with a handgun, the caliber of which does not start with a "4".)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 6 | View Replies]

To: Sir Gawain
Isn't there a rule against posting anything at all critical on immigration or race?
9 posted on 02/25/2003 8:23:17 PM PST by mrustow
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: ArcLight; All
"A Courageous and Prophetic Polemic of a Novel, August 7, 2002
Reviewer: moffattnyc (see more about me) from New York, NY USA
Jean Raspail was already a distinguished travel writer and novelist when he put his reputation on the line with this one - He had a lot to lose. To his credit, Raspail pulls no punches and manages to say just about everything there is to say about the threat that Third World immigration poses to Western Civilization.
I had heard about this book, but decided to read it for the first time only after boat loads of Kurds landed on France's Mediterranean beaches a couple of years ago. The sight of hundreds of ragged Kurds running through the streets of Cannes could have been a scene from the film version of this novel.
The story is about an invasion of France by boat loads of East Indians, and the small group of Frenchman who defend against them. But as Raspail notes in the Introduction, the story is a parable - A parable of the destructive Third World immigration in the West that has been going on since the latter part of the 20th Century, and the West's lack of will to resist it.
Immigration negatively impacts the environment, the economy, crime, and national security. This novel posits that it further threatens to destroy the relatively democratic, tolerant and civilized cultures of the West and the essential commonalities of the Western peoples. According to Raspail, the West "has no soul left" and "it is always the soul that wins the decisive battles."
To call the novel "racist" is unfair. Raspail includes an East Indian among the "Saints" who defend France, and portrays many White Frenchmen who welcome the invaders as their equals. The novel clearly states that being a Westerner is NOT a matter of race, but a "state of mind." "
(the preceding is from an Amazon.com reader review)
10 posted on 02/25/2003 8:43:03 PM PST by Temple Drake (sufficient unto the day is the evil thereof)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 6 | View Replies]

To: Sir Gawain
I read Jean Raspail's book it when it came out, and I still have the paperback kicking around my bookshelves someplace. It's pretty far over the top. The problem is that this kind of racist hysteria discredits reasonable efforts to shape and control immigration policy. In other words, there are seeds of truth in it, but to take it seriously as political prophecy would be to give the PC fanatics another tool to beat us with.
11 posted on 02/25/2003 8:44:19 PM PST by Cicero
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: Sir Gawain
You probably know, but Social Contract Press of Petoskey, Michigan offers The Camp of the Saints for $12.95. I have not read it yet. Being in Canada, I will likely have to get down there myself. Pleasant drive though, from my city.

Just have to make up my own mind. Remember ten years ago, a German sea captain off loaded about 150 Pakistani persons on a Nova Scotia shore. They had previously been held in a camp in West Germany though. Officially the Canadians could have returned them to their last residence,(Germany) there being no possible call for "asylum" claims.

Their leader assailed with vehement aggression the news reporters. The reporters disputed his claim they all came from Pakistan, thus being able to claim refugee status. His cry was- "Are you calling me a liar"- nobody dared do so. I did not follow up the story.

12 posted on 02/25/2003 9:09:35 PM PST by Peter Libra
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.

Free Republic
Browse · Search
News/Activism
Topics · Post Article

FreeRepublic, LLC, PO BOX 9771, FRESNO, CA 93794
FreeRepublic.com is powered by software copyright 2000-2008 John Robinson