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A**R
A dark prophecy gains frightening relevance
I first stumbled across "The Camp of the Saints" as a passing reference in another book I was reading, Christopher Caldwell's "Reflections on the Revolution in Europe." After finishing Caldwell's book, I was intrigued enough to track down a copy of Raspail's "Camp of the Saints" and purchase it.Fair warning - some of the content, and language, of the book is pretty rough going. Raspail spares no effort in his descriptions of the invading armada as it makes its way toward France - feces, nudity, the basest of sexual and violent acts are all presented in unflinching detail. The book was written in the 1970s and contains extensive, and "politically incorrect", discussions about race. Raspail, a French native grappling with France's large-scale immigration from North Africa at the time, obviously had some strong views on the subject.The power of this book, however, is not what it brings forward from the past but what it saw in the future. I happened to be reading "The Camp of the Saints" the same week that the "MV Sun Sea", loaded with almost 500 Sri Lankan Tamil "refugees", was being towed into a Canadian port by the Canadian Navy. It was like watching a forty-year-old prophecy coming true before my eyes. The similarity between what I was reading on the page and what was happening in real time was beyond disturbing.The actions, of the main characters in the book mirror what we see every day in the media and especially on the Internet: There are the government spokesmen telling us not to panic, the media talking heads telling us what our duty is or should be, the leaders of church and society instructing us in what is the "proper" way to feel about everything that's happening to us. And front and center is the ordinary citizen, caught like a child under a steamroller as events roll over them at their terrible slow speed.This is not a fun book to read. This is not an easy book to read. But it is an important book to read.Raspail titled the book from Revelations, Verse 20: "And when the thousand years are ended, Satan will be released from his prison, and will go forth and deceive the nations which are in the four corners of the earth, Gog and Magog, and will gather them together for the battle, the number of whom is as the sand of the sea. And they went up over the breadth of the earth and encompassed the camp of the saints, and the beloved city."Anybody who's had a look at the news lately has to be wondering if our time is up.
E**S
The truth people do not face
This ill-reputed narrative of the invasion of France by filthy outcaste masses from India has been reprinted several times since its publication in 1973 and seems to be going stronger than ever. Recently Steve Bannon called the recent migrations from Middle Eastern countries a ‘Camp of Saints’ type of thing”. Commonly ragarded as a racist tract, this book is actually rich in ideas and says more about the West than the East.“I had no idea this Steve, eh, Bannon existed at all,” the author said recently in an interview with Tablet magazine. “... a French journalist had me listen to what Bannon said about me the other day. I must say I was stunned. ... I don’t know this character and he has understood The Camp of the Saints. He has said that reading it made him see what should be done. Isn’t it extraordinary?”The Camp of the Saints is about the decadence of the West. Author Jean Raspail, a conservative Catholic, sees the problem as a loss of stable values and order. The basic narrative is Revelations 20:9: “And when the thousand years are ended, Satan will be released from his prison, and will go forth and deceive the nations which are in the four corners of the earth, Gog and Magog, and will gather them together for the battle; the number of whom is as the sand of the sea. And they went up over the breadth of the earth and encompassed the camp of the saints and the beloved city.” In the novel, Satan is “the dung man” a preacher who leads the Indian outcaste class (the nations in the four corners of the earth) to conquer the camp of the saints (the West). On his shoulder he always carries his offspring, the “monster child”: “at the bottom, two stumps, then an enormous trunk, all hunched and twisted; no neck but a kind of extra stump, a third one in place of a head ... and a mouth that was just a flap of skin over his gullet.” His huge impoverished rabble has enough collective resources to commandeer a hundred rusted steamers plus provisioning and coal to bring these outcasts from India to the West, which turns out to be the south of France.The proximate cause of this is the dung man's preaching. The author comments “The world is controlled, so it seems, not by a single specific conductor, but by a new apocalyptic beast, ... one that in some primordial time, must have vowed to destroy the Western World.” The monster child, evidently in touch with this beast, communicates with his father by eye-flashes and grimaces. Oddly the dung man sees an “atheist philosopher”, Ballan, as a redeemer who can save him. Meeting Ballan on a crowded Calcutta pier, the dung man pleads "Please take us with you ... Please." Ballan replies “Today’s the day, my friend. We’ll both be in paradise, you and I.” Ballan muses, “Seriously, God, is this your idea?” Shortly afterward, the stampede onto the ship knocks him overboard; his last thought before drowning is regret for rejecting the West.At the beginning of the sixty day voyage, European opinion is divided concerning the migration. Missionary doctors and clergymen admit they have encouraged it and are vaguely gratified to be carried along by a grand revolution. Among the media “ ..[There was] no lack of clever folk, willing from the start, to spread endless layers of verbal cream, spurting thick and unctuous from the udders of their minds. ... Eternal France, in keeping with time-honored custom, owed it to herself to stand up, solo, and squeal out sublime and noble notes of love.” Grandest of the rhetoricians is Orelle, a government official who has won a literary prize, who intones: “All the privileged nations must stand up as one, must lend a solemn ear to the eternal question, ”Cain, where is Abel thy brother?” Among the journalists, there is a race activist, Dio, who has made a career of blowing up minor racial incidents into scandals. There is an impoverished, alert, skeptical fellow, Machefer, who asks embarassing commonsense questions of the idealists. There is Durfort, a noisy and brainless idealist-leftist. There is Vilsberg, whose favored pose is as Deep Thinker who can never make up his mind. The idealists and activists (Dio and Durfort) make lots of money while Machefer just scrapes along, but he at least is devoted to truth and common sense. Their incessant quarrels add some fun to this otherwise gloomy narrative; I thought of ‘Bonfire of the Vanities.’ As for the common man, we see workingfolks Marcel and Josiane hearing Durfort asking the people to take the "refugees" into their homes. Marcel (drill-press machinist at an auto plant) is outraged. But the author realizes that going to the people has limitations. “Marcel is the people, his mind is their mind, half Durfort and half suede [i.e. luxury], not exactly the most compatible couple, but getting along by and large. And the people won’t lift a finger to help. Not in either direction. ... Marcel isn’t any less bright than his forbear the serf. But the monster has eaten away his brain, and he never even felt it. No, Marcel won’t go running to man the ramparts against the Ganges horde ... Let the troops fight it out among themselves. And if they turn tail and run, it’s not up to Marcel to bring up the rear ... He’ll sit by and watch today’s forts being sacked, He’ll let them all go.”French public opinion begins to turn to self-destructive after Dio publishes a long article, “Civilization of the Ganges”. “Arts, letters, philosophy ...” Here were “all the wonders that the Ganges had bestowed on us already ... how could we manage without these folk any longer!” - The Pope publishes tear-jerking messages. Socially-minded bishops call for something in spirit of Vatican III. The International Ganges Rescue Commission is formed from old hands with UNESCO and UNICEF -- “veterans in the rat race to gnaw the UN cheese”. The change in attitudes is overwhelming when Australia is vilified as racist simply for pointing out its right to exclude foreigners. Disgrace pours down on skippers on other ships that pass the migrants by. The fleet appears ready to pass through the Red Sea to Egypt, but when an Egyptian navy ship lobs a shell just above it, while the dung man and his monster child are on the bridge. This is enough to make the fleet change course and head around the Cape of Good Hope. The waters remain unbelievably calm throughout the long ocean trek. A storm comes up but the ships miss it only by a few hours. (The beast is on the migrants’ side.) Sufficient hints are planted to make the ending clear well in advance.Despite appearances, The Camp of the Saints is not about race, but about the problem of assimilating the foreigner. There are billions of people for whom dung is a vital product for brickmaking, fuel and fertilizer, so it’s intimate in their lives. The question is how we deal with the two facts: world population is increasing rapidly, and there are so many people in the world whom we really don’t want to live with. What to do? The problem is of course compounded when there are memories of conquest and subjection. Practically every people has been under subjection at some time and held other peoples under subjection at other times, but few are willing to face facts in their entirety. No matter what you would include in a proposed solution, national boundaries are essential. Once we acknowledge the point, there is the further question of what to do when due to political pressures many people are enabled to get in who according to reasonable standards of civilized behavior should not have been let in. But now we have entered a strictly political realm. Like the author of this book I should know when to stop.
D**K
Value
You can read the literary reviews on Amazon. My 5 star is based on the value of the book. This is not a cheesy imitation paperback. This is a well put together and well printed paperback book; all at a fraction of the cost of a hardcover.
H**H
A Very Frightening and Prophetic Book
The story was written in the 1970s and is almost a prophesy of what's happening now in Europe. In the book, the refugees flowing into Europe are from India, rather than the current influx from the Middle East and north Africa, and they arrive in a massive fleet of old ships, but the overall theme regarding the reactions of the liberal population of Europe and the governments and news media are eerily the same as what we see now. It's almost as if the author had a time machine and could look many decades into the future.I'd give the book five stars if it weren't for the difficulty reading the text. The author's or translator's use of paragraphs is almost nonexistent, and many thoughts are jumbled together into massive paragraphs that can be as long as a page. This tends to slow the rate at which it can be read, and the marginally acceptable quality of the paper and print add to that problem. But all-in-all, it's worth the effort.The author's treatment of the refugees is somewhat racist, but I can't be sure if the author is racist or only wanted to show the seamy side of people like these refugees from the Third World. Each reader will have to decide for himself or herself, but the book is still worth reading rather than dismissing it because of some reviewer's claim that it's a racist book.
R**L
My favorite book of all time
I really couldn't put it down. I recommended it to my friends but they were afraid "it would be too depressing". Not true: the pace of the storytelling and the dark humor really counter-balance the theme of the novel.Extremely vivid and immersive. A scathing examination of the cowardice of the western spirit, the Marxist elements of the media and politics, and the powerful foreign entities who sit comfortably in their high-rises while western civilization quickly digs its own grave.Rather than crush your spirit, this novel will motivate you to speak your mind, and speak what you truly believe, rather than trod along with what is 'politically correct' for fear of social exclusion.This writer is a literary genius who made a big sacrifice telling this story at the risk of his reputation and career.I would also recommend "Growth of the Soil" by Knut Hamsun and "Journey to the End of the Night" by Celine
A**I
Il romanzo più orribile e terribile mai scritto
Romanzo a tesi del 1973, da leggere quale vaccino contro il razzismo e la xenofobia.È una descrizione apocalittica, repellente, disgustosa e suprematista dell’invasione della Francia da parte di un milione di indiani, feccia disumana del mondo.È il ‘livre de chevet’ di Steve Bannon e, si immagina, di Donald Trump.Si abbina perfettamente con il 'Mein Kampf’ di A. Hitler (edizione critica Free Ebrei).Buona lettura!
A**E
Schön geschrieben
Jean Raspail weiß mit Worten zu verzaubern!Die Art und Weiße wie er die Vorkommnisse inszeniert ist faszinierend!Er schafft es auf raffinierte weise ein dutzend Persona, mit unterschiedlichen Ansichten, zu kreieren.
N**E
The nightmare became true
What Jean Raspail announced and warned us about, in 1973, is happening just right now both in The USA and in the EU , the waves of immigrants , undocumented and unwanted have been launched together in our two continents to derail our economies and our societies, Jean Raspail warned us about the millions invading our countries without even firing a single shot, they are so many that incompetent governments are already pushing their own citizens out of their homes (see Sweden) or telling them to giving part of their homes or garages to accomadate people that have no hope nor wish to settle here peacefully to get work and help our economies to grow ;on the contrary the financial, social and cultural price will be enormous, then owerwhelming and eventually will mean the end of our societies and countries. Already canteens in Europe and America are told to avoid pork and ham and girls in Bavaria and Britain are told to dress humbly ( no short skirts...) not to offend the newcomers. In a video on youtube some immigrants from Pakistan demand women to accomadate their sexual needs in the shelters were they are given all kinds of foof and medical treatments!!!!Read this book , it is really the tale of what is going on NOW
C**E
A vision of the end of the West (spoilers)
First, I have to say that this would probably be easier to read in the original French rather than the translation; it's a bit disjointed in parts. This book condenses into about 7 weeks the destruction of the entire Western civilisation and its people and as such is a metaphor for what is taking much longer but which seems to be as inevitable. As a "Westerner", I had to put the book down for a while about halfway through because the sense of impending doom really got to me - the dread of what we know was going to happen. And it did. There was a bit of tearful humour at the end - although it would depend on your political bent whether you found it worthy of tears. I did. The whole book is worthy of tears: the West, having been industrious, inventive and latterly trying really hard to bend over backwards to deem every society equally worthy finds itself overrun by barbarians with no concept of self-sufficiency, birth control or even self control. It begs the question: why are Middle Eastern and African nations so backward?It is heartbreaking: it showcases the LibLefty view that every country in the world has the right to exist except the Western countries; it showcases Political Correctness three decades before it became reality. It shows how the West became so spineless that it could not/would not protect itself against invasion: liberally inculcated soldiers refuse to fight... even the last bastion in Europe (the Swiss, who are armed - a privilege denied the rest of us) fall in the end.A good book. Extremely depressing though.
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