Key Thinkers of the Radical Right

Home > Other > Key Thinkers of the Radical Right > Page 13
Key Thinkers of the Radical Right Page 13

by Mark Sedgwick (ed)


  the destined hills of Rome,”24 which was also Evola’s and Reghini’s am-

  bition, in the sense of their Pagan Imperialism. But the Catholic Church,

  which Mussolini needed for his regime, naturally did not want a pagan

  Rome. This led to the Lateran Accords of 1929 between the Vatican and

  Mussolini, exploding this dream of the Group of Ur.

  The Group of Ur was fundamentally concerned not just with self-

  transformation and integration into the transcendental realm but also

  with the resultant higher dignity and freedom. An actual ontological

  change of state (initiation) was necessary for obtaining the intended iden-

  tity with God (deification). Connected with this was the achievement of an

  59

  Julius Evola and Tradition

  59

  unbroken continuum of consciousness, which ideally would even extend

  beyond (bodily) death.

  The integral tradition

  It was also through Reghini that in the mid- 1920s Evola came into contact

  with the idea of the “integral tradition” in the sense of the French esoteri-

  cist René Guénon, where “integral” distinguishes it from simple tradition

  as the preservation of old customs and mores. Evola was quickly seized by

  the idea, but he differed from Guénon in his active and combative char-

  acter. He saw himself as belonging to the warrior or Kshatriya caste, and

  not, like Guénon, as a contemplative Brahmin. This activist attitude also

  explains Evola’s controversial effort as an esotericist to influence practical

  politics. The fruit of Evola’s intensive study of the integral tradition is what

  is probably his best- known book, Revolt Against the Modern World ( Rivolta

  contro il mondo moderno).25 The book is in two parts: part 1 sets out the

  theoretical principles and explains what constitutes the integral tradition;

  part 2 offers an “occult” history of the world.

  Evola presents the integral tradition as a universal and timeless

  (perennial) Weltanschauung, whose origin lies in the transcendent, be-

  yond humans, peoples, and history. It is primordial, unitive, and all-

  encompassing. All metaphysical worldviews and important religions

  derive from it. Since the integral tradition claims a “divine” origin, it is also

  the final authority for its adherents; it cannot be questioned, never alters,

  and sets the absolute norm that everything should follow. It is clearly de-

  termined from “above.” The modern world, in the form of Western civi-

  lization and technology, which rests on merely material, physiochemical

  bases and is thus determined from “below,” is seen as the exact contrary

  of this tradition.

  The integral tradition, never perfectly realizable on Earth and thus only

  an ideal to be striven for, rests on strictly hierarchical thinking, whereby

  the highest rank approaches the transcendent. The stages descend through

  progressive materialization. From this hierarchy of the absolute primacy

  of everything spiritual, there inevitably derive a series of incompatible

  contrasts with modernity, dominated as it is by the idea of equality. For ex-

  ample, the leadership in a traditional society can belong only to someone

  who can act as link to transcendence, for only “there” can the meaning and

  purpose of such a society be found. A priest- king corresponds most closely

  to this idea of a leader:

  6

  0

  60

  C L A S S I C T H I N K E R S

  Every traditional society is characterized by the presence of

  beings who, by virtue of the innate or acquired superiority over

  the human condition, embody within the temporal order the

  living and efficacious presence of a power that comes from above.

  One of these types of beings is the pontifex . . . Pontifex means

  “builder of bridges” . . . connecting the natural and supernatural

  dimensions. . . . In the world of Tradition the most important foun-

  dation of authority and of the right of kings and chiefs, and the

  reason why they were obeyed, feared and venerated, was essentially

  their transcendent and nonhuman quality.26

  A further consequence of this spiritually organized hierarchy is the di-

  vision of humans according to their inner capability of approaching tra-

  ditional spirituality and transmitting it, clearly manifested in the Hindu

  caste system. Further characteristics of the traditional world are the pre-

  dominance of ritual, initiation, and consecration, together with com-

  pletely different concepts of time and space, considered not quantitatively

  but qualitatively, according to their affinity with transcendence.

  The second part of Revolt Against the Modern World describes the

  “decline” from an originally spiritual and traditional culture down to

  the modern world. Thus, following Greco- Roman and Vedic reports,

  Evola speaks of a hyperborean center that was localized in prehistoric

  times in the Arctic, and where Nordic “god- men” ruled until “Cosmic”

  catastrophes forced them to leave their homeland, thereby spreading

  their upward- directed (“heavenward”), solar, and heroically masculine

  view of life throughout most of the world. On the other side there had

  arisen the downward- directed (“earthward”), lunar, and matriarchal

  cultures of the southern peoples, leading to warfare but also to misceg-

  enation with northerners. The influence of Jakob Bachofen is evident

  here, though Evola turned his worldview completely upside down.27

  Over descending cycles, the solar element in the West is said to have lost

  more and more of its power. A final flickering of tradition is still detectable

  in medieval Catholicism, because this leaned less towards Christian hu-

  mility than towards a sacred imperialism.28 For Evola, the Renaissance and

  especially the French Revolution mark further stages of decline. Modernity

  would finally plunge into collectivism, anarchy, and materialism, as al-

  ready prophesied in Indian scriptures ( Vishnu- purāṇa). World history thus

  appears not as evolution but as devolution, to the point of the Iron or Dark

  Age ( kālī- yuga) of today. A true restoration of tradition would be possible

  61

  Julius Evola and Tradition

  61

  only after the utter collapse of the modern world. There can be no gradual

  transition between traditional and modern culture because they are utterly

  separate and have developed entirely different concepts of time, value, and

  the sacred.

  The much-

  honored German expressionist poet Gottfried Benn,

  reviewing Revolt Against the Modern World, called it “an epochal book.

  Whoever has read it will be changed.”29

  Politics

  Evola’s political philosophy is understandable only through his premise

  of the primacy of the transcendent, as mentioned earlier. It rests on

  hierarchical thinking and finds its expression in the “organic state,” as

  presented in Evola’s chief political work, Men Among the Ruins ( UGli

  uomini e lerovine, 1952).30 Its presupposition is a center resting on tran-

  scendent principles, which— in contrast to totalitarianism— permeates

&
nbsp; all elements of the state from above to below due to its higher spiritual

  power alone. As in Plato, the first duty of the state is to lead citizens to

  higher goals.

  At the same time, Evola took issue with the concept of the nation, since

  this was determined merely by biological and cultural parameters; in-

  stead, he advocates a spiritual- monarchical empire. The core ideas of this

  work were already summarized for Evola’s closest adherents in his short

  book Orientations ( Orientamenti).31

  Evola’s first political essay appeared in 1925 in the anti- Fascist news-

  paper Lo Stato Democratico ( The Democratic State), and already had all the

  ingredients that would mark his later political works: first, opposition to

  democracy, since this depended on quantity, not on quality, and lacked the

  spiritual element. But it also opposed the ruling Fascist regime as being

  too “populist” and likewise devoid of any spirituality. He called the Fascist

  revolution a “caricature of a revolution” ( ironia di rivoluzione). Evola wrote

  all this in the hope of reforming a Fascism striving for strict control, and of

  being able to correct it in the direction of his pagan, spiritual, and imperial

  idea. It was a project that could never succeed.

  Italian Fascism had arisen from the often violent “Fasci italiani

  di combattimento” (Italian battle groups), founded in 1919, which

  transformed into a political party in 1921. In 1922 there came the trium-

  phal “March on Rome,” whereupon it formed a coalition government with

  conservatives and nationalists. Mussolini, who had originally belonged to

  6

  2

  62

  C L A S S I C T H I N K E R S

  the Socialist Party, became prime minister, and in 1925 a single- party dic-

  tatorship was established.

  In 1928 Evola’s Pagan Imperialism was published, as a polemical fo-

  cusing of his political views. The book caused lively controversy, especially

  in the Vatican, whose influence Evola had sharply criticized. After the

  end of the Group of Ur, Evola founded the journal La Torre ( The Tower),

  which was closed down after only six months. The cause was his attacks

  on Mussolini’s campaign for increasing the birthrate and his uncompro-

  mising attitude to the “plebeian” regime.

  Evola abroad

  Seeing no further possibility for himself and his political ideas in Fascist

  Italy, Evola undertook extensive journeys throughout Europe to meet

  representatives of political directions that matched his own sacral, ho-

  listic, antiliberal and anti- Bolshevist positions. Among them were rep-

  resentatives of Germany’s “Conservative Revolution” and the founder of

  Romania’s Iron Guard, Corneliu Codreanu.32 While visiting Romania,

  Evola came into contact with Mircea Eliade, the historian of religion and

  philosopher, who had early on embraced some of Evola’s ideas and with

  whom he remained in contact later.

  Evola also met the political theorist Carl Schmitt and the poet Gottfried

  Benn, and gave lectures in Germany. He met Schmitt several times, and

  letters to him even exist from the postwar era. Evola followed Schmitt’s

  ideas closely,33 but their outlooks were too different to allow for a reciprocal

  influence, not least because of Schmitt’s Catholicism. Evola appreciated

  Schmitt, both because they belonged to the same tradition of conserva-

  tive thinkers and also because they were linked by their esteem for the

  antiliberal political philosopher Juan Donoso Cortés.

  Evola and Ernst Jünger seem never to have met. Evola wanted to

  translate Jünger’s The Worker ( Der Arbeiter), because he saw the “worker”

  as an elemental force against bourgeois society. However, he did not

  agree with some aspects of the work and settled for an adaptation of

  it, supplied with his own commentaries.34 Evola certainly did not agree

  with the later works in which Jünger turned more to humanistic and

  democratic ideas.35 Although Evola translated Spengler’s The Decline of

  the West into Italian in 1957, he wrote that Spengler’s writing influenced

  him in no way and criticized Spengler for his lack of a metaphysical

  standpoint.36

  63

  Julius Evola and Tradition

  63

  It was mainly the apparent leanings of National Socialism toward the

  Germanic past and to ancient symbols, as well as its emphasis on loyalty,

  discipline, and readiness for sacrifice, that led Evola to a closer approach

  to Germany and especially to the SS, which he admired— at least to begin

  with— as a spiritual warrior order. A claim from Italian police reports that

  Evola was acquainted with Heinrich Himmler, who was fascinated by old

  German esoteric teachings and wanted to lead the SS as a chivalric order,

  is unconfirmed. There is however evidence that he was in contact with the

  Ahnenerbe (Research Community for Ancestral Heritage), the research in-

  stitute founded by Himmler and the völkish ideologist Herman Wirth. The

  point of contention was above all the Führer Principle, which, in Evola’s

  view, lacked any legitimacy from a transcendent authority, referred only to

  the people, and consequently had to act in a demagogic fashion. Evola also

  opposed the purely biological racial principle, as well as the whipping- up

  of nationalist feelings.37

  Evola’s attempt to gain a corrective influence over German politics via

  the SS was a complete failure. Already in 1938 an SS document described

  Evola, because of his divergent views, as a “reactionary Roman and a fan-

  tasist,” together with the directive to observe his subsequent activity. With

  that, his efforts for a sacralized politics failed in Germany, as they had

  in Italy.

  Evola’s racial doctrines

  In the mid- 1930s another chance occurred for Evola to gain political influ-

  ence. Mussolini expressed himself in positive terms about Evola’s thesis

  of a “spiritual” racism and invited him for discussions. Evola had applied

  his holistic concept of man as consisting of body, soul, and spirit to ra-

  cial doctrine, and spoke of a bodily race, a soul race, and a spiritual race.

  These would not necessarily coincide in the same individual. As Evola

  wrote in July 1931, “The preservation or restoration of racial unity (in its

  narrow sense) may be everything in an animal. But it is not so in man.”38

  Mussolini wanted to use Evola’s racial doctrine as a counterweight to the

  “materialistic and biological” racism of National Socialism, but the project

  failed because resistance in both countries was too strong.

  Evola’s anti- Semitism requires discussion. He saw the Jews as a symbol

  of the materialistic and economic domination of humanity, as conceived

  by the German sociologist Werner Sombart.39 The early influence of Otto

  Weininger, with his dictum “Judaism is the spirit of modern life,” now

  6

  4

  64

  C L A S S I C T H I N K E R S

  came to fruition.40 After his suicide in 1903, Weininger had acquired a

  worldwide circle of admirers, including Jews. Evola’s anti- Semitism was

&nb
sp; neither religious nor primarily biological. In emotional moments he often

  repudiated his own guidelines, though. He expressed himself positively

  on orthodox Judaism and especially Kabbalah, and ensured that his eso-

  teric book- series Horizons of the Spirit ( Orizzonti dello spirito) would pub-

  lish the great Jewish scholar of Kabbalah, Gershom Scholem.

  The postwar period

  After the downfall and arrest of Mussolini in 1943 and his subsequent

  rescue by German troops, Evola was present as interpreter at discussions

  between Mussolini and Hitler at Hitler’s headquarters in Rastenburg, East

  Prussia (now Kętrzyn, Poland). The resulting Salò Republic, however, ful-

  filled Evola’s expectations even less than the original Fascist state that had

  now collapsed.41 As American troops were marching on Rome in 1944,

  Evola fled to Vienna. His relations with individual Fascist leaders were

  well known, and toward the end of the Fascist regime he had also been

  in contact with the Nazi Security Service ( Sicherheitsdienst).42 The nature

  of these contacts remains unexplained. In Vienna he planned to write a

  Secret History of Secret Societies, probably having access to the documents

  that the German authorities had seized from Masonic lodges. This plan,

  however, was not realized.

  During one of the final bombing raids on Vienna in 1945, Evola suffered

  a serious spinal injury, which caused him to be confined in a wheelchair to

  the end of his life. After three years in Austrian and Italian hospitals and

  sanatoria he returned to Rome, where he resumed his activity as a writer.

  Beside his own writing, Evola was obliged by financial need to extensive

  activity as a translator. This included, among others, works by Gustav

  Meyrink, Mircea Eliade, Arthur Avalon, D. T. Suzuki, Oswald Spengler,

  Gabriel Marcel, Otto Weininger, and Ernst Jünger.

  Soon after his return to Rome, Evola became the spiritual focus

  of a group of mostly young followers, who tried to emulate his sharply

  formulated spiritual and political views. In April 1951 he was accused of

  being the “intellectual instigator” of secret neo- fascist terrorist groups,

  and of “glorifying Fascism.” After six months in custody he was acquitted.

  Evola died in 1974, appreciated only by a few, in a small Roman apart-

 

‹ Prev