segunda-feira, outubro 03, 2005

EM MEMÓRIA DE SAVITRI DEVI



Já tinha decidido que não voltava a pôr aqui textos integrais sacados da Novo Press, mas desta vez abro uma excepção, em louvor de uma das grandes figuras ignoradas da História Contemporânea, Savitri Devi:
Savitri Devi, pseudónimo de Maximine Portaz faria agora 100 anos, nascida em 1905, em Lyon, na França, faleceu na Inglaterra em 1982. Com origens inglesa, grega e italiana, Savitri Devi descrevia-se a si mesma como uma Indo-europeia.
Pensadora religiosa e filósofa, Savitri Devi foi uma incansável activista em nome dos vencidos de 45, assim como procurou ao longo da sua vida reavivar o paganismo indo-europeu, fomentar o vegetarianismo, mostrando-se uma grande defensora da ecologia e do bem estar dos animais. Basta para tal ler a suas obras «The Lightining and the Sun» ou «Impeachment of man».
Convertida ao Hinduísmo, religião que ela considerou como o derradeiro remanescente das antigas religiões pagãs europeias, abraçou a causa nacionalista hindu, opondo-se ferozmente ao igualitarismo cristão e islâmico, assim como ao comunismo e capitalismo.
No pós guerra, ajudou na Europa ao reestruturamento dos movimentos nacionalistas, o que lhe valeu inclusive o encarceramento.
Savitri Devi deve ser homenageada por todos aqueles que sentem realmente a voz dos antepassados vibrar no seu sangue. Savitri Devi não será reconhecida nesta época de decadência e degradação. Será, sem dúvida, devidamente homenageada na Idade de Ouro que está por vir!


Artigo de Savitri Devi (em Inglês) Paganismo Indiano - A Última Expressão Viva da Beleza Ariana.

2 Comments:

Blogger João said...

O livro de Nicholas Clarke, Sol Negro, inclui um capítulo bastante interessante sobre Savitri Devi. Percurso biográfico, ideológico, passagem pela prisão e outros pontos de interesse.

3 de outubro de 2005 às 21:09:00 WEST  
Anonymous Anónimo said...

http://www.bnp.org.uk/news_detail.php?newsId=548

Ban on wearing of St. George cross tie pin

4th October 2005

News article filed by BNP news team



Flying the flag is now banned in Wakefield jail






Another day and another ban on a familiar British symbol. We have already covered the story of Leeds police banning the flying of a St. George Cross in a domestic garden; today a professional multi-culturalist has ordered prison officers to stop wearing charity tie pins which feature the St. George Cross.

The Chief Inspector of Prisons, Anne Owers ordered the ban following an inspection of the top security Wakefield Prison in West Yorkshire. She claimed that the tie pins could be misinterpreted as the English flag which was a “racist” symbol!

In her report Ms Owers said: "We were concerned to see a number of staff wearing a flag of St George tie pin.

"While we were told that these had been bought in support of a cancer charity there was clear scope for misinterpretation.

"Prison Service Orders made clear that unauthorised badges and pins should not be worn."

Brian Caton, of the Prison Officers' Association, said: "If the only problem the chief inspector found was tie pins carrying the Cross of St George... there can't be a lot wrong with Wakefield prison."

Shadow Defence Minister, Gerald Howarth MP said: "What are we coming to in this country? Why shouldn't people wear their national flag with pride?"

Professional anti-white racist

Anne Owers (58) is a professional multi-culturalist, a classic example of an anti-white racist, a white liberal with a pathological hatred for her own kith and kin, who champions the “benefits” of diversity and has been a tireless campaigner for the plight of asylum seekers.

She sits on the Commission of the Future of Multi Ethnic Britain, an unelected, self appointed body of professional minority ethnic complainers and supine white liberals. It was established in 1997 by the Runnymede Trust to consider “the political and cultural implications of the changing diversity of British people”.

Before her appointment to the Prison Inspectorate, Owers was Director of JUSTICE and previously general secretary of the Joint Council for the Welfare of Immigrants, 1986–92. Previously member of the Lord Chancellor’s Advisory Committee on Legal Education and Conduct, 1997–9, and chair of trustees, Refugee Legal Centre, 1993.

She has written a number of publications bemoaning the plight of what she calls asylum seekers but are in fact economic migrants who have travelled through a dozen or more safe countries before arriving on British shores to claim “asylum”. Her work includes Providing Protection: asylum determination systems, Legislating for Human Rights and co-author of Economic, Social and Cultural Rights: their implementation in UK law.

Prison officers and others who want to defy the clampdown on the wearing of national flags can buy from an extensive range offered by Excalibur.

4 de outubro de 2005 às 18:10:00 WEST  

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