The Camp of the Saints

I read Jean Raspail’s The Camp of the Saints in the late 1970s. It is the type of book that excites vigorous emotional opposition from liberal and leftist Westerners because it posits the idea that excessive immigration from the Third World could lead to the destruction of the West. The bookseller in the store where I ordered it was a weasel faced – not that I held that against him – self-appointed intellectual who didn’t want to sell me the book: he thought it would corrupt me. Alas, his fatherly concern came too late. It did lead me to ponder the truism that today’s book burners tend to be on the political left; that is only fitting, I suppose, since they think they know what is best for the rest of us.

Modern Britain is a testament to Raspail’s warnings; we in North America, as yet lacking much of the UK’s immigration nightmare, are probably going to do the job ourselves by aborting ourselves into extinction. The unfortunates that do survive will be secularised into despair over the meaninglessness of their existence, leading them to voluntarily hasten their departure from this vale of tears through euthanasia or suicide.

To my surprise, the book is seeing something of a revival. Here is a recent review of it:

All those engaged in the debate over illegal immigration should find Jean Raispail’s The Camp of the Saints a challenging summer read. Otto Scott calls it “one of the most famous of the underground books.” Lionel Shriver believes it is a “novel both prescient and appalling.” The book became so notorious that the December 1994 issue of the Atlantic Monthly investigated many of the questions it raised.

The Camp of the Saints was published first in 1973 in France as Le Camp des Saints. An English translation by Norman Shapiro was published by Scribner in 1975. Since then, the book has been republished and described as a “controversial and politically incorrect novel,” and “a Fascist fantasy.”

[….]

The Camp of the Saints presents a reader with an alternate apocalypse from the one found in the Biblical book of Revelation. Even though Raspail’s title is taken from Revelation 20:9, “And they came up on the broad plain of the earth and surrounded the camp of the saints,” the book has very little to do with a biblical interpretation of events.

Instead, the title is a sarcastic reference that shows to the Western reader the end of the world in secular terms. In Raspail’s book, liberalism marches steadfastly to its demographic doom.

[….]

Jean Raspail’s vision in The Camp of the Saints is an imaginary one of how the secular order in the West may end. It is a vision seen through the right eye. According to Raspail, the West “has no soul left” and “it is always the soul that wins the decisive battles.”

The secular world truly is in need of salvation, a salvation Jean Raspail believes Christian charity will prove itself powerless to effect. So, he warns us during our summer of immigration discontent, “The times will be cruel.”

2 thoughts on “The Camp of the Saints

  1. The reference in Revelations 20:9 refers to a small cantonment area the size of only a camp for the saints of God at the end time as opposed to the four corners of the world arrayed against them. God’s remnant will not be a large force, but a victorious one.
    Jean Raspail’s book was banned by the French Federal Court from circulation in France. I wonder why? Though fiction, this book if full of foresight and insight into our present predicament.
    If Obama has his way in signing the US to the UN NO BORDERS TREATY by executive fiat, all that Raspail wrote about will happen to the American continent sooner than we might expect. It has already begun. Canada and the United States are shadows of each other – whatever happens in one will happen in the other.

  2. In an age and time when men would rather be know for having raped and murdered their mothers than be called a racist I was surprised to see a review of Camp of the Saints.

    this being a theological site my first comment would be how is inviting in enemies of our God helping us. Is God pleased?

    My other comments would be how is overcrowding and downward pressure on wages helping anyone? Do millionaires really need cheap nannies and gardeners?

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