BLAIR'S CHARLEMAGNE PRIZE
CREATED BY NAZIS
Date of Report 10 July 2003
Translated 30 November 2003
Introduction: This piece demonstrates for the first time on this
website the strong ideological links between Charlemagne's Europe, lauded
by the leaders of the European Union (Tony Blair and Roy Jenkins among
others have received the Charlemagne Prize of the German City of Aachen),
and the Nazis' ambitions for Europe.
The eurofederalist class has always claimed that the European Union
has brought peace to Europe after two world wars - but in fact the 1990s
saw the break up of free nation states like Czechoslovakia and Yugoslavia,
created by the Treaties which ended those wars, the deaths of thousands
and the ethnic cleansing of nearly a million people (mostly Serbs).
The Eurofederalist class created and annually awards the Charlemagne
Prize to politicians who forced the integration of Europe because that
prize and that aim contrasted with the past evils of European Fascism.
We now reveal that even that is a lie for the Charlemagne Prize was
created after the second world war by those who had been political leaders
under the Nazis.
In 800 AD in Rome Charlemagne (in German Karl der Grosse) was anointed
Holy Roman Emperor. His political ambition and religious bigotry had
by then created a large empire built on the blood and bones of those
who did not agree with his religious ideas and on the destruction of
nations which rejected his imperial aims.
The re-creation of the Empire of Charlemagne has been the overt
ambition of many European Catholics, the successors of Austria-Hungary
(prominent among them the MEP Otto von Habsburg) and of course the (nation
state hating) Vatican which saw in the historical uniting of French
and German ("Frankish") Europe in 800 as the historical basis
for the new supranational Empire of the European Union.
From the ambition of Josef Retinger to create a central European
Catholic empire (for which he was expelled as a war danger from both
France and Britain during the First World War) to the religious exterminations
of non Catholics in Yugoslavia by the Croatian Ustashe (puppets of the
Nazis and Italian Fascists) to the 1990s ethnic cleansing of 300,000
Orthodox Serbs from Croatia and the massacres by Croats of Bosnian Muslims,
the influence of Charlemagne has been sustained into the 20th and 21st
centuries. Croatia, now the most ethnically pure state in Europe,
was described by the Vatican as a "Jewel" in its Crown. The
founder of modern Croatia, Franjo Tudjman, wrote in a 1989 book "Genocide
is a natural phenomenon, it is commanded by the Almighty in defence
of the only true faith"
For a detailed description of Charlemagne see the book Fascist Europe
Rising pages 109 - 113.
Note: The Emperor generally called Charlemagne in English (via French
from the Latin Carolus Magnus) is called Karl der Grosse in German.
The prize is known as the "Karlspreis" in German
AACHEN - The Aachen Charlemagne Prize is the oldest political distinction
awarded by the German Federal Republic in the area of foreign policy.
It honours merit in "Europe and European unification". It
is awarded yearly on Ascension Day in the Coronation Hall of Aachen's
Council House. Those honoured include prominent European politicians,
heads of state and government, amongst others Alcide de Gasperi, Jean
Monnet, Robert Schuman, Konrad Adenauer, Vaclav Havel, Roy Jenkins,
Edward Heath, Tony Blair and Bill Clinton. Since 1997 the "Charlemagne
Prize Foundation" ("Karlspreis-Stiftung") has been co-ordinated
with the prize. Its purpose is to "publicize the ideal and aspiration
of the Charlemagne Prize throughout Europe". High ranking representatives
of business, the German Minister for the Economy, the Minister President
of North Rhine Wesfalia and the political advisor Werner Weidenfeld(*1)
serve on its committees.
Those honoured by the Charlemagne Prize (the first was Richard Coudenhove-Kalergi(*2))
are chosen by the "The Charlemagne Prize Society(Karlspreisgesellschaft),
a circle of influential members of the Aachen establishment whose discussions
are secret. It was called into being in 1949 by the efforts of the Aachen
textile merchant, Kurt Pfeiffer. Pfeiffer, who had previously been
a member of the Nazi Party and of five other Nazi organisations, maintained
that he had always tended to a "fundamental belief in Europe".
The Charlemagne Prize Society was founded by him with the intention
of awarding a "European prize which should be associated with the
Imperial Ideal (Reichsidee) of the Emperor Charlemagne, his palace and
burial place ".(both in Aachen)
"UNITER OF THE BRANCHES OF THE GERMAN PEOPLE"
Supposedly the Charlemagne Prize is connected with Charlemagne because
of his empire (Reich), set up around 800 AD, which could be reckoned
a a forerunner of the German-French "core of Europe". In fact
the Charlemagne Prize, first awarded on May 1st 1950, was connected
most closely with the Charlemagne myth which was very popular in the
German Reich from 1871, especially in the Aachen area because of his
"Imperial Idea" and supposed role as "Creator of European
unity".
The Nazis legitimated their plans for a European New Order with
heavily emphasised allusions to Charlemagne. The post war image
of Charlemagne as "Unifier of the Christian West" was preceded
by his Nazi portrayal as "Unifier of the German tribes". Charlemagne
was compared with Hitler, his Reich and Greater Germany. The Nazis identified
his policy with the Germanocentric New Order of Europe and cited his
campaign against the "hunnish" Avars in support of their war
of annihilation in the East. The then Gauleiter , Josef Grohe, declared
at a celebration (Feierstunde) on the twelve hundredth anniversary of
Charlemagne's birth in April 1942 that Aachen was the "starting
point for the formation of the German people".
The Charlemagne Prize Proclamation of 1949 and the official speeches
of the Aachen burgomasters of the early Fifties are heavily stamped
with national ("voelkisch") thinking. They show the Charlemagne
prize had become
associated with the folk-myth of Charlemagne and the German Reich. This
association was favoured not least because "The milieu which had
carried and realized the aggressive pan-Germanic myth of Aachen "
was in agreement with "that which also established the "Christian-Western"
Charlemagne Prize". This is clearly exemplified by the career of
the Aachen Professor of Philosophy, Peter Mennicken, who had authoritative
influence over the symbolism of the Charlemagne prize and the "liturgy"
of its award ceremonies.
"CULTURE" AS A BRIDGE TO THE POST-WAR
ERA
Mennicken joined the SA (Storm Troopers) in 1933 and the Nazi Party
in 1937. He used his lectureship at the Technical High School of Aachen
in the service of expansionist "Western research" and worked
for two so-called "societies for (international) understanding"
which were informal offshoots of the Propaganda Ministry, used for German
propaganda in the Netherlands and Belgium. Through him the Aachen
elite tried to convey a sympathetic picture of Germany and to mobilize
ethnic, regional and separatist resentments in the other side of the
border in subtle ways - through the medium of apparently non-political
cultural exchanges which offered a "border-surmounting" and
"community-building" picture of Aachen. This would serve as
a bridge into the post war era. Correspondingly, Mennicken succeded
in making a clerical-conservative new edition of his "Aachen mysticism"
after 1945.
"BUILDING STONE OF IMPERIAL EUROPE"
To this day the Charlemagne Prize stands in the tradition of the ethnically
("voelkisch") imprinted German Imperial Ideal. ".. Charlemagne
wanted, as we do today, to preserve the diversity of peoples whilst
simultaneously leading them together" - so it was said in the encomium
for the then German Federal President, Roman Herzog, in 1997. A critic
summarizes"The short-circuiting of Middle Ages and modernity, of
Reich and Europe, produces a 1200 year original myth (Ursprungmythos)
for an integrated Europe and its German-French core(...) . The Charlemagne
Prize transforms the political leaders of European integration into
heirs of the once and future European Reich. The myth of the European
mission of Charlemagne and his town belongs among the building stones
of imperial Europe".
(*1) A highly influential foreign policy advisor (see previous reports)
(*2) Founder of the Pan-European Union.