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Alba Rosa

Page 32

by Alexander Wolfheze

Plaasmoord — Afrikaans: ‘farm killing’, targeted killings as part of the ongoing genocide of White Afrikaners in South Africa

  Plakkaat van Verlatinghe — Dutch: ‘Placard of Abjuration’, Dutch ‘Declaration of Independence’ (1581)

  Pointe en relevé — French: ‘rising up on the toes’, ballet technique

  Prinzipienreiterei — German: ‘harping on about principles’

  Proletariat — German from Latin proletarius, ‘(only) producing offspring’: ‘working class’ (Marx)

  Qalandar — Persian: ‘defender (of the people)’, wandering Dervish, Sufi saint

  Quod licet Iovi non licet bovi — Latin: ‘what is permissible to Jove, is not permissible for an oxen’, ‘what is permitted to one important person or group, is not permitted to everyone’

  Quos Deus vult perdere prius dementat — Latin: ‘those whom God wishes to destroy, he strikes with madness first’

  Ragnarök — Old Norse: ‘the doom of the gods’ (Edda)

  Raison d’être — French: ‘reason for being’

  Realmatriarchat — German: ‘real-life matriarchy’

  Realpolitik — German: ‘real politics’, pragmatic political realism

  Regent — Dutch: ‘patrician’, non-noble semi-hereditary ruling class of the Dutch Republic

  Regressione delle caste — Italian: ‘Regression of the Castes’ (Evola)

  Rentier — French: ‘someone living idly off investments’, usurer

  Res Publica Christiana — Latin: ‘The Christian Commonwealth’, Christendom

  Restitutio in integrum — Latin: ‘restoration to original condition’, legal redress for damages incurred

  Retraite — French: ‘retirement’, hence (temporary) spiritual (monastic) retreat

  Revenant — French: ‘returnee’, ghost or animated corpse returning from death

  Sacerdotus — Latin: ‘priest’

  Samizdat — Russian: ‘self-published manuscript’, dissident literature in Communist Eastern Europe

  Samson Agonistes — Greek: ‘Samson the Champion’ (Milton)

  Sara-la-Kali — French/Romani: ‘Sara the Black’, Saint Sarah

  Schreckliche Ende/Schrecken ohne Ende — German: ‘terrible end/terror without end’

  Schrecklichen Kinder der Neuzeit — German: ‘terrible children of the New Age’ (Sloterdijk)

  Sine qua non — Latin: ‘without which nothing’

  Singulärste Schuld auf Erden — German: ‘the world’s most unique debt’ (Sieferle)

  Sitz im Leben — German: ‘setting in life’, theological concept of context

  Soixante-huitard — French: ‘sixty-eight person’, baby boom activist of ‘1968’

  Soevereiniteit in eigen kring — Dutch: ‘sphere sovereignty’ (Kuyper)

  Sonderkommando — German: ‘special unit’, work units of camp inmates involved in the operation of Nazi death camps

  Sophia Perennis — Latin: ‘Perennial Philosophy’, epistemological basis of Traditionalism;

  Sonderfall — German: ‘special case’, historical uniqueness

  Sperrgebiet — German: ‘prohibited area’

  Spyashchaya krasavitsa — Russian: ‘Sleeping Beauty’ (Tchaikovsky)

  Stat rosa pristina nomine, nomina nuda tenemus — Latin: ‘the ancient rose remains [only] in name, naked names are all that we have’ (de Cluny, Eco)

  Stunde Null — German: ‘Zero Hour’, the caesura in German history, precisely marked by the midnight hour of 8 May 1945 (Unconditional Surrender of Germany)

  Superbia — Latin: ‘pride’

  Tabula rasa — Latin: ‘erased slate’, blank wax tablet

  Techne — Greek: ‘craft’, philosophical concept of use-conditioned reality

  Temeraire — from French téméraire: ‘rash’, ‘reckless’

  Tesi samanunga was edele unde scona et omnium virtutum pleniter plena — ‘Macaronic’ Latin and Old Dutch: This community was noble and clean and filled with all virtues (Munsterbilzen Evangelarium)

  Théâtre de l’absurde — French: ‘Theatre of the Absurd’, existentialist fiction

  Theriomachy — Greek: ‘animal struggle’, archetypal human struggle with evil

  Totaler Krieg — German: ‘Total War’ (Goebbels)

  Tournante — French slang: ‘turn over session’, Maghreb-style gang rape

  Tsadikim Nistarim — Hebrew: ‘Hidden Righteous Ones’

  Tutu — ballet costume

  Tweede Kamer — Dutch: ‘Second House’, Dutch House of Representatives

  Übermensch — German: ‘superman’ (Nietzsche)

  Umvolkung — German: ‘ethnic replacement’

  Umwertung aller Werte — German: ‘tranvaluation of all values’ (Nietzsche)

  Untermensch — German: ‘subhuman’, inferior people

  Unus mundus — Latin: ‘One World’, philosophical concept of an underlying unified reality reflected in archetypes and synchronicities (Jung)

  Unzeitgemässe Betrachtungen — German: ‘Untimely Meditations’ (Nietzsche)

  Uradel — German: ‘primordial nobility’ (dating back to the 14th century or earlier), as opposed to Briefadel (‘patent letter nobility’) of later date

  Urzeit — German: ‘prehistoric time’

  Uti possidetis — Latin: ‘as you possess’, legal possession resulting from the cessation of hostilities

  Va banque — French: ‘go bank’, a gambler’s all-in bet equal to all the money in the game’s bet

  Vae victis! — Latin: ‘woe to the vanguished!’ (Brennus)

  Verelendung — German: ‘immiseration’, economic thesis of necessary relative wage reduction in capitalist development (Marx)

  Vergangenheitsbewältigung — German: ‘overcoming the past’, post-war German pre-occupation with national guilt complexes

  Vindiciae contra tyrannos — Latin: ‘Defences against Tyrants’, Huguenot tract concerning peoples’ right to resist unjust rulers

  Völkerwanderung — German: ‘migration of the peoples’, era of Barbarian Invasions of Europe during the Migration Period (375–568 AD)

  Volksgemeinschaft — German: ‘people’s community’

  W Imię Boga: za naszą i waszą wolność — Polish: ‘in the Name of God: for our and your freedom’

  Wehr- und Waffen-Instinkt — German: ‘defence and armament instinct’ (Nietzsche alluding to Luther’s hymn ‘A mighty fortress is our God, a good defence and weapon)

  Werdegang — German: ‘developmental process’

  Wiedergutmachung — German: ‘restitution, compensation’, reparation payments by post-war Germany to victims of the Nazi regime

  Wilhelmus — Dutch national anthem, the oldest in the world and dedicated to Prince William of Orange, ‘Father of the Nation’

  Wir schaffen das — German: ‘we can manage it’, Angela Merkel’s phrase defending her ‘open borders’ policy during the European Migrant Crisis of 2015

  Wunderkammer — German: ‘wonder-room’, curiosity cabinet

  Za vashu i nashu svobodu — Russian: ‘for our and your freedom’

  Zweiundzwanzig, Hoeringstrasse — German: ‘Höringstrasse (number) 22’ (Solzhenitsyn)

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  Notes

  [←1 ]

  ‘Oikophobia’ as defined in Wolfheze, Sunset, 194.

  [←2 ]

  This is the motto of the Dutch province of Zeeland, referring to its constant struggle against the sea.

  [←3 ]

  Commonly referred to as ‘Dutch courage’ by English participants in the Anglo-Dutch Wars.

  [←4 ]

  The dams, dikes and polders of a former inlet of the North Sea called the Zuiderzee.

  [←5 ]

  The dams, levees and storm surge barriers around the Rhine-Meuse-Scheldt delta.

  [←6 ]

  A term recently introduced into Dutch public discourse by Thierry Baudet, leader of the new parliamentary party Forum for Democracy.

  [←7 ]

  Terminology wrongfully ascribed to Thierry Baudet by the politically correct Dutch media.

  [←8 ]

  An indirect reference to the title of the 1995 work De verweesde samenleving, ‘An Orphaned Society’, by assassinated Dutch patriotic leader Pim Fortuyn.

  [←9 ]

  A reference to PM Mark Rutte, a.k.a. ‘Mister Tefal’.

  [←10 ]

  A politically correct euphemism for the non-ethnically Dutch residents of the Netherlands.

  [←11 ]

  A reference to the new semi-American education funding system that came into full force in 2017.

  [←12 ]

  A reference to the ‘progressive’ pioneering role that Holland was supposed to play in the international arena during the ‘Social Justice Warrior’ government of PM Den Uyl between 1973–77.

  [←13 ]

  A reference to the Social Justice Warrior elite inhabiting the fashionable inner city district of Amsterdam.

  [←14 ]

  A term used by patriotic opposition leader Geert Wilders to indicate the fenced-off seats of the government in the House of Representative.

  [←15 ]

  An ancient office still existing in the Netherlands, approximately equivalent in rank to a mayor or provincial King’s Commissioner.

  [←16 ]

  Slightly raised dry and infertile landforms, usually adjoining the marshlands; the Dutch word geest is popularly associated with the homophone word for ‘ghost’.

  [←17 ]

  The famous Dutch flower fields, including the well-known tourist attraction Keukenhof, are concentrated in the transitional region between the sand of the dunes and the clay of the low-lying pastures.

  [←18 ]

  References to, respectively, the Eighty Years’ (or: Dutch Independence) War (1568–1648), the Second Anglo-Dutch War (1665–67) and the Franco-Dutch War (1672–78).

  [←19 ]

  In the wake of the French Revolution the Netherlands were conquered by the First French Republic and annexed by Napoleon, but restored by
the Vienna Congress. In 1848 a domestic constitutional compromise saved the Netherlands from revolution and civil war. During the First World War the Netherlands managed to maintain neutrality.

  [←20 ]

  References to, respectively, the 1944 Benelux union, the 1949 NATO alliance and the 1949 independence of Indonesia. It should be noted that Indonesian independence was a result of pressure by Holland’s ‘ally’ America. The Netherlands lost its New Guinea colony for the same reason in 1962.

  [←21 ]

  In 1964 and 1969 the borders were formally opened to Turkish and Moroccan ‘guest labourers’, many of whom were undesirables, who were deliberately ‘exported’ by their government.

  [←22 ]

  There are around 350,000 native speakers of Frisian, while the most conservative estimates put the numbers of Moroccan and Turkish residents at around 370,000 and 400,000 respectively.

  [←23 ]

  A reference to the assassination of patriotic leader Pim Fortuyn on 6 May 2002, nine days before the parliamentary elections he was widely expected to win. The assassin was officially identified as a lone-wolf Social Justice Warrior, but various conspiracy theories continue to blame the Dutch political establishment for the conveniently timely elimination of the threat that Pim Fortuyn represented to the status quo. The Dutch people referred to him with the sobriquets of Onze Pim, or ‘Our Pim’, as well as by his academic title ‘Professor’.

  [←24 ]

  The term ‘purple’ refers to the grand political coalition of ‘red’ social democrats and ‘blue’ neo-liberals that ruled the Netherlands from 1994 to 2002.

  [←25 ]

  A reference to the semi-legal assistance that the Dutch ‘churches’ render to fraudulent ‘refugees’ who have been refused asylum status, but whose continued residence is effectively ‘tolerated’ by the government. This practice is politically encouraged not only by the ‘progressive’ parliamentary block of Social Justice Warrior parties, but also by the ‘Christian’ parties of the present coalition government (the junior partners — CDA and CU).

 

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