European Apostasy: The Role of Religion in the European New Right

Disclosure

“Pawel Bielawski is both a specialist in the history of religion and a highly knowledgeable authority on the so-called ‘New Right’. In his book, he addresses a little-known subject with method and precision. His work undoubtedly provides an excellent foundation for a substantive discussion of the topic.” — Alain de Benoist The Right in Europe […]

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Description

“Pawel Bielawski is both a specialist in the history of religion and a highly knowledgeable authority on the so-called ‘New Right’. In his book, he addresses a little-known subject with method and precision. His work undoubtedly provides an excellent foundation for a substantive discussion of the topic.” — Alain de Benoist

The Right in Europe is traditionally associated with Christianity, and opposition to this tradition is typically equated with revolution. The New Right, however, as initiated by Alain de Benoist, is founded on different axiological premises. According to its proponents, the true bedrock of European civilisation was not Christianity but ancient paganism — Greco-Roman as well as Slavic, Germanic, Celtic, and others. From this standpoint, it is Christianity that constitutes the revolutionary force, having overthrown the authentic European pagan ancien régime.

The New Right represents an effort to reclaim not only the heritage of the past two millennia of the Christian era but also to recover much older strata of European tradition. Triumphant Christianity constructed itself atop an already existing, fully developed civilisation. For adherents of the New Right, the sacred text of Europeans is not the Bible but Homer’s Iliad.

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Additional information

Publisher

Arktos Media Ltd. (March 25, 2025)

Publication date

March 25, 2025

Language

English

File size

1.0 MB

Text-to-Speech

Enabled

Screen Reader

Supported

Enhanced typesetting

Enabled

X-Ray

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Word Wise

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Print length

1228 pages