Masonic/Jacobin/Cordelier Genocide of French Catholics

Jean-Baptiste Carrier (1756-1794)
Editor’s Note: How often do we hear that religion is the central villain in all of history’s wars and holocausts. If only mankind could jettison God, how much better off would we be, runs this line of malarkey which ignores the atheist-Communist holocausts in China, Russia and Eastern Europe that collectively killed more than 100 million people. In 18th century France the masonic French revolutionaries committed a little-known genocide against Catholics in the Vendée region. Here is a rare account of this secularist holocaust.
Vendée French call for revolutionary massacre to be termed ‘genocide’
It was one of the most infamous episodes of the bloody French Revolution.
Henry Samuel in Paris - Dec. 26, 2008 | Telegraph (UK)
In early 1794 – at the height of the Reign of Terror – French soldiers marched to the Atlantic Vendée, where peasants had risen up against the Revolutionary government in Paris.
Twelve “infernal columns” commanded by General Louis-Marie Turreau were ordered to kill everyone and everything they saw. Thousands of people – including women and children – were massacred in cold blood, and farms and villages torched.
In the city of Nantes, the Revolutionary commander Jean-Baptiste Carrier disposed of Vendéean prisoners-of-war in a horrifically efficient form of mass execution. In the so-called “noyades” –mass drownings – naked men, women, and children were tied together in specially constructed boats, towed out to the middle of the river Loire and then sunk.
Now Vendée, a coastal department in western France, is calling for the incident to be remembered as the first genocide in modern history. Residents claim the massacre has been downplayed so as not to sully the story of the French Revolution.
Historians believe that around 170,000 Vendéeans were killed in the peasant war and the subsequent massacres – and around 5,000 in the noyades.
When it was over, French General Francois Joseph Westermann penned a letter to the Committee of Public Safety stating: “There is no more Vendée… According to the orders that you gave me, I crushed the children under the feet of the horses, massacred the women who, at least for these, will not give birth to any more brigands. I do not have a prisoner to reproach me. I have exterminated all.”
Two centuries on, growing calls from local politicians to have it declared a “genocide” have sparked intellectual debate.
“There was in the Revolution a clearly stated programme to wipe out the Vendéean race,” said Philippe de Villiers, European deputy and former presidential candidate for the right-wing traditionalist Movement for France (MPF) party.
“Why did it take place? Because a people was chosen to be liquidated on account of their religious faith. Today we demand a law officially declaring it as a genocide; we demand a statement from the president; and recognition by the United Nations.”
Mr de Villiers – who opposes Turkish entry into the EU – was in Armenia last month, where he compared the Vendée of 1794 to the 1915 massacres of Armenians. In neither case, he said, “have the perpetrators admitted their fault or asked forgiveness of the victims”.
The bloody events of the Vendée were long absent from French history books, because of the evil light they shed on the Revolutionaries. However, they were well known in the Soviet bloc. Lenin himself had studied the war there and drew inspiration for his policies towards the peasantry.
According to the historian Alain Gérard, of the Vendéean Centre for Historical Research, “In other parts of France the revolutionaries killed the nobles or the rich bourgeoisie. But in Vendée they killed the people.
“It was the Revolution turning against the very people from whom it claimed legitimacy. It proved the faithlessness of the Revolution to its own principles. That’s why it was wiped out of the historical memory,” he said.
While today nobody denies that massacres took place, some historians argue they cannot be called “genocide” as there were excesses on both sides in what was a civil war, and they do not fit the UN criteria of killings based on ethnic or religious identity. “The Vendéeans were no more blameless than were the republicans. The use of the word genocide is wholly inaccurate and inappropriate,” said Timothy Tackett of the University of California.
For Mr Gérard, the massacres were clearly “a deliberate policy on the part of the authorities”.
For Mr de Villiers, an aristocrat whose family seat is in the Vendée, genocide does indeed apply as his forebears were killed for religious reasons: they had rebelled to protect their priests, who refused to swear an oath to the new constitution.
“It’s the rare case of a people rising up for religious reasons. They did not rebel because they were hungry, but because their priests were being killed,” he said.
“It is my burden – and my great honour – to defend the Vendée to the end of my days. The Vendée is not just a province of France, it is a province of the spirit. If today we enjoy the freedom to worship the way we choose, it is largely down to the sacrifice of those who died here.”
Tags: French Revolution, Jacobins, Massacre


December 21st, 2012 at 7:11 pm
Interesting, but the article quoted makes no mention of the fact that the atrocities committed in the Vendee were done by the Masons as an organized force, nor does it even identify Carrier as a Mason himself. The theories of late 18th century conspiracy authors such as John Robison and Abbe Barruel, who both suggested that the French Revolution was the work of Masonic Illuminati occultists, has been debunked by historians time and again. While the horrible massacres of civilians and non-combatants is disgusting and awful, the Reign of Terror was an aberration of history which shows that such wanton massacres are thankfully rare. Let us also not forgot the crimes of the Church over the past 2000 years from the massacre of hundreds of thousands of pagans and heretics and the Inquisition to the witch hunts which continue to the modern day. No group is innocent or blameless here.