Jean Raspail


Jean Paul Raspail was a French explorer, novelist and travel writer. He was a recipient of the prestigious French literary awards Grand Prix du Roman and Grand Prix de littérature by the Académie Française. The French government honoured him in 2003 by appointing him to the Legion of Honour, with the grade of Officer. Although the majority of his books are travelogues or novels about historical figures, exploration and indigenous peoples, internationally, he is best known for his controversial 1973 novel The Camp of the Saints, which is about mass third-world immigration to Europe.

Life and career

Born on 5 July 1925 in Chemillé-sur-Dême, Indre-et-Loire, Raspail was the son of factory manager Octave Raspail and Marguerite Chaix. He attended private Catholic school at Saint-Jean de Passy in Paris, the Institution Sainte-Marie d'Antony and the École des Roches in Verneuil-sur-Avre.
During the first twenty years of his career Raspail traveled the world. He led a Tierra del Fuego–Alaska car trek in 1950–52 and, in 1954, a French research expedition to the land of the Incas. In 1981, his novel Moi, Antoine de Tounens, roi de Patagonie won the Grand Prix du Roman of the Académie Française.
His traditional Catholicism serves as an inspiration for many of his works, in which the utopias of communism and liberalism are shown to fail, and a Catholic monarchy is restored. In his 1990 novel Sire a French king is crowned in Reims in February 1999, the 18-year-old Philippe Pharamond de Bourbon, a direct descendant of the last French kings.
In his best known work, The Camp of the Saints, Raspail predicts the collapse of Western civilization from an overwhelming "tidal wave" of Third World immigration. The "hordes" of the world rise and, in the words of playwright Ian Allen, "destroy the white race." The book has been translated into English, German, Spanish, Italian, Afrikaans, Czech, Dutch, Polish, Hungarian and Portuguese, and as of 2006 it had sold over 500,000 copies. After The Camp of the Saints Raspail wrote other novels, including North, Sire, and The Fisher's Ring. Raspail reiterated these views in a co-written 1985 article for Le Figaro magazine, where he stated "the proportion of France's non-European immigrant population will grow to endanger the survival of traditional French culture, values and identity".
Raspail was a candidate for the French Academy in 2000, for which he received the most votes, yet did not obtain the majority required for election to the vacant seat of Jean Guitton.
An article by Raspail for Le Figaro on 17 June 2004, entitled "The Fatherland Betrayed by the Republic", in which he criticized the French immigration policy, was sued by International League against Racism and Anti-Semitism on the grounds of "incitement to racial hatred", but the action was turned down by the court on 28 October.
In 1970, the Académie Française awarded Raspail its Jean Walter Prize for the whole of his work. In 2007 he was awarded the Grande Médaille d’Or des Explorations et Voyages de Découverte by the Société de géographie of France for the whole of his work.

Personal life

Raspail lived in Neuilly-sur-Seine, a Parisian suburb. He died in the in Paris on 13 June 2020, aged 94. His funeral was held in the Church of Saint-Roch.

Works

  • Terre de feu – Alaska – adventure writing
  • Terres et Peuples Incas
  • Le Vent des Pins, translated as Welcome Honorable Visitors: a novel by Jean Stewart
  • Terres Saintes et Profanes
  • Les Veuves de Santiago
  • Hong-Kong, Chine en sursis
  • Secouons le cocotiertravel writing
  • Secouons le cocotier : 2, Punch Caraïbe – travel writing
  • Bienvenue Honorables Visiteurs – novel
  • Le Tam-Tam de Jonathan – nouvelles
  • L'Armada de la Dernière Chance
  • Le Camp des Saints, translated as The Camp of the Saints by Norman Shapiro – novel
  • La Hache des Steppes
  • Journal Peau Rouge
  • Nuage Blanc et les Peaux-Rouges d'aujourd'hui – by Aliette and Jean Raspail
  • Le Jeu du Roi – novel
  • Boulevard Raspail – columns
  • Les Peaux-rouges aujourd'hui
  • Septentrion , translated as Septentrion – novel
  • Bleu caraïbe et citrons verts : mes derniers voyages aux Antilles
  • Les Antilles, d'île en île
  • Moi, Antoine de Tounens, roi de Patagonie – novel
  • Les Hussards : histoires exemplaires
  • Les Yeux d'Irène – novel
  • Le Président – novel
  • Qui se souvient des hommes..., translated as Who Will Remember the People...: A Novel. Translated by J. Leggatt – novel. UK paperback published under alternative title The People.
  • L'Île bleue, translated by J. Leggatt as Blue Island: A Novel
  • Pêcheurs de Lune
  • Sire – novel
  • Vive Venise – by Aliette and Jean Raspail
  • Sept cavaliers quittèrent la ville au crépuscule par la porte de l'Ouest qui n'était plus gardée – novel
  • L'Anneau du pêcheur – novel
  • Hurrah Zara ! – novel
  • Le Roi au-delà de la mer – novel
  • Adiós, Tierra del Fuego – travel writing
  • Le son des tambours sur la neige et autres nouvelles d'ailleurs
  • Les Royaumes de Borée – novel
  • En canot sur les chemins d'eau du roi, une aventure en Amérique – travel writing
  • La Miséricorde – novel

    Adaptations

  • Le Roi de Patagonie, TV mini-series directed by Georges Campana and Stéphane Kurc
  • Le Jeu du roi, TV film directed by Marc Evans
  • L'Île bleue, TV film directed by Nadine Trintignant
  • Sept cavaliers, comic book in three volumes by Jacques Terpant
  • Le Royaume de Borée, comic book in three volumes by Jacques Terpant