Henri Delassus


Henri Delassus
Dean of the Lille Cathedral
ChurchCatholic Church
ArchdioceseArchdiocese of Cambrai
Orders
Ordination1862
Personal details
Born(1836-04-12)April 12, 1836
Estaires, Nord, France
DiedOctober 6, 1921(1921-10-06) (aged 85)
Saméon, Nord, France
BuriedCemetery of Fournes-en-Weppes
DenominationRoman Catholicism

Henri Delassus (April 12, 1836 – October 6, 1921) was a Roman Catholic priest and anti-Masonic writer.

A member of La Sapinière, he espoused intransigent integralist views in his various books and his weekly newspaper, Semaine religieuse de Cambrai. Delassus was one of the main proponents of Judeo-Masonic conspiracy theory and remains an influential author among French far-right circles.[1]

Biography[edit]

Delassus was ordained at Cambrai in 1862 and made a chaplain of the Basilica Notre-Dame-de-la-Treille in 1874. In 1904 he was given a domestic prelature and became pronotary apostolic in 1911. Later, in 1914 he became dean of the Lille Cathedral's chapter.

From 1872 he collaborated with the journal Semaine religieuse de Cambrai, of which he became owner and director in 1875. His funeral was held at the Cathedral of Lille the 10th October 1921 and he was buried at his family pantheon at Fournes-en-Weppes.

Thought[edit]

Delassus' views have been described as integralist,[2] intransigent[3] and deeply reactionary.[4]

Delassus believed in the existence of a conspiracy between Jews and Freemasons with the goal of destroying European Christendom. In his 1910 magnum opus La Conjuration antichrétienne. Le temple maçonnique voulant s’élever sur les ruines de l’Église (The Anti-Christian conspiracy. The masonic temple seeking to triumph over the ruins of the Church), Delassus states that "for two thousand years, the Jews have had the ambition to conquer the whole world" and gives the supposed plan of the conspirators to destroy France and implement "state collectivism".[1]

To rule the nations it is needed to destroy the institutions that constitute the social order, and particularly the Christian order. That is the goal of the principles of [17]89, of the Rights of Man, of the Liberalism that Freemasonry inoculates in all societies. Through these poisons all institutions are dissolved, killed: Religion, Family, Fatherland, Property, Army, nothing can resist.[1]

In his 1913 book La Mission posthume de sainte Jeanne d'Arc et le règne social de Notre-Seigneur Jésus-Christ ("The posthumous mission of Saint Joan of Arc and the Social Kingship of Our Lord Jesus Christ") Delassus defends a providential view of history, considering French national identity as inseparable from Catholicism and monarchism.[4]

References[edit]

  1. ^ a b c Taguieff, P. (2013). L’invention du « complot judéo-maçonnique ». Avatars d’un mythe apocalyptique moderne. Revue d’Histoire de la Shoah, 198, 23-97. doi:10.3917/rhsho.198.0023
  2. ^ Poulat, Émile (2010). "Le Saint-Siège et l'action française, retour sur une condamnation". Revue Française d'Histoire des Idées Politiques. 31 (1): 141. doi:10.3917/rfhip.031.0141. ISSN 1266-7862.
  3. ^ Prévotat, Jacques (2007). "La ligue d'Action française dans le Nord entre les deux guerres (1919-1939). Approches politiques et religieuses". Revue du Nord. 370 (2): 423. doi:10.3917/rdn.370.0423. ISSN 0035-2624.
  4. ^ a b Albert, Jean-Pierre (1998-03-01). "Saintes et héroïnes de France". Terrain (30): 113–124. doi:10.4000/terrain.3425. ISSN 0760-5668.

External links[edit]