');
The Unz Review •�An Alternative Media Selection$
A Collection of Interesting, Important, and Controversial Perspectives Largely Excluded from the American Mainstream Media
Bernard M. Smith Archive
Review of "Storm of Steel" by Ernst Jünger
Search TextCase SensitiveExact WordsInclude Comments

Bookmark Toggle AllToCAdd to LibraryRemove from Library •�B
Show CommentNext New CommentNext New ReplyRead More
ReplyAgree/Disagree/Etc. More... This Commenter This Thread Hide Thread Display All Comments
AgreeDisagreeThanksLOLTroll
These buttons register your public Agreement, Disagreement, Thanks, LOL, or Troll with the selected comment. They are ONLY available to recent, frequent commenters who have saved their Name+Email using the 'Remember My Information' checkbox, and may also ONLY be used three times during any eight hour period.
Ignore Commenter Follow Commenter
List of Bookmarks

When once it is no longer possible to understand how a man gives his life for his country—and the time will come—then all is over with that faith also, and the idea of the Fatherland is dead; and then, perhaps, we shall be envied, as we envy the saints their inward and irresistible strength.
Storm of Steel by Ernst Jünger

The end of the greatness of Western Civilization in one man’s death.

* * *

On February 17, 1998, a frail centenarian passed away in Wilflingen, Germany. Born in 1895, Ernst Jünger’s life was far more noteworthy than simply its prodigious length — it was a life that epitomized the gallantry, curiosity, patriotism, intelligence, and culture that made Western Civilization what it became — and from what is has descended. Fused in one man were all the qualities — qualities that are not merely in short supply today but positively lacking. It is not hyperbole to say that an era of sorts and an entire civilization was buried with his remains at Wilflingen Cemetery. We simply do not produce men like him — and have not for a very long time.

To say that Jünger’s life was incredible is selling it short — by a longshot. His life almost perfectly corresponded with the entirety of the twentieth century. The changes he witnessed boggle the mind — from the world he inherited to the world that he left. Born less than twenty-five years after Germany’s unification in 1871, he came into the world during the heady optimism of the German Empire. Successively he would be a participant and witness to: World War I and Germany’s partial dismemberment following its defeat at the hand of the allies; the chaos and political upheavals of the Weimar Republic; the rise of the Third Reich and World War II; the complete destruction and dismemberment of Germany following the war; the eras of West and East Germany; and finally, the reunification of Germany in 1991 following the fall of the Soviet Union. During every phase, from a young man to a very old man, Jünger participated and contributed to Germany. Indeed, he is virtually without parallel in what he means to soul of Germany.

He was a man that lived his entire life wrestling with ideas with a creative mind that seemingly never lost its vigor. An active writer from a young age, his books span multiple generations. He consumed life in an almost inexhaustible way — cogitating over things in a way that was almost superhuman. In that sense, he is close to being the personification of Western Civilization in microcosm. Really, it is that unbelievable.

I could recapitulate his life, but perhaps citing to a then-contemporary obituary to give a flavor for the man is more appropriate. While there were many, I found that The Independent gave as good a voice to the extraordinariness of his life as any other — and I cite it in full because it is worth reading in full:

ERNST JUNGER first beheld Halley’s Comet during its 1910 passage, when he was a boy of 15. In 1987, he made a special journey to Malaysia for a second glimpse. He was one of the very few writers to have seen the comet twice in his lifetime.

All this is described in Zwei Mal Halley (“Halley Twice”, 1988), a book filled with Junger’s characteristic meditations on time and place, on dreams, nature, crystals, stars, mountains, the sea, wild animals and insects, especially butterflies, a passion he shared with Nabokov. Throughout his very considerable body of work, there is an obsession with time, with dates, with temporal coincidences, with the fatidic power of numbers over our birth and death. In a volume of his journals covering the years 1965–70, Siebzig verweht (“Past Seventy”, 1980), he makes this revealing entry at Wilfingen, his home between the Danube and the Black Forest, in sight of the castle of Stauffenberg, on 30 March 1965: “I have now reached the biblical age of three score and ten — a rather strange feeling for a man who, in his youth, had never hoped to see his 30th year. Even after my 23rd birthday in 1918, I would gladly have signed a Faustian pact with the Devil: “Give me just 30 years of life, guaranteed, then let it all be ended.”

A similar expression of his fascinated awe of time and numbers appears in an earlier work, An der Zeitmauer (“At the Wall of Time”, 1959). But one of the most extraordinary examples of this obsession can be found in a journal entry for “‘Monday, 8.8.1988’ — a date with four units. 8 is special (four 8’s, and a fifth one by subtracting the 1 from the 9). Odin rides an 8-legged horse. . . . Dates have often brought me surprises.”

One of his many hobbies was the collection of antique sandglasses, on which he was an authority. He also collected sundial inscriptions. Ernst Junger’s birth at Heidelberg is recorded precisely. It fell on 29 March 1895 on the stroke of noon, under Aries, with Cancer in the ascendant. He was the eldest of seven children, one of whom, his beloved brother Friedrich Georg (who died in 1977), was also a writer, a poet and philosopher.

Junger spent the greater part of his childhood and adolescence in Hanover, where his prosperous parents settled shortly after his birth. They possessed a beautiful villa by a lake, where Ernst made his first entomological investigations. He soon developed a dislike for bourgeois life, and spent a couple of unhappy years in boarding schools, whose reports complain of his dreaminess and lack of interest in the boring curriculum. He was later to write: “I had invented for myself a sort of distancing indifference that allowed me to remain connected to reality only by an invisible thread like a spider’s.”

He spent hours reading unauthorised books, and with his brother lived in an exalted universe of their own. They would go wandering round the countryside, and Ernst struck up happy friendships with tramps and gypsies. He was already the Waldganger (wild man of the woods), the anarchist hero of his 1977 novel Eumeswil. It was the beginning of an unending passion for travel and exotic lands. He took the first big step in 1913 by running away from home to join the Foreign Legion, in which he saw service in Oran and Sidi-Bel-Abbes. After five weeks, his father bought him out. Ernst was to write about this escapade in Kinderspielen (“Children’s Games”, 1936). His father promised that if he passed his Abitur (school-leaving examination) he would be allowed to join an expedition to Mount Kilimanjaro. So Junger swotted away at the Gildermeister Institut, whose grim atmosphere is evoked in Die Steinschleuder (“The Catapult“, 1973), a novel in the great tradition of German school stories.

Junger passed his exam in August 1914 and at once volunteered for the army, in which he fought on the French front with exceptional courage all through the First World War. Wounded four times, he received the highest German military honour, the Order of Merit created by Friedrich II: he outlived all those who also received it. Out of his wartime experiences was born Stahlgewittern (“Storm of Steel”, 1920), which he had to publish at his own expense. This story of the horrors of modern warfare was drawn from his wartime notebooks, often written in the heat of battle on the Western Front. It remains one of the greatest works about the First World War, along with those by Erich Maria Remarque, Henri Barbusse, e.e. cummings, David Jones and Lucien Descaves.

Junger stayed in the army until 1923, when he left and began studying zoology at the University of Leipzig and at Naples. He married Gretha von Jeinsen and his son Ernst was born in 1926. In 1927 they moved to Berlin, where he became a member of the national revolutionary group led by Niekisch (arrested by Hitler in 1937 and kept in a concentration camp until the end of the Second World War). He also got to know Ernst von Salomon, Bertolt Brecht, Ernst Toller and Alfred Kubin, as well as the publisher Rowohlt. He began travelling widely, to Sicily, Rhodes, the Dalmatian coast, Norway, Brazil and the Canaries, and made the acquaintance of Andre Gide in Paris. These travels had a great influence on all his writings, most noticeable in his superb novel Heliopolis (1949) – the most elegantly learned, eloquently written and hauntingly convincing science- fiction story ever written.

Goebbels tried in vain to draw him into the ranks of the Nazi hierarchy in 1931, and he refused to be elected to the German Academy of Letters because it was dominated by national socialist timeservers. In 1932 Junger produced a very significant book, Der Arbeiter (“The Worker”), which is nevertheless one of his least-known works. It was long out of print until Martin Heidegger, himself besmirched with Nazi collaboration, persuaded him to risk letting it be reissued in 1963. It presents the mythical figure of standardised modern man as “The Worker” whose pragmatism and nihilism destroy the old traditional categories of peasant, soldier and priest, foretelling an unprecedented reversal of temporal power in our collapsing cultures where an intellectual and artistic elite has no place.

Related to this theme is a later work, Das Aladdinproblem (1983), in which he asks who will rub the magic lamp of destructive science and dehumanising technology: “With the heavens empty, we live in the Age of Uranium: how can we believe our modern Aladdin’s lamp will not produce some unimaginable monster?” Der Arbeiter is also an important theoretical study of the political history of the Thirties in Germany, and has been considered by critics like Georg Lukacs and Walter Benjamin to have been the ideological matrix of national-socialist ideas. But Junger’s links with national socialism were infinitely complex. He was a serving officer, partisan of the revolutionary right, a sort of conservative anarchist, hostile to the Weimar Republic, yet he refused all honours and promotions.

Unable to bear the rising tide of Hitlerism, he left Berlin for the quiet of the countryside at Kirchhorst, where in February 1939 he began the painful drafting of Auf den Marmorklippen. Its anti-Nazi tone is obvious, but the book was published in September, the month war was declared. On the Marble Cliffs was part of my wartime reading, and I well remember the excitement it caused when the translation was published by John Lehmann just after the war.

With the outbreak of war, Junger was given the rank of captain and took part in the invasion of France, during which he did his utmost to spare civilians and protect public monuments. Posted to Paris, he became a well-known figure in the literary salons of the time like the Thursday reunions of artists and writers at Florence Gould’s. He made good friends of authors like the acid-tongued critic Leautaud and above all Marcel Jouhandeau, whose scholarly ease and wit in writing seemed to Junger exceptional at a time of growing artistic barbarity. Even after their condemnation for collaboration with the Nazis, Junger praised the characters and writings of Chardonne, Celine (whom he did not like), Brasillach and Drieu de la Rochelle, while his admiration for Cocteau, Sasha Guitry and actresses like Arletty was as sincere as that for artists like Braque and Picasso, whose studios he frequented.

His journals of this period are studded with all these famous names. However, he was indirectly implicated in Stauffenberg’s attempt to assassinate Hitler in July 1944, and requested to leave the army and return home to Kirchhorst, where he spent the rest of the war, composing a text on Die Friede (“Peace”). His son Ernst, in prison for opposition to Hitler, was despatched to the Italian front and killed on 29 November in the marble quarries at Carrara by Allied snipers.

After German defeat and capitulation, despite his firm denials of having supported Nazism, Junger encountered the shrill hostility of Marxist and so-called liberal critics who accused him of being its predecessor. They even criticised his scholarly, noble, refined style, calling it frigid, elitist and academic. He writes of his experiments with drugs in Annaherungen (“Approaches”, 1970), influenced by Aldous Huxley’s works on the same subject. He finally settled at Wilfingen in the house of the Master Forester attached to the ancestral home of his executed friend Graf Claus Schenk von Stauffenberg, where in 1959 he founded the literary review Antaios with Mircea Eliade. By 1977, his father, mother, brother and wife had all died. He remarried, taking as his wife Liselotte Lohrer, a professional archivist and literary scholar.

All through the Seventies and Eighties Junger travelled widely. In 1979, he visited Verdun and was awarded the town’s Peace Medal. In 1982 he received a final literary consecration with the award of the City of Frankfurt’s Goethe Prize, which aroused violent protest among his detractors. In 1984, he again made a pilgrimage to Verdun, with Chancellor Helmut Kohl and President Francois Mitterrand to pay homage to the victims of two world wars. In 1992, there was extraordinary confirmation of Junger’s anti-Nazi stance with the discovery of a top-secret document proving that his fate was in the balance just before the Third Reich’s capitulation and during the final days Hitler spent in the Wolfs-Schanze, the very headquarters where he was wounded by the Stauffenberg bomb.

The document is dated December 1944. It is addressed by Dr Freisler, president of the Volksgericht (People’s Court) to Martin Bormann, Hitler’s right-hand man. Freisler informs Bormann that the proceedings to be taken against Captain Junger are to be cancelled. Junger had been indicted on account of his novel On the Marble Cliffs and the “defeatist” opinions he had expressed at his old colleague Commandant Stulpnagel’s HQ in Paris, not long before the latter’s suicide. Freisler reveals that on 20 November 1944 the Fuhrer himself had given the order by telephone from the Wolfs- Schanze that the matter was not to be pursued any further. Freisler ends his letter with “Heil Hitler!”, then adds a postscript: “I am sending you three dossiers on the affair. The Fuhrer wishes to have his orders executed immediately.”

In his Journals, Junger notes that the Gestapo had described him at that period in Paris as “an impenetrable, highly suspect individual”. He comments in a 1992 interview: “It was no surprise to me. After all, it conformed to the pattern of my horoscope. Ever since my schooldays I’ve been accustomed to that kind of unpleasantness.” Ernst Junger’s work is all of a piece — highly literary, beautifully sonorous, excitingly visual, intellectually profound and stimulating. It is the life work of an aristocrat of letters, and one of the best tributes to it has been made by another literary patriarch, Julien Gracq: “The hard, smooth enamelling that seems to armour his prose against the touch of too great a familiarity would seem to us perhaps a little frigid if we did not know, and if we never lost consciousness of the fact while reading, that it has been tempered in an ordeal of fire.”

That is a fitting eulogy for one of the greatest writers of the 20th century.

Ernst Junger, writer: born Heidelberg, Germany 29 March 1895; married 1925 Gretha von Jeinsen (died 1960; two sons deceased), 1962 Liselotte Lohrer; died Wilflingen, Germany 17 February 1998.

Noticeably absent from this obituary is any mention of religion, which is unfortunate. I find great solace that this man, who retained his wits sharply until his death, converted to Roman Catholicism at the ripe age of 101 and died in the bosom and sacraments of the Catholic Church. While there are similar conversion stories of remarkable men who converted after a long lifetime of exhaustive study and moral exploration, his conversion is particularly meaningful to me. While I am no Ernst Jünger, by both blood and conviction, I am northwestern European and a Teutonophile: that the very best modern German man saw fit to do exactly what I did — that is, make an adult conversion to Rome — gladdens me exceedingly. A man such as him — a Western man in the best sense of the term who had lived life to its maximal fullness in every way — decided after seeing virtually everything a man can see and thinking about over in a lifetime came to the conclusion that the ancient faith of Rome was true is inspiring beyond measure. Truly this was a man who drunk deeply of virtually every idea and experienced virtually every political and social movement — all in the great vacillations of the greatest privations intermixed with periods of abundance. From a human perspective, he was someone that saw hope and despair, in both a people and in his heart, wax and wane repeatedly. Such a man knew the scope of life as few ever have — and after surveying all of it, he cast his lot with the Nazarene and the Catholic Church. It is true that we live in an appalling age of nihilism and apostasy in our time, but I am gratified that Rome continues to attract the very best of men even if loses millions more of mediocre and self-centered. It is a testament to the powerful and enduring attraction that is Christ as mediated through the Church He founded — a Church that uniquely fits the soul of the most virtuous men of the West.

Now, the argument from authority is the weakest of all arguments; that said, hostile and indifferent non-Catholics who nonetheless care about the survival of Western Civilization and bemoan the depths of depravity into which we have sunk ought to take something from his conversion. Even if it does not result in a similar conversion, it ought to communicate to every non-Catholic Westerner who cares about the West that Catholicism is not merely a part of our history but a living force that continues to attract men of the highest quality. That means it ought to never be tarnished or mocked even by those men who stand aloof from her.

* * *

Jünger, as it clear from above, wrote a great deal — this review only addresses one of his earliest published works: Storm of Steel, which is a first-person account of his experience as a soldier and officer during the First World War. It is a beautiful — if tragic — account of that senseless killing field. It represents the genre of a “soldier’s story” as well as any that I have read, and while it details the horror of the mechanized monster that is modern war, it is neither the glorification of war nor its condemnation. Somewhere in between, Storm of Steel is an account of a man of honor doing his duty without apologizing for it — indeed, if anything, it is the pronouncement of his good fortune to be among the generation that was able to do it. To the modern reader — no doubt a collection of beta men (or, in Nietzsche’s pithier words, “last men”) — such a sentiment after reading the horrors and carnage that Jünger saw and experienced is virtually inexplicable. But then again men of today use words like duty, honor, and fatherland as punchlines — something to be mocked by men who get pedicures. Such is the distance between us and him and the whole of his generation that passed.

The First World War is a confounding — and depressing — topic for me. I have studied it from different angles and perspectives. I have thought about it for seemingly hundreds of hours. I have lamented it and in particular its senselessness. In its essence, WWI was a collective civilizational suicide pact — the destruction of Europe’s finest and the impoverishment of Europe’s future. On the eve of August 1914, European civilization (late-stage Western Civilization) was ascendent around the globe. The war ended that ascent definitively and decisively. What is more, it is virtually impossible to understand why the leaders of Europe decided — in unison — to kill all their best young men and destroy and impoverish their countries simultaneously. The lack of reason or cause, I suppose, bothers me most. Western Civilization was mortally wounded by November 1918 and its self-inflicted wound was utterly meaningless.

But this is not a story of the war’s meaninglessness — it is a story of one of those best men who happened, unbelievably, to survive and tell the tale. Throughout, Jünger speaks for the millions who died — he gives voice to those we lost and what we lost even if we did not lose Jünger. This is a book that communicates the patriotic enthusiasm that swept over Germany, and, by extension, the whole of Europe at the outset of the war. He writes:

We had come from lecture halls, school desks and factory workbenches, and over the brief weeks of training, we had bonded together into one large and enthusiastic group. Grown up in an age of security, we shared a yearning for danger, for the experience of the extraordinary. We were enraptured by war.

The enthusiasm, which he shared with many of his generation, is seemingly out-of-place considering that carnage and hellfire that they would face. Likewise, the enthusiasm did not reflect a belief in the ideological righteousness of the cause beyond the ardent patriotism in the breasts of the men who fought. Consider his view of the enemy, which is infused with a latent sense of chivalry from a bygone era:

Throughout the war, it was always my endeavour to view my opponent without animus, and to form an opinion of him as a man on the basis of the courage he showed. I would always try and seek him out in combat and kill him, and I expected nothing else from him. But never did I entertain mean thoughts of him. When prisoners fell into my hands, later on, I felt responsible for their safety, and would always do everything in my power for them.

We learn early in this book what kind of man this is — and he displays a remarkable consistency throughout in terms of his character.

Jünger’s account is not about military strategy per se although as an officer and leader of men in various battles, the tactics and strategy are always there for consideration. No, this is an account of the primal nature of war — especially the vicious and unforgiving nature of mechanized trench warfare. While this book is not like Guy Sajer’s Forgotten Soldier in that the literary motif of the fog of war is used in the writing itself, there is a distinct chaos that seems never far from the surface in Storm of Steel. But there is something alive — and dare I say beautiful — in the horror of what he describes. It is the continuous paradox of life — man never feels more alive than when he faces death in a real and meaningful way. And death was everywhere in Jünger’s account.

One could almost say that his literary talents created a battlefield aesthetic in which the war was a visual tableau and spectacle — even in its destruction and mangled reality. He paints an intense picture of the trenches, nighttime patrols, and terrifying infantry and storm trooper attacks. Artillery is everywhere and these men lived under constant bombardment. We get a sense of the drip-drip maddening effect of the barrages coupled with the occasional direct hits, which leave multiple men mangled beyond recognition. But we also get a sense of the indomitable esprit de corps of these men; he writes:

Even if ten out of twelve men had fallen, the two survivors would surely meet over a glass on their first evening off, and drink a silent toast to their comrades, and jestingly talk over their shared experiences. There was in these men a quality that both emphasized the savagery of war and transfigured it at the same time: an objective relish for danger, the chevaleresque urge to prevail in battle.

And there is the constant vagaries and senselessness of who dies and how — death is something always lurking and stealing people away in a completely haphazard way. If there is a hidden metaphor in the book as it relates to the meaningless of the war — at least in a geopolitical sense — it is the caprice of who dies and who does not. That said, Jünger does not strike me as intentionally embedding such devices, but it was nonetheless something that struck me repeatedly.

He does not glorify battle per se but there is an unapologetic quality of the writing that conveys the veiled Germanic warrior of an age lost in the mist of time. The suffering and privations — the cold, damp, and hungry conditions — only add laurels of the might and mane of the men who endured and fought. His mode of writing, which builds on a contemporaneous journal that Jünger kept throughout the war, keeps the action moving in an almost herky-jerky fashion that gives us a sense the vicissitudes of soldiers moving hither and thither without always understanding why. Consider this example of his style:

These moments of nocturnal prowling leave an indelible impression. Eyes and ears are tensed to the maximum, the rustling approach of strange feet in the tall grass in an unutterably menacing thing. Your breath comes in shallow bursts; you have to force yourself to stifle any panting or wheezing. There is a little mechanical click as the safety-catch of your pistol is taken off; the sound cuts straight through your nerves. Your teeth are grinding on the fuse-pin of the hand-grenade. The encounter will be short and murderous. You tremble with two contradictory impulses: the heightened awareness of the huntsmen, and the terror of the quarry. You are a world to yourself, saturated with the appalling aura of the savage landscape.

For those who might have seen it, the recent film 1917 uses the cinematic technique of equating the runtime of the film with the sequence of action presented by the film — i.e., the film is a two-hour film that depicts two hours in 1917; it has some similarities to Storm of Steel, not so much in the passage of time or the length of the book, but the work is action-oriented with little dedicated space for philosophical musings other than what is relevant to the action.

Like other war stories, it is a coming-of-age story — innocence and enthusiasm giving way to death and gravitas. The book details Jünger’s progression of increasing responsibilities and dangers. He is eventually trained as a storm trooper who leads offensive raids towards the end of the war. The experience he and his fellows gain always comes at a cost; he writes, “[i]n war you learn your lessons, and they stay learned, but the tuition fees are high.” The book reaches its crescendo during these accounts of the offensive storm trooper raids including the one in which his final injuries were sustained that effectively put him out of the war for good. Both the glorification and vivification that come from war — especially that war — are recounted by him in an evocative way; for example, he writes of his time as a storm trooper:

Trench fighting is the bloodiest, wildest, most brutal of all. … Of all the war’s exciting moments none is so powerful as the meeting of two storm troop leaders between narrow trench walls. There’s no mercy there, no going back, the blood speaks from a shrill cry of recognition that tears itself from one’s breast like a nightmare.

During his service, Jünger was wounded a dozen or so times, each leading to a brief return home or time in the military hospital for recovery. He writes in detail: “[l]eaving out trifles such as ricochets and grazes, I was hit at least fourteen times, these being five bullets, two shell splinters, one shrapnel ball, four hand-grenade splinters and two bullet splinters, which, with entry and exit wounds, left me an even twenty scars.” Despite the comforts, he yearns for the frontlines — he literally cannot wait to return to the hell of the war. Even in his last — and most serious injury — he is anxiously preparing for the winter offensive of 1919 that never came.

Notably, unlike other stories from the losing side, Jünger’s experiences do not lend themselves to cynicism. While Jünger provides a firsthand account of the brutality of trench warfare and the psychological effects it had on the soldiers, there is no sense of complaining in the slightest even when he gives voice to the various temptations that he had to shirk on occasion. The book may be a gripping and unflinching portrayal of the horrors of war, but it is not a demonization of it or his country on account of it. He simply sees himself as a man who did his duty for fatherland and he never exhibits anything remotely like cynicism of the enterprise even if he complains, from time to time, of the mistakes made by generals far off from the tactical reality that he confronted. In that sense, it is a very different book from All Quiet on the Western Front, notwithstanding the many similarities, which exudes a manifested cynicism.

Jünger begins the war and his memoir with the love of his country:

At the sight of the Neckar [River] slopes wreathed with flowering cherry trees, I had a strong sense of having come home. What a beautiful country it was, and eminently worth our blood and our lives. Never before had I felt its charm so clearly. I had good and serious thoughts, and for the first time I sensed that this war was more than just a great adventure.

After all the destruction and carnage, he ends the book with the same love of his country not only intact but somehow strengthened — even as it is tinged with foreboding of what was to come:

Now these [battles]too are over, and already we see once more in the dim light of the future the tumult of the fresh ones. We—by this I mean those youth of this land who are capable of enthusiasm for an ideal—will not shrink from them. We stand in the memory of the dead who are holy to us, and we believe ourselves entrusted with the true and spiritual welfare of our people. We stand for what will be and for what has been. Though force without and barbarity within conglomerate in sombre clouds, yet so long as the blade of a sword will strike a spark in the night may it be said: Germany lives and Germany shall never go under!

We live today among men, at least in the West, who treat their countries with disdain and ignore that they even belong to a people. Where are the men today who might say that Germany — or England — or France — or Spain — or dare I say America — lives? Where are the men who love their fatherlands and love their kin?

* * *

Jünger recounts many men he killed during the war. What stands out to me, however, is the one he did not kill:

A bloody scene with no witnesses was about to happen. It was a relief to me, finally, to have the foe in front of me and within reach. I set the mouth of the pistol at the man’s temple — he was too frightened to move — while my other fist grabbed hold of his tunic, feeling medals and badges of rank. An officer; he must have held some command post in these trenches. With a plaintive sound, he reached into his pocket, not to pull out a weapon, but a photograph which he held up to me. I saw him on it, surrounded by numerous family, all standing on a terrace. It was a plea from another world. Later, I thought it was blind chance that I let him go and plunged onward. That one man of all often appeared in my dreams. I hope that meant he got to see his homeland again.

This was a haunting scene. What a waste that war was — what a waste of men such as these. Hidden in this moment in an otherwise unforgiving war is the recognition of the Western sensibility of humanity. True enough it was his duty to kill, but the hope he articulated for the survival of his enemy is rich in meaning and pregnant with the fraternity that exists — or at least once existed — among European men.

When I took the whole of this book in, what struck me more than anything is that a man of twenty-five could write it. Consider too that four of his twenty-five years were not in graduate school but in muddy and bombed-out trenches. Throughout the book are references to themes of Western Civilization, theology, mythology, and philosophy. By no means is this a book that plumbs any of them deeply but the facility of a twenty-five-year-old with all of them demonstrated a greatness in the German psyche that is simply unrecognizable in virtually any men today regardless of age. True enough, Jünger proved to be a gifted writer after the war, but his talents notwithstanding, the civilization that reared him and existed before World War I was astounding.

Why oh why did we allow them all to be killed?

* * *

Saint Martin of Tours, Pray for us.

(Republished from The Occidental Observer by permission of author or representative)
•�Category: Arts/Letters, History •�Tags: Nazi Germany, World War II
Hide 29�CommentsLeave a Comment
Commenters to Ignore...to FollowEndorsed Only
Trim Comments?
    []
  1. xyzxy says:

    … it ought to communicate to every non-Catholic Westerner who cares about the West that Catholicism is not merely a part of our history but a living force that continues to attract men of the highest quality. That means it ought to never be tarnished or mocked even by those men who stand aloof from her.

    If the church is tarnished and subsequently mocked, it is not (as a greater writer than Junger described) the fault of a devil wearing check trousers suffering rheumatism. It is the church itself– its sometimes men along with its now current doctrine, turned ideology, now a mockery of anything expressing an ascending spirit manifesting within culture. In fact, it is a church leading and cheering on the death of what we know as ‘the West’.

    Why should it not be mocked? And why would upright men have anything at all to do with its organized degeneracy?

    Of course Christians are in a pickle. Where else can they go? Protestant or ‘independent’ operations, whose leaders have essentially become Jews? Joel Osteen passing the plate in a renovated NBA basketball arena encapsulates that scene, well.

    Some want to hearken back to a non-Western but Classical or Norse orientation. Gods having much to commend them, especially in their solar or Olympic aspect. But those gods left the building a long time ago, and it doesn’t look as if they are coming back. We are too much The Virgin Spring for any atavistic revival, it seems.

    Eastern religions can’t quite fill the bill for Europeans–at least in their outward forms which have become sentimental… ascetic Buddhism after Evola is a non-starter; and let’s face it, who today is willing to take Krishna’s life-advice to Arjuna? So much for the Aryan spirit, I guess.

    However it is, religions cannot be chosen like clothing. They represent an ‘organic’ inflowing and outflowing from a race. But given our current deracination, there’s really not much left of that. If Catholicism is in decline, now degenerate, nostalgia won’t make it better, or bring it back to perhaps what it once was.

    Must wait and see what comes of it all, after the collapse, probably.

    •�Replies: @Malla
    , @inspector general
  2. Anon[367] •�Disclaimer says:

    Donald Day, in his book “Onward Christian Soldiers,” when traveling about Poland and other countries as a correspondent for The Chicago Tribune, was dismayed by the poverty and ignorance found in Poland.

    Yet, a giant Catholic Church building could be found in most Polish communities. The church sucked up what little wealth the peasants managed to acquire—ignorance and a Catholic Church willing to take advantage of the ignorant.

  3. Gordo says:

    Thank you for your article.

    •�Agree: Voltarde
  4. @Anon

    Well, there were “giant Catholic buildings” in virtually every settlement in Western Europe — in Germany, England, Spain, Holland, Denmark …. Pick on the Poles all you want but the same Church you mock gave us the University among many other culture improving things.

    •�Replies: @silviosilver
  5. putting Storm of Steel in the same category as All’s Quiet on the Western Front is like comparing a lion to a disease-bearing rat:

    Junger was a heroic warrior for his nation & people, and his book a superb first-hand evocation of modern warfare.

    Remarque was yellow-belly who faked a back injury and spent the entire war working in an army warehouse well out of harm’s way. Postwar, c. 1920, he was caught swaggering about Berlin in a fake officer’s uniform festooned with self-awarded medals. Brought before a military Honor Court, he was told to remove his fake-heroic disguise “or else”. A few years later – by way of vengeance – Remarque cranked out his routine pacifist propaganda piece that “hit” at just the right time. Shortly thereafter he married – or was married by – the Jewess Marion Levy-alias-“Paulette Goddard”:

    http://seductivejewess7.com/type-iii-cc54-marion-sarah-levy-alias-paulette-goddard/

  6. Anonymous[366] •�Disclaimer says:

    Well, there were “giant Catholic buildings” in virtually every settlement in Western Europe — in Germany, England, Spain, Holland, Denmark …. Pick on the Poles all you want but the same Church you mock gave us the University among many other culture improving things.

    Agree, all the great universities of Western civilization came from the Catholic Church. Oxford, Cambridge, Paris, Bologna, Coimbra, Salamanca, Montpelier, Padua,…

    As Scott Locklin, former physicist at Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, put it in an article…
    “No Catholic Church, No Scientific Method”
    https://www.newoxfordreview.org/documents/no-catholic-church-no-scientific-method/

    I would add that without devout Catholics we’d be hundreds of years behind where we are today in mathematics thud physics and engineering. Had we not had devout Catholics like Pascal, Cauchy, Descartes, Fermat, et al.

  7. He writes of his experiments with drugs in Annaherungen (“Approaches”, 1970), influenced by Aldous Huxley’s works on the same subject.

    Junger was an early LSD user. I have read (I forget where) there was a connection between his LSD trips and his religious conversion. The diaries from WWII in Paris are pretty great.

  8. @Anon

    Only in the last one hundred years, or so, has upward socio-economic mobility been an option for the majority of people. Prior to that, people had ambitions, but not in the modern sense of the term. They cared about creating something that would outlast themselves, which often took the form of bearing children. For the same reason, they donated their time, labor, and meager wealth towards building up the local church. They were also concerned about the collective defense of the people to whom they belonged, as this article describes in detail. What @ anon calls ignorance and the Church’s willingness to take advantage of said ignorance shows that the idea of living for something greater than oneself is virtually unrecognizable in today’s world

  9. nickels says:

    Truly a great book.
    Rommel’s Infantry Attacks is a similar narrative and nearly as powerful.

  10. His astonishment grew as the full flood of ‘England’ swept him on from thought to thought. He felt the triumphant helplessness of a lover. Grey, uneven little fields, and small, ancient hedges rushed before him, wild flowers, elms and beeches, gentleness, sedate houses of red brick, proudly unassuming, a countryside of rambling hills and friendly copses. He seemed to be raised high, looking down on a landscape, compounded of the western view from the Cotswolds, and the Weald, and the high land in Wiltshire, and the Midlands seen from the hills above Prince’s Risborough. And all this to the accompaniment of tunes heard long ago, an intolerable number of them being hymns.

    Rupert Brooke’s description of a friends feelings on the outbreak of war in 1914, quoted in Peter Hitchens’ The Abolition Of Britain.

  11. All through the Seventies and Eighties Junger travelled widely. In 1979, he visited Verdun and was awarded the town’s Peace Medal. In 1982 he received a final literary consecration with the award of the City of Frankfurt’s Goethe Prize, which aroused violent protest among his detractors. In 1984, he again made a pilgrimage to Verdun, with Chancellor Helmut Kohl and President Francois Mitterrand to pay homage to the victims of two world wars.

    It would have been better if he had remained silent and refused all honours. Instead, he was complicit with the American-installed West German state and the soon-to-be European Union. Both were promoting massive 3rd World immigration and GATT, later Globalism, even then. They have been much more corrosive to German national integrity and interests than any previous German governments. That includes the Weimar regime.
    What a stupid man.

  12. Lurker says:

    words like duty, honor, and fatherland as punchlines — something to be mocked by men who get pedicures

    Well played sir!

    •�Replies: @Bernard M. Smith
  13. @Bernard M. Smith

    Pick on the Poles all you want but the same Church you mock gave us the University among many other culture improving things.

    Deep down, isn’t the Church’s contribution to treasured cultural items the main reason you chose to affiliate with the Catholic faith, as well as the expected (or hoped for) power that the Church might have to some day make western people cherish their cultural legacy as much as you cherish it? If you do, it’s a sentiment I can relate to, and I don’t think there’s anything really wrong with it, though I no longer have much faith in it.

    The reality is, these contributions were all non-essentials, and it’s very doubtful that people who go Catholic for cultural reasons feel nearly as warmly towards the specific dogmas that Catholicism is actually ‘all about.’ Personally, as awful as it sounds to say it, I’m quite sure that given the choice, I’d opt for a dinner with Anton Lavey over, say, a hardore ‘tradcath’ (tres avant la lettre) like Robert Bellarmine – though I’d disagree with them both, there’s no question which I’d find more stimulating.

    Saint Martin of Tours, Pray for us.

    Pray for what though, that western man survive racially? Why would he?

    •�Replies: @Bernard M. Smith
    , @Dule
  14. @silviosilver

    Well, well, well. True enough, I did not affiliate with the Catholic Church because of its force as a cultural making institution; I did so because it is the faith of my fathers (probably for some forty five generations) and I happen to believe it is true after years of researching it. I think the world — at least my kind (meaning Northwestern Europeans) — are divided in two kinds of people: those who care about the past and their heritage and those who do not. I am the former. I read what I read, write what I write, because of the love of the blood and soil of a sliver of a continent far away from my home. A man without faith and love of kin is an obscenity to me. So, I really am not sure what your point is? Is it really about how you want to spend imaginary dinners with? I write what I write because I want to remember heroes of my kind — and the ideas that made that heroes. I hate GloboHomo, the 1917 Revolution, the 1789 Revolution, and the Reformation for the same reason — they deracinated my people. So I do as my fathers did — I love what they love and I worship as they worshipped. It doesn’t make me better, smarter, or more virtuous — it just puts me in cosmic harmony with my extended family through time — like a temporal symphony. In that, I honor the commandment to honor my mother and father. But I still had to believe — and that I do. In any event, I care deeply about the future of my kind — that is men broadly defined today as White, but what I prefer to call European. And I don’t know if they will survive but if they do, it will require them to have faith again — and that faith must be shared.

    •�Replies: @silviosilver
  15. @Bernard M. Smith

    So I do as my fathers did — I love what they love and I worship as they worshipped. It doesn’t make me better, smarter, or more virtuous — it just puts me in cosmic harmony with my extended family through time — like a temporal symphony.

    This explanation is actually rather close to what I suggested in my previous post, that you ‘believe,’ at least partly, for reasons not strictly related to what the Catholic faith is all about (redemption and salvation).

    I don’t have a problem with you doing that. I wish more people would. But if you expect a shared Catholic faith to ‘perform’ for you in terms of accomplishing racial goals, I’m really not so sure it’s capable of it.

    There’s just nothing in Catholicism that requires anyone to stand up for his racial interests (to put it plainly: create racial separation, the sine qua non of long-term racial survival). So I really can’t understand why St Martin or any other saint or heavenly power would be inclined to pray for you or you aid you in this quest.

    That doesn’t mean being Catholic is necessarily an impediment. I think it does mean, however, that at some level Catholic pro-whites would need to be prepared to ignore the ‘anti-racist’ babble issuing from their prelates – in other words, effectively, to be ‘less Catholic.’ One way of helping them to do this would be to emphasize the extra-religious reasons (mentioned above) for being Catholic.

    Well, well, well.

    Well, well, well, what? Surprised someone would read and respond to your essay?

    •�Replies: @Bernard M. Smith
  16. Dule says:
    @silviosilver

    It is not true that the Roman Catholic church gave us the University as we know it. In the Christian world, state sponsored (imperial) universities existed almost 1000 years prior to those in Bologna, Oxford or Prague, The highest ranked was the Imperial University of Constantinople, sometimes known as the University of the Palace Hall of Magnaura (Greek: Πανδιδακτήριον τῆς Μαγναύρας). It was an Eastern Roman educational institution that could trace its corporate origins to 425 AD, when the emperor Theodosius II founded the Pandidacterium (Medieval Greek: Πανδιδακτήριον). The Pandidakterion was refounded in 1046 by Constantine IX Monomachos who created the Departments of Law (Διδασκαλεῖον τῶν Νόμων) and Philosophy (Γυμνάσιον). At the time various economic schools, colleges, polytechnics, libraries and fine arts academies also operated in the city of Constantinople

    •�Replies: @Bernard M. Smith
  17. @silviosilver

    Dear Silvio: I don’t think that there is anything in Catholicism per se that protects race; that said, historically, no Christian, before 1950, would have believed that their faith required a melding of all peoples. The preservation of one’s tribe, nation, or surrogate (country) would have been thought to be good. As we are now in a position of complete freefall, racially and morally, Catholicism can’t fix the race problem either. I think you started your comments attacking the Church — so I responded that the Church was not to blame and has been a force for good — even for men of the West not particularly religious. Ironically enough, for those who care about race in the West, who want to see ethnic Europeans or “Whites” survive (which I count myself among), I don’t think a lack of faith — or a ne0-paganism — will be enough to do it. There will be Whites who survive the coming social and political apocalypse: they will be religious because the religious have children without counting the social and political (or economic) costs. The future belongs to those who have children — Catholicism will always be young because its most faithful do that. From that point of view, someone concerned about race (assuming you are), would coldly analyze what movement gives us the best chance to survive — and a dispassionate look at that would say that the singular opposition of Catholicism to feminism and birth control means that Catholicism is the best vehicle. That is not why I am a Catholic, but it nonetheless obvious to me that what I wrote was true.

    •�Replies: @Anonymous
    , @Priss Factor
  18. @Dule

    Dear Dule, I have no idea of your background, but the university system as we know in the world is the child of the Western model. That said, if your point is that there were older archetypes in the East, I don’t disagree. Indeed, Constantinople was a preserve of learning and civilization while the West was a wasteland for 500 years after the fall of the Western Empire. In any event, even if you think that the West used an Eastern model, you would have to admit that the Western medieval university system was impressive, I assume. Not sure if you are a Greek or Eastern Orthodox snob, who is loathe to give any credit to the West or you have an axe to grind with Western Church for some other reason, but the idea that the university in the West is simply a byproduct of Eastern thought is not true.

    •�Agree: HdC
  19. Anonymous[366] •�Disclaimer says:
    @Bernard M. Smith

    It’s interesting that two of the greatest intellects of the 20th century— two great geniuses who were almost superhuman in their ability to game out things— came to essentially the same conclusion about life and eternity at the end of their lives.

    From a biography of the greatest chessplayer ever, Bobby Fischer:

    “Bobby talked with him about the transformation of society by creating harmony with one another, and then professed that he thought ‘the only hope for the world is through Catholicism’.”

    Frank Brady, Endgame [London: Constable], p. 456

    From polymath mathematician John Von Neumann’s Wikipedia page about his death from cancer at the relatively young age of 53:

    He was not able to well accept the proximity of his own demise, and the shadow of impending death instilled great fear in him. He invited a Roman Catholic priest, Father Anselm Strittmatter, O.S.B., to visit him for consultation. Von Neumann reportedly said, “So long as there is the possibility of eternal damnation for nonbelievers it is more logical to be a believer at the end,” essentially saying that Pascal had a point, referring to Pascal’s Wager. He had earlier confided to his mother, “There probably has to be a God. Many things are easier to explain if there is than if there isn’t.”Father Strittmatter administered the last rites to him.

    •�Thanks: HdC
  20. Priss Factor says: •�Website
    @Bernard M. Smith

    It must be race. Race, race, race, race.

    Race is most important.

    European history is at most 2,500 yrs old.

    In Northern Europe, it’s 1,500 yrs old or less.

    As for Christianity, its history in Europe ranges anywhere from 1,700 t0 1000 yrs.

    As for ideologies, they came and went, and most were quite recent. Ideologies are things in the mind. So are religions.

    The one constant has been race. Whatever the ideology or religion, what made Europeans European has been their race.

    And the European race is 40,000 yrs old.

    The European race was full formed by evolution even before there was history, civilization, religion, culture, and etc.
    Europeans were fully formed racially before any of that. The history, cultures, religions, and ideologies of Europe did not make the European what they are biologically. Those things guided the Europeans, but the Europeans were biologically fully formed by nature and evolution, geology and climate.

    So, race must be at the center of all thought, action, and decision among European folks.

    Also, as long as the race remains intact, culture can be retrieved.
    Suppose the Irish forget their Irishness but remain white-Irish. By relearning their identity and culture, they can be Irish again.
    But suppose Ireland is filled with nonwhites. Even if such people learn Irish culture and speak Gaelic, they won’t be Irish. Irishness in the truest sense will have been lost forever.

    Race first.

    •�Thanks: Carney
  21. M.Rostau says:

    Till men of faith see how desperate these times truly are, they probably won’t get it.

    Gods and incantations will not save anyone from subversion and media-induced decadence. That’s a major difficulty.

    •�Replies: @inspector general
  22. eah says:

    The German language Wikipedia Seite about Jünger contains this interesting passage:

    Als sich Hitler 1929 gegen die terroristische Landvolkbewegung wandte, in der Jünger den Vorreiter der von ihm erhofften nationalrevolutionären Bewegung gesehen hatte, kam es zum offenen Bruch. Hans Sarkowicz und Alf Mentzer meinen, Jünger habe Hitlers Entscheidung, nicht revolutionär, sondern im legalen Marsch durch die Institutionen an die Macht zu gelangen, als Konzession an den verhassten Parteienstaat abgelehnt.

    Apparently, Jünger was more of a revolutionary, a more radical opponent of the Weimer Republic, than Hitler — Jünger was sympathetic to the NSDAP, and even had personal contact with Hitler (a foto of a letter Hitler wrote to Jünger) and Hess — but Hitler’s opposition to a revolutionary protest movement of farmers, which Jünger supported, caused a break in the relationship — this is seen as evidence Hitler was intent on acquiring power via the political framework of the Weimar Republic, an idea Jünger dismissed.

    The AfD was generally sympathetic to the recent Bauernproteste (protest movement by farmers) in Germany.

  23. Carney says:

    he received the highest German military honour, the Order of Merit created by Friedrich II: he outlived all those who also received it.

    This is a reference to the medal whose proper name is the Pour le Mérite.

    It’s so famous in its original name that it’s rather bizarre of the author to have translated its name into English – if anything that makes it less clear to the reader what medal is being referred to. And in fact, the name is better translated, at least literally, as “For Merit”. If one was to insist on using an English-language term for it, a more familiar one would be its nickname, the “Blue Max”.

    And it wasn’t the “highest” German military honor, because it wasn’t a German honor but rather a Prussian one. Every non-Prussian state in the German Empire had its own gallantry and meritorious leadership awards (such as Bavaria’s Military Order of Max Joseph, Saxony’s Military Order of St. Henry, Württemberg’s Military Merit Order, etc.) that — at least formally and technically — were no lower than the Pour le Mérite in order of precedence.

  24. Malla says:
    @xyzxy

    Krishna’s life-advice to Arjuna

    Which was, “Do your duty and leave the result to God”. The duty of a White man is to fight for his race and traditional culture.

  25. @xyzxy

    A thoughtful assessment, and thanks. Perhaps Junger was finally impressed by the very notion of Christ’s resurrection after torture and death. Defeat not being final is the very spirit of the warrior’s life.

  26. @M.Rostau

    And if men of faith are members of the institutional churches, they are hearing escapism and accommodation instead of messages of courage and resistance from their pastors.

  27. Such a joy to read an intelligent, sensitive, and informed review about an extraordinary man and his work. Congratulations.

Current Commenter
says:

Leave a Reply - Comments on articles more than two weeks old will be judged much more strictly on quality and tone


Remember My InformationWhy?
Email Replies to my Comment
$
Submitted comments have been licensed to The Unz Review and may be republished elsewhere at the sole discretion of the latter
Commenting Disabled While in Translation Mode
Subscribe to This Comment Thread via RSS Subscribe to All Bernard M. Smith Comments via RSS