The Superman:
The Purpose of the Universe,
the Meaning of Life
The Purpose of the Universe,
the Meaning of Life
by Savitri Devi
Extracts from Defiance
Edited by R.G. Fowler
Edited by R.G. Fowler
Defiance, Centennial Edition, p. 61:
“My firm conviction. . . is that the
highest purpose of life is to forward the growth of a superior
humanity, whose role is to rule a healthy world. No means are too
ruthless that can bring us nearer to that goal.”
Defiance, Centennial Edition, p. 234:
“The divinely ordained
differences, expression of the impersonal will of the Sun, can only be
maintained, nay, increased, according to the highest purpose of
Creation which is to evolve perfect types, if each race is maintained
pure,” said I. “And that is why, knowingly or unknowingly echoing the
wisdom of ages, a great German of today, a close collaborator of the
Führer has written: ‘Only in pure blood does God abide’.”
Defiance, Centennial Edition, pp. 303-304:
Slowly the sky darkened; the stars appeared; night came.
I tried to ponder over the
staggering distances that separated me from those mysterious suns in
space; to detach myself from all that was of this earth. But somehow, I
always came back to our planet.
Gazing at a bright green star that
twinkled in the midst of so many others, I said to myself: “Those rays
of light have perhaps travelled for years to meet my eye. For years, at
the rate of 300,000 kilometres a second! How far away that makes the
burning centre from which they emanate; and how small that makes the
earth—my earth that bears all I love! A mere speck on the shores of
limitless, fathomless space, my earth, with its wars, its religions,
its songs! Still, it is only through this little earth that I can love
that endless Universe. The marvel of this earth is not Pascal’s sickly
‘thinking’ Christian, who despises the majestic Universe because he
believes it less precious than his silly conceited self in the eyes of
his all-too-human Yiddish god; no, the highest form of life on this
planet is the healthy, handsome, fearless Aryan who follows his racial
logic to the bitter end; the perfect National Socialist—the one
creature who collectively and consciously, lives up to
a cosmic philosophy that exceeds both himself and the earth,
infinitely; a philosophy in which man’s ties, man’s happiness, man’s
life and death, man’s individual ‘soul’ (if he has such a thing) do not
count; in which nothing counts but the creation, maintenance, and
triumph of the most dynamic and harmonious type of being: of a race of
men indeed ‘like unto the Gods’; of men in tune with the grandeur of
starry space.”
I knew that I had exalted
that superhuman ideal, that proud, hard, logical, divine Nazi
philosophy, in my book, and that my book was lost. I tried to tell
myself: “What does it matter, since the doctrine is eternal? Since it
is the true philosophy of Life, right through starry space, for aeons
and aeons? Since, if that green star of which the radiance takes
several light-years to reach us has living worlds revolving around it,
the mission of those worlds is the same as that of ours: namely,
through love and strife, to realise the Divine in the proud
consciousness of superior races, or to perish?” And I remembered my
challenge to the silly Democrats in Chapter 5 of my lost book: “You
cannot ‘de-Nazify’ Nature!”1
Defiance, Centennial Edition, pp. 334-35:
[National Socialism] aimed at
stemming the physical and moral decay of modern, technically “advanced”
humanity by forcing it—by forcing its racial élite, at least—to live in
accordance with the ultimate purpose of Nature, which is not to make
individuals “happy,” nor even to make, nations “happy,” but to evolve
supermankind—living godhead—out of the existing master races, first of
all, out of the pure Aryan. Happiness is a bourgeois
conception, definitely. It is not our concern. We want animals to be
happy—and inferior men, also, to the extent their happiness does not
disturb the New Order. We believe higher mankind has better things to
do. The Aryan world, remoulded by us after our final triumph, will no
longer think in terms of happiness like the decadent world of today. It
will think in terms of duty—like the early Vedic world, the early
Christian world, the early Islamic world; like the world at the time of
any great new beginning. But it will, in spirit, resemble the early
Vedic world far more than either the Christian or the Islamic. For the
duty it will live for will not be the duty to love all men as
oneself, nor to consider them all as potential brothers in faith; it
will be the duty to love the integral beauty of one’s race above
oneself and above all things, and to contribute to its fullest
expression, at any cost, by any means, because such is the divine
purpose of Nature.
Defiance, Centennial Edition, p. 342:
“It is the superior man’s business to
feel happy in the service of the highest purpose of Nature which is
the return to original perfection—to supermanhood. It is the business
of every man to be happy to serve that purpose, directly or indirectly,
from his natural place, which is the place his race gives him in the
scheme of creation. And if he cannot be? Let him not be. Who cares? Time
rolls on, just the same, marked by the great Individuals who have
understood the true meaning of history, and striven to remould the
earth according to the standards of the eternal Order, against the
downward rush of decay, result of life in falsehood—the Men against
Time.”
Defiance, Centennial Edition, p. 345-46:
“The ‘duty’ in the name of which the action is done must really be duty—not
any fanciful ‘obligation’; not the pursuit of any personal or even
human goal; it must have nothing to do with the satisfaction or
happiness of individuals, no matter how many those individuals be
(numbers do not count). It must be in harmony with the supreme goal of
Nature, which is the birth of a god-like humanity. In other words, the
only ideal in the service of which the infliction of suffering and
death is justified, is the triumph or the defence of the one
world-order capable of bringing forth a god-like humanity. That alone
can justify anything, for that alone is, in the words of the
Bhagavad-Gita, ‘the welfare of the world’.”
1 This sentence probably appeared in the manuscript of Gold in the Furnace,
but it does not appear in the published edition, in Chapter 5 or
anywhere else. The closest approximation, which does appear in Chapter
5, is: “. . . they could not de-Nazify the Gods” (Gold in the Furnace, 3rd ed., p. 61).—Ed.
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