Monday, June 22, 2020

Olavo de Carvalho and Julius Evola, parallels of two prominent right-wing occultists of the Traditionalist School


Olavo de Carvalho and Julius Evola, parallels of two prominent right-wing occultists of the Traditionalist School

Evola, the Guru of Mussolini and the Italian Fascism, Was the Most Prominent Disciple of René Guénon, an Islamic Occultist who Also Influenced Steve Bannon and Olavo de Carvalho

Italian occult philosopher Julius Evola is a model of Guénon adherents promoting a “Judeo-Christian West,” with Bannon becoming the American Evola and Carvalho the Brazilian Evola

By Julio Severo
There is an old Bible passage that says, “there is nothing new under the sun.” (Ecclesiastes 1:9 NIV)
This principle is true in many respects, but perhaps one of the darkest realities is the Traditionalist School, an esoteric cult that was politically relevant in the 1930s. Its master was René Guénon and his most prominent disciple was Julius Evola, who was guru of the Italian fascist dictator Benito Mussolini.
Today, with new Evolas emerging as gurus of modern presidents, the Traditionalist School is reviving its old relevance, even though its name is not known by the general public. Only its members and occult leaders know its importance. Some of the current members of the Traditionalist School are American Steve Bannon, Brazilian Olavo de Carvalho and Russian Alexander Dugin.

There is a belief among Christians that every Marxist stance is satanic and that every anti-Marxist stance is Christian. I had more or less that notion, until I understood, through an adherent of the Islamic sorcerer René Guénon, that there are anti-Marxist stances that are satanic.
Olavo de Carvalho, who is a self-exiled Brazilian immigrant to the United States since 2005, is an example. Although his adherents swear that the foundations of his anti-Marxism are Catholic, the truth is that his anti-Marxist notions were acquired when he was immersed in the occult.
In his article “Capitalism and Socialism according to Astrology” in the Brazilian magazine Planeta, in its September 1977 issue, Olavo de Carvalho, who was already an astrologer at the time, stated:
“The evolution of the conflict between capitalism and socialism closely follows the movements of three planets: the geometric relationships (in astrological language, ‘aspects’) between Saturn and Uranus mark important events in capitalist countries, and the crucial points in the history of communism counterpoint the aspects between Saturn and Neptune.”
It may be a crazy theory to use astrology to explain capitalism and socialism, but when it comes to the occult magazine Planeta, madness was normality itself. There is nothing more natural than an occultist writing in an occult magazine.
According to the American Jewish writer Benjamin R. Teitelbaum in his book “War for Eternity,” published by HarperCollins (2020):
“During the mid-1970s, [Olavo de Carvalho] delved into alchemy and [astrology], and started hanging out in occultist circles in São Paulo. Soon he began writing for the French-based occultist magazine Planète. It hardly counted as standard journalism: he interviewed extraterrestrials, dead people, and so on. At the same time, he started teaching, offering astrology lessons in bookstores.”
I contacted the editor of Planeta magazine, and they assured me that Carvalho was an esoteric columnist there in the 1970s and 1980s. For many years, he wrote as an occultist for an esoteric magazine.
Carvalho wrote many articles in Planeta magazine. In one of his articles, entitled “René Guénon: The Master of Tradition Against the Kingdom of Misrepresentation,” published in the August 1981 issue of Planeta, Carvalho said:
“It is strange that, in ‘spiritualist’ environments and debates in Brazil, you almost never hear the name of René Guénon. However, a first contact with this author is enough to verify that no approach to esoteric or simply religious matters, in the twentieth century, can have any claim to seriousness without making a comparison with his work.”
Carvalho questions why spiritualists in Brazil do not know Guénon, since Guénon’s teachings are essentially occult. Carvalho also said:
“Life, in a way, embodies the ‘transcendent unity of religions’ (title of a book by F. Schuon), because if there is anything that characterizes the Guenonian effort as a whole, it is the defense of a Tradition, of a single Truth that, at the level of metaphysical doctrine, establishes the unity of all particular spiritual manifestations, of all times and cultures. In that sense, he was able, for example, to become a Muslim while declaring the superiority of the Hindu tradition (closer, according to him, to the primordial Tradition), and to defend Eastern doctrines while proposing that, for the West, there was only one legitimate path: the return to the Catholic Church.”
So, according to Carvalho, Guénon could at the same time be a Muslim, defend the Hindu tradition and still defend the return of the West to Catholicism! And Carvalho defends the return of the West to Catholicism with Guenonian passion and unrestricted advocacy of the Inquisition. Occultists only advocate religious channels that facilitate the expansion of the occult itself.
But it was not only Guénon who was comfortable with various religions, perfectly embodying perennialism.
On his own website (www.olavodecarvalho.org), in a post from the year 2000 that he later deleted, but which I recorded in my files, Carvalho said that for a time he dedicated himself to Islamic studies — he learned Arabic and regularly recited excerpts from the Koran — and won an award in Saudi Arabia in 1985 for a 200-page book on Muhammad. He said that he practices Christianity, but that he would be comfortable at professing Islam. The reason, in his opinion, is that Christianity, Islam and Judaism have the same objective at heart.
In other words, Carvalho said the same thing that Guénon himself had already essentially said. Perhaps Carvalho is today a kind of incarnation of Guénon, not that the spiritualist doctrine of incarnation is valid, but he has absorbed so much Guénon and his malice and deceit that the public who follows Carvalho does not know if what he says are in fact his original ideas or one of his many imitations of Guénon’s ideas.
Continuing in his article “René Guénon: The Master of Tradition Against the Kingdom of Misrepresentation,” Carvalho said:
“Guénon’s effort to spread the primordial Tradition in the West had in view the same objective contemporarily advocated, in the East, by the great Islamic master Ahmed El-Alawi, descendant of the Prophet Muhammad: to establish a united front of all orthodox spiritual traditions against two common enemies: materialism and the occult.”
What Carvalho meant was that Guénon intended to unite spiritual traditions (Islam, Hinduism and Catholicism) to combat the occult. This religious union is the very essence of perennialism. But how could Guénon, an occultist, lead a perennialist or traditionalist war on the occult? In the same way that Carvalho today poses as a philosopher who is leading some kind of war on the occult, although he himself is an occultist at the level of Guénon.
However, just as Guénon denied being an occultist and even claimed to fight the occult, today Carvalho denies his Guenonian roots and also claims to fight the occult. Only Guénon himself could play such a stealthy role so perfectly.
An occultist fighting the occult makes as much sense as a Nazi fighting Nazism or a Communist fighting Communism. Chaos, contradiction and lies are the very soul of the occult, where the deceived deceive.
In his article, Carvalho adds that “Guénon managed, simultaneously, to make adherents and to raise awareness within each of the existing traditions” (in Catholicism, Islam and Hinduism).
However, Guénon was never able to “raise awareness” among American evangelicals. This “awakening of consciences” is just a euphemism for minds opening up to occult ideas masked as philosophical, political and anti-Marxist ideas.
It is fascinating that while Guénon and Carvalho see an easy opening to the occult in Catholicism, Islam and Hinduism, all of them see evangelicalism as an enemy, because evangelicalism is the Christian force most resisting the occult, although in Brazil Carvalho has achieved an incredible feat: He was able to deceive some evangelicals by presenting his occultism as a harmless anti-Marxist philosophical activism.
I'm probably the biggest culprit in this. In 2003 Mídia Sem Máscara, Carvalho’s website, invited me to be the first evangelical columnist, because I was already a well-known evangelical writer in Brazil, having a book, “The Homosexual Movement,” published in 1998 by the Brazilian branch of Bethany House Publishers. I also gave interviews to major evangelical magazines in Brazil. Although Carvalho’s site was sponsored by large companies, I never received a penny in salary, even though I worked there for more than a decade, writing about homeschooling, abortion, the gay agenda and Marxism. In my mind, Mídia Sem Máscara was essentially an anti-Marxist website. I never understood that the anti-Marxist base of Mídia Sem Máscara was the Traditionalist School itself. In fact, I didn’t even know what Guénon and Traditionalist School were. So I contributed to draw evangelicals to Mídia Sem Máscara and to Carvalho himself, including through my role as a spiritual adviser to the Evangelical Parliamentary Caucus, traditionally the most conservative and pro-life force in the Brazilian Congress.
Confusion in Carvalho’s life is evident, thanks to his occult involvement. His son is an astrologer. His other two children are Muslims. Media Sem Máscara is closed because Carvalho fought with most of the columnists, including Heitor de Paola and Graça Salgueiro, who were the site’s main writers. He fought with the webmaster. He also fought with me in October 2013 because he wanted to force me, even cursing and slandering me, to accept his passionate defense of the Inquisition. As an evangelical who defends Israel and the Jews, I can never defend the Inquisition and the Holocaust.
I am an example of how evangelicals are able to detect and confront occult forces masked as anti-Marxist political activism. They may be attracted and deceived by the anti-Marxist political appeal, but sooner or later they will detect the occult character behind the appeal. I was able to detect Carvalho’s camouflaged occult because I am an intercessor and author of the book “Prophetic Prayers,” published in the United States in 2016.
Evangelicals are not part of the strategy of the adherents of Guénon to dominate the presidency of several nations, but there is an effort by adherents of Guénon to co-opt evangelicals.
Phenomenally, in his article in the occult magazine Planeta, Carvalho presented Guénon as a tradition-loving occultist who fought against the occult — a contradiction and confusion that Carvalho himself mirrors very well. This may be contradictory to the understanding of the vast majority of people, but confusion is the very essence of the occult. Carvalho has remained true to Guénon’s standard — of attacking the occult while his “philosophy” exhales the occult directly and indirectly.
In the article “René Guénon: The Master of Tradition Against the Kingdom of Misrepresentation,” Carvalho recommended many books by Guénon, which he demonstrated to know very well when summarizing them for helping people understand Guénon’s thought, making it clear, however, that in 1981 there were few works by Guénon in Portuguese. Carvalho probably read them in French, the language of Guénon.
In the article, Carvalho took the opportunity to offer for sale the book “The Eastern Metaphysics,” written by Guénon, commented by Michel Veber and published by the Jupiter School in 1981. In the article, Carvalho calls Veber “my professor Michel Veber, who studied under the Guénon’s personal guidance.”
This is one of the very rare confessions in which Carvalho declared that he studied Guénon from a direct disciple of Guénon.
At the end of the article, according to the information that Carvalho provided to the publisher, Planeta magazine said: “Olavo de Carvalho translated into Portuguese Guénon’s only work published in Brazil to date (The Eastern Metaphysics, São Paulo, Jupiter Publishing House, 1981). Carvalho, journalist and astrologer, is also director of the Jupiter School, where the first course on Guénon’s work in Brazil was also held in April, whose expositor was Michel Veber, plastic artist and martial arts teacher, who studied under the personal guidance of Guénon.”
Carvalho’s Jupiter School also published “Basic Elements of Astrology” (1980) by Emma Coster de Mascheville.
If Guénon was an occultist who hypocritically claimed to fight occultism, how is Carvalho different? He claims to fight fascism, even though he is a member of the Traditionalist School, an occult cult where Guénon is revered. The Traditionalist School produced one of the greatest fascist philosophers the world has ever seen, Julius Evola.
According to Teitelbaum, “Traditionalism counts as one of the clearest examples of religious esotericism.” Actually, traditionalists are not conservative in any Christian sense. If its conservative image is Christian, it is fake Christianity, because its essence and soul is occultism.
Teitelbaum declared that Steve Bannon, who was once President Donald Trump’s guru until he was expelled for treason and opportunism, is a weak member of the Traditionalist School. Teitelbaum considers Olavo de Carvalho to be one of the strongest members of this school.
The most prominent member of the Traditionalist School was the Italian philosopher Julius Evola, who was a guru of the Italian fascist dictator Benito Mussolini. Although Carvalho is famous in the Traditionalist School, Evola was much more.
Let us see some similarities and even parallels between Evola and Carvalho. Let us also remember that traditionalists are also known as perennialists.
Carvalho is not a pioneer in anti-Marxism along the lines of the Traditionalist School. Evola was anti-Marxist decades before Carvalho thought about it. Of course, even without this school, there was already an anti-Marxist culture in Brazil, mainly present in the Pentecostal and charismatic evangelical churches. For this reason, in the Cold War years while the KGB funded leftist Catholic movements, the CIA funded and encouraged conservative evangelical movements.
However, Olavo de Carvalho’s anti-Marxism has nothing to do with Christianity, especially evangelicalism, and it has everything to do with the Traditionalist School.
You cannot understand Carvalho’s anti-Marxist roots without understanding Evola, who was the greatest adherent of Guénon and of the Traditionalist School.
In 2014, years before he became famous as the White House chief strategist (post from where he was expelled some months later), Steve Bannon gave a lecture at a conference held inside the Vatican. He spoke about the need to defend the values of the “Judeo-Christian West”—a term he used 11 times—against crony capitalism and libertarian capitalism, secularization, and Islam. He also mentioned the late Julius Evola, an anti-Marxist Italian philosopher popular with fascists and Nazis in the 1930s.
The Italian philosopher was a virulent anti-Semite and Nazi sympathizer who influenced far-right movements in Italy from the 1940s until his death in 1974.
Evola was the author of right-wing handbooks, including “A Handbook for Right-Wing Youth.” He was also the author of several occult books, including “Introduction to Magic: Rituals and Practical Techniques for the Magus.”
Evola was in a sense the Antonio Gramsci of the right. Incidentally, both were Italian.
Born in Rome to an aristocratic family, Evola became fascinated with esotericism and the study of non-European religions in his 20s. He developed a strong rejection of modernity and yearned for a return to an ancient form of spirituality: paganism. He became an adherent of Traditionalism and the most prominent disciple of René Guénon.
When the fascists came to power in Italy in 1922, Evola jumped on board and became a regular contributor to the regime’s mouthpiece magazine, Difesa della Razza (Defense of the Race). He devised his own brand of anti-Semitism, which he called razzismo dello spirito, racism of the spirit.
Further distinguishing Evola from other racist writers was the fact that he openly attacked the Christian religion, which he described as a “Semitic superstition” and as “one of the main sources of the decadence of the West” in his seminal 1928 essay “Imperialismo Pagano.”
The similarity between Evola and Carvalho in this point is that even though Carvalho is not openly anti-Semitic, he is an open advocate of the Inquisition, which tortured and murdered thousands and thousands of Jews. Besides, Carvalho sees evangelicalism, especially the American evangelicalism, as “one of the main sources of the decadence of the West.” For Carvalho, the medieval Catholicism, which ruled Europe with the Inquisition, is the purest form of Christianity.
Evola’s fascination with esotericism wasn’t only abstract; he believed in the power of magic and tried to use it to restore Roman pagan religion. “He joined an esoteric group called the Ur Group and performed rituals with the specific aim of drawing [the dictator Benito] Mussolini away from Christianity and toward paganism,” said Simone Caltabellota, an editor and writer who researched the group’s archives for his historical novel Amore degli Anni Venti, set in Evola’s inner circle.
Evola’s radical ideas about Christianity eventually put him at odds with Mussolini’s regime, which signed the Lateran Treaty with the Vatican in 1929, establishing a special relationship between the Catholic Church and the fascist Italian state. “Evola wasn’t an organic intellectual for the fascist government, but rather a merely tolerated one. Mussolini didn’t like Evola, because he knew of the magic rituals. For his part, Evola thought that Mussolini’s fascism wasn’t extreme enough,” Caltabellota noted.
Only after the end of World War II did Evola become the intellectual of choice for the far right — “their Aristotle,” historian Francesco Germinario said. “Both in Italy and in Europe, it’s hard to find a [right-wing] militant who hasn’t dealt with Evola’s writings.”
In 1921, the philosopher wrote an introduction to The Protocols of the Elders of Zion — an anti-Semitic text first published in 1903, and largely used by fascists and Nazis — in which he conceded that the document may have been a forgery, but insisted that it nevertheless contained a deeper truth.
I do not know what it is worse: The Protocols of the Elders of Zion or the Catholic Inquisition, who tortured and killed Jews. In this sense, how different is Carvalho from Evola? One Traditionalist defended the Protocols and another defends the Inquisition.
The fact that an anti-Semite as Evola is held in high regard by radical “conservatives,” including Bannon and the Brazilian foreign minister, claiming to defend the “Judeo-Christian West” is a shock to conservative evangelicals like me. Such high regard has parallel only in Brazil, where Carvalho’s feelings toward the Jews under the Inquisition are everything, except supportive. Carvalho, who has a history as the most prominent Brazilian astrologer, is the most prominent Brazilian advocate of the Inquisition, and he denies its many crimes against the Jews. How different is this from Evola?
That Evola was the most prominent disciple of Guénon and the most prominent member of the Traditionalist School puts the disciples of Guénon and the members of the Traditionalist School in bad company. In fact, in fascist company.
Bannon, Carvalho and Evola have a common connection: All of them are members of the Traditionalist School, where its adherents see Guénon as their supreme master. All of them are adherents of or were strongly influenced by Guénon and his direct disciples. But Carvalho is vastly more Traditionalist and Guenonian than Bannon is.
So it is no wonder that Bannon praised Evola. It is no wonder also that the Brazilian Foreign Minister Ernesto Araújo, who is an adherent of Carvalho, also praised Evola, Bannon and Carvalho. This is a political-esoteric cult in all sense.
Bannon’s involvement with Guénon is explained in “Devil’s Bargain: Steve Bannon, Donald Trump, and the Storming of the Presidency” (Penguin Publishing Group, 2017), by Joshua Green. According to Green, Bannon has a “deep interest in Christian mysticism and esoteric Hinduism” and a special “fascination with Guénon.”
Green said that “The antimodernist tenor of Guénon’s philosophy drew several notable followers” and “The most notorious of these was Julius Evola,” who “had struck an alliance with Benito Mussolini, and his ideas became the basis of Fascist racial theory; later… Evola’s ideas gained currency in Nazi Germany.”
According to Green,
“The common themes of the collapse of Western civilization and the loss of the transcendent in books such as Guénon’s The Crisis of the Modern World (1927) and Evola’s Revolt Against the Modern World (1934) are what drew Bannon’s interest to Traditionalism (although he was also very much taken with its spiritual aspects, citing Guénon’s 1925 book, Man and His Becoming According to the Vedanta, as ‘a life-changing discovery’). Bannon… brought to Guénon’s Traditionalism a strong dose of Catholic social thought.”
For decades, Carvalho has been promoting Guénon in Brazil. His latest best-seller, “O Mínimo Que Você Precisa Saber Para Não Ser Um Idiota” (The Least You Should Know to Be Not an Idiot), published in 2013, quotes positively Guénon two times. For a short review, you can read my article “The Least You Should Know to Be Not a ‘Protestant Donkey.’”
So it is no wonder that adherents of Carvalho eventually get interested in Evola in their pursuit of traditionalist or anti-Marxist interests.
Adherents of Carvalho who followed his recommendation to read Guénon eventually praised Evola and other fascists.
The bibliography of “Trump and the West,” written by Enersto Araújo (Brazilian foreign minister), has Guénon and Julius Evola as the main references for his defense of “traditionalism” and the West. He mentions ostensibly “The Crisis of the Modern World” (New York: Sophia Perennis, 2001.), by René Guénon, and “Metaphysics of War” (London: Arktos, 2001), by Julius Evola.
Probably, he quoted a Nazi official because, in their shared traditionalist and nationalist interests, both drank from the same traditionalist source.
The connection between all of them is René Guénon.
The books Evola wrote, ranging from traditionalism to alchemy, mirror the influence he received from Guénon:
* “A Handbook for Right-Wing Youth” (2017), a collection of essays of Evola defending the right-wing ideology.
* Essays on Magical Idealism, 1925.
* Introduzione alla magia (1927–1929; 1971). English translation: Introduction to Magic: Rituals and Practical Techniques for the Magus. Inner Traditions/Bear. 2001. And: Introduction to Magic, Volume II: The Path of Initiatic Wisdom. Inner Traditions/Bear. 2019.
* Rivolta contro il mondo moderno (1934; second edition 1951; third edition 1970); English translation: Revolt Against the Modern World: Politics, Religion, and Social Order in the Kali Yuga. Inner Traditions/Bear. 1995.
* Tre aspetti del problema ebraico (1936; Three Aspects of the Jewish Problem).
* Il Mistero del Graal e la Tradizione Ghibellina dell'Impero (1937). English translation: The Mystery of the Grail: Initiation and Magic in the Quest for the Spirit. Inner Traditions/Bear. 1996.
* Indirizzi per una educazione razziale (1941; The Elements of Racial Education).
* La dottrina del risveglio (1943). English translations: The Doctrine of Awakening: The Attainment of Self-Mastery According to the Earliest Buddhist Texts. Inner Traditions/Bear. 1996.
* Lo Yoga della potenza (1949). English translation: The Yoga of Power: Tantra, Shakti, and the Secret Way. Inner Traditions/Bear. 1993.
* Ricognizioni. Uomini e problemi (1974). English translation: Recognitions: Studies on Men and Problems from the Perspective of the Right. Arktos. 2017.
Similarly, the books Carvalho wrote, ranging from traditionalism to alchemy, mirror the influence he received from Guénon:
* A Imagem do Homem na Astrologia [Male Image in Astrology]. São Paulo: Jupiter. (1980)
* O Crime da Madre Agnes ou A Confusão entre Espiritualidade e Psiquismo [Mother Agnes’s Crime or The Confusion between Spiritualism and Psychism]. São Paulo: Speculum. (1983)
* Questões de Simbolismo Astrológico [Issues of Astrologic Symbolism]. São Paulo: Speculum. (1983)
* Astros e Símbolos [Stars and Symbols]. São Paulo: Nova Stella. (1985)
* Astrologia e Religião [Astrology and Religion]. São Paulo: Nova Stella. (1986)
* Fronteiras da Tradição. São Paulo: Nova Stella. (1986)
The fact that Carvalho and Evola liked to be presented as “philosophers” and the fact that the book production of both included occultism, astrology and advocacy of the right-wing ideology make both almost twin brothers. At least, their problem involves twin demonic spirits.
The man Guénon most influenced, Evola, became not only a fascist, but also the guru of the Italian fascism. Why think that the other men he influenced — including Bannon, Carvalho and Alexander Dugin — would not become in a way or another fascists and gurus of fascism in their respective nations?
Not surprisingly, all of these members of the Traditionalist School are ambitious about influencing presidents. Evola, influencing Mussolini. Carvalho, influencing Brazil’s Bolsonaro. Bannon, influencing Trump — who expelled him before a more destructive influence emerged. And Dugin, influencing Putin — according to Carvalho. But, according to my experience, including with my trip to the Kremlin, Dugin never had on Putin the massive influence Carvalho has on Bolsonaro.
Bannon is the American Evola. Carvalho is the Brazilian Evola. And Dugin is Russian Evola. And Evola was just an Italian Bannon, Carvalho and Dugin.
Carvalho eternally denies his traditionalistic connections and eternally exhales them. If in the past his first trip to the U.S. was to visit and stay with Martin Lings, a direct disciple of Guénon and the author of the introduction of “The Essential Rene Guenon: Metaphysical Principles, Traditional Doctrines, and the Crisis of Modernity,” by René Guénon, today he is connected to other members of the Traditionalist School, including Catholic Wolfgang Smith and Muslim Seyyed Hossein Nasr, both adherents of Guénon. The three appeared in a documentary by geocentrist Rick Delano. Geocentrism and Flat Earth appeal to Guenonians (adherents of Guénon).
If today Carvalho attacks some Guenonians (Lings), yet, he praises others. He just loves Bannon and Smith because, as he said himself, “Steve Bannon and Wolfgang Smith think I’m a genius.” He loves to be flattered.
The Atlantic showed Carvalho’s inconsistencies in two interviews with him. In the first interview, in 2018, he criticized Bannon; in the second, in 2019, he praised him.
His trip to Lings in the 1980s was riddled with scandals. The students in his astrology course, from whom he had borrowed thousands of dollars to make the trip, sued him for swindle.
What is clear is that Carvalho studied under two occult masters, Michel Veber and Martin Lings, who were direct disciples of Guénon. He also read all or most books by Guénon.
Teitelbaum said that Carvalho’s name in the Islamic tariqa (an occult cult) was “Sidi Muhammad.”
Adherents of Carvalho keep today showing affinity for astrology. In his book “Introduction to Magic,” Evola praises astrology.
The resurgence of admiration for Evola is a Brazilian phenomenon occurring only within Carvalho’s movement. Only people affected by his ideas end up praising Evola. Even affected evangelicals succumb. On May 2019, evangelical writer Thiago Cortes quoted a statement from Evola: “Be radical, have principles, be absolute, be what the bourgeoisie calls extremist.” It is a right-wing statement made by a right-winger with Nazi ties.
Cortes has a history as a columnist of major Brazilian evangelical websites such as GospelPrime and GospelMais. On early 2016, I scolded him for cursing foul-mouthed Carvalho. But later, the curses turned into a passion for Carvalho. Today, everything about Cortes’s rightism, including Evola, is Carvalho’s influence. Cortes’s passion for Carvalho has guaranteed him a high political job and direct connections with Eduardo Bolsonaro, who is the son of the Brazilian president. One of the things Eduardo does most is propagandizing Carvalho.
Most Christians influenced by Carvalho are Catholic. When Protestants are influenced, their behavior becomes erratic and irrational. One of the most prominent Brazilian Protestant ministers influenced by Carvalho is Daniel Lopez, a minister in the headquarters of Snowball Church in São Paulo, Brazil. After becoming an adherent of Carvalho, Lopez began to sell pro-Inquisition and Eastern religion books.
Toward the end of his life, Evola toned down his attacks on Christianity. While maintaining that Christianity was “incompatible” with his worldview, he claimed that, in an increasingly materialistic world, a “sincere conversion to Catholicism could be an advancement” for those incapable of embracing a more authentic spirituality, that is, occultism.
But he found a new target for his invective: America.
Evola saw the advent of [what he described as] Americanism — capitalism and evangelical values — as the worst thing that could happen to Europe, Germinario said, adding that Evola was particularly suspicious of Anglo-Saxon cultures because “he blamed Protestantism for having undermined the principle of authority.”
As far as Protestantism is concerned, Evola and Carvalho are twin occult brothers. In his Portuguese writings, Carvalho frequently accuses that Protestantism has undermined Western civilization, which he alleges was built exclusively by the Catholic Church and Traditionalism (occultism). In fact, he thinks that Protestantism was the first communist revolution in the human History.
Adherents of Guénon see “conservative American evangelicalism as an aberration from historical” Catholicism. Even though Bannon has never voiced openly such disdain for the conservative American evangelicalism, Carvalho has voiced a number of scornful comments against evangelicals, including his comment saying: “Evangelical churches have done more harm to Brazil than the entire left.”
No surprisingly, Carvalho has produced videos where he himself says that his worst enemy is an evangelical: Me. For two times, Carvalho has asked the Brazilian government to investigate me because he thinks that it is a crime to expose his occultism and advocacy of the Inquisition.
The parallels between Carvalho and Evola are impressive, because as a member of the Traditionalist School Evola came to be the guru of Mussolini, and as a member of the Traditionalist School Carvalho came to be the guru of Brazilian President Jair Bolsonaro.
According to Teitelbaum, Bolsonaro’s fascination with the members of the Traditionalist School is so profound that in his first trip to the United States Bolsonaro made a point to be with Bannon and Carvalho. Teitelbaum said,
“I saw images splashed across U.S. media showing Steve sitting once more at a lavish dinner in Washington, D.C.—across town this time, at the residence of the Brazilian ambassador on Massachusetts Avenue. To Steve’s left sat President Bolsonaro. To Bolsonaro’s left sat Olavo de Carvalho. And to Olavo’s left sat Brazil’s foreign minister, Ernesto Araújo.”
By reading Teitelbaum, I mused how the bizarre religious esotericism of the Traditionalist School could lead Carvalho from guru of a cult of Brazilian esoteric fanatics to guru of the Brazilian president.
With information from The Atlantic, Benjamin R. Teitelbaum (War for Eternity), revista Planeta, Olavo de Carvalho website and Facebook and Joshua Green (Devil’s Bargain: Steve Bannon, Donald Trump, and the Storming of the Presidency).
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