The Northern Advocate

As the world marks armistice day, nationalis­m rises again

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The graveyards extend for miles, farther than the eye can see. For a century now, parts of northern France and Belgium have been an eerie mausoleum, a landscape ravaged by the horrors of World War I, a conflict that was then the deadliest event in modern history.

More than 60 world leaders will gather in Paris this weekend to mark the centennial of the 1918 armistice. As host, French President Emmanuel Macron is embracing a post-national, panEuropea­n understand­ing of the past — and vision of the future.

But the World War I centennial arrives at a moment when the European project and transatlan­tic alliance are under strain — and nationalis­m is seeing a startling resurgence.

Anti-European Union sentiment has grown even in countries where right-wing populists have performed poorly at the polls, and Brussels has struggled to respond to flagrant assaults on European values as basic as the rule of law.

Heads of state assert “Italy First,” “Hungary First” and “America First,” echoing language deployed by those who argued against US involvemen­t in the world wars and League of Nations. And collective aversion to the term “nationalis­t” has begun to recede.

“You know, they have a word — it sort of became oldfashion­ed,” President Trump said at a rally last month. “It’s called a nationalis­t. And I say, really? We’re not supposed to use that word. You know what I am? I’m a nationalis­t, okay? I’m a nationalis­t. Nationalis­t. Nothing wrong. Use that word.”

Margaret Macmillan, a World War I historian at the University of Oxford, said the cavalier language evinces a mentality that peace is the default and even inevitable condition.

“We in the West, in particular, have been extremely lucky. We’ve lived through an extremely long period of peace,” she said. “The worry is that we take peace for granted and think it’s a normal state of affairs.”

In advance of the gathering in Paris, Macron has positioned himself as Europe’s leading challenger to the rising tide of nationalis­m. He has said that leaders such as Hungary’s Viktor Orban are right to see him as their biggest opponents, and warned — in an address to the United Nations — that unilateral­ism inevitably US President Donald Trump engenders “withdrawal and conflict”.

Macron’s Armistice Day plans reflect his commitment to the post-war project. A ceremony Sunday on the Champs-Elysees will be a solemn affair, rememberin­g lives lost rather than celebratin­g a war victory. That will be followed by a threeday peace forum that aims to “strengthen multilater­alism and internatio­nal cooperatio­n”.

If the event celebrates anything, it will be the long legacy of peace, which eluded the continent after the first world war but has now held more or less intact for seven decades. To Macron and other defenders of the EU, the oftmaligne­d institutio­n is a critical reason why.

“The European Union is the rejection of the two world wars — that’s what it is. It’s a way of creating the economic and democratic stability that did not emerge after World War I,” said Yale University historian Jay Winter.

The degree to which the EU’s post-nationalis­t vision has transforme­d the continent is evident in the German region of Saarland, an area of 1 million residents on the French border.

The region — marked by lush forests, gentle hills and rich coal deposits that once made Saarland an industrial jackpot — has changed hands eight times over the past 250 years. In the past century alone, it was traded between France and Germany four times.

The first of those came in the aftermath of World War I, when France claimed the territory as compensati­on for German destructio­n of France’s coal industry. Germany lost the land again after World War II, and only got it back in 1957. As recently as the 1990s, the nearby border was subject to strict controls. But today, it’s largely invisible. French citizens commute to Saarland for work, Germans drop in on France to pick up a bottle of wine.

World War I occupies a more limited space in the German historical imaginatio­n than it does for France, the UK or Belgium. Few of the battles were on German soil, and the horrors of the war that followed — World War II — overshadow all else in the nation’s historical memory. But the lessons of both wars are woven into the country’s modern DNA. As other nations have swung toward populists pledging to look out for their own country’s interests Germany has stayed rooted in internatio­nal cooperatio­n.

Unlike during other major anniversar­ies of the war, Germany has marked the centenary occasions alongside onetime enemies. It will do so again on Sunday when Chancellor Angela Merkel travels to Paris and President Frank-Walter Steinmeier visits London for a ceremony with Queen Elizabeth II.

“It has really been a European commemorat­ion,” Ho¨lscher said. “That’s something very new.”

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