Breiz da Zont (Brittany of the Future), was a
Breton nationalist
Breton nationalism (, ) is the nationalism of the historical province of Brittany, France. Brittany is considered to be one of the six Celtic nations (along with Cornwall, Ireland, the Isle of Man, Scotland and Wales).
Breton ''nationalism'' wa ...
periodical active during the 1930s. It was affiliated to an extremist offshoot of the
Breton Autonomist Party The Breton Autonomist Party ( or PAB, ) was a political party which existed in Brittany from 1927 to 1931.
Origin
The party was created at the first congress of the nationalist journal '' Breiz Atao'' in Rosporden in September 1927. It followed fr ...
.
Initially, Breiz da Zont was the organ of the nationalist grouping known as ''Parti nationaliste intégral breton'' (Breton Integral Nationalist Party: PNIB) led by
Théophile Jeusset.
Morvan Lebesque participated in the drafting committee, and also edited the journal at the request of Jeusset, who was forced to give up for health reasons. The poet
Gwilherm Berthou
Gwilherm Berthou (10 May 1908, Paimpol – 14 March 1951, Rennes) was a Breton nationalist and Neo-druidic, neo-Druidic bardic poet. He was a member of the Breton artistic movement Seiz Breur.
Terrorism
Berthou was born in Paimpol, Côtes-d'Armor ...
and the composer
Paul Ladmirault
Paul Émile Ladmirault (8 December 1877 – 30 October 1944) was a French composer and music critic whose music expressed his devotion to Brittany. Claude Debussy wrote that his work possessed a "fine dreamy musicality", commenting on its charact ...
were members.
Antisemitism
In its early phase the journal was strongly linked to antisemitic and fascist ideology. In an article published in July 1931, Théophile Jeusset wrote:
It is due to our particular resistance to the conquest of sovereign French territory by the corrupting ideas which emanate more or less from the Jews - 'freemasonry', 'secularism' - etc, that the Bretons were decimated during the last world war: over 200,000 of them. It is easy to invoke military explanations for this carnage, but that does not alter the fact the actual organizer of troop dispositions was the Jew Abrahami, born... in the ghetto of Constantinople.
Another issue reproduced the edict of
John I, Duke of Brittany
John I (, ; 1217/12188 October 1286), known as John the Red due to the colour of his beard, was Duke of Brittany from 1221 to his death and 2nd Earl of Richmond in 1268.
John was the eldest of three children born to Duchess Alix and her husban ...
declaring the expulsion of Jews from Brittany. An article in August 1931 includes the words "we, complete Breton nationalists, could also qualify us as National Socialist supporters of Adolf Hitler."
Kentoc'h Mervel
In 1929 Gwilherm Berthou suggested to
Célestin Lainé
Célestin Lainé (25 October 1908 – 7 October 1983) was a Breton nationalist and collaborator during the Second World War who led the SS affiliated Bezen Perrot militia. His Breton language name is Neven Hénaff. He was a chemical engin ...
that a nationalist militant group dedicated to direct action to should be formed. This was to be called ''Kentoc'h Mervel'' (Sooner Death). As Lainé sought his own recruits, Berthou brought the staff of Breiz da Zont to join ''en masse''. When Lainé discovered this he distanced himself from Berthou, believing that a public journal could not create an effective support for a secret organization, as it would be too easily infiltrated. Lainé went on to form
Gwenn ha du. Lainé later wrote "I don't know what became of Kentoc'h Mervel after that, except that it never grew beyond fancy words."
Daniel Leach, "Bezen Perrot: The Breton nationalist unit of the SS, 1943-5", e-Keltoi
/ref>
Later developments
After the departure of Morvan Lebesque, the journal moved away from fascism towards a more conventional conservatism, monarchism, Breton nationalism and Catholicism.
Théophile Jeusset later went on to found the pro-Nazi Breton Social-National Workers' Movement
The Breton Social-National Workers' Movement () was a nationalist
Nationalism is an idea or movement that holds that the nation should be congruent with the State (polity), state. As a movement, it presupposes the existence and tends to pro ...
.
References
{{reflist
Breton nationalism
Defunct periodicals published in France