Sunday 1 November 2015

Bourassa — La langue II

Henri Bourassa, La Langue, gardienne de la Foi (1918).

II

The Church, protector of national tongues

The right to one’s mother tongue, to one’s national tongue, is one of the best established of natural rights, one of fundamental bases of the essential human societies: family, tribe, race, nation. The first and the most constant preoccupation of the worst violators of the natural right of peoples — conquerors, dominators, brutal majorities — who want to enslave a vanquished nation or a minority, and to wipe them out as a social group, is to tear their national tongue from them. The ultimate and supreme resistance of races who choose not to die, is the fight for the preservation of their ancestral idiom. Victors and vanquished, killers and victims, both understand that he who guards his language holds the key which looses him from his chains.[1]
This natural right — no authority has better understood its force, none has respected its free and legitimate exercise more than our holy and tender mother, the Church Catholic, Apostolic, and Roman. No power has so constantly confirmed the right of peoples to their national language in education, management, and government, as the Papacy — from Saint Peter to Benedict XV.[2] We can say more: the Church has always seen the conservation of the use of national tongues as the most precious human element of her apostolate, and she has drawn her inspiration from this thought every time she has been called upon to make a judgement, from the point of view of the faith and of natural law, on the conflicts bred in the Church by the rivalries of races or peoples. The decisions or contrary acts of this or that man of the Church, priest, bishop, or pope — if such should ever happen — ought to be examined in light of the particular circumstances of time or place. An attentive and impartial study demonstrates that none of these decisions, none of these acts, undermines in any way the doctrine and general practice of the Church, always in agreement with the natural law.
It is in the annals of false Churches — heretical or schismatic, in thrall to the secular power — that one must recount the history of systematic oppression by means of language. When, unfortunately, this violation of natural rights is carried out in certain particular Churches which remain in communion with Rome, it is always following purely human politics, under the direction of prelates more worried about pleasing Caesar-the-King or Caesar-the-People than about building the Kingdom of God; and this complacency (happily rare and passing) of some men of the Church towards the caprice of despots or the passions of brutal majorities, has always accompanied a dissident or hostile tendency towards the Holy See, that is to say an inclination towards schism or heresy: Gallicanism, Josephinism, Polonism, Americanism, Anglo-Saxonism.[3] In other words, particular Churches, members of the universal Church, have violated or misjudged the right of minorities to their mother tongue, and did the work of national assimilation and religious perversion; in that measure they have separated themselves from the catholic spirit and tradition to incline towards becoming national — as if the Church of God, one and indivisible, could ever become, even partially, one nation’s thing! — that is to say, schismatic. Those, on the other hand, and by far the most numerous, which have respected the right of the conquered, of minorities, are the Churches whose angels — to use the language of the Apocalypse — have not ceased to obey God rather than men, and to practise towards all the faithful the charity of the great apostle of all nations, who did not see Jews nor Gentiles in the Church anymore, but only children of Christ.



[1] Words of Mistral, the most illustrious félibre of Provence, ardent defender of regional dialects.
[2] One shall read with advantage, on this particular point, the learned study of R. P. Leduc, dominican, reproduced following the conference.
[3] Let this not be confounded with its ancestor, Anglicanism: the one has crossed over the straits of schism to plunge into full heresy and end in the abyss of agnosticism; the other stands on the good side of the water, but so near the bank that it throws in many souls through mixed marriages, neutral or protestant schools, and drinking from the most anti-Christian literature that exists on earth. As for Americanism, we know towards what misadventures it is heading, when the vigilant authority of the Holy See has just upbraided it.

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