Groupe Union Défense (originally named Groupe Union Droit), better known as GUD, was a French far-right students' union formed in the 1960s. After a period of inactivity it relaunched in 2022.[2][3][4]
Successor | Social Bastion |
---|---|
Formation | 1968 |
Dissolved | 26 June 2024[1] |
Type | Far-right students' union |
Location |
The GUD was based in Panthéon-Assas University,[5][6][7] a law school in Paris.
On 26 June 2024, the French government ordered the dissolution of the GUD.[8]
Ideology
editFormed as far-right, anti-communist youth organization, in the mid-1980s, the GUD turned toward support of the Third Position movements and "national revolutionary" theories,[9] as well as embracing anti-Zionism, anti-Americanism and support for Hafez al-Assad.[10]
Culture
editGUD took as symbol the Celtic cross and the comic black rats (rats noirs).[11][12]
Some music groups of Rock identitaire français had connections with GUD.[13][14][15]
History
editGUD was founded in December 1968 under the name Union Droit at Panthéon-Assas University[10] by Alain Robert (homme politique) , Gérard Longuet,[16] Gérard Ecorcheville and some members of the political movement Occident. In its early period, it was a reactionary bourgeois student movement, and some of its early members went on to become mainstream conservative politicians, including Gérard Longuet, Hervé Novelli and Alain Madelin.[10][17]
Members of the GUD participated in the 1969 founding of Ordre Nouveau.[18]
During the 1970s and early 1980s, linked to the Parti des forces nouvelles (PFN), the GUD published the satiric monthly Alternative.[19] Members in this period included Alain Orsoni, a Corsican nationalist linked to organised crime and suspected of the murder of Marie-Jeanne Bozzi.[10]
On 9 May 1994 GUD member Sébastien Deyzieu died after clashes between nationalists and riot police.[20][21] Following these event, some French nationalist groups formed an umbrella organization Comité du 9-Mai (C9M) and holds[clarification needed] yearly a commemorative marches in Paris on May 9.[22][23]
In 1998, the Group united itself with Jeune Résistance and the Union des cercles résistance, offshoots of Nouvelle Résistance group, under the name Unité Radicale, but it was dissolved[24][25] after Maxime Brunerie's failed assassination attempt on president Jacques Chirac.[26]
In 2004, the GUD reformed under the name Rassemblement étudiant de droite . Its publication was Le Dissident.[27]
In 2017 members of the GUD squatted a building in Lyon and founded political movement Social Bastion.[28][29][30]
In late 2022, graffiti appeared in educational institutions in Paris (including the École Normale Supérieure) saying "GUD is back"; a video was released on Ouest Casual, a Telegram channel used by the far right, commemorating some Greek neo-Nazis; and the GUD slogan “Europe, Youth, Revolution” appeared on stickers in Paris and chants at a right-wing demonstration in Lyon. Its activists were reported to be drawn from far-right trade union La Cocarde Étudiante, the ultra-right group the Zouaves, traditionalist Catholics from Versailles, and football hooligans.[10]
Members
editSuccessive leaders of the GUD were: Alain Robert, Jack Marchal, Jean-François Santacroce, Serge Rep, Philippe Cuignache, Charles-Henri Varaut, Frédéric Chatillon, William Bonnefoy, Benoît Fleury.
Military volunteers
editSome GUD members have fought in Lebanese Civil War with the Kataeb Party[31] in 1976, Croatian War of Independence[32] in the 1990s and in Burma during Karen conflict.[33] In 1985 member of the GUD Jean-Philippe Courrèges was killed in action fighting for the Karen National Liberation Army.[34]
GUD members have had links with the Department for Protection and Security, which is the security organization of the far-right political party National Front.[35]
Former member of the GUD Alain Orsoni was member of the FLNC.[36]
See also
editReferences
edit- ^ "Le GUD est officiellement dissous, annonce le gouvernement". Le Monde.fr.
- ^ Plottu, Pierre; Macé, Maxime (7 November 2022). "Des militants d'extrême droite réactivent le GUD à Paris". Libération (in French). Retrieved 13 December 2022.
- ^ B.Corson, Equipe (16 November 2022). "GUD, le retour d'une légende brune". POLITIS (in French). Retrieved 13 December 2022.
- ^ Macé, Maxime; Plottu, Pierre (25 March 2022). "Brève histoire du GUD, ce groupuscule fascisant dont a fait partie Loïk Le Priol". Libération (in French). Retrieved 13 December 2022.
- ^ L'université en Ile-de-France (4) Paris-II Assas, la longue marche vers le centre droit
- ^ Avec "Assas Patriote", l'extrême droite tente de reprendre pied à Paris-II Panthéon-Assas
- ^ Élections à Assas: le GUD tente de reprendre pied
- ^ "Le GUD est officiellement dissous, annonce le gouvernement". Le Monde.fr.
- ^ L’Odyssée des Rats noirs : voyage au coeur du GUD
- ^ a b c d e Blast le souffle de l’info (16 November 2022). "Extrême droite : les rats noirs de retour - Site d'information français d'actualités et d'investigation indépendant". Blast - Le souffle de l’info - Site d’information français d’actualités et d’investigation indépendant (in French). Retrieved 13 December 2022.
- ^ El otro Mayo del 68: la contrarrevolución de la rata negra
- ^ La rata negra mascota del neofascismo europeo
- ^ Une musique groupusculaire : le rock identitaire français
- ^ GUD, Génération identitaire, Action française... leurs racines, leurs méthodes
- ^ Le Rock Identitaire Français (5) Chapitre III : Les acteurs du RIF : les groupes
- ^ Nicolas Lebourg, « Une ligne vraiment très droite », Politis, no 1143, semaine du 10 au 16 mars 2011, p. 8-9.
- ^ Henley, Jon (20 July 2002). "France's neo-Nazi breeding ground". the Guardian. Retrieved 13 December 2022.
- ^ Dossier extrême droite radicale: Groupe Union Défense
- ^ Dossier extrême droite radicale: Groupe Union Défense
- ^ L'extrême droite radicale tente une sortie sur le social, le 9 mai
- ^ Jacques Leclercq, « Comité du 9-Mai », Droites conservatrices, nationales et ultras : Dictionnaire 2005-2010, L'Harmattan, p. 124.
- ^ Commemoration Sebastien deyzieu (C9M)
- ^ Il y a 25 ans, Sébastien Deyzieu
- ^ Christophe Bourseiller, "Les risques de la spirale", in: Maxime Brunerie/Christian Rol, Une vie ordinaire, Paris: Denoël, 2011, 224 p., p. 8-15.
- ^ Would-be assassin rooted in hard right
- ^ Chirac escapes lone gunman's bullet, BBC
- ^ "Du côté obscur de la droite". Archived from the original on 2019-07-31. Retrieved 2019-07-31.
- ^ Lyon: le Gud squatte un immeuble pour venir en aide aux Français dans le besoin
- ^ A Lyon, le GUD expulsé de son squat
- ^ À Lyon, le GUD réquisitionne un bâtiment pour aider les Français
- ^ Not Only Syria? The Phenomenon of Foreign Fighters in a Comparative Perspective, p. 94
- ^ James Ciment World Terrorism: An Encyclopedia of Political Violence from Ancient Times to the Post-9/11 Era, p. 234.
- ^ "La Souris rattrapée par le Chat…tillon: quand LSD choisit finalement son camp". Archived from the original on 2020-10-27. Retrieved 2019-07-31.
- ^ C’était un 4 octobre…
- ^ Abel Mestre et Caroline Monnot, « Les réseaux du Front national », Sylvain Crépon, Alexandre Dézé, Nonna Mayer, Les Faux-semblants du Front national : sociologie d'un parti politique, Presses de Sciences PoP
- ^ Alain Orsoni: seul face à sa peur
Bibliography
edit- Frédéric Chatillon, Thomas Lagane et Jack Marchal (dir.), Les Rats maudits. Histoire des étudiants nationalistes 1965-1995, Éditions des Monts d'Arrée, 1995, ISBN 2-911387-00-7.
- Roger Griffin, Net gains and GUD reactions: patterns of prejudice in a Neo-fascist groupuscule, Patterns of Prejudice, vol. 33, n°2, 1999, p. 31-50.
- Collectif, Bêtes et méchants. – Petite histoire des jeunes fascistes français, Paris, Éditions Reflex, 2002, ISBN 2-914519-01-X.
External links
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