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A
Tribute to Dr. Sam Francis
Obdurate for Truth
by Pat Buchanan
© 2005 Creators Syndicate, Inc.
t the foot of Lookout Mountain, we buried Sam Francis today.
A shy, private
man, Sam would have been embarrassed by how many would travel here to
pay final respects. His Tennessee family told friends who came from all
over the country that they had not really known how admired and beloved
Sam was.
When God created him, He endowed Sam with a great gift - one
of the finest minds of his generation. Sam did not waste it. As a student,
he was a prodigy. By high school, he was winning citywide competitions
in poetry and essay-writing. From Chattanooga, Sam went on to Johns Hopkins
and, from there, to earn a Ph.D. in English history at the University
of North Carolina.
Sam then came north to work for the Heritage Foundation,
where he became an expert on international terror. He left to join Sen.
John East, whose election had folks chortling that Jesse Helms was now
"the liberal senator from North Carolina." Then, Sam took up his real
vocation, journalism, joining the Washington Times, where he was soon
winning national prizes for the quality of his editorials.
Sam became
a rising star in the conservative firmament and began to write a national
column. And that's when Sam got into trouble. For the founding fathers
of the conservative movement had passed on, their estate had gone to probate,
and squatters and hustlers had swindled the Old Right out of its inheritance.
Soon, others began to redefine conservatism, to impose limits on debate,
to censor as heretics those who would not mouth the new party line.
In
1994, Sam merrily ridiculed Baptist churchmen who had issued an apology
for slavery. As the preachers had never owned slaves and there was no
Bible command against slavery, Sam asked, what exactly were the preachers
apologizing for?
Cautioned to watch his step, he did not. For Sam cared
about his convictions more than his popularity. As Minister Michael Milton
of First Presbyterian eulogized at his gravesite, Sam was one with Flannery
O'Connor in believing that "truth does not change according to our ability
to stomach it."
Among the events that altered Sam's life was the savaging
of his friend and mentor, Mel Bradford, whom Ronald Reagan had chosen
to chair the National Endowment for the Humanities. Neoconservatives had
coveted the post and the honors a chairman could bestow. So a small cabal
painted Bradford, a well-known scholar-critic of Lincoln, as a racist.
"If they want it that bad," Mel told a friend, "let them have it."
Seeing
how wounded Bradford had been, Sam was always there when one of his own
was caught out in the open. Like his forebears in the Army of the Confederacy,
Sam rode to the sound of the guns.
A proud "paleo," he mocked the neo-orthodoxy
that the South was always wrong, Wilson and FDR had been right, and Dr.
King was a paragon of virtue and patriotism. He delighted in mocking the
tin gods of the New and Revised Conservative Bible.
What he cherished
was the civilization and culture that had nurtured him. He loved Southern
and American literature, history and heroes, and few men of his time were
so widely read. Sam was convinced Western culture and civilization could
not survive the dispossession or death of the European peoples who gave
them birth. He opposed the mass immigration of non-Western peoples, cultures
and creeds, and regarded as the "Stupid Party" a GOP that truckled to
corporate contributors and refused to defend our borders.
A decade ago,
Sam said as much at a conference and was gone from the paper. He never
fully understood what he had done wrong. Said Milton: "Dr. Francis' defense
of the truth led many to admire him, befriend him and, at times, withdraw
from him. The work of a prophet is a lonely calling."
With his intelligence,
vast knowledge and droll wit, Sam was the most entertaining of dinner
companions. His barbs and anecdotes about friends and adversaries had
those at his table laughing so loud that other patrons in the restaurant
wondered what was going on.
His death was a difficult one. Sam awoke at
home on a Saturday late in January feeling terrible. No ambulance would
come. So, he drove himself to the nearest hospital, where he underwent
seven hours of surgery for an aortic aneurysm. Heavily sedated for weeks,
as doctors feared he could not survive movement, Sam's heart gave out
when they tried to help him sit up in a chair.
I only spoke to Sam for
minutes in those final days of his life. And my words here are too long
delayed. But Sam's passing left a hole in our hearts as it will in our
lives. It is difficult to bear the thought I will not again see Sam's
big grin, as he sat down to dinner, spread a napkin over his ample lap
and proceeded to divest himself of the latest witticisms he had invented.
May the Lord have mercy on my brave and generous friend.
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