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Vatican Assassins

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Chapter 23 293<br />

Eugene Sue was cut from the same mold as the great anti-Jesuit and Roman<br />

Catholic French patriot, General Lafayette. In fact they were contemporaries. He<br />

published his masterpiece and international bestseller, The Wandering Jew, in 1844.<br />

At that time the powers of the Holy Alliance were supreme in Europe. France,<br />

however, was enjoying the non-absolutist rule of its “Citizen-King,” Louis Philippe.<br />

Prince Metternich of the Austrian House of Hapsburg was still alive using the<br />

armies of the Monarchs to suppress and murder any people that would dare attempt a<br />

popular revolution. The Spanish people had expelled the Jesuits in 1820 and<br />

attempted to establish popular government. But the invading French army sent by the<br />

Jesuits’ most powerful Freemason in France, Louis XVIII, crushed them.<br />

By 1844 France was enjoying good government, its beloved “Citizen King”<br />

Louis Philippe having expelled the Order in 1831. Praise God! But the other<br />

peoples of Europe were becoming more and more oppressed by the power of the<br />

Jesuits controlling the affairs of States according to the purposes of the Holy Alliance.<br />

They remembered the relative liberty given to them by Napoleon (as he used them to<br />

punish the Monarchs) and looked to the successful republican example of Protestant<br />

America. They yearned for that same freedom and were willing to die for it during<br />

this progressive and accomplished Nineteenth Century, the greatest of centuries!<br />

At this time The Wandering Jew was published. Typical of the great,<br />

expressive heart of the French, the story draws from its reader every extreme of<br />

human emotion. Love, hate, joy, sorrow, hope, disappointment, suspense, courage,<br />

intrigue and surprise so grip the reader that the novel becomes irresistible. The<br />

righteous priest Gabriel, the poor but loyal hunchback Mother Bunch, the assassin<br />

Faringhea, the beautiful and accomplished Adrienne, the courageous Indian prince<br />

Djalma, the old soldier of Napoleon’s army Dagobert, and General Simon’s innocent<br />

little girls, Rose and Blanche, are but a few of the wonderful characters used to<br />

convey a story of so great a magnitude and final tragedy as to move anyone with a<br />

heart to action — action against the Jesuit Order!<br />

One of the key characters is Rodin the Jesuit. He is thoroughly evil,<br />

deceptive, treacherous, heartless, and completely loyal to the General in Rome. He is<br />

the key player in attempting to steal a huge fortune from a French Protestant family,<br />

which is held in trust by a Jew.<br />

Another character is the Jesuit, Abbe Marquis d’Aigrigny. The author<br />

assigns this traitor the perfect narrative describing the function and power of the<br />

Order. We read:<br />

“What ought not to be sacrificed in order to reign in secret over the allpowerful<br />

of the earth, who lord it in full day? This journey to Rome,<br />

The Jesuits – 1844

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