'Europe is
committing suicide. Langsam aber sicher. Slowly
but surely.'
Is there
nothing we can do to avoid this, I ask.
'There is no
escape. It is our destiny.'
I am taking
tea with Neagu Djuvaru, the doyen of Romanian historians, who will be 100 in
August. He is an old man but has the ebullience of a child. He seems a very
happy man except when he thinks about the future of Europe, which he is glad he
will not live to see.
There is, he says
firmly, no alternative to a Muslim conquest of Europe and the end of Western civilisation.
It is a thesis he has repeated several times in interviews. Romanians, who have not been exposed to cultural relativism, treat it with great respect.
I tell him
that an American history professor recently said to me that Western
civilisation will not come to an end because it is now universal. There is no other civilisation. But as I
say
this I realise that there was no alternative to Western civilisation in the
fifth century