Roger Holeindre

Roger Holeindre (born 21 March 1929) is a French Army veteran, politician and author. He served in the First Indochina War and the Algerian War. He was a member of the National Assembly from 1986 to 1988. He is the former vice-president of the National Front (FN). He represents the “national-conservative” tendency, opposed to the “nationalist revolutionaries” (closer to Third Position ideologies). Holeindre is the president of the Cercle national des combattants.

Life and activism
Roger Holeindre was born on 21 March 1929 in Corrano, Corse-du-Sud. He grew up in Vosges and then Seine-Saint-Denis. In 1989, he wrote À tous ceux qui n'ont rien compris ("To those who haven't understood a thing") in which he claims to have stolen two machine guns from the Germans in August 1944 and that the operation got a friend killed. It hasn't been proven or denied he joined any Resistance organisation afterwards, but it can be assumed he never had any connection with the German occupation forces as he didn't spent any jail sentence after 1945 (which was a pre-requisite to any investigation for suspicious persons about collaboration in France at that time).

After working as a steel worker, he volunteered for the Indochina War in 1948 and later for the Algerian War. After being almost fatally wounded in the head, he was demobilized and lived in the city of Tebessa in the East of Algeria. He created there a youth center for education of Muslim locals. He joined the Organisation armée secrète (OAS), a right-wing terrorist movement opposed to the 1962 Évian Accords which granted independence to Algeria. Holeindre also founded the FAF (Front pour l’Algérie Française, Front for French Algeria). He met with Bruno Gollnisch in this period. After being given a prison sentence for his involvement with the OAS, he worked as a reporter for Paris-Match, while in the same time counselling young Occident far-right activists.

In January 1968, Holeindre founded the Front uni de soutien au Sud-Viêt-Nam (United Front in Support of South Vietnam) and supported the US war effort. Occident actively participated to this Front. Holeindre also maintained contacts with the direction of the WACL (World Anticommunist League), supported by the Taiwanese authorities. Présent, a newspaper close to the FN, then published the congratulations telegram sent to Holeindre after his election as deputy in 1986 by the President of the WACL and President of the National Assembly of Taiwan, Ku Chen Kang.

Holeindre became a member of the political bureau of the National Front, created in 1972 by Jean-Marie Le Pen, along with François Brigneau. When the “nationalist revolutionary” tendency of the French far-right founded, in 1972, the Front national pour l’unité française (FNUF, National Front for French Unity, original name of the FN), they opened it to their rivals of the “national-conservative” tendency. Thus, Jean-Marie Le Pen, Roger Holeindre and Pierre Durand (a former Poujadist) sieged at the side of the “nationalists” François Brigneau, Alain Robert, Pierre Bousquet (former Waffen-SS), Jean Vallette d'Osia (former resistant who later testified in favor of the revisionist Pierre Vial ), and Rolande Birgy (former resistant ). After the first split, at the end of 1973 (leading to the creation of the PFN), François Duprat continued to represent the “nationalist” tendency inside the FN.

Holeindre served as a member of the National Assembly for the Seine Saint Denis region from 1986 to 1988. He subsequently served as the vice-president of the FN. He also presides the Cercle national des combattants (National veterant circle), a veteran association close to the FN. He supported Le Pen against Bruno Mégret's attempt to seize control of the FN, and claims to follow Jean-Pierre Stirbois's nationalist and solidarist current.

Holeindre was part of the “TSM” current (Tous sauf Mégret, Anybody But Mégret), along with Samuel Maréchal, Marine Le Pen, Jean-Claude Martinez, and the Catholic current represented by Bernard Antony and Bruno Gollnisch, as well as Martine Lehideux. The split between Mégret and Le Pen started on 16 July 1997 meeting near Strasbourg during which Roger Holeindre started the hostilities, by stating that the FN, in the French colonial tradition, should return to a more "paternalist" approach on immigration issues, and criticized “ideological racialism” theories, targeting Nouvelle Droite supporters and former members of the Club de l'Horloge.

Decorations

 * Médaille militaire
 * Croix de guerre des théâtres d'opérations extérieures
 * Croix de la Valeur Militaire
 * Croix du combattant volontaire