Tomislav Sunić


Tomislav Sunić, sometimes known as Tom Sunic, is a Croatian-American translator, far right activist and a former professor. His views are often cited as part of the European New Right. The Southern Poverty Law Center describes Sunić as having white nationalist opinions.

Biography

Sunić was born in Zagreb, SFR Yugoslavia in 1953 to a Croatian Catholic family. He is a naturalized United States citizen.
His father, Mirko Sunić, Mirko Sunić authored, in 1996, Moji inkriminirani zapisi.
Tomislav Sunić studied French and English Language and Literature at the University of Zagreb until 1978. From 1980 to 1982 he worked in Algeria as an interpreter for the Yugoslav-Croatian construction company Ingra. He emigrated to the United States, where he received a master's degree at California State University, Sacramento in 1985.
In June 1987, at the invitation of Freedom House, Sunić and Mate Meštrović, along with twelve other émigré academics and dissidents from different Yugoslav constituent republics, were invited to discuss the political crisis in Yugoslavia. Sunić, who participated in the discussion, gave a short speech on Communist repression in Yugoslavia and what he described as the activities of the Yugoslav secret police, the UDBA.
Tomislav Sunić received a doctorate in political science in 1988 from the University of California, Santa Barbara. During his graduate studies he lobbied for Croatian prisoners in Yugoslavia and wrote for the émigré Croat London-based biweekly Nova Hrvatska and the Madrid-based Croat literary quarterly Hrvatska Revija. From 1988-93, he taught at California State University, the University of California, and Juniata College. From 1993-2001, he served in various diplomatic positions with the Croatian government in Zagreb, London, Copenhagen, and Brussels. He taught at the Anglo-American College in Prague, and currently resides in Zagreb, where he works as a freelance writer.
Sunić's books and views can be described as being in the style of the GRECE, a school of thought by Alain de Benoist, who wrote a preface to Sunić's book and whose articles Sunić often translates into English. Sunić has widely written, translated and lectured in English, German, French and Croatian on many authors, novelists and political thinkers who can be called the predecessors of the European New Right The "European New Right," or Nouvelle Droite, is a name for various forms of conservative, right-wing, or dissident cultural movements and political groupings which emerged in opposition to the liberal and leftist academic milieu of the mid- to late-20th century. Critics have argued that de Benoist has developed a novel cultural fascism and have depicted the advocates of Sunić's school of thought as "literary fascists".
Kevin B. MacDonald, an evolutionary psychologist who has been characterized as "The Marx of the Anti-Semites", wrote an introduction to Sunić's book Homo Americanus, a book which deals extensively with the Judeo-Christian mindset and its secular modalities in the USA. MacDonald states the work "addresses the modern world of hyper-liberalism, globalist capitalism and the crisis of our inherited Indo-European civilization". Sunić is critical of Judeo-Christian monotheism, to which he attributes the rise of communism and liberalism.
Sunić has been critical of post-World War II legislative changes in Europe, regarding non-white immigration and restrictions on freedom of speech. He has attended and spoken at some conferences organized and attended by historical revisionists. In August 2003, he gave a lecture in German at a conference sponsored by Germany's neo-Nazi party, the National Democratic Party, alongside the far-right ex-lawyer Horst Mahler. He lectured on Carl Schmitt, a German legal scholar, who was influential in Nazi Germany. Sunić's articles have been published in American, French, German and Croatian journals, including the now defunct Journal of Historical Review.

Speaking appearances

Sunić has accepted invitations to speak before radical conservatives, white nationalist academics and individuals and groups accused of holding or promoting racist and anti-Semitic views. He spoke at the 2002 and 2003 'Eurofest' events, sponsored by the Sacramento chapter of National Alliance, where he gave a speech, "'Turkish Onslaught to Europe to Communist Disaster', which was critical of non-European immigration.
In his books, articles and speeches Sunić critically examines modern higher education and different antiracist and antifascist institutions which he describes as a platform for "semantic distortions of political concepts, in order to "demonize or discredit non-conformist, nationalist and traditionalist schools of thought."
Sunić spoke to the French Senate on 15 January 2007, at a conference entitled "Nationalismes et religions dans les Balkans occidentaux", sponsored by the Fondation Robert Schuman. The topic of his talk was "Facteur nationaliste et facteur religieux dans les tensions actuelles". Other speakers included Michel Barnier and General David Leakey.
Sunic held a speech in Sweden at the neo-nazi festival "Nordiska Festivalen" in 2008. He has also spoken at a British far-right meeting for "Generation Identity". Sunic also held a speech at another extreme right wing conference in 2011 called "Identitär Idé".
A June 2011 conference tour was with MacDonald, in Sweden, where they both talked about the topic "Individualism and Nationalism in the Modern Multicultural Society". He spoke at the "Forgotten Genocide" International Conference, held in St. Louis Community College, on "The Fate of the Danube Germans in Yugoslavia in the Wake of WWII". In July 2011, he was a guest speaker in Knin, Croatia, at the summer school of the Flemish separatist, rightist political party, Vlaams Belang, where he lectured on the parallels between multicultural Belgium and multicultural Yugoslavia.
Sunić is a frequent guest of ethnic or expatriate German and Croatian community or social groups in North America, Australia and Europe, where he talks about what he alleges were mass killings of ethnic German and Croat civilians in the former Yugoslavia and in Eastern Europe in the aftermath of WWII.
More recently, Sunić spoke at two National Policy Institute gatherings in 2011 and 2013.

Radio programme

From 2 June 2009 until 2012, Sunić hosted a radio show with the Voice of Reason Broadcast Network] Topics he addressed included race, culture, nationalism, and politics. The show, which began as The New Nationalist Perspective was later renamed The Sunic Journal. It ended in 2012.

Political Affiliation

Sunić sits on the board of directors of the white nationalist American Freedom Party.

Books