We’ve posted in the past about German citizens who have fled the multicultural lunacy in their homeland and escaped to Hungary. The following article from F. de Souche tells the story of French expatriates who have migrated to Central Europe to escape the madness of Modern Multicultural France.

Many thanks to Ava Lon for the translation:

“Identitarian emigrants”: Exodus to the East to rediscover ethnic and cultural homogeneity by Koba

January 31, 2017 They are mechanics, surveyors, financiers… Young Frenchmen, some of them claiming to be “identitarian emigrants”, chose to go into exile in Poland or in Hungary, where people appreciate ethnic and cultural homogeneity. One day in 2014, Romain, a 25-year-old from Lille, decided to leave France. Something did not suit him in this country where he grew up. A desire to go elsewhere, too. Then he took his motorcycle and his musical instruments. The former mechanic rolled aimlessly to the east, before stopping on a whim in Budapest. Today, he says he does not regret this serendipitous choice. He discovered retrospectively what increasingly troubled him in France: his cultural and ethnic diversity. Romain (who did not wish to give his surname) did not have a priori the community fiber. He says it without taboo: “Here, there is a homogeneity and I feel at home.” He is happy to live “with men of European origin, Catholics.” How many of these young people, like Romain, decided to break away from a country that no longer felt like home? Within the French community that has settled in the countries of the East — and has been steadily growing in recent years — this discourse is becoming more and more frequent and open to the point of no longer being considered a fringe phenomenon. Several thousand French people have gone to live in these countries for a number of years. And among them it is not difficult, by simple word-of-mouth, to come into contact with expatriates who explain, without circumlocution, without embarrassment, and without apparent hatred, either, how this cultural question has germinated in their minds as evidence. Some people even claim to be “identitarian emigrants”.

Grégory Leroy, 31, has decided to live in Poland. He found a more uniform world, more in keeping with his aspirations. “I have traveled extensively, and I have learned that I am not a fan of multicultural countries,” he explains. “I think it’s important to encounter more people who look like us in the street, and this is the case here.” After growing up in Courbevoie (Hauts-de-Seine), he emigrated in 2012, following a tip supplied by one of his brother’s friends, who advised him to invest in Warsaw. He created Hussard, an “antiterrorist training” company that offers “a three-day initiation in the art of open warfare” and features on its website a martial discourse, resolutely in phase with that of the Polish right wing that is now in power. “Coercive French legislation on legitimate defense and possession of weapons encourages the emergence of ultra-recidivist and ultra-violent delinquency whose extension is the jihadism.”… Multiculturalism is clearly not the cup of tea for these atypical “expats.” Such is Gabriel (who prefers not to give his name). A native of Haute-Savoie, with a promising career in finance, this 35-year-old young man left France in 2005 and settled for ten years in Budapest. Without equivocation, he associates the quality of life he found there with the “cultural, even ethnic homogeneity” of his adopted country. “If you mix people too much, it does not work,” he says.