A descendant of the assassinated Austro-Hungarian Archduke Franz Ferdinand has noted parallels between current events and the leadup to the First World War. In a November 16 address at Castle Artstetten, his family’s historical estate, Prince Leo von Hohenberg highlighted issues such as “mass migration” and the erosion of “traditional values.”
In a subsequent interview, he noted the resemblance of current “warmongering” to the period leading up to his great-grandfather’s assassination. Franz Ferdinand’s death in the summer of 1914 was a pivotal event sparking the First World War.
The Hohenberg prince’s comments follow President Joe Biden recently giving the green light to Ukraine to fire long-range American-made missiles far inside Russia. Russia’s President Vladimir Putin warns the move could be seen as a declaration of war by NATO.
A father, reserve officer, and Christian, von Hohenberg emphasized the need for peace. Consequently, he expressed that alongside physical conflicts, there is a “spiritual war” targeting public conscience, driven by globalists using “all the might and financial power of international institutions.”
Additionally, the prince warned that the war is waged “by redefining concepts and selecting wording, by changing norms through universal repetition of mantras in media, film, and television, through changing school and university curriculum, through changing culture, through selectively manipulating data, now with the help of AI, and other subtle techniques.”
Emphasizing the Christian faith, von Hohenberg advocated turning to God amidst moral and cultural challenges, seeing Christ in others, promoting small acts of kindness, and personal integrity as pathways to broader change. President-elect Donald J. Trump acknowledged Christ throughout his campaign, marking the Roman Catholic feasts of St. Michael the Archangel and other events.