Sunday, March 15, 2009

The far right is on the march again: the rise of fascism in Austria

Thanks to Her Royal Whyness.

From the Daily Mail:

In Austria's recent general election, nearly 30 per cent of voters backed extremist right-wing parties. Live visits the birthplace of Hitler to investigate how Fascism is once again threatening to erupt across Europe. 

Supporters of far right leader Heinz Christian Strache (pictured in the flyers held aloft by the man at the front) gather at a rally in Vienna

Supporters of far right leader Heinz Christian Strache (pictured in the flyers held aloft by the man at the front) gather at a rally in Vienna

Beneath a leaden sky the solemn, black-clad crowd moves slowly towards a modest grey headstone. At one end 
of the grave, a flame casts light on the black lettering that is engraved on the marble. At the other end, an elderly soldier bends down to place flowers before standing to salute. 

From all over Austria, people are here to pay their respects to their fallen hero. But the solemnity of the occasion is cut with tension. Beyond the crowd of about 300, armed police are in attendance. They keep a respectful distance but the rasping bark of Alsatians hidden in vans provides an eerie soundtrack as the crowd congregates in mist and light rain. 

We’ve been warned that despite a heavy police presence journalists have often been attacked at these meetings. If trouble does come then the mob look ready to fight. There are bull-necked stewards and young men who swagger aggressively.

Heinz Christian Strache

The Freedom Party leader Heinz Christian Strache

This is a neo-Nazi gathering and in the crowd are some of Austria’s most hard-faced fascists. Among them is Gottfried Kussel, a notorious thug who was the showman of Austria’s far-right movement in the Eighties and Nineties until he was imprisoned for eight years for promoting Nazi ideology. 

Today he cuts a Don Corleone figure as he stands defiantly at the graveside. His neo-Nazi acolytes make sure no one comes near him and our photographer is unceremoniously barged out of his way.  

Ominous-looking men with scars across their faces whisper to each other and shake hands. These are members of Austria’s Burschenschaften, an arcane, secretive organisation best known for its fascination with fencing, an initiation ceremony that includes a duel in which the opponents cut each other’s faces, and for its strong links to the far right. 

Incredibly, standing shoulder to shoulder with these hard-line Nazi sympathisers are well known Austrian politicians. At the graveside, a speech is made by Lutz Weinzinger, a leading member of Austria’s Freedom Party (FPO), who pays tribute to the fallen. 

This is a gathering in memory of an Austrian-born Nazi fighter pilot, who during WWII shot down 258 planes, 255 of them Russian. Such was Major Walter Nowotny’s standing at the time of his death in 1944 that the Nazi Party awarded him a grave of honour in Vienna’s largest cemetery, close to the musical legends Mozart, Brahms and Strauss. 

But in 2005 that honour was revoked and his body moved to lie in an area of public graves. The decision infuriated the far right and made their annual pilgrimage an even greater event. 

Today, the anniversary of Nowotny’s death, also coincides with Kristallnacht, the ‘night of broken glass’ in 1938 when 92 people were murdered and thousands attacked across Germany as stormtroopers set upon Jews in an outpouring of Nazi violence. 

Some 70 years on from that infamous pogrom, the world faces a similar financial crisis to the one that precipitated the rise of Hitler and, in chilling echoes of Thirties Europe, support for far-right groups is exploding. Hitler’s birthplace has become the focus for neo-Nazis across the world. 

And so I have come to Austria to investigate how Fascism and extremism are moving, unchecked, into the forefront of its society. 

Last September, Austria’s far right gained massive political influence in an election that saw the FPO along with another far right party – Alliance For The Future (BZO) – gain 29 per cent of the vote, the same share as Austria’s main party, the Social Democrats. The election stirred up terrifying memories of the rise of the Nazi Party in the Thirties. 

And just as the Nazis gained power on the back of extreme nationalism and virulent anti-Semitism, the recent unprecedented gains in Austria were made on a platform of fear about immigration and the perceived threat of Islam. FPO leader Heinz Christian Strache, for example, described women in Islamic dress as ‘female ninjas’.

Emboldened by the new power in parliament, neo-Nazi thugs have desecrated Muslim graves. Recently, in Hitler’s home town of Braunau, a swastika flag was publicly unveiled. 

Austrian far right leader Heinz Christian Strache addresses a rally

Austrian far right leader Heinz Christian Strache addresses a rally

The FPO wants to legalise Nazi symbols, while its firebrand leader has been accused of having links to far right extremists. 

After the FPO’s election victory, Nick Griffin, leader of the British Nationalist Party (BNP), sent a personal message to Strache. 

‘We in Britain are impressed to see that you have been able to combine principled nationalism with electoral success. We are sure that this gives you a good springboard for the European elections and we hope very much that we will be able to join you in a successful nationalist block in Brussels next year.’ 

The message followed on from a secret meeting last May in which a high-ranking FPO politician paid a visit to London for a meeting with Griffin. 

The relationship between the FPO and the BNP becomes more worrying as I learn of the strong links between Austria’s political party and hard-line Nazis. 

Former Waffen SS officer and unrepentant Nazi Herbert Schweiger

Former Waffen SS officer and unrepentant Nazi Herbert Schweiger

Herbert Schweiger makes no attempt to hide his Nazi views. At his home in the Austrian mountains, the former SS officer gazes out of a window to a view of a misty alpine valley. Described to me as the ‘Puppet Master’ of the far right, Schweiger, 85, is a legendary figure for neo-Nazis across the world. 

‘Our time is coming again and soon we will have another leader like Hitler,’ he says. 

Still remarkably sharp-minded, Schweiger was a lieutenant in the infamous Waffen SS Panzer Division Leibstandarte Adolf Hitler, an elite unit originally formed before WWII to act as the Führer’s personal bodyguards. 

This is his first interview for four years and the first he has ever given to a journalist from outside Austria. It happens a few weeks before he is due to appear in court charged with promoting neo-Nazi ideology. 

It will be the fifth time he has stood trial for breaking a law, the Verbotsgesetz, enacted in 1947 to halt the spread of fascist ideology. He has been found guilty twice and acquitted twice. It quickly becomes apparent that little has changed in Schweiger’s mindset since his Third Reich days.

‘The Jew on Wall Street is responsible for the world’s current economic crisis. It is the same now as in 1929 when 90 per cent of money was in the hands of the Jew. Hitler had the right solutions then,’ he says, invoking the language of Goebbels. 

The room is filled with mementos from his past and indicators of his sickening beliefs. His bookshelf is a library of loathing. I spot a book by controversial British Holocaust denier David Irving and one on the ‘myth of Auschwitz’. On a shelf hangs a pennant from the SS Death’s Head unit that ran Hitler’s concentration camps. Such memorabilia is banned in Austria but Schweiger defiantly displays his Nazi possessions. 

If Schweiger was an old Nazi living out his final days in this remote spot, it might be possible to shrug him off as a now harmless man living in his past. But Schweiger has no intention of keeping quiet.

‘My job is to educate the fundamentals of Nazism. I travel regularly in Austria and Germany speaking to young members of our different groups,’ he says.

Schweiger’s lectures are full of hate and prejudice. He refers to Jews as ‘intellectual nomads’ and says poor Africans should be allowed to starve. 

‘The black man only thinks in the present and when his belly is full he does not think of the future,’ he says. ‘They reproduce en masse even when they have no food, so supporting Africans is suicide for the white race.

‘It is not nation against nation now but race against race. It is a question of survival that Europe unites against the rise of Asia. There is an unstoppable war between the white and yellow races. In England and Scotland there is very strong racial potential.

Our time is coming again and soon we will have another leader like Hitler

‘Of course I am a racist, but I am a scientific racist,’ he adds, as if this is a justification. 

Schweiger’s raison d’être is politics. He was a founding member of three political parties in Austria – the VDU, the banned NDP and the FPO. He has given his support to the current leader of the FPO. 

‘Strache is doing the right thing by fighting the foreigner,’ says Schweiger. 

He is now in close contact with the Kameradschaften, underground cells of hardcore neo-Nazis across Austria and Germany who, over the past three years, have started to infiltrate political parties such as the FPO. 

His belief that the bullet and the ballot box go hand in hand goes back to 1961, when he helped to train a terrorist movement fighting for the reunification of Austria and South Tyrol. 

‘I was an explosives expert in the SS so I trained Burschenschaften how to make bombs. We used the hotel my wife and I owned as a training camp,’ he says. The hotel he refers to is 50 yards from his home.

Thirty people in Italy were murdered during the campaign. One of the men convicted for the atrocities, Norbert Burger, later formed the now-banned neo-Nazi NDP party with Schweiger.

Schweiger’s involvement earned him his first spell in custody in 1962 but he was acquitted. 

A gathering of the Burschenschaften, a secretive nationalist group with far-right tendencies

A gathering of the Burschenschaften, a secretive nationalist group with far-right tendencies

At Vienna’s Documentation Centre of Austrian Resistance (DOW), I speak to Heribert Schiedel, who monitors neo-Nazi activity. He tells me that the glue between people like Schweiger and the politicians are the Burschenschaften fraternities. Schiedel draws two circles and explains. 

‘In the circle on the left you have legal parties such as the FPO. In the circle on the right you have illegal groups. Two distinct groupings who pretend they are separate.’ 

He draws another circle linking the two together. ‘This circle links the legal and illegal. This signifies the Burschenschaften. They have long been associated with Fascism and have a history of terrorism. Adolf Eichmann, Rudolf Hess and Heinrich Himmler were Burschenschaften – as are prominent members of the FPO in parliament.’

There are Burschenschaften groups all over Austria and 18 in the capital alone. Their activities range from quaint to disturbing.

At the University of Vienna, members of the Burschenschaften come to pay homage to a statue called the Siegfriedskopf (the Head of Siegfried, a warrior from German mythology). Their ritual takes place every Wednesday. 
The university authorities wanted to remove the statue, but the government insisted it should stay as it is a protected monument. Instead, the piece was relocated to the courtyard. 

Today, the Burschenschaften have been prevented from entering the courtyard and at the main entrance police stand guard as they hand out leaflets. Dressed in traditional uniforms, the Burschenschaften resemble colourful bandsmen and are a far cry from the shaven-headed thugs normally associated with Fascism. 

But the groups have a 200-year-old history steeped in patriotism and loyalty to a German state. In 2005, Olympia, one of the most extreme Burschenschaften fraternities, invited David Irving to Austria.

As other students gather, there is tension in the air. One girl whispers that this group recently attacked students protesting outside the Austrian Parliament against the FPO.

A young student with round glasses and a scar on his left cheek, wearing the purple colours of Olympia, is handing out leaflets. Roland denies being a neo-Nazi but he quickly starts relaying his fiercely nationalist views.

Gottfried Kussel (second from right) among the gathering at the grave of WWII Nazi pilot Walter Nowotny

Gottfried Kussel (second from right) among the gathering at the grave of WWII Nazi pilot Walter Nowotny

‘The anti-fascists are the new fascists,’ he says. ‘We are not allowed to tell the truth about how foreigners are a threat.’ 

The truth, according to Roland, is that Muslims, immigrants and America are destroying his way of life. 

‘We are German-Austrians. We want a community here based on German nationalism,’ he adds. ‘We must fight to save our heritage and culture.’

The Burschenschaften hold regular, secretive meetings in cellar bars around Vienna. Journalists are not usually admitted, but I manage to persuade a group of Burschenschaften students to let me see their traditions. Once inside, I find myself in a bar filled with 200 men sitting at long tables drinking steins of Austrian beer. 

The Burschenschaften are resplendent in the colours of their fraternities. Old and young, they sport sashes in the black, red and gold of the German flag, and as the beer flows in this neo-Gothic building, chatter fills the room and cigarette smoke rises in plumes up to chandeliers hung from a vaulted ceiling. 

‘Prost!’ the man sitting to my right toasts loudly. His name is Christian. He is no neo-Nazi thug, but instead a psychology student. His white peaked cap signifies that he is a member of a Burschenschaften group called Gothia.
Most of the men at this table are Gothia, including the man sitting opposite who ordered the beer. He glares at me again. He has long scars on both sides of his face that run from his cheekbones down to the edges of his mouth, and when he sucks on his cigarette he reminds me of the Joker from Batman. Christian has a dozen wounds from fencing, including five on his left cheek. 

‘It is a badge of honour to duel,’ he says proudly, before explaining that this is an annual event and that one of tonight’s speeches will be on the ‘threat of Islam to Europe’. 

Suddenly, everyone at our table stands amazed as FPO leader Heinz Christian Strache enters. 

He is wearing a royal blue hat – signifying his membership of the Vandalia Burschenschaften – and after shaking hands with each of us he sits at the far end of the table. Shortly afterwards I’m asked to leave. 

Although the Burschenschaften claims to be politically neutral, FPO flyers had been placed in front of each guest and it was clear this event was a political rally in support of the FPO – an event that would culminate with these Austrians, including a leading politician, singing the German national anthem. 

After my encounter with the leader of the FPO among the Burschenschaften, I contact Strache’s press office to question his membership of an organisation linked to far right extremism, and ask why the FPO wishes to revoke the Verbotsgesetz (the law banning Nazi ideology).

In a response by email, Mr Strache replied that the FPO wants to revoke the Verbotsgesetz because it believes in freedom of speech. He denied having any links to neo-Nazi groups and says he is proud to be a member of the Burschenschaften. 

‘The Burschenschaften was founded during the wars against Napoleon Bonaparte in the beginning of the 19th century. These are the historical origins I am proud of,’ he wrote.

Back at Nowotny’s graveside I think of the Puppet Master in his mountain home. How can a former Nazi still hold so much political sway? The Burschenschaften are here, too. 

There are no ‘sieg heils’ and no swastikas for the cameras, but it’s clear that Fascism is back. These are not thugs merely intent on racial violence, who are easily locked up. These are intellectuals and politicians whose move to the forefront of society is far more insidious. 

Through the political influence of the FPO it is entirely possible that the Verbotsgesetz could be revoked – and if that happens swastikas could once again be seen on Austria’s streets. 

The ideas and racial hatred that I have heard over my two weeks in Austria are just as threatening and just as sickening as any I have ever heard. And they are a lot more sinister because they are spoken with the veneer of respectability. 

The open defiance of these men honouring their Nazi ‘war hero’, and the support they are gaining in these troubled economic times, should be setting off alarm bells in Europe and the rest of the world. 

14 comments:

Anonymous said...

Soon enough Marxist Islamofascists and White Supremacists will clash in Europe. And both hate the Jews with passion.

Anonymous said...

Great piece of fodder from a anti-Israeli Pali loving leftist writer

It is incredible how these pro-moslem writers can dig up so much about the far right, could it be a smoke screen to cover their own very active anti-semitism

Reliapundit said...

please, pasto: fascism is not far right; it is part of the left.

benito coinmed the owrd.

his full name:

benito juarez mussolini.

named for a socialist.

raised by a socialist.

started a new form of socialism he dubbed fsscism after the latin word FASCI - a bundle of straw.

whereas a sinlge piece of straw is weak, a bundle of straw is strong.

fascism is all about the primacy of the bundle - THE STATE.

corporatism meant IN ITALIAN a corporation of workers and the state.

so please: don't say that fascism's resurgence is a resurgence of the right.

it is a form of leftism.

just like NAZISM.

also of the left.

kevin said...

I saw this over at drudge. It's as if Europe never outgrew their Monarchist roots. Always enslaving themselves to one form of tyranny or another.

Unknown said...

When you make it illegal to discuss cultural differences and Islam, when everyone who does is called a racist, you are only left with two choices: multiculturalism or racism. This feeds extremists who are very dangerous. We need rational discourse. Culturism, I would hope, can facilitate a popular anti-Islamic immigration movement that is not neo-Nazi. The current forced choice causes frustration and pushed people towards Nazi-ism.

www.culturism.us

Pastorius said...

Reliapundit,
I understand that, and I agree with you. This article is from the Daily Mail. It's not by me.

Pastorius said...

Shiva,
You bring up a great point: Generally, the mainstream media never puts much effort into getting info and drawing connections on the Islamic Jihad.

Pastorius said...

Culturist John,
I have a feeling that a lot of people who are in parties like the BNP, the VB and the FPO, are Culturists themselves.

The problem is, the leadership of these parties is, in my opinion, made up of racists.

Pastorius said...

Kevin,
I absolutely agree. Europe has not outgrown it's monarchist roots.

Recently, the Editrix ( a contributor here at IBA, and therefore, someone with whom we would generally agree) wrote a piece on Obama's gentlemanliness. I got into a pretty long conversation with her about what a gentleman is. I asked her if she did not consider Reagan to have been a gentleman. She said no. He was more like a worker who had become successful.

Basically, I came away from that comments thread believing that the Editrix enjoys having an aristocracy.

In America, we entertain ourselves with a celebrity form of aristocracy, but few of us actually believe these people have any class at all. It's entertainment.

It seems to me the human spirit has a need for an aristocracy. I think it's a Jungian thing. We need archetypes by which to live. It has to do with tradition vs. Free Choice.

In America, we have untethered ourselves from tradition, and I don't know that that is the greatest thing either. Especially when we lose religion as well.

Anonymous said...

MSM modus operandi.

This article clearly wants to associate fascism with the BNP, the VB and the FPO in anticipation of upcoming elections. . . as well as to try to influence public opinion against the efforts of Geert Wilders in anticipation of his trial.


This article was from the same site . . .Daily Mail . . .

Minister beaten after clashing with Muslims on his TV show"

Despite ALL the violence emanating from the left (as well as muslims and their sympathizers) the people reading this paper will read an article like this and question their ability to do anything about it.

HRW

Anonymous said...

Pastorius, there are still some of us here who are Objectivist, which means we are a-theist and our "aristocracy" is a meritocracy. Are you saying we are part of the problem? Because we refuse to be ruled by a religion in which we do not believe or by people with some monarchist-based notion of "aristocracy" vs. "workers"? Are not the Europeans now paying for centuries of believing that if they can't be ruled by priests or aristocrats the only alternative is socialism?

Or am I just being a stupid heathen again?

Pastorius said...

RRA,
I've never called you a stupid heathen, and that's not the attitude I take towards people who don't believe in God. I have enough of the Objectivist in me that I don't much care what you believe in, as long as you don't try to force me to do what I don't want to do.

Where do you get this idea that I have a negative impression of atheists? The only thing I can ever recall having said about atheists that might be controversial is that it is absurd to be an absolutist atheist (evangelical atheist) because one can not prove a negative. So, to be sure that God does not exist, and to attempt to talk others into the same belief is illogical.

But, that is not the same thing as having a negative impression of atheists.

Now, as to your question about whether my statement on untethering ourselves from tradition and religion is a bad thing, I will quote Nietzsche, because I think he makes a lot of sense on this subject:

"Where has God gone?" he cried. "I shall tell you. We have killed him - you and I. We are his murderers. But how have we done this? How were we able to drink up the sea? Who gave us the sponge to wipe away the entire horizon? What did we do when we unchained the earth from its sun? Whither is it moving now? Whither are we moving now? Away from all suns? Are we not perpetually falling? Backward, sideward, forward, in all directions? Is there any up or down left? Are we not straying as through an infinite nothing? Do we not feel the breath of empty space? Has it not become colder? Is it not more and more night coming on all the time? Must not lanterns be lit in the morning? Do we not hear anything yet of the noise of the gravediggers who are burying God? Do we not smell anything yet of God's decomposition? Gods too decompose. God is dead. God remains dead. And we have killed him. How shall we, murderers of all murderers, console ourselves? That which was the holiest and mightiest of all that the world has yet possessed has bled to death under our knives. Who will wipe this blood off us? With what water could we purify ourselves? What festivals of atonement, what sacred games shall we need to invent? Is not the greatness of this deed too great for us? Must we not ourselves become gods simply to be worthy of it? There has never been a greater deed; and whosoever shall be born after us - for the sake of this deed he shall be part of a higher history than all history hitherto."

Here the madman fell silent and again regarded his listeners; and they too were silent and stared at him in astonishment. At last he threw his lantern to the ground, and it broke and went out. "I have come too early," he said then; "my time has not come yet. The tremendous event is still on its way, still travelling - it has not yet reached the ears of men. Lightning and thunder require time, the light of the stars requires time, deeds require time even after they are done, before they can be seen and heard. This deed is still more distant from them than the distant stars - and yet they have done it themselves."

It has been further related that on that same day the madman entered divers churches and there sang a requiem. Led out and quietened, he is said to have retorted each time: "what are these churches now if they are not the tombs and sepulchres of God?"

Anonymous said...

wiki snip

Nowotny joined the Luftwaffe in 1939 and completed his fighter pilot training in 1941, after which he was posted to Jagdgeschwader 54 "Grünherz" (JG 54) on the Eastern Front. Nowotny was the first pilot to achieve 250 victories — 194 in 1943 alone — earning him the coveted Ritterkreuz mit Eichenlaub, Schwertern und Brillianten (Knight's Cross of the Iron Cross with Oak Leaves, Swords and Diamonds) on 19 October 1943. He was then ordered to cease operational flying.
Reinstated to front-line service in September 1944, Nowotny was tasked with testing and establishing tactics for the Messerschmitt Me 262 jet fighter. He would be credited with three victories in this type before being killed in a crash following combat with United States Army Air Forces (USAAF) fighters on 8 November 1944. After his death, the first operational jet fighter wing, Jagdgeschwader 7 "Nowotny", was named in his honor.[2]

I just got a freaky wrong number call from none other than actress Shirley MacLaine! After I hung up the phone I had this odd feeling I was supposed to post the above snip.

After all, this guy could really fly!

I can imagine him responding to Aragorn's key question (what say you?) with something along the lines of:

"Ok deal, dude. And let's just get started right away."

"Now did you happen to notice the little orientation tip we send over from our side, and across the sands of time, cleverly coded into my very own name, of all things, regarding that nasty skyscraper incident in Manhattan and your seemingly confused response to it?"

Anonymous said...

HRW
I see this as a disguised attack on the BNP, A subtle change of tactic since the whipping they got recently when they published M Philips BNP are Odious article.

I find it positive that we are reminded of the horrors the nazi,s, yet I find it disgusting and insulting that news papers such as the Daily mail, and Journalists such as Melanie Philips think so low of the British integrity, and in this article of the German/Austian integrity.

What we are seeing is the NuLab/Lib/con supporting media stoking up fears about rising fascism/nazim and the parties who are tackling the real threat of islam, while at the same time are supporting the islamists.

The article is just another pathetic smear, which no doubt will please the baboons at Charlie the Chimp,s site.

The article centers around a small group of men commemorating a fighter pilot who achieved fame by shooting down more than 250 other war pilots, not like other pilots, which in other articles to be found in the Daily Mail, planned and carpet bombed cities, and the Mail calls for them to be remembered as hero,s.

Here are the words of one such hero, Bomber Harris
"The aim of the Combined Bomber Offensive...should be unambiguously stated as the destruction of German cities, the killing of German workers, and the disruption of civilized life throughout Germany.
It should be emphasized that the destruction of houses, public utilities, transport and lives, the creation of a refugee problem on an unprecedented scale, and the breakdown of morale both at home and at the battle fronts by fear of extended and intensified bombing, are accepted and intended aims of our bombing policy. They are not by-products of attempts to hit factories."

The daily Mail should remember that not all Brits are morons,the brits will not allow the nazi,s to raise their ugly head.