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- <text id=94TT0739>
- <link 94TO0164>
- <title>
- Jun. 06, 1994: D-Day:Fascism Lives
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
- Jun. 06, 1994 The Man Who Beat Hitler
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- COVER/D-DAY, Page 50
- Fascism Lives
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p> 50 years later, the legacy of Hitler and Mussolini still bedevils
- Europe
- </p>
- <p>By James O. Jackson/Bonn--With reporting by Michael Brunton/London, Bruce Crumley/Paris,
- John Moody/Rome and Nomi Morris/Berlin
- </p>
- <p> Throughout Europe, the past is staging a comeback, and its presence
- is not comforting. Last week in Rome, its shadows intruded again.
- A band of what Italians call "Nazi-skins" invaded Casa del popolo,
- a social center for immigrants. Shouting "Bastards, we're going
- to kill you," they threatened to throw Molotov cocktails into
- the building on the Via di Valle Aurelia. A 17-year-old immigrant
- suffered serious head injuries after being bludgeoned with an
- iron bar.
- </p>
- <p> Two weeks earlier, a gang of 200 Nazi-skins marched through
- the northern Italian city of Vicenza shouting racist slogans
- and waving banners with swastika-like emblems. Mainstream political
- leaders expressed outrage, but not Teodoro Buontempo, 48, a
- self-proclaimed fascist elected to Parliament in March on the
- ticket of the National Alliance, the successor to the party
- founded by followers of Benito Mussolini. In an interview with
- the Turin daily La Stampa, Buontempo said, "I would send them
- into the midst of society" to proclaim their values. And they
- have. Speaking on the Italian television network RAI-1, Maurizio
- Boccacci, leader of the Vicenza marchers, said, "We follow a
- policy that we hope will regain lost values in our community.
- Fascism is the family, respect for older people and for the
- fatherland."
- </p>
- <p> In this year of Normandy's remembrance, the extreme right--always lurking in the wings of European politics--is inching
- toward the spotlight. Parties of the far right collected upwards
- of 10% of the vote in some elections in France, Italy and Germany.
- Five members of the far right National Alliance hold seats in
- the new Italian government. Skinheads decked with swastikas
- continue to terrorize foreigners in Germany, Italy, Britain
- and Spain. While the number of neo-Nazis and neofascists in
- Western Europe remains minuscule, ugly pictures of straight-arm
- salutes, street hooligans and racial hatred are haunting reminders
- that the old ideologies are not dead.
- </p>
- <p> The example of Italy is the one that troubles Europeans most.
- In the midst of a soul-destroying political crisis, Italian
- voters reached not just to the right but to the spiritual descendants
- of Mussolini to rescue their nation. These new politicians reject
- any direct fascist connection. Today's National Alliance says
- it is not interested in the authoritarian leadership and bombastic
- nationalism of the old Fascists but in tougher jail sentences,
- job creation and limits on immigration.
- </p>
- <p> The most polished of the new breed is Gianfranco Fini, 42, who
- deftly transformed the once frankly neofascist Italian Social
- Movement, founded in 1946, and unabashed guardian of Mussolini's
- legacy into the right-wing National Alliance. The party, which
- won 13.5% of the vote in parliamentary elections in March, shares
- power in the right-of-center coalition government of millionaire-businessman
- Silvio Berlusconi. A politician of intentionally moderate language,
- Fini has labored to rid his party of its World War II ties--but not always with success. Last April La Stampa roused a furor
- when it quoted him as calling Mussolini the "greatest statesman
- of the century." He complained that the interviewer put words
- in his mouth but still considers joining forces with Hitler
- to have been Mussolini's main mistake. That, he says, "ruined
- fascism."
- </p>
- <p> Fini says the word fascism is misapplied to his party. "If we
- were in the U.S., we'd be called Republicans," he declares.
- "In France we'd be Gaullists." He believes the Italians who
- support him are voting issues--jobs, health care, crime--not ideology. "There isn't one Italian in a hundred who would
- ask me about fascism, racial laws and Nazis," he says. The neofascist
- label, he insists, was unfairly tagged to his party by the press
- and his political opponents.
- </p>
- <p> Fini joined politicians in condemning skinhead violence. He
- said the marchers in Vicenza should be "put in coal mines so
- they can break rocks with their heads." When told that his National
- Alliance colleague Buontempo thought highly of the demonstrators,
- Fini simply said, "Buontempo is mistaken."
- </p>
- <p> If such controversies were happening only in Rome, they might
- be dismissed as stray spikes on an otherwise healthy European
- heartline. But other nations are experiencing their own unhealthy
- twitches. France has its National Front, led by the anti-immigration
- populist Jean-Marie Le Pen. He has led the party to a solid
- 10% vote in a series of elections dating back to 1988, despite
- a penchant for crude crematorium quips, a reportedly secret
- admiration for Hitler and a not-so-secret racism. The extreme-right
- neofascist British National Party, which advocates anti-immigration
- policies, last year startled the political establishment by
- winning a seat in the local government of a poor London district.
- In May's municipal elections, they lost it again but, encouraged,
- the B.N.P. together with a handful of other small rightist movements
- fielded 68 candidates, winning up to 7% of the vote--but no
- seats--in some districts.
- </p>
- <p> Britain's soccer terraces are fertile soil for the neofascist
- recruiters. In Spain, ultrarightist youths have combined a fondness
- for Nazi paraphernalia and street violence with a rabid attachment
- to their home teams, venting their anger on football-field rivals.
- In Madrid, local matchups resemble a military exercise, as armed
- police patrol the grounds to separate hooligan bands. Recently,
- three members of one Barcelona fan club, who frequently boasted
- of neofascist opinions, were sentenced to 15-year prison terms
- for killing a young supporter of a rival club.
- </p>
- <p> Nowhere are neo-Nazi outbursts more unsettling than in Germany.
- In one week in May, German authorities recorded the beating
- of a Zairian asylum seeker in Halle, the torching of a Turkish
- kindergarten near Bonn, the vandalizing of a Jewish cemetery
- near Wurzburg, five arson fires at a refugee shelter in Hauzenberg
- and the arrests of 26 neo-Nazis for chanting "Sieg Heil!" during
- a party in a Berlin suburb. Such occurrences have become so
- commonplace they rarely make the front pages and are simply
- considered a routine part of the German political landscape.
- </p>
- <p> As elsewhere in Europe, the skinheads in Germany have an impact
- on fringe politics. While far-right parties, such as the Republikaners,
- eschew violence and discourage stiff-arm salutes, they profit
- politically from the undercurrent of anti-immigrant and nationalist
- sentiment stirred up by the neo-Nazis. The Republikaners have
- scored as high as 15% in local elections, and charismatic party
- leader Franz Schonhuber, who served in Hitler's SS, is a member
- of the European Parliament.
- </p>
- <p> In fact, representatives of neofascist or far-right parties
- currently holding as many as 20 seats have scored their most
- surprising successes in elections for the European Parliament--even though they abhor the concept of a European Union.
- </p>
- <p> But viewing current events through the prism of the Nazi and
- fascist past can be distorting. With the exception of Italy,
- neofascists wield no real power in any national parliament,
- and the Italian case is too much of a political quirk to be
- considered a harbinger of Europe's future. "The situation today
- is not at all the same as it was in 1933," says Karsten Voigt,
- a spokesman for Germany's opposition Social Democrats. "The
- problem in 1933 was not that there were too many Nazis but that
- there were too few democrats. Today we have enough democrats."
- So do France, Britain, Spain and Italy. That, ultimately, is
- the gift the soldiers brought to Europe on D-day.
- </p>
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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