Paul
Goble
Staunton, August 11 – Moscow’s law
against homosexual propaganda has led ever more people in Russia and the West
to talk about the increasing threat of national socialism and
fascism in that country. Three “signs” reported this past week underscore just how
dangerous the situation in that country is becoming.
First, on Friday, posters appeared in
St.Petersburg featuring a picture of Heinrich Himmler, one of Hitler’s closest
associates, and the Nazi’s words that “seven to eight percent of the men in
Germany are homosexuals. If that continues, our nation is at risk of
self-destruction. Those who practice homosexuality deprive Germany of children
which they should supply it” (rosbalt.ru/piter/2013/08/09/1162525.html).
Under the Nazi leader’s statement,
the producers of these posters ask rhetorically whether that observation
reminds those reading it of the situation in Russia now.
According to the Russian news
agency, it is not yet clear who is behind these posters, those who oppose the
Russian law against “homosexual propaganda” and who wish to draw a parallel
between Russia today and Hitler’s Reich or those who support a campaign against
Russia’s embattled LGBT community.
Second,
yesterday, the Diletant.ru portal reported that the Algoritm publishing house
has issued in Russian translation “the first and only novel” of Nazi propaganda
chief Joseph Goebbels. That book, entitled “Michael” and published in 1929,
takes the form of a diary of a disgruntled German veteran of World War I (diletant.ru/news/19464147/).
According to the Russian publisher,
which is releasing the Nazi novel in its “Prose of the Great” series, the novel
shows “the influence of Goether, Nietsche, Dostoyevsky and the Gospels. Certain
disputed moments in the novel today are undoubtedly anachronistic but one
should remember that in the era when the novel was created, it had not a
marginal but a broad distribution in all strata of society …we thus do not have
the right to condemn the author for this or that views.”
Diletant.ru notes that the novel was
published in English in New York in 1987, but the portal says nothing about the
potentially dangerous impact of such a work in Russia now or about the studied
neutrality of the Russian publisher of the Nazi propaganda minister’s
fictionalized justification for the rise of national socialism in Weimar Germany.
And third, also last
week, the Fizrazvitiye.ru site calls attention to the fact that despite the Soviet
band on any use of any fascist symbols, today, the Russian examining magistrate
system now features on its seal the “fasci” or bound sticks that became the
source of the name of Mussolini’s fascists (fizrazvitie.ru/2011/08/fashizm-sudebnye-pristavy.html).
The
appearance of the fasci on the Russian magistrate seal is certainly less
disturbing than the other two items. On the one hand, the seal was adopted not
this year but in 2004. And on the other, many countries use this Roman symbol
in a variety of ways without any reference to the fact that Mussolini did as
well.
But
like the other two developments reported above, this one too shows how
sensitive and divisive anything related to national socialism have become in
Russia, a development that reflects the eagerness of some in Moscow to exploit
such ethnically explosive and morally repugnant ideas and the unwillingness of others
to condemn such things in a systematic way.
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