SS songs and antisemitism: the week Golden Dawn turned
openly Nazi
Supporters of the
far-right party gave Hitler salutes and sang the Horst Wessel song outside
parliament last week. Helena Smith reports from Athens on how Golden Dawn has taken on a
sinister new tone
Helena
Smith
The
Observer, Saturday 7 June 2014 / http://www.theguardian.com/world/2014/jun/07/greece-golden-dawn-fascism-threat-to-democracy
It has been
a bad week for democracy in Athens .
All around this great Greek city, the politics of hate now lurk. On Friday I
got a taste of it in the tiny Italian-style cafe I frequent off Syntagma Square .
It arrived
in the form of two middle-aged men, both supporters of the neo-fascist Golden
Dawn – and, by their own account, the holders of university degrees,
well-travelled and well-informed. Over espressos, they began to engage in an
animated discussion about all that is wrong with Greece .
The first,
a self-described businessman decked out in designer suit, brogues and silk tie,
blamed the country's economic collapse on malfeasance, corruption and
uncontrolled immigration. "The only way to teach our filthy politicians is
to bring in Golden Dawn," he trilled, his eyes locked in a fierce glare.
"These gentlemen are patriots, proud Greek nationalists, and they know how
to deal with the scum, the foreigners who never pay taxes, who steal our jobs,
who have taken over our streets."
Dismissing
charges that Golden Dawn is a criminal gang masquerading as a political group,
the second – a self-described government employee – said the far right was the
best response yet to the great Jewish conspiracy of an interconnected banking
system that has come with globalisation. "Let's not forget all the faggots
and the Jews, the wankers who control the banks, the foreigners who are behind
them, who came in and fucked Greece ,"
he insisted. "The criminals who have governed us, who have robbed us of
our future, of our dreams, need a big thwack."
Last
Wednesday Greece
got that jolt when Nikos Michaloliakos, Golden Dawn's imprisoned leader – who
stands accused of murder and assault – made his first public appearance in
almost nine months. The politics of hate took over Athens as the 58-year-old was hauled before
parliament, ahead of a vote to lift his immunity from prosecution, on further
charges of illegal weapons possession.
Emboldened
by its recent success in European and local elections – in which the party
emerged as the country's third biggest political force, thanks to a softening
of image that has attracted ever-growing numbers of the middle class – the
extremists drove home the message that they were not only on the rebound but
here to stay. And as they ran roughshod through the house of democracy, hurling
abuse at other MPs in an unprecedented display of violence and vulgarity, there
was no mistaking what Golden Dawn is: a party of neo-Nazi creed determined to
overturn the democratic order. For, far from being contrite, the handcuffed
Michaloliakos was in unusually aggressive mood, giving Nazi salutes, telling
the house speaker to "shut up", and instructing guards to take their
hands off him.
Outside,
black-shirted Golden Dawn supporters, lined up in military formation in Syntagma Square ,
gave a hearty rendition of the Nazi Horst Wessel song – albeit with Greek
lyrics. All this was a far cry from the party's recent efforts to distance
itself from the thuggery and racist rhetoric from which it was born.
"That
day democracy felt a bit weak," said Pavlos Tzimas, a political
commentator who has watched the party's rise from its fringe group beginnings
in the early 1980s. He has watched it grow from marginal group to mainstream
party over the past three decades. "After all the revelations [about
criminal activity], after all the prosecutions against its MPs, it still has
the nerve to act in such a way, in scenes of hate that, frankly, I cannot
recall ever being seen inside the parliament," he sighed. "Golden
Dawn is not a passing phase, it will not disappear with the end of the crisis,
it feels untouchable, it fears nothing, and what we saw this week is its real
face. It is not like other extremist parties in Europe .
It is a true neo-Nazi force whose aim is to use democracy to destroy
democracy."
The
crackdown against Golden Dawn – triggered by the killing of an anti-fascist
rapper at the hands of a self-confessed party cadre last September – was meant
not only to bring offenders to justice but reverse the group's seemingly
unstoppable ascent. At first the round-up of party leaders seemed to dent the
ultranationalists' popularity. For the first time since June 2012, when it was catapulted
into parliament with 6.9% of the vote and 18 deputies, its ratings dipped. But
in an alarming display of rehabilitation, the neo-fascists won 9.4% of the vote
in the European elections on 25 May and, in the race for the Athens mayoralty on 18 May, were backed by
16.1% of the electorate even though its candidate, Ilias Kasidiaris, sports a
swastika tattoo and assaulted two leftwing female politicians during a live TV
show. In both cases the results were the most shocking endorsement yet of the anti-liberal
party.
What
worries Tzimas most is not just the coarsening of public debate but the
"banalisation of violence" that is now stalking Greece .
"We seem to be getting used to it, and that frightens me," he said.
In an
explosive political climate, where popular rage is at boiling point nearly five
years into the country's worst crisis in living memory, the politics of hate so
embodied by Golden Dawn is becoming increasingly pervasive. "Who cares if
six million Jews were exterminated?" asked the businessman back at the
cafe, in a shocking endorsement of that reality. "I don't care if they
were turned into soap. What I care about is the salary I have lost, the
never-ending taxes I am forced to pay, the criminals who rule this country, the
anger I carry inside."
In a global
survey released by the Anti-Defamation League last month, Greece at 69% was found to be the most
antisemitic country in Europe .
"This
is the deeper explanation for the growth of Golden Dawn," says Dimitris
Psarras, author of The Black Bible of Golden Dawn, which chronicles the party's
meteoric rise. "Greece
has deep cultural differences with the rest of Europe .
After the second world war, it did not undergo real democratisation because we
had civil war [1946-49]. And after that the deep state was never really purged
[of extreme rightwing elements]. Even when it was a small group, Golden Dawn
had ties to the Greek state."
The party's
fielding of two retired generals on its European election ticket was testimony
to those ties. With three Golden Dawn MEPs now about to take seats in Brussels , the burning
question for many is how to confront the extremists. Following the poll, even France 's Front
National leader, Marine Le Pen, ruled out relations with them.
The
independent MP and prominent novelist Petros Tatsopoulos, himself the focus of
much of the fascists' fury in parliament last week, thinks there is no other
way but to ban Golden Dawn. "It was a huge, historic mistake on the part
of our parliament not to de-legitimise Golden Dawn," said Tatsopoulos,
until recently an MP with the radical left. "It should have been banned,
not for its Nazi ideology but because it is a paramilitary force … who, if it
could, would press ahead with a coup d'état," he told the Observer.
"We know how these people work. The fascist poison that Greece is
experiencing is not just political, it is poisoning every aspect of social
life, the way people think, the way they behave. I honestly believe that the
500,000 Greeks who voted for Golden Dawn were very conscious of what they were
doing."
Was
democracy in its own birthplace now under threat? "Golden Dawn is on
stand-by," he averred. "I don't know how long it will take, but if
this voluntary blindness continues, if the crisis goes on, it will be a real
threat to democracy in the near future."
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