Expanding the coverage of the Neonazi/far/radical right spectrum groups, myself and colleagues made a trip to Bad Reichenhall, a village on the German-Austrian border near Salzburg.
Annually, they hold a memorial for the Charlemagne division of the Waffen-SS, which consisted of French collaborators who fought for Germany. They were executed at the conclusion of the war.
Bad Reichenhall is known to consumers of table salt, as well as being a semi-major tourist destination. However, tourists may not be able to see what is behind the businesses and beautiful landscapes of the village- extreme conservative and far right-wing values to the point that these Waffen-SS agents have a permanent memorial in the village's cemetery and also has a relatively eyebrow-raising memorial stone at the Kretabruecke (Crete Bridge) in remembrance of the Gebirgsjaeger (mountain-specialist troops) killed while in service for the Nazis.
Many of the faces coincide with those present at Bagida marches and die Rechte demonstrations in Munich and elsewhere. These facts make the complete lack of coverage by the media rather conspicuous. However, as previously noted, the existence of a far/extreme/radical right in central Europe are dissonant topics, which people prefer to ignore, or lie about and claim it doesn't exist. These factors lended themselves to the breakout of Pegida, which was there all along, but, after a point, Dresdners were no longer able to lie and keep their racist sentiments a secret.
Peter M., once again, began making a spectacle of himself and was loudly chastized by others there for his misbehavior.
The speeches ranged from revisionism regarding the end of WWII and Germany's role and surrender, then taking a radical deviation to Volkstheory by Philipp Hasselbach. At the end, they sang "Wenn alle untreu werden", a song associated with the SS and, while not forbidden under German law, is highly controversial. Anti-Jewish rhetoric was also present in the speeches, including the mention of "hooknoses".
Coverage by Endstation Rechts/Bayern here
Related*:
Waffen-SS Division Charlemagne Memorial here
National Socialism Documentation Center Protest here
Alternative for Germany rally here
Montags (the last Bagida rally before an extended pause) here
Further Escalation here Conflict in the Old Botanical Garden (neonazi attack) here
Die Rechte II (same neonazi group as the Keup Street entry) here
Provocation here Keup Street Is Everywhere Keupstraße ist überall (neonazi rally) here
More Bagida here
Bagida VII here
Bagida VI here
Bagida V here
Point/Counterpoint (separately posted picture from this rally) here
Pegida Bagida (rally 4) here
Pegida Muegida here
NoPegida (record-breaking counter demonstration in Munich) here
Muenchen ist Bunt here
Kein Mensch (Dresden) Here
Muenster Keinen Meter here
July 26th, Munich here
*omitted was demonstration #3
Memorial to the Gebirgsjaeger, who fought for Nazi-Germany |
A creepy, black and red sign, just before entering the demo area in the hills. The black/red color scheme is, while likely unintentional, highly conspicuous. |
Dan Eising in the middle |
Peter Meidl (die Rechte Rosenheim) misbehaving and making a spectacle of himself. He is under investigation for statements regarding the Holocaust. |
VH on the right, also attends Bagida marches. |
Memorial for the fallen Waffen-SS. |
Back row, right of the pole, a frequent-attendee of Bagida marches, as well as die Rechte neonazi demos. |
Blonde in the center has been spotted at die Rechte demos. |
To the right, wearing glasses- frequent attendee of die Rechte rallies. |
Philipp Hasselbach |
VG, girlfriend of Hasselbach |
Jan R. behind Hasselbach, often attends die Rechte demos, has been spotted often with Peter M. and while wearing forbidden Blood and Honor clothing. |
Three aborted attempts at playing the trumpet. He embarrassingly walked away, head down. |
Cemetery:
Wreath and memorial placed to the left. A death threat was made on our way in. |
Permanent tablets memorializing the dead Waffen-SS agents |
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