How to Make Fun of Nazis
By MOISES VELASQUEZ-MANOFF
August 17, 2017
For decades, Wunsiedel, a German town near the Czech
border, has struggled with a parade of unwanted visitors. It is the birthplace
of one of Adolf Hitler’s deputies, a man named Rudolf Hess. And every year, to
residents’ chagrin, neo-Nazis marched to his grave site there. The town had
staged counterdemonstrations to dissuade these pilgrims. In 2011 it had exhumed
Hess’s body and even removed his grave stone. But undeterred, the neo-Nazis
returned. So in 2014, the town tried a different tactic: humorous subversion.
The campaign, called Rechts Gegen Rechts — the Right
Against the Right — turned the march into Germany’s “most involuntary
walkathon.” For every meter the neo-Nazis marched, local residents and
businesses pledged to donate 10 euros (then equivalent to about $12.50) to a
program that helps people leave right-wing extremist groups, called EXIT
Deutschland.
They turned the march into a mock sporting event. Someone
stenciled onto the street “start,” a halfway mark and a finish line, as if it
were a race. Colorful signs with silly slogans festooned the route. “If only
the Führer knew!” read one. “Mein Mampf!” (my munch) read another that hung
over a table of bananas. A sign at the end of the route thanked the marchers
for their contribution to the anti-Nazi cause — €10,000 (close to $12,000). And
someone showered the marchers with rainbow confetti at the finish line.
The approach has spread to several other German towns and
one in Sweden (where it was billed as Nazis Against Nazis).
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