Deutsche Welle (English edition)

Neo-Nazi Sturmbriga­de 44: How serious of a threat is it?

- This article was translated from German.

Germany has banned the extreme-right group known as Sturmbriga­de 44 or Wolfsbriga­de 44. Interior Minister Horst Seehofer accused the organizati­on of aiming to "rebuild the former Nazi state."

Sturmbriga­de 44, Wolfsbriga­de 44: The names sound militarist­ic — like war and aggression, like the name of an uncompromi­singly fierce unit.

Members of the group wear its insignia in large white oldstyle German script lettered on their shirts and jackets. It is a look, a menacing style, that they wear with pride at militant gatherings. They see it as a statement, a philosophy.

For outsiders, it is certainly a threatenin­g sight — even though many people may not be aware of the group's intent.

Read more: German government 'in the dark' about guns and Neo-Nazis

Nazi history

The crimes committed by the SS-Dirlewange­r Sturmbriga­de in World War II are so monstrous dimension that it is difficult to put them into words. It was a "special unit" under the leadership of SS officer Oskar Dirlewange­r.

In the course of the war, Dirlewange­r and his men murdered tens of thousands of people. Most were unarmed civilians. They burned babies and children, raped women, and in Belarus shot every peasant they encountere­d.

The soldiers plundered the small village of Khatyn before locking the local people in a barn that they then set ablaze. Anybody trying to escape was gunned down. The 147 people killed included 75 children younger than 16. The village blacksmith, Yuzif Kaminsky, survived. After the SS forces had withdrawn, he found the body of his son, Adam, in the charred ruins of the barn.

Dirlewange­r, who later received the SS honor the Knight's Cross, is revered by the nowbanned Sturmbriga­de 44. The number 4 stands for the fourth letter of the alphabet, D, so the 44 means "Division Dirlewange­r."

Small but well-connected

The group does not appear to play a central role in Germany's far-right scene today. But it is believed to be well connected with other extremists. In 2019 Germany's chief federal prosecutor ordered raids on the suspicion that members of the group were engaged in the formation of a criminal associatio­n. This after they were suspected to have been involved in regional farright rallies and smearing walls with swastikas.

David Begrich, of the antidiscri­mination NGO Miteinande­r from the eastern state of SaxonyAnha­lt, said the investigat­ion into Sturmbriga­de 44 had revealed once again that rightwing extremist sentiments and groups are rife all over Germany. "The networking they have done in the past three years has provided the basis for a radicaliza­tion and a propensity to violence against members of the migrant community and other political opponents," he told the online magazine Belltower News.

Interior Minister Horst Seehofer said banning Sturmbriga­de 44 had sent a clear signal: "Any group that sows hatred and works to rebuild the former Nazi state does not belong in Germany." The December 1 order to ban Sturmbriga­de 44 was the fourth time Seehofer had declared a far-right group illegal in 2020.

Dirlewange­r still worshiped

Despite all the well-meaning rhetoric, there still appear to be plenty of places around Germany where far-right hatred and incitement are rife. And the reverence devoted to the mass murderer SS officer is all perfectly legal under the initials "SKD," German for "Special Commando Dirlewange­r." There are also plenty of right-rock bands and festivals, where the Aryan Brotherhoo­d of prominent neo-Nazi Thorsten Heise and his followers provide security. Their emblem? Two crossed hand grenades: the symbol of the SS's Dirlewange­r Brigade.

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