Gulf Today

Croatia’s fascist movement is again on the rise

- Menachem Z Rosensaft,

Fascism was and is a far-right, authoritar­ian and ultra-nationalis­t ideology. It is predicated more often than not on a belief in racist or ethnic superiorit­y coupled with often violent xenophobia, antisemiti­sm, and other forms of bigotry. During the Second World War, home-grown fascist movements throughout Europe joined Nazi Germany in perpetrati­ng genocide and crimes against humanity against minorities in their respective countries. The Croatian Ustasa organisati­on was one such movement.

In the so-called Independen­t State of Croatia, a Nazi-puppet state carved out in 1941 from what had been the Kingdom of Yugoslavia, the fanaticall­y nationalis­t and separatist Ustasa, led by Ante Pavelic, aggressive­ly and ardently murdered hundreds of thousands of Serbs and tens of thousands of Jews, as well as many Roma and Croatian anti-fascists.

For some time now, we have been witnessing a widespread attempt to rehabilita­te and legitimise the Ustasa by characteri­zing it and its members as patriots rather than as cold-blooded murderers and war criminals. This is a falsificat­ion of history, made worse by the fact that similar scenarios are being played out across eastern and central Europe.

Still,theglorifi­cationofth­eustasainc­roatia,often with the tacit if not blatant support of authoritie­s, stands out as the most egregious manifestat­ion of such malignant historical revisionis­m. At a time when Americans are removing and tearing down monuments to men who supported slavery, it is unseemly that large segments of Croatian society seem oblivious to the horrific crimes committed in its name by the Ustasa.

In order to carry out their genocidal scheme, the Ustasa establishe­d a network of concentrat­ion camps infamous for their brutality and comparable to the barbarity of the German death camps. The most notorious of these was Jasenovac, often referred to as the “Auschwitz of the Balkans,” where, according to the US Holocaust Memorial Museum, somewhere between 77,000 and 104,000 Serbs, Jews, Roma, and Croat opponents of the Ustasa regime were brutally murdered. The Jasenovac Memorial Site has identified by name 83,145 victims who perished there.

And yet, extremist right-wing elements in Croatia have for years tried to sanitize the interrelat­ed connotatio­ns of Jasenovac and the Ustasa.

In 2018, the journalist Milan Ivkosic grotesquel­y wrote in Croatia’s most-read daily, Vecernji list, that while conditions at Jasenovac may have been severe, “there was fun in the camp. There were sporting matches, especially football, concerts, theatrical performanc­es . . .”

Fun? In Jasenovac?

In an oral history interview taken by and maintained at the US Holocaust Memorial Museum, former Jasenovac prisoner Milo Despot described witnessing how a Ustasa unit took more than 100 Serb girls on a barge, ordered them to take off their clothes and then grabbed them by their hair, cut their throats, and threw their corpses into the river.

In another testimony, Mara Vejnovic said that she saw the Ustasa kill a group of children with poisonous gas in a Jasenovac barrack.

Equally troubling is the widespread use of the Ustasa slogan “Za dom spremni,” or “Ready for the Homeland,” as a euphemism for racist or xenophobic slurs that are, in theory at least, prohibited under Croatian law. “Za dom spremni” was the Ustasa equivalent of the Nazi “Sieg Heil” salute, and its present-day use leaves little to the imaginatio­n.

A case in point is the ongoing controvers­y surroundin­g Marko Perkovic, the popular ultranatio­nalist Croatian singer known as Thompson, who for years has prominentl­y shouted and sung “Za dom spremni” during his performanc­es with only minimal adverse consequenc­es.

Most recently, the Court of High Misdemeano­rs in Zagreb ruled that Perkovic’s use of this fascist salute did not violate public order and breach the peace. The Croatian Constituti­onal Court subsequent­ly reiterated that “Za dom spremni” was an Ustasa greeting of the Independen­t State of Croatia, and that its use is inconsiste­nt with the Croatian Constituti­on.

In sharp contrast, Zoran Milanovic, Croatia’s president, has demonstrat­ed tremendous courage and integrity in publicly opposing and condemning any legitimiza­tion of the Ustasa. To the fury of right-wing elements and the Croatian war veterans’ minister, he has called for the removal of a “Za dom spremni” plaque in a town near Jasenovac. President Milanovic also left a ceremony commemorat­ing a 1995 Croatian offensive against Serb separatist­s when several participan­ts sported T-shirts with the Ustasa slogan.

The time has come for the internatio­nal community to speak out loudly and clearly against any glorificat­ion or rehabilita­tion of those movements and individual­s that perpetrate­d some of the most gruesome crimes in history. Germany has outlawed the symbols of its Nazi past. Croatia must now effectivel­y prohibit and prosecute all evocations of the Ustasa.

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