(JTA) — Several hundred ultranationalists, including seven veterans of Nazi Germany’s Waffen SS, marched through Riga on the independence day of the Baltic nation of Latvia.
The march Wednesday, a controversial affair that is Europe’s only annual event by Waffen SS veterans, drew a handful of counterprotesters from Latvia’s Jewish community and about 40 anti-fascist activists, including 20 Germans, Efraim Zuroff, the Israel director of the Simon Wiesenthal Center, told JTA by phone from Riga.
Latvian authorities detained five Germans who crossed over to Latvia from Lithuania and prevented another one from boarding a plane bound for Latvia, Zuroff said. Several far-right Latvian lawmakers also participated in the march, he said.
Noting an absence of pressure by leading European Union countries to curb the Latvian Nazi marches,” Zuroff said they were “a stain on the EU record of confronting the glorification of perpetrators of the Holocaust.”
In the Baltic nations, collaborators who fought alongside the Nazis and participated in the annihilation of local Jewish communities are seen by many as heroes because they fought against the Soviet Union, which ruled the nations until the early 1990s. Lithuania officially considers the Soviet Union’s domination of its territory as a form of genocide along with the Holocaust – a perception that is commonplace elsewhere in the Baltic countries as well.
Russia under Vladimir Putin, Zuroff said, uses the Baltic nations’ ultranationalist marches in propaganda that he said is meant to falsely depict the populations of those countries as fascist.
“They are not, but they are also derelict in confronting the canard that fighting alongside Nazis was patriotic, and that Soviet domination was in any way comparable to the Holocaust,” Zuroff said.
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