"Prohibiting rally won’t solve neo-Nazi problem”

Sociologist Mirko Đorđević says that <a href="http://www.b92.net/eng/news/politics-article.php?yyyy=2007&mm=09&dd=26&nav_category=93&nav_id=44069" class="text-link" target= "_blank">prohibiting the neo-Nazi rally planned for October 7</a>, was not the solution.

Izvor: Beta

Thursday, 27.09.2007.

13:01

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Sociologist Mirko Djordjevic says that prohibiting the neo-Nazi rally planned for October 7, was not the solution. “It is good that the rally has been banned, but we see that it was a forced decision, as a result of public pressure, and especially international pressure." "Prohibiting rally won’t solve neo-Nazi problem” "The problem won’t go away just because of this ban,” Djordjevic said, adding that aggressive, nationalist ideologies had cemented themselves into many spheres of public life over the last 15 years. “Such ideologies encourage the appearance of neo-Nazi and clero-fascist organizations,” Djordjevic said, adding that Nacionalni Stroj was not the only neo-Nazi organization in Serbia. Djordjevic said that in a democratic society, one must make public the real truth behind people like Adolf Hitler and Dimitrij Ljotic (a Serb collaborator of the Germans during World War II). “No-one ever remembers to say that Hitler was a rude, self-taught and poor tradesman, a house painter by profession, and that he was uneducated. When we talk about Hitler and Ljotic, we are talking about scum whose be-all and end-all was violence,” Djordjevic said. He said that it was a horrible fact that in several cities there were boulevards and streets named after people such as Ljotic and Milan Nedic, who led a Nazi-backed puppet government in German-occupied Serbia during the war. “That ideology is embedded and sprouts from historical revisionism. People must wake up and keep resisting this ideology. If not, Nazis and their like will continue to prosper,” Djordjevic concluded.

"Prohibiting rally won’t solve neo-Nazi problem”

"The problem won’t go away just because of this ban,” Đorđević said, adding that aggressive, nationalist ideologies had cemented themselves into many spheres of public life over the last 15 years.

“Such ideologies encourage the appearance of neo-Nazi and clero-fascist organizations,” Đorđević said, adding that Nacionalni Stroj was not the only neo-Nazi organization in Serbia.

Đorđević said that in a democratic society, one must make public the real truth behind people like Adolf Hitler and Dimitrij Ljotić (a Serb collaborator of the Germans during World War II).

“No-one ever remembers to say that Hitler was a rude, self-taught and poor tradesman, a house painter by profession, and that he was uneducated. When we talk about Hitler and Ljotić, we are talking about scum whose be-all and end-all was violence,” Đorđević said.

He said that it was a horrible fact that in several cities there were boulevards and streets named after people such as Ljotić and Milan Nedić, who led a Nazi-backed puppet government in German-occupied Serbia during the war.

“That ideology is embedded and sprouts from historical revisionism. People must wake up and keep resisting this ideology. If not, Nazis and their like will continue to prosper,” Đorđević concluded.

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