Next to a mural showing an idealised Aryan family, Gothic script declares that the village in eastern Germany is "free, social, national." The signpost next to it once pointed the way to Hitler's birthplace, 530 miles away in Austria, until a court order forced villagers to take it down.
The echoes of the Third Reich are quite deliberate. In Jamel, a tiny collection of red brick farmhouses fringed by forest, dozens of villagers describe themselves as Nazis and a majority turns out to vote for the far Right.
This is a place with little welcome for strangers. Rottweilers bark incessantly. A shaven-headed man shouts his own warning while a woman shrieks an obscenity from her window.
Jamel is for some the tip of the iceberg; an indication of how the far Right in Germany is open and active, especially in areas of former East Germany where jobs are scarce. Full story...
Related posts:
The echoes of the Third Reich are quite deliberate. In Jamel, a tiny collection of red brick farmhouses fringed by forest, dozens of villagers describe themselves as Nazis and a majority turns out to vote for the far Right.
This is a place with little welcome for strangers. Rottweilers bark incessantly. A shaven-headed man shouts his own warning while a woman shrieks an obscenity from her window.
Jamel is for some the tip of the iceberg; an indication of how the far Right in Germany is open and active, especially in areas of former East Germany where jobs are scarce. Full story...
Related posts:
- Neo-Nazi network uncovered in German prisons...
- German neo-Nazi murderers had 'shockingly high' number of supporters...
- Neo-Nazi flash mobs strike German cities, aim to become 'immortal' on YouTube...
- Skinheads are out: neo-nazis in Germany now disguised as boy next door...
- The German state and the neo-Nazi killings...
- Neo-Nazis blamed for stunting east Germany...
- 30,000 Golden Dawn supporters march in Athens under neo-nazi banners...
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