Weekly SA Mirror

Remembering the defeat of fascism – or witnessing its return?

AMNESIA: Neo-fascism merely adapted, disguised, and reshaped itself according to the times. In some states, we now see historical revisionism – and even glorification of local fascist or Nazi collaborators…

By Biljana Vankovska

As we approach a major anniversary – 80 years since the defeat of fascism – a strange silence hangs over my country, Macedonia, and the broader region we now call the territory of former Yugoslavia.

 National authorities have been under sustained external (Western) pressure for years: May 9 must no longer be associated with the victory over fascism. Year after year, in both public memory and the education system, May 9 has been rebranded as Europe Day. Older generations still remember, but what do younger ones know about Yugoslavia’s enormous human sacrifice, second only to the USSR, in the struggle against Evil? Almost nothing.

We, the older ones, might suffer from the absence of dementia – we stubbornly remember the times when our fathers and grandfathers gave their lives for ideals that today’s youth barely even hear about. This imposed forgetfulness on younger generations, however, goes so far that TV segments show young people unable to answer the simple question: Who was Josip Broz Tito?

 In Macedonia, more and more students know nothing about October 11 1941, the Day of the Macedonian Uprising against fascism. Yet they excel in competitions where they display near-perfect knowledge of Europe. The irony is painful: the roots of patriotism and links to the most glorious moments of our not-so-distant past are not only being severed but portrayed as harmful. A mythical and quasi-religious connection is being nurtured toward a mirage called Europe – meaning, of course, the European Union – which is idealised as a promised land, waiting with open arms. But this is no coincidence. Through its entire state-building apparatus, the EU seeks to rewrite history and implant it in the minds of new generations. In that version of history, any connection to the brutal colonial past is erased. More importantly, a veil is drawn over the fact that Europe’s imperial ambitions led to two world wars. The Second World War, whose anniversary we now mark quietly – even clandestinely, behind the EU’s back – was the anti-climax of capitalism, its degeneration into Nazism and fascism.

 This was not merely the result of individuals like Hitler or Mussolini, but of structural conditions that emerged from the womb of the post-World War I capitalist crisis. The EU, falsely presenting itself as the embodiment of “Europe”, has been busy re-modelling its image – until the start of the special military operation in Ukraine, it even tried to portray itself as a normative power, winning hearts and minds through soft power. It was even awarded the Nobel Peace Prize for past deeds.

Yet, its present and future seem to signal the revival of the very seed of evil it once claimed to oppose. The latest deep cycle of capitalist crisis first resulted in a divorce from democratic principles, but now it does not hide its hyper-imperialist and militaristic aspirations – for the sake of “self-defense” from an imagined Russian threat.  Colloquially, many of us use the new word “Rusophrenia”: a belief that Russia is about to collapse and to take over the world at the same time. This term describes well the irrational view of Russia that is now entrenched in Western public opinion. It helps legitimise the new wave of militarisation, even at the expense of the social well-being of Western citizens.

The rehabilitation of fascism began with its erasure from memory. Then came the glorification of the Euromaidan in Ukraine – the so-called pro-European revolution of 2014. A strange amnesia is spreading through the so-called Western world.

As said, May 9 was kidnapped, and with it, textbooks, symbolic acts, and commemorations were gradually stripped of any connection to the true military victors of World War II: the Red Army and the Soviet people, who sacrificed more than 27 million lives. (Yugoslavs sacrificed more than a million people.) It was the Soviets who liberated Berlin – twice. The final time, it was done by Mikhail Gorbachev, at a cost that Russia continues to pay today. Even the UN Secretary-General now avoids naming the Red Army soldiers who freed prisoners from the most notorious concentration camps. It is Moscow and its allies who now stand as the only ones acting in the spirit of Orwell’s assertion that “in a time of universal deceit, telling the truth is a revolutionary act”. That truth will ring out loudly during the parade and major celebration on Red Square. What is happening in what used to be Yugoslavia? In countries where generations were raised on narratives of brotherhood and unity, on the heroism of partisans who fought on the right side of history?

First came the erosion of sovereignty and the right to self-determination. As the new religion – NATO and the EU are the only alternative and always right – was internalised, governments began distancing themselves from that part of our history. They turned instead to ancient glories or to painting a glowing future in union with the West.To be red, to be a partisan, to be anti-fascist – gradually became suspicious, even dangerous. Our government now prides itself on alliances with the West (though it’s increasingly unclear – whose West? America’s or Europe’s?), and in distancing itself from those we once fought alongside. Former occupiers are now called “administrators”. Busts of partisans gather dust.

Anti-fascism has become uncomfortable to display – lest our Western allies recognise themselves in the mirror. So, silence prevails. Europe, the EU, is still celebrated – even as it re-militarises, tramples basic values and human rights, and tacitly supports genocidal regimes. Confusion reigns over what to celebrate, what to remember, and why. Because, in an Orwellian world, war is peace, and peace is war.

Commemoration and historical memory matter. But just as vital is the ability to see, with eyes wide open, that the serpent’s egg still lives – and could hatch again into what millions across the world gave their lives to defeat eighty years ago. The bitter truth is that fascism was never fully defeated – except on the battlefield in 1945. Social scientists know well that the roots of fascism cannot be destroyed by arms alone. Neo-fascism merely adapted, disguised, and reshaped itself according to the times. In some states, we now see historical revisionism – and even glorification of local fascist or Nazi collaborators.

That is why the Russian initiative at the United Nations is significant. On December 17 2024, during the 79th session of the UN General Assembly, the Russian Federation proposed a resolution: Combating glorification of Nazism, neo-Nazism and other practices that contribute to fuelling contemporary forms of racism, racial discrimination, xenophobia and related intolerance. It was co-sponsored by 39 states from various regions. At last, it received 119 votes in favour, while 53 voted against. Regrettably, my country was among the latter – even though its very right to self-determination and statehood within Yugoslavia was born of the anti-fascist struggle.

 Perhaps for global politics, it is even more telling to examine who else voted against the resolution: Ukraine, the US, the UK, Germany, Italy, Belgium, Norway, the Netherlands, Finland, Sweden, Japan, Canada … Look at the new geopolitical map of the world, and it all becomes self-evident and telling. According to some sources, Soviet Marshal Georgy Zhukov said, “We have liberated Europe from fascism, but they will never forgive us for it.”

They haven’t, as we now clearly see.

*Biljana Vankovska is a professor of political science and international relations at Ss. Cyril and Methodius University in Skopje, a member of the Transnational Foundation of Peace and Future Research (TFF) in Lund, Sweden, and the most influential public intellectual in Macedonia

Comment

DISMISS CORRUPT COPS

Recent reports of police officers implicated in serious criminal offences including kidnapping for ransom and escorting a vehicle trafficking bags of dagga worth hundreds of thousands of rands, must have shocked many South Africans  who must be very worried about  their safety in this country.

In one of the most bizarre cases of corruption, a 42-year-old police sergeant was arrested for the alleged kidnapping of 19-year-old high school student, Kamogelo Baukudi in the Free State. The police officer is also accused of  extortion. After causing the boy’s family so much trauma, we hope he would do the right thing and help the family in finding the missing student as soon as possible.

Another case is that of three members of the White River Flying Squad who were arrested while allegedly escorting a vehicle trafficking bags of dagga  along the N4 near Matsulu T-Junction in Mpumalanga . They are facing charges of corruption and defeating the ends of justice.

The arrests occurred a few weeks after the Portfolio Committee on Police called on the police management to urgently institute Section 34 inquiries as per the South African Police Act against officers charged with serious criminal offences. The committee remained of the view that to fight crime effectively, police officers accused of serious crimes must be removed to ensure that only committed officers stayed in the service. Indeed.  The scourge of crime will surely continue unabated as long as the South African Police Services is infiltrated by corrupt officers  who were in cahoot with criminal syndicates and thus weakening efforts by dedicated and committed officers to fight crime.

The committee recently met with the Ministry of Police and senior management of  the SAPS to also raise alarm about the growing number of officers who remained in active service despite being formally charged with serious criminal offences including rape, attempted murder, drug trafficking and conduct linked to organised crime.

The  SAPS leadership was questioned about multiple specific cases in which officers, some out on bail and facing grave charges, were not only still reporting for duty, but in some instances still held  leadership positions or operated in frontline roles.

 These cases included a police constable who was out on bail for rape and was still serving at a local station; an acting station commander who was currently facing charges of attempted murder and torture and a member who was caught selling police dockets, later arrested again for drunk driving while on suspension, and was now back at work.

With crime having spiralled out of control, senior police management should heed the advice from the Portfolio Committee on Police and dismiss all the officers who have been implicated in serious crimes and replace them with dedicated men and women in blue.

The fight against crime will never be won as long as the police force is littered with police officers whose only duty is to work with criminal syndicates to enrich themselves.

Corrupt police officers must be rooted out to restore the credibility of the police force. These are the officers responsible for an unstable criminal justice system  that is failing in its efforts to fight crime in this country.

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