Lithuanian court: Swastikas not a Nazi symbol
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A Lithuanian court has ruled that a swastika is part of the country’s historic legacy and not a Nazi symbol.
The May 19 ruling capped a three-month case involving four men who displayed swastikas at Klaipeda’s national independence parade.
“It is not a Nazi attribute, but a valuable symbol of the Baltic culture, an ancient sign of our ancestors, which had been stolen from them and treacherously used by other peoples,” one of the defense witnesses said, according Russia’s English news channel.
Efraim Zuroff, the Simon Wiesenthal Center’s chief Nazi hunter and Israel director, called the decision “outrageous” and likely to lead to a tremendous increase in the use of Nazi symbols by Lithuania’s ultranationalists.
Swastikas previously have been displayed in Lithuania on May Day, and once in front of the presidential palace in the Lithuanian capital of Vilnius, according to news reports. Neither instance prompted police or legal action. — jta
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05/31/2010 at 01:00 PM
Given the deep-seated and persistent racism throughout much of Lithuanian history, the swastika probably is an apt symbol of Lithuanian culture.
One can assume that the European Union, originally intended as a rejoinder to fascist and Nazi ideology, will do nothing.
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