Croatia's national football team celebrates with a Nazi-supporting fascist singer, dividing the county



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Imagine that the German national team celebrated its World Cup victory four years ago by inviting a Nazi singer to share the stage with the players. A singer who in the past had sung warmly about Auschwitz, the annihilation of Jews and SS, including the song about beautiful Germany, including parts that were lost in World War II, has become the hymn of the team.

In Zagreb last Monday, the Croatian national football team celebrated its second place in the World Cup with a parade in the capital. Some 500,000 welcomed them. People lining the streets.

>> 2018 World Cup: Why Jews Should Root France on Croatia

Marko Perkovic – nicknamed Thompson, after the submachine gun – was invited to join the players on stage. Together, they sang the anthem of the team, which mentions the Croatian parties of Bosnia.

Thompson fought in the 1991-95 Croatian War of Independence before becoming a patriotic rock-folk Balkan singer. In the past, he sang much sharper songs, including that of Jasenovac, a Croatian death camp in Slavonia where hundreds of thousands of Serbs, Jews, Roma and opponents of the Nazi-Croat regime were murdered during the Second World War. World War. "The Neretva River sweeps the Serbs towards the blue Adriatic", title this song that praises Ante Pavelic, the leader of the Nazi-Croatian regime of Ustasius.

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<figcaption clbad= AP Photo / Darko Vojinovic


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Thompson begins his performances with the war cry of Ustase, and Nazi salutes can be seen in the public, with Ustase shirts and other paraphernalia. Its performance has been banned in some European countries and even in Croatia attempts have been made to prevent it. In the celebrations in Zagreb, the most flamboyant songs were not heard, but the Ustasian regime certainly did, and the fact that Thompson became the center of the celebrations sparked a big debate in Croatia and the Croatian diaspora.

A number of websites have published polls such as: "Thompson on Zagreb Square – for or against", which shows that Croats are divided on the issue. In the Croatian diaspora, especially in the German-speaking part, harsh articles have been published against the singer. "It's like falling in love with a man and then discovering that he has a swastika tattoo," writes Danijela Pilic in Suddeutsche Zeitung.

The invitation to Thompson was extended by the players, especially Luka Modric, who misinterpreted the public sentiment. Perkovic himself denies being a Nazi fascist. "I am a patriot, not a fascist," he said.

Efraim Zuroff of the Weisenthal Center is not persuaded. In a statement, Zuroff said that Perkovic was a prominent supporter of the pro-Nazi regime, who sang songs calling for the killing of Serbs, and that to invite him to sing "gives his fascist views a legitimacy that would make him angry. they do not deserve ".

The controversy reveals Croatia's unresolved attitude to its dark past and the tensions created after the War of Independence. As expected, the populist regime, led by Kolinda Grabar-Kitarovic, the president of the camera, turned the team and the celebrations into a test of loyalty.

Here we can also see nationalist singer Marko Perković Thompson with footballer Luka Modrić, and on the other picture we can see him doing a Nazi salute.
Modrić and other players call him to be with them The scene. But in the end, the majority of the crowd booed and left pic.twitter.com/rvcXDGpTpW

– Nomad Kirk (@kroslav) July 20, 2018

After the Croats united to support their team in the World Cup in Russia, and many Balkans, including the Serbs, openly rooted for it, the Croats scored a goal against his side.

"In Croatia, there is bitterness and disappointment, because there is the feeling that some symbols are still appropriated by a certain political color, as if the others – those who are not agree with Thompson – were not Tena Prelec, a researcher at the European Institute of the London School of Economics, told the Financial Times.

The Thompson affair is important mainly because Croatia must exploit the success of its football team to rehabilitate the sport locally. The miracle of 2018 occurred despite the politicized Croatian sports federation, despite the corruption of the Croatian league and its bias towards Dinamo Zagreb and despite the government, which has not done enough to change the situation. In Croatia, there are not enough fields or coaches and promising players have to sell their futures to people like the former strongman of the Football Association and Dinamo Zagreb, Zdravko Mamic.

Part of a wider political struggle in Croatia

Instead, the team has become a part of a political struggle that is tearing apart Croatia, which is now the throes of an economic crisis and emigration. In a country where veterans' organizations dare to set up a commemorative plaque in the Jasenovac death camp wearing a fascist slogan, and a year later the government moves the plaque to a nearby town, inviting a man like Thompson.

I really wanted to encourage Croatia during the World Cup, I think of us (Serbs) and them alone. After several cases of players singing Nazi songs and the appearance of Marko Perković Thompson on their celebration (dude in the black T-shirt) I never repeat the same mistake. pic.twitter.com/2TyZrqEt7v

– Milan Stevanović (@FathVader) 17 July 2018

Sport and football have always served Croatian nationalism after gaining independence. The first president, Franjo Tudjman, recruited athletes for the young state and tried to make Dinamo Zagreb the national team of the country. He changed his name to Croatia Zagreb and the Croatian secret services were brought on board to make sure that the group would win championships. The monitoring reports of the referees, players and coaches, administrators and supporters were ready to blackmail the officials on the way to the National Team Championships.

In favor of the Dinamo fans, in the first place the Bad Blue Boys, it must be said that they fought this trend. While there are places where fans are proud to be "the country's team" and take advantage of widespread corruption, Dinamo supporters have done everything to prevent it. They refused to recognize the name "Croatia Zagreb", they set fire to Tudjman's headquarters in the wretched Maksimir stadium and finally, after Tudjman's death, they had what they wanted, the traditional Dinamo name Zagreb was back.

The main square of Zagreb was cleaned the next morning of the remains of the celebration. On the other hand, Thompson's shadow will continue to throw a veil on Croatian football for years to come.

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