Letters | Nazi history should serve as a warning to Hong Kong: orchestrated violence breeds more violence
Reading history, one has a stunning sense of déjà vu. Niall Ferguson’s Kissinger, 1923-1968: The Idealist describes events in Germany in early 1932 when, after police restrictions were lifted, the National Socialist German Workers’ Party (Nazi Party), held almost weekly events in Fürth, organising at least 26 meetings in the two weeks before the election of that year.
While initially firearms played no role in the gang warfare between the communists and Nazis, eventually people, longing for the old German ideal of “tranquility and order”, accepted that further violence might be necessary as a means to that end. Sounds familiar?
On the night of February 3, 1933, some Nazi radicals attacked a communist. After the Reichstag fire later that month, a Nazi landtag deputy proclaimed the “German Revolution”. (Sounds familiar again?) What followed was a series of catastrophes.