http://www.iht.com/articles/2007/07/01/europe/croatia.php

INTERNATIONAL HERALD TRIBUNE (FRANCE)

http://img.iht.com/images/2007/07/02/02croatia550.jpg

At a recent concert in Zagreb, some fans of the Croatian rock star Marko
Perkovic wore the black caps of Croatia's World War II Nazi puppet
government, known as Ustashe. (Denis Lovrovic)

A Croatian rock star flirts with the Nazi past
By Nicolas Wood

Sunday, July 1, 2007

ZAGREB, Croatia: For the Croatian rock star Marko Perkovic, it is a routine
part of his performance: He shouts a well-known Croatian slogan from World
War II and his fans respond with the Nazi salute.

On a hot Sunday evening last month, thousands did just that in a packed
soccer stadium here in the Croatian capital. Photographs from the concert
show youths wearing the black caps of the Nazi-backed Ustasha regime that
ruled Croatia, and which was responsible for sending tens of thousands of
Serbs, gypsies and Jews to their deaths in concentration camps.

Perkovic's popularity is nothing new in Croatia. It dates back to the Balkan
wars in which he fought in the Croatian Army. His patriotic and sometimes
violently nationalist songs made him an instant hit. Most Croats know him
better by his stage name, Thompson, which was given to him during the war,
when he carried the vintage British-made submachine gun of the same name.

But now Thompson's growing success - among a new generation of Croats, many
of them apparently oblivious to the history of the Holocaust - has prompted
concern and condemnation from minority groups in Croatia and Jewish groups
abroad. The concert last month was his biggest to date, with at least 40,000
people in attendance.

What has shocked those groups more, though, is that in the ensuing debate,
many senior politicians and the members of the media have not seen a problem
with the imagery or salutes.

"They just don't seem to get it," said Efraim Zuroff, the Israel Director of
the Simon Wiesenthal Center, who called on the president of Croatia, Stjepan
Mesic, to ban future concerts and help outlaw the use of extremist symbols
and slogans.

Despite those objections, the concert was shown during prime time Sunday
night on state-owned television, prompting further protests from Jewish and
Serbian groups in Croatia.

"We don't want to pay for something that strikes fear into my children, or
distances them from their friends or neighbors," said Milorad Pupovac,
leader of the largest Serbian political party in Croatia.

Such imagery is also at odds with the image that the Croatian government
wants to send to the world.

Over the last three years, the conservative Croatian prime minister, Ivo
Sanader, has to some extent reduced its reputation as a nationalist state
that once harbored war criminals. The transition is widely viewed as a
success and Croatia is a favorite to join the European Union, possibly in
2009.

So the country that for much of the 1990s was seen as a war-torn nation is
now widely perceived as a prime destination with four million tourists a
year flocking to its Adriatic coast line. A government-backed advertising
campaign on CNN urges more to come and experience "the Mediterranean as it
once was."

Many former critics of Croatian nationalist leanings in the 1990s
acknowledge that the country has a come a long way. Once it was possible to
buy photographs and memorabilia from the Ustasha period openly in the center
of Zagreb. Restaurants displayed pictures of Ustasha units on their walls.

While that has disappeared, souvenir shops still sell key rings and baseball
caps with the Ustasha U, as well as the slogan used in Thompson concerts;
"Za Dom: Spremni!" which means "For the Homeland: Ready!" And sometimes,
insensitivity about issues stemming from the Holocaust can verge on extreme.

Take Perkovic's public affairs manager, Albino Ursic. A large poster
entitled "Final Solution" adorns the wall of Ursic's office. It shows a
packet of cigarettes marked with a large Swastika and labelled "Adolf
Filters" poking out of a black leather jacket. "It's an antismoking
picture," Ursic explained. He designed the image in 1994.

"It won an award in Lisbon," he added, stressing that he had no sympathies
with the right, and viewed himself as left of center. As for Perkovic's use
of the slogans, Ursic said the fascist salutes were no different than those
made by soccer hooligans across Europe who have little understanding of what
they are doing

"It is just teenage rebellion," he said.

And while the Croatian government issued a statement after the concert in
June criticizing the open display of Ustasha memorabilia and slogans, much
of the Croatian political establishment seems to agree with Ursic. They
cannot see what all the fuss is about.

"You can't see any antisemitism here," said Dragan Primorac, the education
minister of Croatia. He was due to attend the same Thompson concert last
month, before it was postponed by a day due to rain. Other celebrities who
did manage to make it included a former Croatian foreign minister and two
former Croatian NBA basketball stars.

"At most you could blame four to five people," he said, for wearing Ustasha
regalia, or giving the Nazi salute during the concert. He stressed, too,
that Croatia was a good friend of Israel and pointed to his mantelpiece,
where there stood a photograph of himself meeting Shimon Perez.

Perkovic, too, has recently sought to tone down his nationalist image. In an
interview, the soft-spoken singer said he had never raised his own arm to
make a fascist salute. Nor, he said, did he encourage people to wear Ustasha
uniforms. As for the Ustasha slogan he uses, he said it was a traditional
Croatian salute that predated World War II.

But rights groups here say there is a fundamental problem: while Croatia is
now seeking to move away from the nationalist period of the 1990s, a whole
generation of young people has grown up in the last 15 years with an
incomplete education about the Holocaust, and many in Croatia believe the
deeds of its wartime leaders are on the same level as Communist leaders in
Yugoslavia.

"The education about the recent history of Croatia is not adequate," said
Danijel Ivin, the president of the Croatian Helsinki Committee for Human
Rights.

Primorac, the education minister, said that is slowly beginning to change.
Since 2004, a whole day is dedicated each year to studying the Holocaust.
Still, others believe Croatia's ability to face its past will remain a
problem for some time.

"It is an issue," said Tomislav Jakic, an advisor to President Mesic. "It is
far from the Ustasha nostalgia that it was 15 years ago, when the ghost was
first let out of the bottle. But the ghost is still here, and it will be for
years to come."



 


Одговори путем е-поште