The Ideological Bases of the Collaboration in Europe During the Second World War and a Short Comparison with Slovenia

Authors

  • Boris Mlakar

Keywords:

nacionalizem, antisemitizem, Slovenia, Europe, Second World War, occupation, occupying regimes, collaboration, ideology, Nazism, nationalism, anti-Semitism

Abstract

Using extensive literature and some archive sources, the author explores the ideological and political bases of various forms and degrees of the collaboration with occupying regimes in selected European countries during the Second World War. Individual cases are then briefly compared with the situation and events in the occupied Slovenia. He concludes that, in Western Europe and the Baltic states, the main ideological role was played by extreme nationalist movements. In this respect, there were also attempts to create some kind of Fascist International, which the Nazi leadership intended to mobilize in its campaign far the so-called 'new Europe'. In some areas, anti-Semitism and anti-Communism, i.e. the fear of a Soviet domination, featured prominently. The latter, reinforced by the violent attitudes of the partisan movement, was typical of Slovenia. Everywhere, the emergence of collaboration was connected with survival and opportunism, although the latter may only be classified as an ideological basis conditionally.

Published

2007-01-01

Issue

Section

Articles

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