Clerical People's Party
Kyrkliga Folkpartiet (English: Clerical People's Party or Popular Party) was a minor pro-fascist party in Sweden founded in 1930.[1] The party was formed and led by Ivar Rhedin, a priest in the Church of Sweden.[2] Rhedin was the editor of Göteborgs Stiftstidning (Magazine of the Diocese of Gothenburg), in which he wrote many pro-German articles. The party was an ally of the main Nazi party in Sweden, National Socialist Workers Party. But the cooperation between the two parties didn't last. Although both groups were staunch antisemites, their approaches toward the Jews were somewhat different. Rhedin, as a conservative Christian, was against the Jews as a religious community. NSAP were against the Jews as a race. Rhedin had no problem in accepting Jews who converted to Christianity, whereas NSAP and other nazi groups considered that converted Jews continued to be Jews in racial aspects. The party was closed down in 1936.[1]
References
- Matthew Feldman; Marius Turda; Tudor Georgescu (31 October 2013). Clerical Fascism in Interwar Europe. Routledge. p. 93. ISBN 978-1-317-96899-3. Retrieved 24 September 2016.
- Larsen, Stein U. (1990). "Chapter 13. Conservatives and fascist in the Nordic countries: Norway, Sweden, Denmard and Finland, 1918-1945". In Blinkhorn, Martin (ed.). Fascists and conservatives: the radical right and the establishment in twentieth-century Europe. London: Unwin Hyman. pp. 254–255. ISBN 0-04-940086X.