Singles Connection
FEATURES
Balancing work and home life
Mapping the past
Making miracles in the Promised Land
COMMUNITY
Brody spotlighted for support of veterans
Flourishing in the desert
Planning moves forward for newcomers, seniors
Prescott rabbi missing
HEALTH
Home safety tips to implement as seniors recover from surgery
NATION
Jews, evangelicals protest Gaza withdrawal
Shadegg leads drive for U.S-Israel energy pact
WORLD
France rejects E.U. Constitution; Jews wary
OSCE official sees progress in anti-Semitism war
Neo-Nazis rampage in Chile
ISRAEL
Bush gives Abbas $50 million present
First Ethiopian deputy mayor faces problems
OPINION
Editorial - Black and white world?
Commentary - Israel-Diaspora disconnect on Gaza
Commentary - Looking back, looking ahead
In the Mail - Letters to the Editor
ARTS
New project emphasizes value of Hebrew
Comic brings one-man play to Valley
BUSINESS
Delivering an elevator speech
COMING UP
This Week
MILESTONES
Births
B'nai Mitzvah
Weddings
Obituaries
EDUCATION
East Valley JCC students design, raffle quilts
TORAH STUDY
Israel's vows renewed in the wilderness
Singles Connection
HOME PAGE

June 3, 2005/Iyar 25 5765, Volume 57, No. 40

Neo-Nazis rampage in Chile

JOE GOLDMAN
Jewish Telegraphic Agency
BUENOS AIRES - Neo-Nazis are terrorizing a Chilean city, and two members of the group are now on trial for the murder of a 19-year-old. Approximately 20 members of a local gang in Quillota, a city about 60 miles northwest of the capital city of Santiago, reportedly go out on nightly runs to "clean" the city of homosexuals, drug addicts and left-wing punk adolescents.

Though the gang is not targeting Jews - few are believed to live in Quillota - one local resident told JTA that Quillota's streets are filled with graffiti including swastikas; the spider-like symbol of Patria y Libertad, or Fatherland and Freedom, an extreme right-wing group with close links to Nazis who came to Chile after World War II; the Southern Hammer, the name of a new neo-Nazi group in the area; the slogan "No to Communism, no to Capitalism, yes to Nazism"; and numbers representing the years that have passed since the birth of Hitler.

"Here in Quillota the neo-Nazis are from rich, upper-class families and some are descendants of German families," one terrorized young adolescent in Quillota was quoted in May as saying in the La Nacion daily newspaper. "They study by day in some of the most chic schools in the city. Then at night they go out in their luxurious vehicles to go after punks, homosexuals and anyone else who thinks differently than they do."

Authorities in smaller neighboring towns of La Cruz and Quilpue have also noted the presence of neo-Nazi organizations and graffiti.

"What we need to do is investigate who are those behind these neo-Nazi activities, who are the leaders who recruit and give them incentives to - as they say their goal is - 'clean up' the city streets," Quillota Mayor Luis Mella said. "We don't want people that kill because of a mistaken ideal of what is good and what is bad."

Chile has suffered from sporadic outbursts of neo-Nazism and anti-Semitism in recent years, but the May 7 murder of a 19-year-old from Quillota was by far the worst incident in recent memory.

Angelo Ramirez was reportedly murdered by a group of neo-Nazis who beat, stabbed and kicked him for 10 minutes, carved a swastika in his cheek, then left him to bleed to death on the street.

The prosecution said Ramirez died from 16 stab wounds and 10 hammer blows. A 19-year-old college student majoring in English and a 16-year-old high school student are in custody and awaiting trial for the killing. The two, who face 10 years to life imprisonment, are from wealthy families in Quillota.

Recent arrests of top leaders of Colonia Dignidad, a secretive Nazi refuge in southern Chile, have given new hope to the family of a Jewish academic who is the only American still considered "disappeared" in Chile, and who last was seen in Colonia Dignidad.

Boris Weisfeiler, a world-class mathematician, escaped from anti-Semitic harassment in the Soviet Union and immigrated to the United States in the 1970s. He taught first at Princeton's Institute for Advanced Studies and then was a mathematics professor at Penn State University.

He was never heard from again after he left in December 1984 for a solo hiking vacation in the Andes of southern Chilean.

"I still don't know how the arrests will affect Boris' case," his sister, Olga Weisfeiler, said. "I hope that when this mafia is gone, arrested, then people will feel free to start talking."


Home