Russian National Socialist Party

In this article, the topic of Russian National Socialist Party will be addressed, which has generated great interest and controversy in recent times. Russian National Socialist Party is a topic that has captured the attention of people of all ages and backgrounds, since its relevance transcends borders and contexts. Since its emergence, Russian National Socialist Party has sparked much debate and has been the subject of study and analysis by experts and hobbyists alike. In this article, different aspects related to Russian National Socialist Party will be explored, including its origin, evolution, impact and possible future implications. Likewise, different perspectives and opinions on Russian National Socialist Party will be examined, with the aim of offering a complete and balanced view on this topic.

The Russian National Socialist Party (Russian: Русская Национальная Социалистическая Партия, romanizedRusskaya Natsional'naya Sotsialisticheskaya Partiya) was a neo-Nazi and clerical fascist group based in Russia.

Development

The party grew out of the followers of Konstantin Kasimovsky, a leading member of Pamyat in the immediate aftermath of the collapse of the Soviet Union. He split from the Pamyat-led National Patriotic Front in 1992 and formed his own party, the Russian National Union, the following year. This party re-emerged as the RNSP around 1999 after Kasimovsky closed down the Russian National Union and began to move away from the emphasis placed on the Russian Orthodox Church by that group. Despite this lessening of emphasis on religion the party's website lists Orthodox Christianity as one of its four main ideological principles, the others being a strong state, aggressive Russian nationalism and non-Marxist socialism. The party symbol is the Labarum of Constantine the Great and since 1999 have published a newspaper Pravoye Soprotivleniye ('Right Resistance'), itself a successor to the earlier journal Shturmovik.

Kasimovsky has since claimed to be the leader of a group called Russian Action although its nature, and that of its relationship to the RNSP, remains unclear.

See also

References

  1. ^ "AXT". Axt.org.uk. Archived from the original on 20 November 2008. Retrieved 16 December 2016.
  2. ^ a b "Russian National Socialist Party". Nationalism.org. Retrieved 16 December 2016.
  3. ^ Raphael Walden, Racism and Human Rights, Martinus Nijhoff Publishers, 2004, p. 110

External links