hidden pixel

National Movement of Switzerland Information

The National Movement of Switzerland (German: Nationale Bewegung der Schweiz or NBS) was a Nazi umbrella group formed in Switzerland in 1940.

The NBS had its roots in the 1938 foundation of the Bund Treuer Eidgenossen Nationalsozialistischer Weltanschauung by Rolf Henne after he was removed from the leadership of the National Front by the more moderate Robert Tobler. In 1940, this group absorbed a number of tiny Nazi supporting organisations to become the NSB under Henne and Dr. Max Leo Keller. Keller had worked with Heinrich Himmler and brought with him Andreas von Sprecher, who was SS-trained, to run the new group's propaganda department.

Keller, Jakob Schaffner and Ernst Hofmann, as representatives of the NBS, received an audience with President Marcel Pilet-Golaz where they demanded much closer relations with Nazi Germany, leading to eventual incorporation. This was followed by a Munich conference in October 1940 in which Reinhard Heydrich and Franz Riedweg invited the leaders of the NBS and other Swiss groups in order to increase cohesion. Ultimately the meeting strengthened the hand of the NBS as the remnants of the Bund Treuer Eidgenossen Nationalsozialistischer Weltanschauung as well as the Eidgenössische Soziale Arbeiter-Partei and Ernst Leonhardt's Nationalsozialistische Schweizerische Arbeitspartei agreed to be absorbed into the movement.

Despite this strengthening the group was soon gone as the Swiss Federal Council feared that annexation by Germany was just around the corner. In a series of moves against the most extreme groups, the NBS was closed down on November 19, 1940, by which time it had 160 cells and around 4000 members. The group continued to work underground for a time before a police crackdown which led to most of the leadership fleeing to Germany. Whilst in Germany Keller set up the Bund der Schweizer Nationalsozialisten as an émigré movement, although its influence was limited and he eventually returned to Switzerland in 1941. Meanwhile, various NBS units continued to be active secretly, mostly with help from the SS, until the end of the war.

See also

External links

The far right in Switzerland
Defunct far right organizations Eidgenössische Sammlung · National Front · National Movement of Switzerland · Schweizerischer Vaterländischer Verband · Union Nationale · Volkspartei der Schweiz
Active far right organizations Swiss Nationalist Party · Swiss Democrats · Freedom Party
Historical far right people Emil Sonderegger (d. 1934) · Wilhelm Gustloff (d. 1936) · Arthur Fonjallaz (d. 1944) · Jakob Schaffner (d. 1944) · Ernst Leonhardt (d. 1945) · Eugen Bircher (d. 1956) · Georges Oltramare (d. 1960) · Robert Tobler (d. 1962) · Rolf Henne (d. 1966) · Hans Oehler (d. 1967) · Franz Burri (d. 1987) · James Schwarzenbach (d. 1994) · François Genoud (d. 1996) · Ahmed Huber (d. 2008)
Living far right people Gaston-Armand Amaudruz · Bernhard Schaub · Eric Weber
Related topics Überfremdung · Immigrant criminality · New European Order · Right-wing populism · AUNS

Categories:

 

The above information uses material from Wikipedia and is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License.
Some facts may not have been fully verified for accuracy. [Disclaimers]
This page was last archived by our server on Wed May 30 19:27:11 2012.
Displaying this page or its contents does not use any Wikimedia Foundation's resources.
The owners of this site proudly support the Wikimedia Foundation.