Jürgen Mosler

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Jürgen Mosler (* 1955 ) is a German neo-Nazi .

Career

Jürgen Mosler became known alongside Thomas Brehl and Christian Worch as Michael Kühnen's deputy in the National Socialists / National Activists' Action Front (ANS / NA). After they were banned, Mosler held leadership positions in the New Front (GdNF) and the Freedom German Workers' Party (FAP). In 1986 there was an ideological break with Michael Kühnen when a group around Mosler published a manifesto against homosexuality . Mosler, who was in charge of this action, described homosexuality as a "pathological abnormality". Bold, who have in the course of this dispute Outing took place, the GDNF left with Thomas Brehl.

Mosler led the GdNF together with Michael Swierczek and Christian Malcoci and took over both the magazine Neue Front - Publication of the National Resistance and the management of the committee for the preparation of the celebrations for the 100th birthday of Adolf Hitler (KAH). As an author, he also published in the Austrian newspaper Sieg , which was edited by Walter Ochensberger , the chairman of the Bund Volkstreuer Jugend .

Mosler's group also gained influence in the FAP. Mosler worked as Secretary General for a long time. In 1990, however, they left the party after Friedhelm Busse was re-elected as chairman in 1990. Mosler and his companions then founded the National Offensive . In 1995 there was a trial in which he confessed to having transferred the banned ANS / NA to the KAH and was sentenced to two years in prison. Jürgen Rieger had not been admitted as Mosler's lawyer for this second trial. Afterwards (and also before) Mosler wrote regularly for the Nordic newspaper of the Artgemeinschaft - Germanic Faith Community for a way of life in keeping with the nature and appeared as a speaker in 1998 on “1. National Resistance Day ”for the NPD . Since Jürgen Rieger's death on October 29, 2009, he has been the “editor” of the Nordische Zeitung.

In 2009 Mosler stood as an NPD candidate for the local elections in Oberhausen in the Alt-Oberhausen district , but was not elected. The NPD received just 0.1% of the vote.

Individual evidence

  1. Steffen Kailitz : Political extremism in the Federal Republic of Germany: an introduction . VS Verlag für Sozialwissenschaften, Wiesbaden 2004, ISBN 3-531-14193-7 , p. 99 .
  2. a b c Jürgen Mosler . In: Thomas Grumke and Bernd Wagner (eds.): Handbuch Rechtsradikalismus . Leske + Budrich, Opladen 2002, ISBN 3-8100-3399-5 , p. 284 f .
  3. redok: Sometimes they come back. Hagalil , July 23, 2009; accessed January 18, 2012 .
  4. ↑ Presentation of the election results (WEP). (No longer available online.) City of Oberhausen, archived from the original on March 4, 2014 ; Retrieved January 18, 2012 . Info: The archive link was inserted automatically and has not yet been checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice. @1@ 2Template: Webachiv / IABot / suw.oberhausen.de