Philip Tschentscher

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Philip Tschentscher (* 1981 in Hessen ) is a German neo-Nazi activist. In the right scene he is also known as a songwriter under the pseudonym Reichstrunkenbold .

Life

Philip Tschentscher grew up in the small Hessian town of Hofgeismar near Kassel and was already active as a neo-Nazi in his youth. An incident from his school days is recorded: On April 20, Adolf Hitler's birthday, which is celebrated in the neo-Nazi scene, he came to school with a Hitler hairstyle and mustache and shouted appropriate slogans.

After school he moved to Erfurt to study at the university there. At that time he was a member of the Freedom Fighters Comradeship and maintained contacts with Manfred Roeder , for whom he organized his “circulars” in 2006 when he was in custody. In addition, he gave lectures on National Socialism, homeland security and Germanic customs. He also organized right-wing rock concerts.

He then moved to Görschen in Saxony-Anhalt , where he lived in a three-sided courtyard with two other neo-Nazis. In 2009 and 2010 Tschentscher produced two CDs under the name Reichstrunkenbold, a pseudonym he borrowed from Robert Ley , the Reichsleiter of the NSDAP. This got the nickname because of his severe alcohol addiction . Tschentscher appears under this name at neo-Nazi events. His songs are anti-Semitic , racist and glorify National Socialism . Among other things, he covered a song by the band Kommando Freisler , in which it says “In Auschwitz , every child knows that Jews are only for heating. Fiedirallala, fiedirallala, fiedirallalallala. In Buchenwald , in Buchenwald, no Jew gets really old. Fiedirallala, fiedirallala, fiedirallalallala. ”On the CD cover of the album Much Ashes About Nothing is a picture of an incinerator in a Nazi extermination camp.

Tschentscher earns his living selling Nazi devotional items, which he sells by van in Germany and Austria. Tschentscher became internationally known during the proceedings against the Austrian right-wing extremist organization Object 21 . Tschentscher had supplied the cultural association, which was banned in 2011, with Nazi memorabilia and forbidden weapons and had also performed at a recital in which he “performed songs with anti-Semitic and racist texts as well as historical Nazi songs”. On January 16, 2014, he was sentenced to three years' imprisonment for violating the Austrian constitutional law prohibiting the NSDAP. He was released early in 2015 and is now said to be back in Hesse. Despite his announcement that he wanted to lead an apolitical life after his imprisonment, he appeared several times at neo-Nazi events.

On April 18, 2016, Philip Tschentscher testified before the NSU committee of inquiry . There he testified that his music did not reflect his political opinion, but was only for entertainment. He described his political opinion as "national-patriotic".

Discography

  • 2009: Much ashes for nothing (in-house production)
  • 2010: The underground never dies (in-house production)
  • 2019: We stick together (in-house production)

Individual evidence

  1. Gerd Henke and Antje Thon: Neo-Nazis: No active scene. Hna.de , November 16, 2011, accessed April 20, 2017 .
  2. Reichstrunkenbold at Discogs (English)
  3. ^ A b Martina Renner: Judgments against »Object 21« . In: The Right Edge . 148 (May / June 2014), ISSN  1619-1404 , p. 16–17 ( der-rechte-rand.de [PDF]).
  4. a b Ministry of the Interior and Sport Saxony-Anhalt (Ed.): Verfassungsschutz Report 2014 . S. 38 ( sachsen-anhalt.de [PDF]).
  5. quoted after the fidelity day on March 19, 2016 in Bruchsal. Karlsruhe Network against Right, accessed on April 20, 2017 .
  6. a b Day of Loyalty to Home on March 19, 2016 in Bruchsal. Karlsruhe Network against Right, accessed on April 20, 2017 .
  7. Ministry of the Interior and Sport Saxony-Anhalt (Ed.): Verfassungsschutz Report 2015 . S. 69 ( sachsen-anhalt.de [PDF]).
  8. ^ South Lower Saxony: Neo-Nazi concert with "Reichstrunkenbold" announced. Fault report , October 1, 2016, accessed April 20, 2017 .
  9. Martin Steinhagen: NSU Committee: Reports on "Heimatschutz". Frankfurter Rundschau , April 18, 2016, accessed on April 20, 2017 .