About the Lecture: Founded in 1932, Thunder Cross (Pērkonkrusts) was the largest and most prominent right-wing political party in Latvia in the early twentieth century. Its motto—“Latvia for Latvians!”—echoed the ultranationalist rhetoric of similar movements throughout Europe at the time. Unlike the Nazis in Germany or the Fascists in Italy, however, Thunder Cross never succeeded in seizing power. Nevertheless, Holocaust historian Paula A. Oppermann argues, its movement left an indelible mark on the country. The antisemitism at the core of Thunder Cross’s ideology remaine

d a driving force for Latvian fascists throughout the twentieth century, persisting despite shifting historical and political contexts.Thunder Cross is the most comprehensive study of Latvia’s fascist movement in English to date, and the only work that investigates the often neglected continuities of fascist antisemitism after World War II. Formulated as an empirical case study, this book draws on international and interdisciplinary secondary literature and sources in seven languages to broaden our understanding of fascism, antisemitism, and mass violence from Germany and Italy to the larger European context.
Comment by Molly Pucci (Trinity College Dublin)
Chaired by Chad S.A. Gibbs (College of Charleston)
Sponsored by:
Mosse Lectures
George L. Mosse Program in History
Zucker/Goldberg Center for Holocaust Studies at the College of Charleston
UW-Madison Mosse/Weinstein Center for Jewish Studies
UW-Madison Center for German & European Studies
UW-Madison Center for Russia, East Europe, and Central Asia
About the Author: Paula A. Oppermann is a Research Associate of the Berlin Historical Commission and editor of the volume Die Lageberichte der Geheimen Staatspolizei über die Provinz Brandenburg und die Reichshauptstadt Berlin 1933 bis 1936, Teilband II: Die Reichshauptstadt Berlin [The Situation Reports of the Secret State Police on the Province of Brandenburg and the Reich Capital Berlin 1933 to 1936, Part II: The Reich Capital Berlin]. She studied history and Baltic Studies at Greifswald University and Holocaust and Genocide Studies at Uppsala University. She received her terminal degree from the University of Glasgow in 2022 with a study of Latvia’s fascist Party, Pērkonkrusts [Thunder Cross], from the interwar to the postwar period. From 2022 to 2023 she served as Research Associate in the Department of Contemporary History at Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich and managed the cooperation with the Center for Holocaust Studies at the Institute for Contemporary History. In addition, she is active in the area of historical education, including as Research Associate in the documentation center Topography of Terror in Berlin and in the Wiener Holocaust Library of London.