The National Radical Camp (
Polish: Obóz Narodowo-Radykalny; ONR) is a radical right-wing and nationalist Polish political organisation following in its activities the organization of the same name that existed before the Second World War in Poland.
The current incarnation revived in 1993 is a far-right movement in
Poland much like its historical predecessors.[2] It has often been described as
fascist and sometimes as
neo-Nazi.[3][4] As of 2012 it is registered as a
common-interest association.[5]
The modern National Radical Camp, like its predecessors, is
fascist.[8][9] The
United NationsCommittee for the Elimination of Racial Discrimination considers the organization a fascist group promoting racial and national hatred and has called on Poland to de-legalize it by enforcing its constitutional ban on such groups.[10][11] In 2021, Poland’s Supreme Court ruled that the National Radical Camp could be called fascist. [12]
The party flag of the organization was included in the police handbook as an explicitly racist symbol and has made usage of the
Celtic Cross, an old symbol appropriated by
neo-Nazis.[13] The
Interior Ministry subsequently pulled the book from circulation after a complaint from MP
Adam Andruszkiewicz.[13]
In 2015, an ONR demonstration ended with the burning of an effigy of an ultra-Orthodox Jew.[14] Proceedings were opened for violating laws against "insulting people based on religion, ethnicity, race or nationality".[15]
In 2019, the Lublin-Południe District Prosecutor's Office opened proceedings against ONR for "public propagation of a totalitarian regime" after they published a Tweet celebrating Belgian fascist and
SS officerLéon Degrelle.[16]
Marches
Myślenice rallies
ONR attracted publicity in 2005, 2007, 2008 and 2009 for unauthorized marches during the anniversary of the anti-Jewish riot in
Myślenice in 1936.[17][18][19] In 2005 the group had a couple of hundred members.[20]
An illegal rally held on June 30, 2007 resulted in a court case, in which the ONR leader, Wojciech Mazurkiewicz, was
acquitted only because the magistrate warning was issued too late, according to the presiding
judge.[21] The 2008 rally led by the same ONR leader was taped by police with the intention of sharing the video with the local prosecutors office according to
Lesser Poland Police.[17][22]
ONR members at a 2008 rally in Myślenice made a
Roman salute before disbanding. When questioned by reporters at the scene, the ONR leader claimed it is different from the
Nazi salute.[23]
Independence Day marches
The association has also been known as initiators of marches during the
National Independence Day of Poland. One of them (in Warsaw), as a co-initiative of several different nationalist movements in 2010, evolved in 2012 into one of the biggest events during the day, which now attracts a more diverse community.[24] Since 2012, it has been organized by a registered association which was founded and is co-chaired by ONR.[25][26]
On 11 November 2017, 60,000 people marched in an Independence Day celebration procession co-organized by the ONR along with the
All-Polish Youth.[27][28] People from the group "Black Block", which consisted of associations "Niklot" and "Szturmowcy", carried banners that read "White Europe", "Europe Will Be White" and "Clean Blood, Sober mind -
sXe.[29][30] There were also others who were chanting "Death to enemies of the homeland" and "Catholic Poland, not secular".[30] Foreign guests included self-identified Italian fascist
Roberto Fiore, Slovak
neo-Nazi MP
Milan Mazurek, and several members of Hungary's far-right
Jobbik party.[31] American
white supremacistRichard Spencer planned to speak at the march, but was banned from doing so,[32] with the Ministry announcing in a later statement that Spencer's views were "in conflict with the legal order of Poland".[33] The march was cited in a
European Parliament resolution that called for member states to act decisively against far-right extremism.[34][35]
For the march in 2018, the Italian
neo-fascist party
Forza Nuova was invited.[36][37] Far-right activists and groups from Hungary, Estonia, Belarus, Spain, Italy, the Netherlands, USA and Portugal joined the event in 2021 and formed the “Nationalistic Column” with Polish far-right organizations and movements, including but not limited to: “Trzecia Droga”, “Szturmowcy”, Autonomiczni Nacjonaliści, All-Polish Youth, National Rebirth of Poland (NOP) and the ONR.[38][39]