How Finland defeated fascism
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DownloadIn the 1930s, a far right group in Finland captured this man,
their former president, and took him and his wife from Helsinki to Joensuu,
a remote Finnish city almost 300 miles from their home.
The group interrogated them, threatened them, and then released them.
This was the Lapua Movement, a violent, conservative,
political movement that almost pushed Finland into authoritarianism.
But then something happened.
Somehow, they managed to stave off fascism,
and they've remained a stable democracy ever since.
Today, Helsinki is a great city, capital of a nation that has stemmed
the dangerous political currents sweeping the rest of Europe.
So how did Finland protect its democracy?
And is there something the world can learn from this moment in history?
To understand how we got there, let's go back to 1918.
The recent rise in communism had countries
terrified all over Europe, and Finland was no exception.
I do think that the history begins from the Finnish Civil War of 1918.
There were two sides, the Reds, or the communists,
versus the whites, the conservatives. And going forward,
those colors are going to be important for keeping track.
They clashed in the war with very heavy bloodletting.
Finland broke away from Red Russia, mercilessly exterminated its own reds.
And in 1919, became at last an independent nation.
And even though the whites won,
a lot of people remained really nervous about communism in their country,
especially with the new Soviet Union as their direct neighbor.
Those most radical whites sought to create what was called a "White Finland,"
which usually meant some kind of authoritarian state,
but that didn't come about.
And throughout the 1920s, we can see a simmering resentment against the Republic.
And that all came to a head in 1929 in, you guessed it, Lapua.
Lapua is in South Ostrobothnia, one of the most conservative regions in Finland.
So when a communist youth group holds a march there,
they know exactly who they're provoking.
That was the tinder that was that was needed to to light the fire.
The rally was violently subdued, and the communists were thrown out.
So news of what happened in Lapua spread really quickly throughout the country,
and it radicalized an entire nationalist faction of the Whites,
and it was called the Lapua Movement.
Within a year, the Lapua Movement had popular support across the country.
Their supporters included not just the far right, but also more center
right and moderate elites, politicians, and prominent business owners.
A lot of these more moderate elements
thought that they could use the Lapua Movement,
harnessing their passion and their popularity.
And they were also hesitant to push back against them.
And there was one more group that we're going to have to keep an eye on.
They're called the Civic Guard.
They have two roles.
They are an auxiliary defense force, the trains their members in military tactics.
And they are also an organization which is there in case the Reds
would rise again.
So they were naturally really sympathetic
to the Lapua Movement's anti-communist cause,
but a lot of them didn't subscribe to their more authoritarian goals,
which is something we're going to keep an eye on for later.
By the summer of 1930, the Lapua Movement planned a demonstration
called the Peasants' March, and they had a really specific reference in mind.
Benito Mussolini's March on Rome in 1922, when he used the threat
of mass violence to pressure Italy's king into making him prime minister,
bringing the fascists to power.
One just can't dismiss the importance of the March on Rome
to the entire European contemporary far right.
That's when they organized
the so-called Peasants' March on Helsinki, sending tens of thousands of people,
into a demonstration that some of them hoped would actually turn into a coup.
But instead, the government met with them and passed laws that made communists
ineligible for elections and criminalized communist propaganda.
At this point, the Lapua Movement was at the height of its power and support
amongst the conservatives in Finland,
but at their core they were a violent and extremist group.
And it continued to be driven, in part, by radical members
who acted independently and without restraint.
And they showed absolute intolerance for those who opposed them.
Kidnappings really became their hallmark.
The idea was basically symbolic.
You kidnapped someone who you thought a sympathizer of the left
or a member of the political left, and then the persons
were usually taken by car or by some other means towards the east,
towards the Soviet Union.
The message is crystal clear:
if you're a communist, you don't belong in Finland.
And then in October of 1930,
the radicals of the Lapua Movement kidnapped
someone who wasn't just an ordinary rival.
They kidnapped Kaarlo Juho Ståhlberg.
That's the guy you saw at the beginning of the video.
And not only was he a former president, he was the first president of Finland's Republic.
And for a lot of people, that want to step too far.
That clearly was a provocation by the movement
that went against the sense of decency of most of their supporters, even.
And that... that marks the decline of the movement.
And in the 1931 elections,
the Lapua Movement made their last real political gain.
They managed to help tip a close presidential election in favor of P.E. Svinhufvud.
P.E. Svinhufvud is then elected president
of the Republic, and he's the absolute darling of the political right.
I even found this really interesting photo of Svinhufvud at the Peasants' March.
So we know that he really was participating in the Lapua Movement.
But Svinhufvud was also more traditional than the radical whites.
In the end, Svinhufvud would back the Republic, and the law, and rule of law,
rather than any hopes and dreams of the of the most radical whites.
And so in 1932, even though the president they had helped elect was in power,
the Lapua Movement wasn't getting what they wanted. In a final act of desperation,
they tried to stage a coup.
A group gathered in Mäntsälä, near Helsinki, with the goal of gathering
the civic guard to march on the capital and overthrow the Republic.
But when they called on the Civic Guard, something else happened
that they had never considered.
The majority of the civic guards do not respond to the to the call for uprising.
No one goes anywhere and will stay at home and will stand down.
And then the nail in the coffin, the Lapua Movement's former darling President Svinhufvud
gave a radio address, telling the group to stand down.
You could name it just the swan song of of the Lapua Movement.
And just like that, the violent extremist group was done.
They lost the support of the masses, the politicians,
and the military, and the Lapua Movement was banned.
And Finnish democracy has been stable ever since.
Even surviving the Second World War.
Fascism and communism have been rejected by democratic Finns.
Some of the details and events of the Lapua Movement have uncomfortable
echoes with recent experiences in the US.
Democracy at one level was about the rule of the people.
It's about elections.
It's about popular involvement. Absolutely.
But in order to sustain
that project of popular engagement and popular decision making,
you need to have unelected
officials who manage the guardrails.
I think this places a spotlight on the question of who appoints
officials.
Because one of the things we forget or at least take for granted,
is how many nonpartisan systems you have to have in place
to have a healthy democracy.
But one of the largest reasons the Lapua movement failed
was because it crossed the line.
It became too violent and too extreme too quickly.
So it lost mass support and with it, the elites.
And there's one more key lesson
from the Lapua movement that is, thankfully, a lot more hopeful.
We remember the fascists of Italy and the Nazis of Germany, but in reality,
almost every European country had their own far right movements.
An organization which all dreamed of taking state power,
one either through violence or some other means.
And almost all of them failed.
Key Vocabulary (50)
toward
"Go to school."
belonging
"Cup of tea."
also
"You and me."
inside
"In the house."
specific
"That book."
A third-person singular pronoun used to refer to an object, animal, or situation that has already been mentioned or is clear from context. It is also frequently used as a dummy subject to talk about time, weather, or distance.
Used to show who is intended to have or use something, or to explain the purpose or reason for an action. It is also frequently used to indicate a specific duration of time.
A preposition used to indicate that something is in a position above and supported by a surface. It is also used to indicate a specific day or date, or to show that a device is functioning.
A preposition used to indicate that people or things are together, in the same place, or performing an action together. It can also describe the instrument used to perform an action or a characteristic that someone or something has.
Used to refer to the person or people that the speaker is addressing. It is the second-person pronoun used for both singular and plural subjects and objects.
A preposition used to indicate a specific point, location, or position in space. It is also used to specify a particular point in time or a certain state or activity.
Used to identify a specific person, thing, or idea that is physically close to the speaker or has just been mentioned. It can also refer to the present time or a situation that is currently happening.
A coordinating conjunction used to connect two statements that contrast with each other. It is used to introduce an added statement that is different from what has already been mentioned.
A preposition used to show the method or means of doing something, or to identify the person or thing that performs an action. It frequently appears in passive sentences to indicate the agent or before modes of transport.
Used to indicate the starting point, source, or origin of something. It can describe a physical location, a point in time, or the person who sent or gave an item.
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In the 1930s, a radical conservative faction almost pushed Finland into full authoritarianism. Called the Lapua movement, it was a far-right group of Finns who sought to overthrow the republic,...
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