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In Spain, the US and Argentina, the far right is rewriting the past: ‘Nationalism needs its history’

On Via Rasella, in the heart of Rome, stands a bullet-riddled building. The machine gun fire left so many holes that you can see them with a quick Google Maps search. It was there, on the afternoon of March 23, 1944, in the German-occupied city, that a company of the SS Bozen Regiment was marching when the GAP partisan group detonated two bombs. Thirty-three soldiers died, while their surviving comrades fired in all directions. The walls still bear witness. And so does all of Italy: the Nazi vengeance the following day in the Ardeatine Caves claimed the lives of 335 people — 10 for every German killed. Both episodes have since filled history books and collective memory. But three years ago, they were rewritten.

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A poster of Giorgia Meloni for the 2024 European elections on April 25, 2024, in Naples.

© Mondadori Portfolio (GETTY IMAGE

Benito Mussolini (right) speaks with Francisco Franco and Ramón Serrano Súñer at Villa Grimaldi, Ventimiglia, on February 13, 1941.
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