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White supremacist propaganda on college campuses rose more than 250 percent, report says

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White nationalist featured in documentary surrenders to Charlottesville police
IDENTITY EVROPA/Twitter
ByMEGHAN KENEALLY
February 01, 2018, 7:33 PM

— -- The amount of white supremacist propaganda found on college campuses grew exponentially in the past year, according to a new report from the Anti-Defamation League.

The ADL found a 258 percent increase in reports of white supremacist fliers, banners, posters and stickers on U.S. college campuses in fall semester 2016 and fall semester 2017.

In fall 2016, there were 41 incidents reported and, in the same time period the following year, there were 147 incidents, the report stated.

White supremacists "see campuses as fertile recruiting ground," the ADL said in a statement released with the report.

"While campuses must respect and protect free speech, administrators must also address the need to counter hate groups' messages and show these bigoted beliefs belong in the darkest shadows, not in our bright halls of learning," ADL CEO Jonathan Greenblatt said in the statement. "There is a moral obligation to respond clearly and forcefully to constitutionally protected hate speech."

White nationalists carry torches on the grounds of the University of Virginia, on the eve of a planned Unite The Right rally in Charlottesville, Va., Aug. 11, 2017.

Since Sept. 1, 2016, there were a total of 346 incidents reported, according to the report from the ADL, an advocacy group that seeks to combat hate groups and bias through information and training that was originally founded to counter anti-Semitism. The incidents counted in the report were found at 216 college campuses in 44 states and Washington D.C.

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The propaganda included messages promoting specific groups or calling for people to "save" the white race, the report stated, and sometimes also attacking "minority groups, including Jews, Blacks, Muslims, non-white immigrants, and the LGBT community."

PHOTO: Peter Cvjetanovic, right,along with Neo Nazis, Alt-Right, and White Supremacists encircle and chant at counter protesters after marching through the University of Virginia campus with torches in Charlottesville, Va., on Aug. 11, 2017.
Peter Cvjetanovic, right,along with Neo Nazis, Alt-Right, and White Supremacists encircle and chant at counter protesters at the base of a statue of Thomas Jefferson after marching through the University of Virginia campus with torches in Charlottesville, Va., on Aug. 11, 2017.

The group responsible for 158 of the 346 incidents, according to the report, is called Identity Evropa and calls for the preservation of "white American culture," while avoiding often-used white supremacist and Nazi-inspired images and language.

Identity Evropa is also identified as a white nationalist hate group by the Southern Poverty Law Center, a watchdog organization that monitors and reports hate-group activity throughout the U.S.

The white nationalist group's posters often include recognizable historical images rendered in black and white, such as Michaelangelo's statue of David or a picture of Julius Caeser, captioned with phrases like "Protect your heritage" or "Our destiny is ours."

Identity Evropa regularly shares pictures of posters it claimed to have placed on college campuses and public places. On Wednesday, the group shared a photo of one of its posters purportedly hanging at the University of Northern Colorado in Greeley on its Twitter feed.

An "IDENTITY EVROPA" flier is pictured on a posting board at the University of Northern Colorado.
IDENTITY EVROPA/Twitter

The SPLC has tracked similar amounts of white supremacist hate group activity on college campuses, citing 298 incidents of fliers in 2017.

Heidi Beirich, the director of the Intelligence Project at the SPLC, said that white supremacist and white nationalist groups "want impressionable young people as part of their audience and this college work is part of that."

"It's hard to know how effective it is,” she said. “I would guess in most cases it probably isn't [effective] at least in terms of recruitment but it's good in terms of getting their name recognition up, getting their names in the press, particularly in the campus press which will be reporting on it."

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