Elof Eriksson

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Born30 July 1883
Stockholm, Sweden
Died9 December 1965 (aged 82)
Stockholm, Sweden
OccupationFarm manager
Yearsactive1914–1965
Elof Eriksson
Born30 July 1883
Stockholm, Sweden
Died9 December 1965 (aged 82)
Stockholm, Sweden
OccupationFarm manager
Years active1914–1965
Notable workSemi-Gotha (1941)
Världskulturer(1962)
Political partySveriges Fascistiska Folkparti
MovementNationella Samlingsrörelsen
FatherJakob Eriksson

Elof Eriksson (30 July 1883 – 9 December 1965) was a Swedish antisemitic political writer. He was recognised as the main exponent of antisemitism[1] in inter-war Sweden along with Einar Åberg.

Born in Stockholm, his father Jakob Eriksson was a well-known plant pathologist.[2] Raised on a large farm at Hyllie, Eriksson studied horticulture and agriculture before becoming farm manager of the family plot.[2]

Eriksson began his political career in 1914 in the agrarian movements connected to the Jordbrukarnas Riksförbund (Farmers National Federation), leading a highly reactionary faction that was suspicious of democracy and was supportive of eugenics.[3] He wrote a series for articles for Nya Dagligt Allehanda condemning liberalism and the Swedish party system, which he blamed for the problems facing Swedish agriculture and took part in the Farmers' March, a mass rally held on 6 February 1914.[2] A meeting with Mauritz Rydgren in 1914 helped to instill in Eriksson a strong belief in antisemitism and Swedish racial purity although initially these were privately held beliefs that did not manifest in his political activities.[2] He left active politics when the group as a whole merged with the Centre Party and became a writer and publisher, taking over the editing of the highly conservative Södertälje Tidning in 1923. It was whilst writing for this paper that he began to demonstrate his antisemitic opinions.[3]

Fascist politics

Ideology

References

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