Elof Eriksson
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Elof Eriksson | |
|---|---|
| Born | 30 July 1883 Stockholm, Sweden |
| Died | 9 December 1965 (aged 82) Stockholm, Sweden |
| Occupation | Farm manager |
| Years active | 1914–1965 |
| Notable work | Semi-Gotha (1941) Världskulturer(1962) |
| Political party | Sveriges Fascistiska Folkparti |
| Movement | Nationella Samlingsrörelsen |
| Father | Jakob 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]