Matt Koehl

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Matthias Koehl Jr. (January 22, 1935 – October 9/10, 2014) was an American neo-Nazi politician and religious leader who served as the second leader of the American Nazi Party from 1967 to 2014. He joined the party in 1960 following membership in various white supremacist groups, and succeeded to leadership following the assassination of the founder of the party, George Lincoln Rockwell, in 1967.

Koehl became unpopular in the movement, alienating the party's members and attempting to consolidate power by removing his opposition from the party; often those cut off went on to form opposition groups. Koehl was very concerned with his unpopular image and made alliances with worldwide neo-fascists such as Hans-Ulrich Rudel and Povl Riis-Knudsen. Koehl cut down on the organisation's previous publicity stunts under Rockwell.

In 1983, Koehl renamed the organization the New Order and transformed it into a religious organization, influenced by the fascist writer Savitri Devi. The New Order promoted occult veneration of Adolf Hitler as an avatar of God. Eventually in 1985 the group came under financial troubles and relocated from Washington DC to Wisconsin and Michigan. Koehl revealed little personal information to the group's members, who were low in number but sturdy. Koehl died in 2014, aged 79, and was succeeded by Martin Kerr.

Early life

Koehl was born on January 22, 1935 in Milwaukee, Wisconsin to Hungarian immigrants of German descent.Template:Sfn Koehl's father, Matthias Koehl Sr., claimed that his son rarely spoke with him about personal matters, but "was more talkative to his mother".<ref name="DailyTelegram1967" /> At a young age, Koehl had a reputation for being vocally antisemitic.Template:Sfn Koehl first professed admiration for Hitler at age 13Template:Sfn and disrupted a school lesson by defending the German dictator.Template:Sfn He distributed racist literature at his high school and served as a spokesman for the Nazi group the American Action Army.Template:Sfn

He graduated from a high school in his home town in 1952,<ref name="DailyTelegram1967" /> and became the leader of the young guard of the National Renaissance Party.Template:Sfn He then moved to Chicago, where he worked as an encyclopedia salesman,Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn before he went to the University of Wisconsin–Milwaukee to study journalism.<ref name="DailyTelegram1967">Template:Cite news</ref> There, he played the violin alongside the civic opera.<ref name="MilwaukeeMagazine2008">Template:Cite magazine</ref> He subsequently enlisted in the United States Marine Corps and spent two years under them.Template:Sfn

Politics

Black-and-white photo Koehl holding an American flag
Koehl, pictured at a National Renaissance Party rally in 1953

In 1956, Koehl visited the "We the People" convention at the La Salle Hotel, where he was told by a member of the Sons of the American Revolution about George Lincoln Rockwell's plans to form a Nazi party. Koehl was initially shocked by the concept, but hoped it was legitimate.Template:Sfn

Koehl subsequently moved between various white supremacist parties. He helped with the organization of the United White Party,Template:Sfn and visited its founding meeting.Template:Sfn Koehl became the national organizer of the National States' Rights Party,Template:Sfn where he first met Rockwell in 1958;Template:Sfn they worked on John G. Crommelin's campaign.<ref name="SPLC2014">Template:Cite web</ref> By 1959, he was a member of the Fighting American Nationalists, a front group for Rockwell's American Nazi Party (ANP),Template:Sfn before he joined the ANP proper in 1960.<ref name="SPLC2014" /> According to author Frederick J. Simonelli, Koehl and Rockwell became close friends after meeting, as Rockwell's extreme personality complimented Koehl's introverted nature. Simonelli compared this to the relationship between Adolf Hitler and Martin Bormann.Template:Sfn

In the 1950s, Koehl was roommates with Eustace Mullins, and the two visited St. Elizabeths Hospital in order to meet poet and fascist collaborator Ezra Pound.Template:Sfn Later, during Koehl's leadership of the ANP, Pound's poetry was reprinted in the group's journal,Template:Sfn and he was associated with the Committee to Free Ezra Pound in the 1950s.Template:Sfn

With the American Nazi Party

Template:Multiple image Koehl left the National States' Rights Party to become the leader of the Chicago division of the ANPTemplate:Sfn in 1961, then moved to Rockwell's headquarters in 1963. This promotion of location accompanied his promotion to corresponding secretary of the World Union of National Socialists and national secretary of the ANP; in addition, he edited and published bulletins for both groups.Template:Sfn By late 1963, he had been promoted to major and national secretary, the chief administrative officer, ending the vacancy left by James K. Warner,Template:Sfn and by 1966, he was deputy commander in the aftermath of the resignation of Alan Welch.Template:Sfn

One frequent rumor that plagued Koehl during his period under Rockwell was accusations that he was a homosexual.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Allegations included that in 1951, when he was 16 years old, he had sexual relations with two older male members of the Committee to Free Ezra Pound, or that he, alongside those two members, sexually assaulted a 15-year-old boy.Template:Sfn Rick Cooper, leader of the National Socialist Vanguard, claimed that he found Koehl engaged in sex with a man in 1958,Template:Sfn and James Mason spread evidence-less booklets alleging that he was gay.Template:Sfn There was no proof of such allegations, but it deeply affected Rockwell, who attempted to "prove" Koehl's heterosexuality by trying to marry him to a Nazi woman. However, she did not appeal to Koehl, who ignored her.Template:Sfn

Koehl clashed with Rockwell.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn In August 1966, Rockwell angrily rejected a suggestion from Koehl that they should have more staff (at the time, the ANP did not have enough money for food and could not pay for new employees).Template:Sfn On August 24th, 1967, Rockwell and Koehl had another verbal dispute; an "acrimonious showdown" according to Rockwell biography Frederick Simonelli, where an eyewitness reported that Rockwell claimed Koehl would be expelled from the Party. The following day, Rockwell was assassinated.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn While due to the argument there was speculation Koehl may have been involved (a theory supported by various people who knew Rockwell, including his lover Barbara von Goetz), the man convicted for the assassination was a former ANP member named John Patler.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Despite the conviction, dissident Nazis spread posters stating that Koehl was wanted for Rockwell's murder.Template:Sfn

During Patler's time in the Party, he had hated Koehl for their disagreements on race; Patler, who was ethnically Greek, supported Rockwell's pan-white supremacy, while Koehl cared only for "Nordic" whites, and was uncomfortable with Patler's presence in the group.Template:Sfn Rockwell and Patler had repeatedly argued and subsequently reconciled prior to Patler being forced out of the Party by Rockwell in March 1967. Rockwell sent Koehl to deliver the order, and Koehl brought ANP stormtroopers to search Patler's room and stop him from stealing Party property to "[add] to Patler's humiliation," according to Simonelli.Template:Sfn At the time, Koehl claimed to newsmen the party "[didn't] know of anyone who [could] fill [Rockwell's] shoes",<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> but Koehl was selected as leader by a group of 16 Party members<ref name=":0">Template:Cite web</ref> and succeeded Rockwell as commander of the National Socialist White People's Party, the-at-the-time name of the American Nazi Party.Template:Sfn

As party leader

File:Matthias Koehl & the American Nazi Party (cropped).jpg
Koehl with other ANP members in 1967

Immediately after Rockwell's death, groups like the American Jewish Committee believed he would be incapable of keeping the loyalty of the Nazis, believing him not as charismatic as Rockwell. This prediction proved to hold weight, as soon after achieving the position, Koehl became unpopular.Template:Sfn His style of leadership alienated old members and made many new members leave.Template:Sfn Shortly after Koehl gained power, two other high-ranking members of the Party, Robert Lloyd and William Luther Pierce, requested that he share power between the three of them. Koehl responded distastefully and Pierce was forced to leave the organization. Future Atomwaffen Division advisor James Mason lost faith in Koehl's leadership because of the incident, but stayed in the organization because he "didn't know what else to do".Template:Sfn Many former members of the group were purged of their positions in Koehl's attempt to compose the Party of people completely loyal to him. He took control of the World Union of National Socialists (WUNS), and his leadership there was also criticized.Template:Sfn

Koehl suspended Joseph Tommasi, a California-based Party member, and soon after the group's Cleveland organizer, Casey Kalemba, left; both formed their own Neo-Nazi groups outside of the ANP.Template:Sfn An article in The Record Herald claimed he lacked the way Rockwell carried himself and commanded respect.<ref name="RecordHerald1968" /> Similarly an article in the American Jewish Year Book stated these splits were due to Koehl lacking Rockwell's leadership ability; a few units, example including the division in Los Angeles, split off from the Party rather than following him.Template:Sfn Koehl was criticized by loyalists of Rockwell like Robert Surrey,Template:Sfn and former members of the party, like Harold Covington, actively pushed for Koehl to be overthrown in his leadership.Template:Sfn James Mason called him an "orthodox, cultist conservative" with "no talent" and "no charisma".Template:Sfn Nonetheless this lack of trust in Koehl was not universal, and the Party remained strong for years following Pierce leaving. Koehl was praised by Australian nationalist Jim Saleam as "[standing] above his contemporaries", claiming his ideas "appear to be the basis of American Nazi thinking".Template:Sfn

In an attempt to disperse this view of him, Koehl traveled to West Germany and had his photograph taken with several former members of the original Nazi Party, publishing many of the images, chief among them one in which he shook hands with Nazi military officer Hans-Ulrich Rudel.Template:Sfn These photographs were published alongside photos of people he had shaken hands with doing the same with Hitler, suggesting a connection between the leader of the Third Reich and Koehl. Another attempt to boost his opinion amongst extremists was his alliance with Danish Nazi leader Povl Riis-Knudsen, who became General Secretary of the WUNS.Template:Sfn Koehl was very concerned with finding a way to get more people to join the group, and so as a solution, formed the National Socialist Liberation Front, a group targeting high school and college-aged people to join the movement. This group more or less failed in attracting people to the organization, and his attempts failed to stop the party's splitting.Template:Sfn

During Koehl's leadership of the group, they backed away from their attacks on other racial groups to instead focus on "positive" aspects of the Neo-Nazi ideology.<ref name="SPLC2014" /> He consolidated the Party, shutting down the California and Chicago units,Template:Sfn and largely stopped the organization from pursuing the publicity stunts they under Rockwell were known for. Instead, the message was spread primarily through prerecorded messages from Koehl sent to telephones, urging the receiver to follow the "White Power message"; one example being his request that people in Washington, D.C. disobey the gun control laws and keep at least 100 rounds for every weapon they own.<ref name="RecordHerald1968">Template:Cite news</ref> One plot Koehl's party became known for during the 1980s were "Victory Bonds", a scheme mimicking War bonds where money invested would be given back once Koehl achieved power. The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission shut down Victory Bonds after they became aware of it in a failed suit from Rick Cooper to get his money back.Template:Sfn

In the New Order

Koehl came to believe that "all the problems [faced] in North America are fundamentally spiritual in origin", and claimed that Hitler said at the end of his life that Nazism could be revived "as a religious movement". He came to believe that the Party was inherently religious, and should stop attempting to pursue politics. Therefore,Template:Sfn in 1983, Koehl renamed the organization the New Order and made it more overtly religious, espousing that Hitler had been sent down to Earth by a divine entity, reflecting his inspiration from fascist author Savitri Devi.<ref name="SPLC2014" /> He wrote in 1993 that the New Order was the only group dedicated "totally, exclusively, uncompromisingly and without reservation to the Cause of Adolf Hitler,"Template:Sfn and the front page of the New Order's website describes it as "a faith in the fullest sense of the word" and "a religion".Template:Sfn This near-cult of Hitler was what led Povl Riis-Knudsen to become disillusioned with Koehl and his group.Template:Sfn

By the early 1980s, the organization's membership was dwindling, and groups like the Chico Area National Socialists were still splitting off. Koehl sought out a policy, inconsistent with previous traditions, of collaborating with other organizations; a "practical demonstration of [white unity]" as he described it. However, this failed, as differences both personal and in beliefs split the groups apart.Template:Sfn He and the Order came under heavy financial troubles in the 1980s from both the Internal Revenue Service<ref name="SPLC2014" /> (who had given him and his group a lien for $37,000 in unpaid taxes)Template:Sfn and the cost of living in Washington, D.C., which culminated in him dispersing the Order to Wisconsin and Michigan<ref name="SPLC2014" /> in 1985.<ref name=":0" /> The Anti-Defamation League estimated in 1984 that the New Order had only 25 hardcore members and roughly 100 followers, and by 1997 it was considered tiny in membership and unusually stable for a hate group.Template:Sfn Koehl stayed very secretive and followers knew little about him, but were completely trusting of him. Koehl kept himself locked in his office for most of the day then went home—members of the organization were not told what he did afterwards or the location of where he lived.Template:Sfn Public demonstrations of the organization were rare, and never numbered more than twenty people; annual income estimates were under $100,000.Template:Sfn

Koehl opposed the trend of White power skinheads and attacked David Duke's "repudiation of all things Nazi" during the 1991 Louisiana gubernatorial election. He missed opportunities to gain support for the New Order, and lived in obscurity from then on.<ref name=":0" /> By 1992, the World Union of National Socialists no longer held significant power over the movement, and was formally restructured into a policy-making group over a membership-based organization. Rockwell and British Nazi leader Colin Jordan's vision for the WUNS as a firmly structured group never came to fruition.Template:Sfn

Death

Koehl died in the night between October 9 and 10, 2014, at the age of 79. His death was reported by the New Order in a short statement, and then by the Southern Poverty Law Center.<ref name="SPLC2014" /> He was succeeded as leader of the New Order by Martin Kerr.<ref name="Murphy2018">Template:Cite news</ref>

Ideology and beliefs

Template:Neo-Nazism sidebar Koehl was an obsessive adherent to classic German Nazism and admired Adolf Hitler, being strongly antisemitic.Template:Sfn Even from his entrance into the ANP, Koehl was interested in joining the group because of his great respect for the German Führer. While writing for National Socialist World, he depicted him as a visionary ideological thinker with more roots in White nationalism than German nationalism, and thought of Nazism as a new faith. He saw the ideology not as pushing for something political or social, but for a "universal transformation of ideas and things."Template:Sfn Koehl was, according to Simonelli, a "rabid germanophile" who opposed the removal of the swastika from the group's image by Rockwell.Template:Sfn

In an Associated Press interview from after he took power, Koehl claimed he had been "born a racist", opposed miscegenation, and believed in the establishment of an "all-white America". He went on to say that race war was "just around the corner." He pushed to first build up the Party within, constructing a "revolutionary cadre", and then to form a "Grassroots movement in American politics".<ref name="RecordHerald1968" /> Koehl said that he wished to "send [African-Americans] back to Africa", and that those who did not go of their own will should be forced to or killed.Template:Sfn Years later he claimed again that "Blacks are the pawns of the Jews", and that he had nothing against Black people inherently, but thought miscegenation was a form of genocide and that White separatism was the only way to "build the White race strong again". Template:Sfn He said in a 1976 Crawdaddy interview that it was "a mistake" for colonists to bring Africans into the United States, and elaborated on his views on Jewish people; he believed that there would be none in his ideal society, and that a potential solution was to bring them to "a big island somewhere in the middle of the Ocean" where they could "perform hard and honest work", continuing that "if it kills them… it is their tough luck".Template:Sfn

Koehl further developed his admiration of Hitler by reforming the party into the New Order.Template:Sfn In this group, Koehl implemented religious elements, imaging it as a faithful community.Template:Sfn In the book Black Sun, Nicholas Goodrick-Clarke emphasizes the extents to which the organization's discussion of Hitler was religious; the New Order produced literature praising him in a manner Goodrick-Clarke considered to be imitative of Jesus, Koehl himself directly compared the cause and followers of Hitler to that of the Christian messiah in a 1991 speech to European members of the New Order,Template:Sfn and, while talking about Rockwell after his death, compared his role within the Nazi ideology to that of St. Paul within Christianity.Template:Sfn Koehl made claims that Hitler was "a gift of Almighty Providence" and that by rejecting him, "we rejected God himself".Template:Sfn He claimed in 1985 that Hitler had "risen from the grave",Template:Sfn and described him as the "greatest figure to ever walk the face of this earth."Template:Sfn His language explicitly rejected democracy as having ruined the world, citing that the victory of the Allied powers led unfavorably to concepts he opposed such as miscegenation, rock music, Alternative lifestyles, HIV/AIDS, crime and corruption.Template:Sfn

Works

  • Some Guidelines to the Development of the National Socialist Movement (1969)
  • The Future Calls (1972)
  • The Program of the National Socialist White People's Party (Cicero, IL: NS Publications, 1980)
  • Faith of the Future (1995)

References

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Works cited

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