![]() Cover of Fashist, 1939 | |
Type | Monthly |
---|---|
Format | Broadsheet |
Publisher | Anastasy Vonsyatsky |
Editor | Donat Yosifovich Kunle |
Founded | August 1933 |
Political alignment | Fascist |
Language | Russian language |
Ceased publication | July 1941 |
Headquarters | Putnam, Connecticut, United States |
Circulation | ~10,000 |
Fashist (Russian: Фашистъ, 'Fascist') was a Russian fascist publication that ran from 1933 to 1941, issued from Putnam, Connecticut, United States. [1] It was published by Anastasy Vonsyatsky. [2] Fashist was distributed among Russian exiles around the world. [3]
The first issue of Fashist was published in August 1933. [3] The first issue was printed in 2,000 copies. [2] Donat Yosifovich Kunle was the editor of Fashist. [1] [4] The publication functioned as an organ of the All-Russian Fascist Organization. [5]
Fashist was published more or less on a monthly basis. Each issue was printed in roughly 10,000 copies. [2] The publication had a newspaper format, but was printed on costly glossy paper. The material of the publication consisted of reports on party activities as well as historical narratives. Fashist dedicated a lot of attention to Civil War nostalgia, praising the role of the White Army and its leaders. [2]
Many authors of articles in Fashist were kept anonymous, to avoid reprisals from Soviet agents. Instead, they signed the articles as fashkor (фашкор, short for 'Fascist Correspondent', compare with rabkor ) followed by their party membership number and geographic location. [2] By using the pseudonyms of many different fashkors, Fashist created the impression of being in the epicentre of a vast global network of émigré Russian fascist agents as well as a network of saboteurs with the Soviet Union. [2] [6] In reality, Vonsyatsky could count on only a handful of Russian exiles as correspondents. [6]
As of 1938–39, it served as the organ of the All-Russian National Revolutionary Workers-Peasants Party of Fascists. [1] Donat Kunle, a pilot, was killed in a plane crash in California on June 21, 1941. [7] Fashist ceased publication the following month. [8]