Discovery of Nazi graffiti in Italian parliament sparks outrage

18 Apr, 2018 14:14 / Updated 7 years ago

A Nazi slogan and swastika graffiti found on a bathroom door in the Italian houses of parliament has sparked outrage among politicians and on social media.

The discovery of a verse from one of the Wehrmacht’s hymns ‘Es braust unser panzer,’ translated as ‘Our tank roars,’ triggered dismay among the deputies of the lower house of the Italian parliament at the Palazzo Montecitorio in Rome.

READ MORE: German theater investigated over free ticket offer for swastika wearers

The verse was followed by a second engraving, possibly added as a response, which translates from Italian as ‘go to hell...’.

The Nazi-linked etchings were reported to the newly-elected President of the Lower House of Parliament Roberto Fico. However, parliamentary dismay was nothing compared to the public outrage that followed as news of the Nazi graffiti went viral.

Twitter commentators were outraged, slamming the fascist engraving and calling for the culprit to be traced. “Swastika engraved in the Montecitorio bathrooms. It’s a known fact that, just like cavemen, fascists communicate with graffiti,” one Italian tweeted.

“Swastika in the bathrooms of our Parliament. Please have everyone who had access to that bathroom participate in a calligraphic expertise [handwriting analysis]. Everyone. And if there were external visitors, then they should take part in it as well. It should not end up like this. [We need] the name and the last name of who did this,” said another.

Others on social media said the graffiti was unfit for somewhere like Palazzo Montecitorio, which should be “a sacred place for democracy and freedom and instead it is disgraced with such filth.”

However, given the sheer number of visitors to the site – from parliamentary staff to journalists, and even students on guided tours – it would likely be impossible to trace who might be responsible for the engravings.

If you like this story, share it with a friend!