(Redirected from National Socialist Workers Party)
Poster of the SSS in
Lidingö (Branch no. 93) and NU - Vanguard Lidingö, announcing a meeting. Gunnar Prawitz speaks on 'Capitalist Democracy or Nordic People's State' and Sgt. Sten Lundberg on 'Nordic Youth, Vanguard of the Future'.
'Nationalsocialistiska Arbetarpartiet' was a
Swedish political party which initially espoused
Nazism before adopting a more indigenous form of
Fascism.
The party was formed in
1933 by
Sven Olof Lindholm after he split from the
Swedish National Socialist Party, following a series of clashes over policy and personality. The party initially acted as a simple mirror of the
National Socialist German Workers Party, with the party newspaper ''Den Svenske Nationalsocialisten'' repeating what was being said in
Nazi Germany and the ''Nordisk Ungdom'' (Nordic Youth) group serving as a replica of the
Hitler Youth (albeit on a smaller scale). The
swastika was also initially used as the party emblem.
The NSAP did differ from the German model from the beginning however, as they placed strong emphasis on the
anti-capitalist nature of their rhetoric. The party's emphasis on the
socialism of their Nazism led many to label them
Strasserite, although they avoided the direct criticism of
Adolf Hitler that was forming the bulk of the writings of
Otto Strasser by the mid
1930s.

''Vasakärven''
The party continued to move away from the Hitler model and largely abandoned their ties to Germany in favour of a more Swedish model. In
1938 they stopped using the swastika and replaced it with the Vasakärven (Vasa sheaf), an old Swedish emblem used by
King Gustav II Adolf. By the end of the year the party had changed its name to 'Svensk Socialistisk Samling' (Swedish Socialist Unity) and had largely dropped all but passing reference to the Nazis. Nonetheless the party declined dramatically during the
Second World War and was formally dissolved in
1945.