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Shofar FTP Archive File: orgs/canadian/league-for-human-rights/heritage-front//wolfgang-droege


Newsgroups: can.politics
Subject: [05/18] Who is Wolfgang Droege?
Summary: The League for Human Rights (B'nai Brith Canada) 1994
         report on the extremist organization The Heritage
         Front

Archive/File:
pub/orgs/canadian/league-for-human-rights/heritage-front/wolfgang-droege
Last-Modified: 1995/11/29

                   Who is Wolfgang Droege?

Wolfgang Droege has a long history of hate activity, as well as 
a lengthy criminal record.  

. 1949 - Droege is born in 1949 in Forchheim, Bavaria.
. 1952 - Immigrates to Canada with his mother.  
. 1967 - He later returns to Germany, where he unsuccessfully 
         tries to join the army. 
. 1967-1974 - Droege works odd jobs in Sudbury and Toronto, 
         eventually l learning printing as a trade.  
. 1974 - Joins the violent Western Guard, headed by Don Andrews 
         and John Ross Taylor. He is involved in a violent clash 
         with Black students at U of T.  
. 1975 - Droege spends two weeks in jail for writing racist slogans 
         along the parade route for the African Liberation Day 
         parade in Toronto. He is later given two years probation 
         for writing "White power" on construction boardings, That 
         same year he meets James Alexander McQuirter, who would 
         later be a major figure in the Canadian KKK.  
. 1976 - Droege is convicted of assaulting a reporter.  
. 1976 - Wolfgang Droege attends David Duke's "International 
         Patriotic Congress," a neo-Nazi and White supremacist 
         conference in New Orleans. He meets Duke, and becomes a 
         KKK representative in Canada. Three years later, Droege 
         organizes a Duke speaking tour of Canada.  
. 1981 - While working with the Klan, Droege is convicted with 
         nine others after a failed invasion of the Caribbean 
         nation of Dominica.  
. 1985 - Droege is arrested in Alabama as an illegal alien and 
         charged with cocaine possession, as well as possession of 
         an illegal knife. He serves four years of a 13-year sentence. 
         While in prison, he receives letters from David Duke, Tom 
         Metzger, and Robert Miles of Aryan Nations.  
. 1989 - He is released from jail, and goes to Libya in September. 
         He is deported from the United States for the fourth time. 
         That same year he helps found the Heritage Front, severing 
         virtually all ties with Don Andrews.  
. 1993 - Following a brawl with antiracists, he is charged with 
         possession of a weapon dangerous to the public peace.  
. 1994 - Droege is convicted of contempt of court and sentenced to a 
         three-month jail term. He serves nearly two months, but is 
         out of prison pending appeal. He claims that he is 
         financially ailing, and cannot find work.

Wolfgang Droege is one of seven directors of the Heritage Front. He 
is a well-known White supremacist with a long history of involvement 
in Canadian hate groups, as well as a lengthy criminal record.  

According to Warren Kinsella, in his book Web of Hate, Droege was 
born in 1949 near Nuremberg, Germany, Wolfgang Droege became a 
committed racist as a child. His father was a Luftwaffe pilot, and 
his grandfather was a close friend of Julius Streicher, a prominent 
Nazi and an associate of Hitler's. Streicher's tales of 'racial 
pride' and the ideals of the Third Reich had a enormous impact on 
the young Droege, according to Warren Kinsella.  

Droege came to Canada when he was 3, and became a Canadian citizen. 
He returned to Germany briefly in 1967 in an unsuccessful attempt to 
join the army, and was soon attending meetings of the German neo-Nazi 
National Party. Droege eventually returned to Canada and drifted from 
job to job. In 1974 he joined the violent White supremacist Western 
Guard, led by Donald Andrews and John Ross Taylor, two notorious 
Canadian racists with criminal records. Droege is alleged to have 
also been the British Columbia organizer for the Nationalist Party, 
which Don Andrews formed after resigning from the Western Guard.  

In the late '70s and early '80s, Droege was second-in-command to 
Canadian Ku Klux Klan leader James Alexander McQuirter. In 1976 
Droege first met American Klan leader David Duke; the two worked 
together for several years. Later Droege became the leader of the 
B.C. Klan, although he quit the organization in the late 1980s. At 
one time, he possessed a membership card of the avowed American 
terrorist group Aryan Nations. He is currently in touch with leaders
of White supremacist groups across the United States and Canada.  

Droege's relationship with hate groups plays a large part in his 
relationship with the law. In 1975, while he was with the Western 
Guard, Droege spent fourteen days in jail for writing "White 
power" slogans along the route of an African Liberation Day march in 
Toronto. He was later put on probation for two years after a 
separate incident in which he painted "White Power" on construction 
boardings. In 1976, he was convicted of assaulting a reporter. In 
1981, while working with McQuirter in the Klan, Droege and nine 
others were convicted on charges of conspiracy after attempting to 
take over the Caribbean island of Dominica to establish a White 
supremacist base in 1979 - a violent scheme by which Droege had 
hoped to achieve financial security. Also involved in the plot were 
Ontario Klan member Larry Jacklin, and future Klan leader Don Black. 
 
In 1985 Droege was arrested as an illegal alien in Alabama, and 
charged with three counts of possession of cocaine and conspiracy to 
distribute the drug, as well as for possession of an illegal knife. 
For this he was sentenced to 13 years in prison, of which he served 
four. Droege has been deported from the United States four times, most 
recently upon disembarking from a plane in Chicago after a 1989 visit 
to Colonel Muammar Qadhafi. Soon after the trip, he cofounded the 
Heritage Front with several others who had been with him in Tripoli, 
including Gerry Lincoln, Grant Bristow and David Maxwell French.  

Wolfgang Droege has been involved with some of the most vicious White 
supremacist groups in the world. He claims that he left the KKK, 
perhaps the most notorious of all these organizations, because "the 
Klan tends to attract people who are purely haters," whereas he sees 
the Heritage Front as being "more idealistic." But his own words 
reveal that he has not abandoned the goals he had when he was with 
those groups, although his strategy may have changed. When asked 
in a recent interview whether or not the Heritage Front's strategy 
was to include "hard-core, radical tactics," he responded:  

"When I was younger, I wanted things to change overnight, and I took 
tremendous chances. But I've settled down. It isn't going to happen 
overnight. First, build an infrastructure." (_eye_ Magazine, July 17, 
1992)  

Droege's objectives remain the same; only his methods have changed. 
Little else could be expected of someone who trained with David Duke's 
Knights of the Ku Klux Klan. When his mask slips, as when he claims 
that there was no plan to exterminate Jews during the Second 
World War, a violent hater is revealed. His reputation as a "hero" 
in the White supremacist movement further identifies him as a bigot 
for whom the Heritage Front is the latest of many platforms for his 
racist ideology.  

~
The League for Human Rights of B'nai Brith Canada, 15 Hove
Street, Downsview, Ontario M3H 4Y8. 416-633-6224.

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