Anti-Antifa
"Anti-Antifa" is the far-right’s term for their targeted approach against anti-fascists, those who are committed to opposing, in word and deed, the extreme right and its political stance. The practice of creating lists with the names of their political opponents was not new – as early as the 1920s, the Nazis had done the same. In 1992, the Nationale Liste (NL), a far right party founded by the Hamburg neo-Nazis Christian Worch and Thomas Wulff, published a special anti-Antifa issue of their magazine Index. It listed the names and addresses of anti-fascists, with the aim of intimidating and threatening them. Across Germany, neo-Nazis followed the Hamburg example and published names, addresses, telephone numbers and personal descriptions of activists, journalists and politicians. In Hamburg, Gerhard and Waltraut L. and Jürgen B. were terrorised for months after their addresses were published.

The magazine listed the names of individuals from the left-wing political scene and published photos and the contact data of meeting venues. More and more lists of addresses and threatening letters began to circulate. Gerhard and Waltraut L., a married couple from Hamburg-Eidelstedt, for instance, were told that they would be doused in petrol or torn to shreds by pit bulls.