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HomeOpinionAlan Berg was murdered 40 years ago by neo-Nazis. Today, antisemitism rises.

Alan Berg was murdered 40 years ago by neo-Nazis. Today, antisemitism rises.

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Forty years ago this week, my phone rang waking me up. Denver’s rock promoter, Barry Fey, was on the other line: “Wake up! Turn on Channel 4 – Alan’s dead!”

It was the night of June 18, 1984, and Alan Berg, an outspoken Jewish radio talk show host, had been gunned down in Congress Park by members of a white-supremacist, neo-Nazi group who named themselves “The Order,” or in German “Bruders Schweigen,” the Silent Brothers.

At the time of Alan’s murder, the antisemitic hate of the killers was considered far out of the mainstream of political thought and was shocking to most of us. Forty years later, Alan is gone but the antisemitism he despised and fought is all around us.

Alan was Denver, Colorado’s first victim of a legitimate hate crime, and yet the city has not recognized him with a street name, a sign, or a plaque to mark the murder of this remarkable man. Only last year was Alan admitted to the Denver Press Club Hall of Fame.

How did Alan’s murder happen? What were the events leading up to that horrible night on Adams Street in Denver?

Alan and I were both working at KOA radio. I was on-air 9 a.m. to noon and Alan worked from 1 p.m. to 4 p.m. The hour between our shows was a news talk hour. I hosted it with Evan Slack, farm reporter, Kent Gershong on sports, and Kris Olinger reading the news. I would have guests on, and Alan would join us every day at about 12:45, in what we call “a pass.” Alan would billboard what he would talk about that day on his show.

We were best friends for nine years in a business where our colleagues were our family, or as Alan used to say “inlaws and outlaws” who gathered every Friday night for dinner.

As the “King of Agriculture,” KOA received many small-town newspapers and farm and ranch reports from all over Colorado. I loved to read them. One day after the show, I came across the Primrose and Cattleman’s Gazette. The paper was published in Fort Lupton by a man named Rick Elliott.

In this June 24, 1984 file photo, Peter Boyles alternated between tears and the happy memories of Alan Berg as he gave his eulogy. (Photo By Brian Brainerd/The Denver Post)
In this June 24, 1984 file photo, Peter Boyles alternated between tears and the happy memories of Alan Berg as he gave his eulogy. (Photo By Brian Brainerd/The Denver Post)

Elliott had printed in the Gazette The Protocols of the Elders of Zion, which alleges a global Jewish plot to run the world. The article was “written” by Colonel Frances Farrell.



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