An extraordinary photograph of an American neo-Nazi rally re-emerged on social media in October 2018, prompting multiple inquiries from readers about its authenticity and the details surrounding it.

A 14 October 2018 Facebook post featured a photograph of a group of people performing a Nazi salute in front of a large, upright burning swastika, with a caption warning: “No, this is NOT a colorized photo from Nazi Germany in 1939. This is a photo taken in Draketown, Georgia, USA this last weekend. This is what I will continue to Fight against! This is not America!”:

As indicated in the meme, this image and caption were first posted to Twitter in April 2018 by Brian Krassen, a critic of President Donald Trump and editor at the liberal web site HillReporter.com:

No, this is NOT a colorized photo from Nazi Germany in 1939. This is a photo taken in Draketown, Georgia, USA this last weekend. This is what I will continue to Fight against! This is not America! pic.twitter.com/dMUZ5sdXGV — Brian Krassenstein (@krassenstein) April 23, 2018



Although no neo-Nazi rally was held in Draketown over the weekend of 12-14 October 2018, one did take place there on Saturday 21 April, so Krassen’s reference to “this last weekend” should be read in that light.

The image in question does indeed capture a rally of American neo-Nazis in Draketown, Georgia, on 21 April 2018. The photograph was taken by Spencer Platt for the Getty agency and carried the following caption:

DRAKETOWN, GA – APRIL 21: Members of the National Socialist Movement, one of the largest neo-Nazi groups in the US, hold a swastika burning after a rally on April 21, 2018 in Draketown, Georgia. Community members had opposed the rally in Newnan and came out to embrace racial unity in the small Georgia town. Fearing a repeat of the violence that broke out after Charlottesville, hundreds of police officers were stationed in the town during the rally in an attempt to keep the anti racist protesters and neo-Nazi groups separated.

According to the New York Times, around two dozen neo-Nazis were vastly outnumbered by counter-protesters during an earlier rally in the city of Newnan, around 45 miles south of Draketown, and despite some confrontations between both sides, the event passed off without the kind of violence seen at the August 2017 “Unite the Right” rally in Charlottesville, Virginia.

The 2017 Charlottesville event culminated in the death of Heather Hayer, who was killed when James Alex Fields, a rally attendee with neo-Nazi sympathies, drove a car into a crowd of counter-protesters.

Of the Newnan rally, the Times reported: