About 1,500 people assembled and marched at 4:00 P.M., March 11, 2015–Lithuania’s second independence day–from the central Cathedral Square to the square next to parliament down Vilnius’s main street Gedimino prospektas.
As in previous years, marchers carried a black-and-white flag with a swastika and the inscription “Skinhead Lietuva” (Skinhead Lithuania) employing the lightning-bolt SS symbol, a flag which featured prominently as the marchers spoke at length and sang next to the parliament building.
Witnesses including native Lithuanian speakers reported the marchers again used the offensive slogan “Lithuania for Lithuanians” as the marched up the main street.
The turnout was somewhat smaller than in previous “peak” years but was nonetheless impressive, since the march was rescheduled at the last moment when the Vilnius municipal authorities again caved in to fascist youth demands for a permit to sanction their public spectacle. It had originally been scheduled for 3 P.M. March organizers claimed they would go forward with it without a permit. The neo-Nazis had to squeeze in between other regularly scheduled events, and actually ended up pooling their forces behind the sound-stage on Cathedral Square where the combined martial orchestras of Lithuania, Latvia and Estonia were performing a concert for the public.

































