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Berlin mayor concerned at Madame Tussauds' plan to feature Hitler

Discussion in 'WWII Today' started by higge, Jun 3, 2008.

  1. higge

    higge Member

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    BERLIN — Berlin's mayor has expressed concern at Madame Tussauds' plans to include Adolf Hitler among prominent Germans who will be immortalized in wax at its new museum, his spokesman said Monday.
    Klaus Wowereit has written a letter to the wax museum's curators urging them to consider carefully whether to include the Nazi dictator and, if they still do, to be careful how they present him, spokesman Guenter Kolodziej said Monday.
    "In the mayor's view, he should not be shown as a cult figure," Kolodziej said.
    Madame Tussauds' Berlin museum is scheduled to open on July 9. It will be located on the Unter den Linden boulevard, close to the German capital's landmark Brandenburg Gate.
    Spokeswoman Katrin Srumsdorf said the museum planned to send Wowereit an official response Tuesday.
    She stressed that curators recognize the need to treat Hitler with sensitivity. Unlike in London, where he stands along with major world leaders, Hitler's likeness in Berlin will be hunched over a desk in a dimly lit bunker, she added.
    "He will appear as an old, broken man, as he might have looked in the days just before he committed suicide," Srumsdorf said.
    The Hitler statue will be the only one on display behind glass, which means visitors won't be able to have their pictures taken with it, and the exhibit will be constantly monitored by video cameras.
    Madame Tussauds Berlin will feature many prominent Germans, including former Chancellor Helmut Kohl, current Chancellor Angela Merkel and scientist Albert Einstein - who left Germany shortly before Hitler took power in 1933, never to return.
    The display also will feature Britain's prime minister during World War II, Winston Churchill.
    Kolodziej noted that it is illegal in Germany to use Nazi symbols as propaganda, but that Hitler's likeness alone is not illegal.




    http://canadianpress.google.com/article/ALeqM5jVO3dBybO0elmIYUZ6XwxeOtsw2w
     
  2. Tom Houlihan

    Tom Houlihan Member

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    Regardless of how you feel about the man, he is a vital part of German history. What he accomplished for Germany, and what he did to Germany must be remembered. To gloss over him would make it easier for a modern incarnation to develop.
     
  3. higge

    higge Member

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    As I have no feelings to neo-nazies or anything related, I must admit that he was very very powerful man in his time. Unlike Stalin, people voted him as a leader of third reich.

    I think it also should be shown in museums. No matter what happened in 1939-1945.

    After all, Stalin is still celebrated in Moscow year after another. Weren't he evil enough to deny? He was, I really know.
     

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