Hitler is back?
Nov 18, 2012 10:06 Moscow Time
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Photo: EPA
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Recently the name of Adolf Hitler, the former leader of National Socialism, who drew the German people and the whole humankind into the bloodiest war of the XX century, which burned the lives of 60 million people, has more and more often appeared in mass media.
Hitler's name has been surfacing
here and there in different context. In Austria the tomb stone on
Hitler's parent's grave was destroyed, since it had turned into a place
of worship of neo-Nazi and extremists. Turkey banned the video with
Germany's Reichkanzler advertising men's shampoo. In India the owner of a
men's clothing store called his store with the Fuhrer's name in order
to draw customers, causing the Jewish community of Ahmedabad in the
state of Gujarat to appeal to have him change the store sign.
Last
summer, the Italian prosecutors received a signal that some wine trader
sold wine in bottles with the labels depicting the portraits of Adolf
Hitler and Benito Mussolini. The prosecutors started investigation based
on the complaint filed by an American couple, whose relatives died in
Oswenzim. In Great Britain the bed linen that had belonged to the
creator of the Third Reich was sold at an auction for 2000 pounds.
Even
in Germany itself the interest in the dictator does not disappear. Two
years ago in Berlin in the German History Museum an exhibition took
place entitled «Hitler and the Germans. United people and crimes». Every
new generation is bothered by the questions: how could it happen that
Hitler got to power, what kind of person he was, what were the reasons
for his cruelty, what effect his personality had on the people around
him?
German filmmaker Nico Hofmann is once again
ready to investigate those reasons in his new saga about Hitler. The TV
series will show the Fuhrer's life beginning with 1914 and ending with
his inglorious death after the fall of Berlin in 1945. The German
publication Spiegel online, which by the way has a monthly „wake fort he
devil“, reports about this risky project. There is always an newsworthy
event: political debates around the Fuhrer’s family estate in Austria
(whether to demolish it, let people live there or turn it into a
monument) or an art exhibition in one of the galleries in Great Britain,
where one can play golf with Hitler.
Where does this
never-ending interest towards Hitler's personality and his surroundings
come from? Did Adolf Schicklgruber really have a certain dark charisma,
which to this day attracts both scientists and ordinary people?
This
is the subject of our conversation with Professor Doctor Hans-Henning
Schröder, a German historian and political scientist from the German
Institute of International Politics and Security.
«On
the one hand, the film about Rommel is still a film about resistance.
You know, Hitler forced him to commit suicide. We are talking about a
soldier, who went all the way from a supporter to an opponent of Hitler.
Rommel is the central character of the film; he is still very popular
in Germany, perhaps because his son was the mayor of Stuttgart.
The
era of the Third Reich is still being investigated, hence, the figure
of Rommel, who took a very complicated path. On the other hand, there is
still potential for the far-right radicals in Germany. According to the
latest research, about 9% of the Germans support the far-right radical
ideas, while in the Eastern regions this figure in even higher – 16%.
Such people support the ideas of national patriotism and have
anti-democratic views. Such a situation is typical not only of Germany,
but also of other countries. Naturally, in Germany the government's
efforts are aimed against this phenomenon».
The
British daily newspaper Daily Mail in its questions and answers section
announced that over 39 187 books were written about Hitler, while 85 640
books were written about Napoleon. But Napoleon died 191 years ago,
while Hitler 67 years ago. If the interest for Hitler does not decrease,
he can easily breach the gap. And given all this, I would like to ask
about Hitler's book „Mein Kampf“. Mass media report that it can be
published again. Is that so?
«German law, including Bavaria, which
owns the rights to this publication and uses its rights to prohibit its
further publishing anywhere in the world, forbids publishing this book.
However, the international law limits copyright to a term of 80 years.
At the end of 2015 this term will be over, after which anybody will be
able to publish the book. And now the German government is looking for a
way to prevent this process in the future».
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