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Sunday, July 6, 2008

Man tore the head of Adolf Hitler

BERLIN: Just minutes after the museum opened, the 41-year-old German man pushed aside two security men guarding the exhibit. The man tore off the head in protest at the exhibit. The police were alerted and arrested the man, who did not resist. He was being investigated for assault and damaging property. One eye-witness said he was completely shocked. "I was the first. And he was standing in front of me, beside me for more than an hour outside. We spoke to each other normally. I didn't think at all that he was planning anything. We chatted about sports and things, about all kinds of things. We also went in together and stood beside Karl Marx. Then he went on because Hitler was the third figure. And then he went behind the table and tore his (Hitler's) head off and shouted "no morewar" and then wrecked him," Andreas Fisch said.
The waxwork figure of Adolf Hitler in a mock bunker during the last days of his life was criticised as being in bad taste. A media preview of the new branch of Madame Tussauds on Thursday was overshadowed by a row over the exhibit. Critics said it was inappropriate to display the Nazi dictator, who started World War Two and ordered the extermination of Europe's Jews, in a museum alongside celebrities, pop stars, world statesmen and sporting heroes.
About 25 workers spent about four months on the waxwork, using more than 2,000 pictures and pieces of archive material and also guided by a model of the "Fuehrer" in the London branch of Madame Tussauds where it is standing upright. It is illegal in Germany to show Nazi symbols and art glorifying Hitler and the exhibit was cordoned off to stop visitors posing with him. Unobtrusive signs asked visitors to refrain from taking photos or posing with Hitler "out of respect for the millions of people who died during World War Two". Camera surveillance and museum officials were meant to stop inappropriate behaviour. Institutions such as the foundation for Germany's central Holocaust memorial site condemned the idea of the exhibit as tasteless, saying it had been included to generate business. The wax figure is the latest in a gradual breaking down of taboos about Hitler in Germany more than 60 years after the end of the war and the Holocaust in which some six million Jews were killed. The 2004 film "Downfall" provoked controversy as it portrayed the leader in a human light during the last days of his life and last year a satire about Hitler by Swiss-born Jewish director Dani Levy was released in Germany.

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