1/28/2012

Hitler's Ideologies Still Demanded!!

Adolf Hitler's "Mein Kampf," where he lays out his Aryan ideology, remains taboo in Germany. A British publisher's plans to sell excerpts of the book at German newsstands was scuttled at the last minute after legal threats by the state of Bavaria, which owns the book's copyright.

Excerpts of Hitler‘s "Mein Kampf," which were set to be sold in newsstands across Germany for the first time since the end of World War II, have been pulled at the 11th hour after legal threats by the state of Bavaria, which owns the book's copyright.

British publisher Peter McGee had planned on Thursday to release parts of the still taboo book in a series of 15-page, German-language inserts with the historical magazine Zeitungszeugen, along with accompanying commentary. But Mcgee said Wednesday he would publish just the commentary after legal pressure from the Bavarian Ministry of Finance, which, since the late 1940s, has held the rights to Hitler’s writings and those of other Nazi leaders like Joseph Goebbels.

Bavaria also holds the rights to works published by Franz Eher Nachfolger, the Nazi party’s publisher, after U.S. occupation forces passed on to the Ministry the task of ensuring that Nazi propaganda was not disseminated in Germany. It is still illegal in Germany to spread Nazi ideology, or display swastikas or make the stiff-armed Nazi salute.

Several generations of legal experts at the Ministry have been on the case ever since, but their job has recently seemed less relevant. Because what was appropriate in the 1950s and 1960s has become, especially since the upswing in research on the Nazis that started in the 1970s, little more than an irritation. In fact, with its blind determination to carry out its task, the Ministry has been responsible for Hitler’s pamphlet, a badly written and confused tract, acquiring the mystique of a “forbidden book.”

Still Jewish groups and Holocaust survivors had expressed outrage at McGee's plans for widespread sale of the excerpts, which he said was aimed at demystifying the crude text. There are already two books on the German market, by Werner Maser and Christian Zentner respectively, containing excerpts of “Mein Kampf” with commentary. The Zentner book is in its 21st edition.

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