The Jewish Chronicle

Nazi imagery is cause for Norway alarm

- BY PATJI ALNAES-KATJAVIVI

AN INCIDENT in Trondheim last month has shed a spotlight on how casually Nazi imagery can be used – and how little scrutiny it can receive.

The controvers­y was triggered by a “Politicall­y Incorrect” party at a student union building in the city, where the Norwegian University of Science and Technology (NTNU) is situated.

Students entering the bar that night were greeted by a doorman bearing a mock firearm and provided with an “entry visa” bearing Hitler’s image. The bar staff wore Nazi-style uniforms while the drinks menu offered cocktails with names like “Auschwitz”, “Blitzkrieg” and “Mein Kampf”.

The event itself was scandalous, of course, although it is always worth rememberin­g students do often exercise poor judgment. Remember, for instance, Prince Harry’s choice of Nazi desert uniform and swastika armband to a private fancy-dress party 12 years ago.

And there was plenty of criticism in Norway at the time from the Centre for Studies of Holocaust and Religious Minorities, and from Evrin Kohn, deputy director of the Norwegian Centre Against Racism.

“This was supposed to be a party with the theme ‘politicall­y incorrect’ but unfortunat­ely it went to [sic] far,” the student union said in an apology on its Facebook page.

“The party was supposed to make a mockery of the Nazi movement, and the anti-Nazi propaganda on the walls tried to highlight this.

“We are sorry that this [message] was not conveyed well enough.”

But Norway spent many years under German occupation during the Second World War and this is why, as a representa­tive from the Jewish Museum told local Trondheim newspaper Adressavis­en, even playing with Nazi symbolism is deeply problemati­c.

Under the occupation, most Norwegian Jews perished if they did not go into hiding or flee the country.

Hundreds were rounded up and deported on ships to continenta­l Europe during the war, including 532 Jewish men, women and children on a single ship, the Donau, on 26 November 1942.

Last month was the 75th anniversar­y of that notorious event, marked in a remembranc­e service attended by Crown Princess Mette Marit. Norwegian Prime Minister Erna Solberg used the occasion to repeat an apology for the deportatio­n first uttered by her predecesso­r Jens Stoltenber­g in 2012.

What still remains troubling about the Trondheim incident is the university’s reluctance to intervene directly.

There will be no formal reprimand for the students who planned last month’s party. The university itself told the JC this was because the party did not take part on campus and the student union is an independen­t body. But it is NTNU that funds the student union to the tune of £157,000 per year.

Student news website Dusken.no reported NTNU students as saying the party would influence their habit of visiting the union bar in the future.

And for one Trondheim student writing in Adresseavi­sen, the local newspaper, the destinatio­n of the money is deeply important.

Her great-grandfathe­r was murdered in the concentrat­ion camps, she said, prompting her to ask: “Did my membership fee go towards the hire of SS uniforms?”

Did my student fee go towards hiring SS uniforms?’

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 ??  ?? The party drinks menu
The party drinks menu
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