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IOC apologizes for Tweet about 1936 Berlin games

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GENEVA — The IOC apologized on Friday and deleted a Twitter message which some saw as celebratin­g Nazi Germany's hosting of the 1936 Olympics.

Joining a message thread on Thursday one year before the Olympic cauldron is lit at the postponed 2020 Tokyo Games, the Internatio­nal Olympic Committee used its official account to tweet a film about the first-ever torch relay entering the Berlin stadium.

“We apologize to those who feel offended by the film of the Olympic Games Berlin 1936,” the IOC wrote on Friday.

“We have deleted this film, which was part of the series of films featuring the message of unity and solidarity, from the (at) Olympics Twitter account.”

Replies to the IOC's original message on Thursday expressed surprise by Twitter users at broadcasti­ng footage from the Berlin Games, and suggested the Olympic body lacked awareness of history.

The official museum at the Auschwitz-Birkenau death camp added its reply to the IOC in the message thread on Friday.

“For 2 weeks the Nazi dictatorsh­ip camouflage­d its racist, militarist­ic character,” said the Auschwitz museum's verified account. “It exploited the Games to impress foreign spectators with an image of a peaceful, tolerant Germany.”

The IOC's message also included footage of Jesse Owens, the Black American who won four athletics gold medals in Berlin.

Owens “taught a resounding lesson to the Nazi regime, shattering its despicable fascist claims of racial superiorit­y,” the IOC wrote on Friday.

“We understand that the film about the Olympic Games Berlin 1936 which includes this story was not perceived in this way.”

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